Thursday, August 1, 2013

Dinner List 7/29 - 8/2

Yea, I almost wrote 7/29 - 7/33.  Whatevs.

Busted.
Monday, July 29th

Matt's b-day Fish.
Tuesday, July 30th

Plans
Wednesday, July 31st

Teri Steak Tips & stuff
Thursday, August 1st

Goodies @ Rob & Suzannes
Friday, August 2nd

Rolling list of food ideers:
"The Billy"
Spinach & cheese turnovers
The James Bond 3-course meals
Spring/summer rolls
Teri steak tips
Grilled cheese

Chicken Parm & Artichokes

Chicken Parm & Artichokes


Yea baby.  This is kind of involved.  You don't want it to be, buy some rice bread, GF bread crumbs, or just go full-gluten on this bitch.

Beware, no pics of artichokes because we forgot.


Chicken Parm

  • 2 quarts of tomato sauce.  Your own or recipe below.
  • 4 cups of breadcrumbs (same deal)
  • 4 chicken breasts
  • 1 1/2 cups of flour (GF option would be ny baking mix or starch+rice)
  • 2 eggs
  • 8oz mozzarella, sliced
  • 1 cup finely grated parmesan
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1/4 cup of olive oil.
Pound the chicken breasts to max 1/2" thick and cut into 3rds.  Put on a plate.

Make your
assembly line - bowls of each:

  1. Flour dredge (that's your flour jackass)
  2. Egg wash: Beat the two eggs with 2 TBSP of water
  3. Bread crumbs, mixed with salt and pepper.  If you want to get fancy, throw in some dried herbs like oregano and basil.
Take a chicken breast piece and dredge in flour.  Shake off the excess.  Dunk in the egg wash.  Shake off the excess.  Roll in breadcrumbs.  Put aside.

When this is done, heat up a layer of oil in a pan.  Get out a baking dish that can fit all the chicken pieces in one layer.  Drizzle 2 TBSP of oil in the bottom of the baking dish.  Fry each chicken piece for 5 minutes on each side, or until golden.  When they're done, put them in your baking dish.

When it's 30 minutes to gametime, heat up your oven to 450.  Put a slice of mozza on each chicken piece.  Cover with tomato sauce.  Sprinkle with parmesan.  Cook for 30 minutes covered.

Serve with more parm.

Artichokes

Cut the bottom off it.  Steam for 45 minutes.  Serve with melted butter and chopped garlic.

Tomato Sauce

You want this to be thick (point.)  


  • 2 cans chopped tomatoes (about 29oz total)
  • 1 can tomato paste (6oz)
  • 1 cup red wine
  • 1/2 cup of mixed fresh, chopped herbs (seriously, make them fresh) - rosemary, basil, oregano, parsley
  • 2 TBSP chopped garlic
  • 1 whole chopped onion
  • 1/4 cup olive oil


  • Heat up 2 TBSP of oil in a sauce pot (4qt is a good size.)  Sweat your garlic and onion until brown.  Add everything else.  Cook until thickened and yummy.  Add salt and pepper and other herbs as needed.  If it gets too thick, add  more wine or water.  If it's too thin, cook longer or add more tomato paste.  You can cook this bitch all day or in as little as 30 minutes.


    Bread Crumbs

    This is a reciple for gluten free waffles, which crisp up nicely.  You can use whatever bread you want.  We used a combo of this plus toasted buiscuits leftover from the strawberry shortcake.
    • 1/2 cup GF flour
    • 3/4 cup starch (potato, corn, etc.)
    • 1 tsp sea salt
    • 1/2 tsp baking soda
    • 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
    • 2 tsp xanthan gum
    • Dried parsley, basil, and oregano (3TBSP total)
    • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
    • 1 egg
    • 1/4 cup olive oil
    • 1 1/2 cup water
    Mix all the dry ingredients.  Yea, that's the flour through the garlic powder.  Separately, beat the egg and oil.  Stir the wet ingredients into the dry.  It'll be a really dry batter.  Add water (more or less than the 1 1/2 cup if needbe) to make a thick, but pourable batter.


    If you have a waffle iron, use it.  If you don't, we're not making waffles, so it don't matter.  Put some oil in a fry pan and get it hot.  Put about 1/2 cup of batter in the hot pan and mush it out as flat as you can.  Fry a few minutes each side.

    Crisp up this or whatever bread you use in the oven at 425 for 10 minutes.

    Then put it in a food processor.


    Plate-o-nachos & chili rellenos

    Plate-o-nachos & chili rellenos

    This is no longer recommended if you can't be in a cheese coma for the next 4 hours.  Holy shit.

    It is, however, a good way to get your lazy ass friends to make their own meals.


    Nachos

    Your prep:
    Chips.  Spread 'em (point) on a piece of tinfoil or parchment paper on a baking sheet.  One layer thick.

    Their prep:
    Sour cream
    Lime juice
    Chopped onion
    Chopped cilantro
    Crumbled queso cheese
    Grated cheddar cheese
    Chopped tomatillos
    Sliced jalapenos
    Chopped tomatoes
    Chopped black olives
    Canned salsa

    Your other prep:
    Taco meat.  You can go straight taco bell style on this piece or you can fry up some ground beef and add in your selection of chili and other spices.

    Guac.  Same deal.  Guac-in-a-bag or avos plus ketchup plus lime juice plus salt plus cilantro.  Done.

    Put 'em all in bowls and have at it.  Broil the bitches for 3-5 minutes.


    Rellenos

    • A pepper for every person.  And alliteration.
    • Grated cheddar, queso cheese, and some parm.  About 1/2c per pepper total.  Add some herbs if you're adventurous.
    • 2 eggs and 1tsp corn starch for every 4 peppers
    • Oil for frying
    Cut the stem and seeds out of the peppers.  Roast them over a flame or broil them until a little charred but still hard (point.)

    Stuff the peppers with the cheese mix.

    Separate your eggs.  Put the egg whites and corn starch in an electric mixer and whip until stiff (another point.)  Beat and then fold in the egg yolks.  You should have a very light, fluffy, batter-like substance.  Weird, huh?

    Get a layer of oil hot in a frying pan.  Put a blob of the egg "dough" and flatten it with a spatula.  Put the pepper on top of it.  Put another blob of egg on top of the pepper and mush it around the pepper to coat it.  Fry for about 4 minutes per side or until nice and brown.










    Monday, July 22, 2013

    Dinner List 7/22 - 7/26

    Plate-o-nachos & chili rellenos
    Monday, July 22nd

    Chicken parm & artichokes
    Tuesday, July 23rd

    Sam & Sage Have Plans
    Wednesday, Thursday, Friday

    Special Weekend Edition: Matt's "The Billy" Menu
    Oops.  Shit didn't happen.
    Saturday, July 27th

    Rolling list of food ideers:
    Spinach & cheese turnovers
    The James Bond 3-course meals
    Spring/summer rolls
    Teri steak tips
    Grilled cheese

    Matt's Sensei Seagal 3-course menu

    Matt's "Sensei Seagal" Menu: A true American hero

    Inspired by the man himself.  Paired with quality flicks and bad TV dramas.

    The Main Course: Roast Beef
    Give yourself 20 minutes per pound for this bad boy.  Figure 8oz per person.
    • A full boneless rib - don't try to mess with this one or you'll get a thumb in the eye.  
    • 2 cloves garlic, sliced
    • Salt and pepper
    • A bad attitude
    Keep the attitude.  Preheat your oven to 425.  Trim the roast, roll it up so the fat is on the outside.  Tie it up so it doesn't get a way.  Poke holes with a pairing knife every few inches; put a slice of garlic in each one.  Rub the whole thing down with salt and pepper.  Put it in the oven, fat side down, on a roasting rack and let 'er be.

    The Side Dish: Garlic Fries w/ Spicy Ketchup
    • 1 big russet potato per person, washed and peeled
    • Garlic powder, chopped garlic, garlic oil, salt
    • Lots of oil.

    First, you need to cut fries.  If you don't have a mandolin or a fry cutter (don't ask, but yes), then try to cut fries with a knife.  Don't lose a finger.  Aim for 3/8" thick.  As you cut them, put them in a bowl of water so that they don't turn brown.  You can leave them all in there until you're ready.

    If you have a fryer, use it.  If you don't, good luck:

    Put about an inch of oil in the bottom of a heavy pot.  Get it hot.  Hot enough that when you drop a DROP of water in it, the fucker pops at you like nobody's business.  Take fries out of your water bath, dry them with paper towels, then dump them in the hot oil.  Don't do too many at once.  In a 4qt pot with an inch of oil, two handfuls is a good amount.  Too many and they'll lower the oil temp and get mushy.  Then you'll have to use them for breakfast.

    Fry the fries for about 10 minutes, or until they're golden in color.  Take them out with tongs (or your bare hands, if you're like the badass this meal is named for) and let them drain on paper towels.  While they're still hot, toss the fries with a little bit of chopped garlic, some oil, and a sprinkle of salt and garlic powder (or garlic salt.)

    The Finish: Chocolate Stout Floats
    Just put that shit in a glass with vanilla icecream.  Use root bear for those wanting unleaded.

    Mango Curry w/ Rice, Naan & Saag

    Mango Curry w/ Rice, Naan (Gluten-Free) & Saag

    Oh shit.  I forgot to blog.  And take pictures.  So you're going to have to trust it.

    Saag is a spinach-garlic-concoction.
    Naan is bread.

    And accept the fact now that you're going to make too much curry.  Seriously.

    I suggest getting the curry going, then making the Saag and Naan while it's cooking down.  You do what you want.

    Feeds 6ish.

    The only pick I took...
    The Curry:
    • 1 big onion, chopped
    • 4 medium carrots, chopped
    • 2 cloves of garlic
    • 6 boneless/skinless chicken thighs, cut into chunks or strips
    • 3TBSP cilantro, chopped (fresh, don't disappoint me now)
    • 1qt plain yogurt
    • 1c water
    • Spices - at least curry powder
    • 4lb of pork - go for butt or shoulder (some people are into the shoulder), you want something with some fat on it, so don't get all yuppie on me and buy tenderloin
    • 1/4c of chili powder (the mix, NOT straight cayenne) and 1/4c of ground cumin
    • TBSP of salt
    Heat up some oil in a pot (4qt pot is good) on medium.  Add the onions, carrots, and garlic and cook until they smell good.  Just don't burn them.  Add the chicken (yup, raw) and some more oil so that nothing sticks and cook that until the chicken is white on the outside - about 5-7min.  Add the water and get it to a simmer.

    Mix your spices into the yogurt (this'll help make sure they don't get clumpy):
    • Start with 3TBSP of curry powder
    • If you want to get adventurous, try your luck with ginger, garlic, or chili
    Put the whole thing of yogurt into the pot, mix it real good, and set it on a lower simmer.  This is going to cook down (and cook the chicken) for about 45 minutes.  If it's too thin, cook it longer.  If it's too thick, add water.  If it needs more spice, mix the spices with some liquid or yogurt before adding to stop clumping.

    The Rice
    You don't know how to make it?  Read the instructions on Uncle Ben's box

    Saag (or Saag Paneer if you add the cheese)
    You're going to make this, then reheat it when you're ready to eat.
    • 1 stick of butter
    • 1lb of spinach (or two good bunches)
    • 1/3lb (or one good bunch) of some bitter greens - mustard, dandelion, etc.
    • 2 cloves of garlic, chopped
    • Some water
    • Spices - cumin seeds, chile, turmeric powder, cumin
    • 6oz of paneer (or queso fresco) chopped into 1/2" cubes
    Rinse and chop all of your greens.  Melt that butter in a big sauté pan.  Add your garlic and a mix of spices.  Start with 2 TBSP of turmeric, 1 TBSP of cumin, 1 tsp of coriander, 1 tsp of chili powder (not straight cayenne.)  You can add more later after you taste it.  Cook that for 3 minutes for the garlic to brown up and smell nice. Add enough greens to fill the pan (but not go over the top) and stir into the butter until it cooks the greens down to a dark green and they look like cooked spinach - 3-5min a batch.  Repeat this, adding a few tablespoons of water each time before the greens, until all of them are in there and cooked.  Mix in your cheese.  Set the whole pan aside, off of heat, until you're ready to eat.  When you are, heat 'er back up.

    Naan
    Seriously, it's easier to just buy this in a package and heat it up.  But if you're stubborn (like me), here's a gluten-free variety that doesn't suck.


    • 1/2 cup water, as hot as your tap will give it out
    • 1 tablespoon honey
    • 1 packet (2 1/4 tsp) instant yeast
    • 1/2c milk
    • 1 TBSP lemon juice
    • 1 1/2 cups rice flour or GF flour mix
    • 3/8 cup potato starch
    • 3/8 cup corn starch
    • 2 tsp guar/xanthan gum
    • 1 1/2 tsp salt
    • 1/4 tsp baking powder
    • 2 large eggs, beaten
    • oil for cooking

    First, you're going to make buttermilk: put the 1/2c milk and TBSP lemon juice in a jar, mix, and set aside.  Watch it get clumpy and gross for 5 minutes, and then you have buttermilk.

    Second, you're going to make a slurry of yeast (I made that term up for this): get your 1/2 cup of hot water, honey, and yeast in a bowl, and mix it together.  LEAVE IT BE.  Until it gets frothy - about 5-10min.

    While that's all doing it's thing, mix the dry ingredients together (for those of you struggling with this, that's the rice flour through the baking powder.)

    In a separate bowl, mix up your eggs.

    When the buttermilk and yeast are ready, mix both with your eggs, then mix all that with the flour.  Stir it all together, then leave it in a bowl, covered (on the counter) for 20 minutes to rise and rest.

    When that's done, get some potato starch ready to keep shit from getting sticky (point.)  Get a handful of the dough and knead it, then set it aside on a pan as a flat disc (should be about 4" diameter, and roughly flat to about 3/4 of an inch.)  From all this, you'll end up with 4-5 discs this size.  Go smaller if you want, it doesn't matter.

    Now (finally), get a big sauté pan and heat up some oil in it on medium.  Don't use a lot of oil, just enough to coat.  Don't let the oil smoke, and you'll have to mess with the temp the whole time.  When it's hot, you're going to drop one of the discs onto the pan.  Right away, start pressing the dough outward so it flattens and spreads.  Use your fingers if you're brave, or use the back of a metal spatula and put some starch/flour on the top of the dough to keep it from sticking.

    Fry for 3-4 minutes a side.  Repeat.  Godspeed.

    Monday, July 15, 2013

    Dinner List 7/15 - 7/19

    Sam Has a Meeting
    4-cheese quiche and leftover mashed sweet pots
    Monday, July 15th

    Sam & Sage Have Plans
    Tuesday, July 16th

    Mango Curry w/ Rice, Naan & Saag
    Wednesday, July 17th

    Matt's Sensei Seagal 3-course menu
    Thursday, July 18th

    BBQ & Spicy Wings w/ some side dish
    Friday, July 19th

    Rolling list of food ideers:
    Spinach & cheese turnovers
    The James Bond and The Billy 3-course meals
    Spring/summer rolls
    Teri steak tips

    Monday, July 8, 2013

    Dinner List 7/8 - 7/12

    Fish & Veg
    Monday, July 8th

    Pad Thai
    Tuesday, July 9th

    Stuffed Shrooms & Beet Salad
    Wednesday, July 10th

    7 4 Cheese Quiche, Sweet Pots, and Salad
    Thursday, July 11th

    Used Shoes, Sprained Thumb, Good Times
    Friday, July 12th

    Friday, July 5, 2013

    Vacation 6/24 - 7/5

    I ate at IHOP.
    I ate at a place called the Potatoe Patch.
    I ate a ton of burgers.
    And chips.
    And tacos.
    And now I'm back and need to get cookin'.

    Monday, June 17, 2013

    Dinner List 6/17 - 6/21

    Sam's Got Soccer
    Monday, June 17th

    Sam's Got Soccer
    Tuesday, June 18th

    Sam & Sage Have Plans
    Wednesday, June 19th

    Martina is Cookin' Up a Storm: Chicken Satays & Grilled Veggies
    Thursday, June 20th

    TBD
    Friday, June 21st

    Tacos

    Tacos & Sage's Corn Salad

    I love taco night.  And I love options.  Go big on the options.

    • Salsa (your own?)  F that.  Costco.
    • Sour cream.
    • Chopped lettuce.
    • Guac (your own, for real)
    • Chips
    • Shredded cheese (queso fresco and/or cheddar)


    So let's focus on the meats.

    First, not for rookies:
    The double-crunch taco, leftover BBQ pulled pork, queso fresco, shredded lettuce, sour cream, and a drizzle of BBQ.

    Beef:

    • 2lb ground beef
    • 1/2c salsa
    • 1/8c chili powder
    • 1/8c oil (olive, veggie, whatevs)
    • 2TBSP garlic
    • salt


    Cook and chop the beef until cooked through.  Add the spices and cook it until not watery from the salsa.  Add more oil or water if it gets too dry.

    Chicken:

    • Roast 2 chickens (this takes time.  too bad.)
    • 4 limes
    • 1/4c salsa
    • Cilantro


    Debone the chickens and rip the meat into shreds.  Saute that with enough oil to not stick, juice the limes, and add the salsa, cilantro, and whatever other spices you're feeling.

    Leftovers happen as a salad.

    Friday, June 14, 2013

    BBQ Pulled Pork w/ Cornbread & Slaw

    BBQ Pulled Pork w/ Cornbread & Slaw

    You're not going to find a BBQ or cornbread recipe here.  That's way too much typing.  Get a box of Jiffy Mix and some Bubs BBQ.

    Feeds about 6 people.

    You need a pot that can fit all the pork on the bottom and go into the oven.

    Get this going first:


    • 4lb of pork - go for butt or shoulder (some people are into the shoulder), you want something with some fat on it, so don't get all yuppie on me and buy tenderloin
    • 1/4c of chili powder (the mix, NOT straight cayenne) and 1/4c of ground cumin
    • TBSP of salt


    Turn your oven on to 300.

    Wash and pat dry the pork.  Get a few TBSP of oil heating up in your pot on the stove.  Mix the spices and salt together, then rub the outside of the pork.  Put it into the hot oil in the pot.  You want to brown each side, so let it sear for 3-5 min, then turn it.  Put the lid on the pot, and put it in the oven for 3 hours.


    Then, make the cornbread:
    BBQ ingredients.  Have at it.
    Follow a recipe from the Jiffy box.  Or look that shit up.  It should cook in the oven for about an hour.  Even though the box says to cook at 350, just put it in with the pork.

    If you're making BBQ, now is a good time.

    And lastly, make your slaw:

    • 1 small head of purple cabbage
    • 1 small head of green cabbage
    • 4 carrots
    • 1c mayo
    • 2 TBSP vinegar
    • 3 TBSP honey
    • 1 TBSP parsley or some other nice fresh herb
    • Salt and pepper
    Shred the cabbage and carrots.  Separately, mix the mayo, vinegar and honey.  Then mix all that business together and put it in the fridge until the pork is done.

    Roll-your-own Sushi

    Sushi - Spicy Tuna and Tuna maki

    Date-night sushi.  Good idea?  Yes.  This is complicated.  Try to pay attention.

    Little bit of fish goes a long way.  So do silicone sushi rolling mats.

    You'll need (for the sushi):
    1lb of really good ahi.  Don't skimp.
    Some nori or soy sushi paper sheets (this will make about 4)
    1/3c of mayo
    TBSP of syracha or some other hot sauce you like
    Chopped chives, green onions, avocados, cucumbers, or whatever else you like with your fish

    And sushi rice.  Cooked.

    Spicy Tuna:
    Take half the ahi, chop it up nice and fine.  Add the syracha and mayo.  Mix.  Put 'er in the fridge.

    To roll that mess up (this makes rice-on-the-outside rolls):
    If you want rice-on-the-inside-rolls, then 
    Take a sushi mat and cover it in rice.  You don't want to mash the rice, and you want it less than a half inch thick.  Takes practice.  Try some water on those mitts so it doesn't stick.

    Put a sheet of nori or soy on top of the rice.

    Don't forget the sexy assistant
    Lay all the goodies on top of the paper, about 1/3 of the way up from the bottom.  Try to align things horizontally so that when you cut them, it looks pretty.  When you're ready to roll it, try not to squeeze the shit out the side of the sushi roll.  Be gentle.

    Want some sauce?
    Try 1/4c of mayo plus 2 TBSP of a sweet chili sauce
    Or go straight up shoyu and make some wasabi.  That green powder that turns into the paste you get at sushi restaurants is fake.  For realz.

    Sunday, June 9, 2013

    Dinner List 6/10 - 6/14

    Leftovas
    Monday, June 10th

    Sam's got plans
    Tuesday, June 11th

    Roll-your-own Sushi
    Wednesday, June 12th

    BBQ pulled pork w/ cornbread & slaw
    Thursday, June 13th

    Tacos & such
    Friday, June 14th

    Hot & BBQ Chicken Wings (drumsticks) w/ Corn on the Cob

    Hot & BBQ Chicken Wings (drumsticks) w/ Corn on the Cob

    For fat kids like me and my friends, drumsticks are so much better than wings.  More meat.  More sauce.

    Figure on 2 pieces per person.  Or more.

    Bone-in chicken drumpsticks and things and wings.
    Cook them on a cookie sheet (I recommend some tinfoil) at 400 for an hour.  Flip 'em every now and then.  They should be really cooked.
    Take out, toss in your sauce.
    Put back in the oven under the broiler for 5 min.
    Take out, toss in your sauce again.
    Put back under the broiler for another 5 min.

    Corn.  Shuck it.  Boil some water.  Put the corn in, and cook for 6 minutes once the water returns to a boil.

    Serve all this goodness with butter and salt for the corn and blue cheese and some carrots or celery for the chicken.

    Sauce #1 - the "buffalo"
    8oz Franks Red Hot
    1 stick of butter
    Melt it all together

    Saunce #2
    Sam's custom BBQ.  Sorry, you can't have the recipe yet.  Get your own.

    Friday, June 7, 2013

    Just Shoyu Chicken w/ Veggies

    Sage's Shoyu Chicken w/ (maybe) Green Papaya Salad

    Just Shoyu Chicken w/ Veggies

    Sage was busy.  You don't get a picture.
    All I had was chicken breasts.

    6 of 'em, cut into big chunks.
    1c soy sauce.
    1c some combo of sweet stuff (sugar, agave, whatevs)
    As much chopped garlic as I could find (2+ TBSP)
    Same with ginger (2+ TBSP)
    1/4c of rice wine vinegar

    Put 'er in a pot and cook for a few hours.  The longer the better.

    Steam some rice.

    Steam some cabbage, carrots, and onions.

    Thursday, June 6, 2013

    Fish Tacos w/ Corn & Bean Salad

    Fish Tacos w/ Corn & Bean Sald

    Go to the grocery and ask the fish guy for whatever fish came in today.  For me, that was opah.  Get 2lbs of it.

    For the salad:
    2 cans of beans (black and whatevers)
    1bag of frozen corn
    2 chopped avocados
    Little bit 'o cilantro
    A chopped bell pepper (red if it isn't stupid expensive)
    2 chopped tomatoes
    A lime (the juice)
    Salt, pepper, goodness, and maybe some kick

    For the fixins for boring peeps:
    Sour cream
    Guac (2 avos, TBSP of ketchup, 2 limes, cilantro, and salt)
    Some cheese

    For fixins for the good stuff:
    Shredded green & purple cabbage
    Tartar sauce (make this your damn self):
    1c mayo
    1 lemon (juice)
    3 TBSP relish (get into it)
    A few chopped capers
    3 chopped scallions

    And the fish.  Use whatever batter you feel like; a paleo-ish one is 1 part corn starch to 1 part potato starch to 2 parts some kind of gluten free flour.  Mix that with beer (that's not paleo), dip, and fry.

    Monday, June 3, 2013

    Moroccan Lamb Brochettes w/ Green Beans & Apricot Creme Freche-ish

    Some kind of Moroccan Lamb Leg /w Waldorf Salad

    Moroccan Lamb Brochettes w/ Green Beans & Apricot Creme Freche-ish

    Get the boneless leg of lamb at Costco
    Trim it and cut it into chunks about 1" x 1"
    Put 'er in a container with about a half cup of olive oil, 2 TBSP of cumin, TBSP of garlic, ginger, and oregano, and one chopped up onion.  And some salt.
    Coat that all together and let it sit.

    Mix 2 TBSP vanilla yogurt with 2 TBSP apricot preserves and 1/2 cup of sour creme.

    The lamb should sit for 4 hours. But I ain't got time for that.  So take it out and grill it.  Or pan cook it.

    Steam your breans.  Put the lamb on them, then the cream on that.

    Dinner List 6/3 - 6/7

    Some kind of Moroccan Lamb Leg /w Waldorf Salad
    Monday, June 3rd

    Fish Tacos w/ Corn & Bean Salad
    Tuesday, June 3rd

    sorry, we gots plans
    Wednesday, June 4th

    Sage's Shoyu Chicken w/ (maybe) Green Papaya Salad
    Thursday, June 5th

    Hot & BBQ Chicken Wings (drumsticks) w/ Corn on the Cob
    Friday, June 6th