Pamper (Easter) Monday

Today is the last day of the school’s Easter break – boo hoo! πŸ˜‰ We had friends over for a slap-up 3 course lunch today and had a really cosy time.

DD8 and I had ‘tie-dyed’ eggs with 2 of DH’s old silk ties. A really simple craft from one of my favourite ‘foodie’ websites http://ourbestbites.com

The mini chocolate eggs we had also put on the table as a decoration disappeared pretty fast. Luckily I had made Danish marcipan cake for dessert.

That disappeared pretty fast too…

Well, we did have a couple of slices each. With squirty cream, of course!

At 5pm I told the kids I was making homemade pizza for dinner. DD8 said, β€˜Mum, don’t worry! We’ll walk to the pizzeria and get a takeaway for you!’ And off she went with DS10, a small purse in hand πŸ˜‰

Truth to tell, I don’t really like the pizzas from our nearest pizzeria. But the kids love going off there on their own and it’s so rare (thanks to Flylady and menu planning!) that we get takeaway food these days. So I’m sitting back, enjoying a quiet moment in my fantastic kitchen, enjoying not having to cook and enjoying the fact that my ‘little ones’ are pampering me…

Time for me to get this show back on the road and get this new school week started. Hope you have a marvelous pamper Monday. Pizza or no pizza! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 1 April 2010

Greetings all! Today is the official start of the Danish Easter break. It was sooo quiet this morning. All shops and businesses are closed. Today – Thursday – and Friday, Sunday and Monday. Yikes! πŸ˜‰ I used to get caught out the first few years we lived here but, thanks to Flylady and forward planning, we’ve always got food in the fridge now to tide us over.

Lots of people have gone to their summer houses or have gone to visit their family on the mainland (Jutland). And those who are still here on the island in Copenhagen are doing the same as us – tidying their gardens and putting out the garden furniture! πŸ™‚ Always seems funny to me that the whole country closes down for Easter (even more than at Christmas) and yet the Danes are not a religious bunch and hardly anyone goes to church…

Here’s our menu plan for the Easter break:

THURSDAY

  • DH’s favourite – roast pork (with lots of lovely crackling). Boiled potatoes, my fantastic gravy and hot, red cabbage. Yum! Probably some Ben and Jerry’s icecream for dessert. Cos, hey, it’s the holidays! πŸ˜‰ Can you smell the pork? It’s already in the oven….

FRIDAY

  • My DBIL (Dear-Brother-in-Law, the sweet one, who looks after our kids a lot) has invited us over. Hooray – no cooking for me! (Though I might be roped in to help with the washing up…)

SATURDAY

  • We’ll be doing ‘stuff’ around the house and garden today. Going to do pork chops in the crockpot. I have a few dregs of salad dressing/Chinese sauces in the fridge, so they’ll be getting added to “Chop Surprise” πŸ˜‰ Serving with brown rice made in the ricecooker.

SUNDAY

  • Going out with friends to see the Danish comedian, Niels Hausgaard (I bought the tickets for DH’s birthday). Need something quick before we go out and leave the kids with the babysitter. Pasta med kΓΈdsovs, spaghetti bolognese, pasta with meat sauce. Salad.

MONDAY

  • Friends coming here to eat. We’re going retro with a starter of prawn cocktail and homemade (cold-risen) focaccia bread. My recipe for the bread is right here. Please try it! Super easy and always gets RAVE reviews… Then baked ham (topped with brown sugar/mustard), potatoes and ‘Twinkies’ salad. Recipe for that is here! πŸ˜‰ Dessert? Haven’t decided yet.

TUESDAY

  • Back to school (and work) so will make one of the kids’ favourites, Danish meatball and dumpling soup. Leftover homemade focaccia bread to go with it. And koldskΓ₯l for dessert. Which is rather weird but has a great summery taste…basically it’s buttermilk and you scatter tiny vanilla biscuits on the top. Told you it was weird! πŸ˜‰

WEDNESDAY

  • DH will probably work late tonight, so veggie burgers (spelt) on wholemeal buns with veggie sticks and dip.

Bon appΓ©tit! Have a wonderful Easter and a thrilling Thursday! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 25 March 2010

Only one more school packed lunch to make…the Easter holidays are in sight – yeehaw!

THURSDAY

  • Danish Biksemad, which got dropped from yesterday’s menu. What’s that, you ask? A kind of hash: fried cubed potatoes, beef, onions, topped with a fried egg, served with ketchup or brown HP sauce and cubed beetroot. One of the kids’ (and DH’s) favourites. And the potato/onion/beef mix comes in a bag from the freezer – easy! πŸ˜‰

FRIDAY

  • DBIL (Dear-Brother-In-Law) is coming to watch the kids while DH and I are out rocking to Magtens Korridorer (see Monday’s blogpost). We’ll give DBIL dinner before we go πŸ˜‰ I’m making roast lamb with creamy, tomato sauce. Green beans with sugar and bacon – recipe from Jenny’s blog. Thanks, Jenny, for the idea – may not be healthy, but they taste darn good! πŸ˜‰ And gratin dauphinois – my own, quick n’ easy shortcut recipe is on the blog right here. And very good it is too! πŸ˜‰

SATURDAY

  • It’s the final of Danish X-Factor on the telly tonight. Chicken in puff pastry, smashed cauliflower (idea via Leanne Ely, a.k.a. The Dinner Diva from http://www.savingdinner.com/ And a big, green salad.

SUNDAY

  • Will probably make Crab Quiche (a variation on the basic quiche lorraine using tinned crab, cheese, eggs and spring onions) and more salad.

MONDAY

  • The first dish that DH ever made for me, OksekΓΈd i Fad. Or in English, ‘Beef in a Bowl’! A Danish variation on shepherd’s pie which uses truckloads of ketchup. Terribly glamorous! πŸ˜‰ If you’d like to try it out, hubby’s recipe is here.

TUESDAY

  • Using my crockpot today and will do a whole chicken or pork chops in it, depending on my mood. Whatever I make will be served with wholemeal pasta.

WEDNESDAY

  • Quesadillas or tortilla wraps using yesterday’s leftover chicken or chops. Veggie sticks on the side: cucumber, red pepper and carrot.

Bon appΓ©tit!

Spring is here! Have a thoroughly thrilling Thursday! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 18 March 2010

I ‘planned’ in a couple of days with leftovers last week and it worked really well. No complaints and no food went to waste…hooray! So here we go again with food recycling πŸ™‚

THURSDAY

  • Hanging up my apron tonight because DD7 is going to School Dinner Club at a classmate’s house and DS10 and I are going to see Avatar πŸ™‚ DH will be enjoying the leftovers of my yummy Forloren Hare (Danish meatloaf).

FRIDAY

  • We’re throwing a party for DD7 (soon to be DD8…) classmates today. 14 girls. Yikes! πŸ˜‰ So dinner is something nice and easy. Spaghetti bolognese, pasta med kΓΈdsovs (as it’s called here), pasta with meatsauce. Leftover birthday cake for dessert πŸ™‚

SATURDAY

  • We’re invited to a special lunch/brunch today, so tonight we’ll probably have leftover spaghetti bolognese from Friday with salad. Or [shock horror!] some frozen pizza I have stashed away for emergencies! πŸ˜‰

SUNDAY

  • The steak salad I had planned for last weekend didn’t happen, so it’s on this week’s menu again. Spinach, rucola, cherry tomatoes, fried onions and beef steaks – peppered, fried and finely sliced.

MONDAY

  • Using my crockpot today and will be making a mild chicken curry (will use a bit extra chicken, so I’m sure to have ‘leftovers’ for Wednesday). Will serve with basmati rice (with cardamom pods added) made in my ricecooker and warmed nan breads.

TUESDAY

  • Scout night for the kids, at different times during the evening. Biksemad. Which is a kind of Danish hash: cubed potatoes fried with onions and cubed pieces of beef. Serve with a fried egg on top, ketchup and cubed beetroot. The kids love it! πŸ™‚

WEDNESDAY

  • Will chop the leftover curried chicken from Monday and mix it with mango chutney and mayonnaise (a cheat’s version of Coronation Chicken) and serve wrapped up in tortillas with salad or veggie sticks on the side. If there isn’t much chicken left to make a decent main course, I’ll pad out the meal with a dessert…

Bon appΓ©tit!

Hope you have a thrilling Thursday! πŸ™‚

Menu Planning Thursday – 11 March 2010 and KENT!

I’ve decided to add in an official Leftover Day to the menuplan because every week I seem to be dropping one or two things from the planned menu due to food overload! πŸ˜‰

Here’s whats cooking (and being reheated) at Casa Copenhagen this week…

THURSDAY

  • I cooked a whole roast chicken yesterday, so today it’s leftover chicken with wholewheat pasta, spinach and crunchy bacon.

FRIDAY

  • Nice n’easy because we are all tired on Friday nights πŸ™‚ Baked ham, steamed carrots and gratin dauphinois. (The ham that we should have eaten Monday, but got dropped from the menu.)

SATURDAY

  • DH and I are out to a rock concert – the Swedish giants of rock, Kent. And those lovely chaps from Stockholm provide lyrics and chords on their website, so we can all sing (in Swedish) and play along, thanks boys! My favourite song is LSD NΓ₯gon? (Anyone for LSD?).  Not quite sure yet if we’re eating out beforehand with friends. I’ll make brown rice, frikadeller (Danish meatballs) and veggie sticks for the kids. And when the babysitter comes, they can all help themselves to icecream πŸ™‚

SUNDAY

  • Good old fashioned steak salad: spinach, rucola, cherry tomatoes, fried onions and steaks – peppered, fried and finely sliced.

MONDAY

  • Forloren Hare, Danish Meatloaf. If you’d like my recipe with imperial measurements it’s right here and the civilised, metric version is here Yummy, yummy, yummy! πŸ™‚

TUESDAY

  • Scout night for the kids. Leftover meatloaf from Monday. I could go several ways with it…meatloaf chili, meatloaf parmesan – but maybe you have a more exciting idea? 

WEDNESDAY

  •  Brain food…fish! Pieces of cod fillet roasted in the oven together with garlic, potatoes, red onions, tomatoes and green beans. And for dipping, mayonnaise mixed with a bit of mustard, a French classic. Easy and quick. If you’ve never made this before and need a recipe to follow, http://www.recipezaar.com/ have lots for cod. This one for Oven Baked Cod with Roasted Vegetables is very similar to the way I make mine.

Bon appΓ©tit – or velbekomme as they say around these parts – and happy Little Friday! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 4 March 2010

Oh. My. Word. Was looking back over the blog (been writing every day since 1st August 2009 which makes for a lot of stuff…) and I realised that my first Menu Plan was 10 August. Which means I’ve been menu planning for 30 weeks – go me! I certainly feel I deserve a Flylady gold star for that πŸ˜‰

Some weeks the menu pan is easier to put together than others. And we don’t always end up eating what I planned. But one thing is sure, it makes for stress-free living. And that’s what we all want. Isn’t it?

THURSDAY

  • I’m driving the kids back and forth to the local Kids Cinema Club today, so it’s the old standby: pasta med kΓΈdsovs, pasta with meatsauce, spaghetti bolognese. I set the dinnertable this morning and the bolognese sauce (I made a double portion last time we had it and stashed it in the freezer) is defrosting. So we’re ready to rock’n’roll as soon as we get through the door.

FRIDAY

  • I didn’t make Silvana Franco’s Sticky Pork Chops in the crockpot last week, so we’re having them tonight. Rice, spelt or pearl barley cooked in my ricecooker to go with it.

SATURDAY

  • DH and I are out to an office dinner – hooray for posh dining! Making crockpot lasagne for kids and their babysitter. Ben and Jerry’s icecream for pud. Lucky sitter! πŸ˜‰

SUNDAY

  • The Dinner Diva, a.ka. Leanne Ely’s “Greek Turkey Burgers” and lots of salad. Another dish which didn’t make it to the table last week. Still chuckling at Leanne’s twinning of the two bosom buddy countries… πŸ™‚

MONDAY

  • Baked ham with creamy gratin dauphinois and peas.

TUESDAY

  • Scout night = always a quick and easy dish. Danish meatball and dumpling soup (from freezer section at supermarket). Just add fresh, chopped carrots and stock. And enjoy kids’ happy faces πŸ™‚ Homemade bread to go with it.

WEDNESDAY

  • Probably roast chicken. Always gets eaten up and it’s a nice, comforting smell to come home to. And baked potatoes and salad.

That’s all for this week folks. Happy ‘Little Friday’! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 25 February 2010

Here’s this weeks rundown of what’s coming over the counter at Kitchen Copenhagen! πŸ™‚

 

 

THURSDAY

  • The kids have made a special request…homemade pizza pepperoni! Lots of salad to go with it, bien sΓ»r… ;D

FRIDAY

  • My bestest friend and running buddy – the wonderful H – is having a girly birthday dinner so I am out to par-tay! Will be taking my bike as it’s going to be a long, well-oiled evening… (And, yes, my cactus tablets are ready and waiting in my makeup bag!) The kids are DH are fending for themselves.

SATURDAY

  • Lamb. Have put this on the menu several times in the last couple of weeks but plans have changed and it’s still in the freezer. Time to get it out and get it roasted! Serving with it’s usual partners-in-crime gratin dauphinois and tomato salad. Dessert? Don’t know yet!

SUNDAY

  • I’m out, again, yay! This time for a girly birthday brunch – my other good friend and running buddy, the lovely V! πŸ™‚ For tonight’s family dinner I’ll use up any leftover lamb with some pasta. If there isn’t enough lamb, I’ve always got bacon. Will probably do a pudding tonight – thinking of a steamed pud with custard.

MONDAY

  • Trying out a new recipe from Silvana Franco’s book “The Hi Lo Cookbook” She’s a great family cook, you can find some recipes from that book online here. I’m doing her Sticky Pork Chops. Going to make them in the crock. Chinese noodles along with it.

TUESDAY

  • Family fave…’Hurdy Gurdy’ Swedish Sausage Stew (my recipe is here) and bulghur or spelt (made in my ricecooker) with it. Can make it with my eyes closed and when I open my eyes it has disappeared! πŸ˜‰

WEDNESDAY

  • Leanne from http://www.savingdinner.com/ sent out a recipe as part of the Flylady‘s Winter Olympics shindig for Low Carb Greek Turkey burgers. Now I come to type the name, it’s kind of funny putting Greece and Turkey together in the same sentence (if you live in Europe, you’ll understand!). I’ve got some minced chicken in the freezer, so going to give them a whizz πŸ™‚

That’s all folks. Hope you have a wonderful ‘Little Friday’!

Menu Planning Thursday – 18 February 2010

My Scottish brother and niece are leaving tomorrow morning and then we’ll be back to just the four of us. Meanwhile, the snow continues…


THURSDAY
Chicken Parmesan (made with panko breadcrumbs) with tagliatelle. Spinach salad on the side. Hot dinner rolls. Didn’t have the chance to make pancakes on Shrove Tuesday (we were in Sweden), so we’re making a big batch tonight πŸ™‚

FRIDAY
Beef tacos and veggie sticks.

SATURDAY
Lamb steaks. Easy, tasty comfort food and DH’s fave meat. Gratin dauphinois on the side and steamed broccoli/cauliflower.

SUNDAY
Impossible Cheeseburger Pie. I’ve seen this mentioned on several recipe websites and it seems to be a fairly well-known American dish. Let’s see what the family make of it! πŸ˜‰

MONDAY
I do a NEWO run on Mondays and then my WHB (weekly clean), so I l-o-v-e having something easy planned for dinner. Using my crockpot today to do pork chops in sauce and will serve with brown rice done in my ricecooker.

TUESDAY
No need to cook today as the kids and I are at the Scout annual meeting where we’ll be fed and watered πŸ™‚


WEDNESDAY
Hump day. Roast chicken legs, couscous with apricots, pinenuts and raisins. Have some salad to use up too because it’s Wednesday and ‘clean out the fridge’ day…

That’s the menu done for yet another week, hooray! Have a thoroughly thrilling Thursday! πŸ™‚

– Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Menu planning Thursday – 11 February 2010

My (vegetarian) Scottish niece is coming to stay tomorrow for the winter week – hooray! πŸ™‚ And my brother will join us on Monday. So this week’s menu is basically family favourites but vegetarian-friendly…

THURSDAY

  • Whole chicken done in the crockpot. Serving with broccoli and chinese-style noodles (ketjap manis, cashews, spring onion).

FRIDAY

  • My niece is flying in. Vegetarian crockpot lasagne. Making it with quorn mince instead of beef πŸ˜‰ Salad. And strawberry/marcipan/chocolate cake from http://www.lagkagehuset.dk/ for dessert! πŸ™‚

SATURDAY

  • Good friends coming for dinner. Not quite sure what we’re having as a starter yet. But I’ll be making my easy-peasy cold-risen bread. For main course, duck confit and chicken confit (all the way from La France), Twinkies salad (raw florets of broccoli and cauli, baby toms, olives, Italian dressing), carrot/cashew salad, green salad and gratin dauphinois. And lots of mustard! My niece will have falafel instead of the meat. Dessert will probably be choco coco dessert and some homemade Danish fastelavns boller (carnival buns) – made and decorated by the kids πŸ™‚

SUNDAY

  • Veggie ‘spelt’ burgers (something we eat here anyway). They go straight from the freezer to the oven to the plate. Or burger bun πŸ˜‰ Will serve on wholemeal rolls with tortilla chips on the side, lots of veggie batons/cherry toms and various dips.

MONDAY

  • Brother is flying in today. Roast beef, bΓ©arnaise sauce, rΓΆsti potatoes, spinach/feta cheese salad.  My niece will have a veggie cutlet. And I’ve bought these specially for my bruvver…cos he loves ’em πŸ˜‰

TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY

  • We’re off for a quick trip to Sweden (staying the night in a nice hotel) but DH will be staying at home, minding the fort, and getting his own dinner. But don’t worry, I’ll leave food for him in the fridge ;

That’s all folks – have a thoroughly thrilling Thursday! πŸ™‚

Foodie Friday – Going Imperial

My Friday posts are normally about things that I love, love, love. Though I suppose you could argue that the rest of the days on this blog are like that too! πŸ˜‰ Anyway, today is no exception. Though this post is actually a rehash of previous posts…

My sweetie tweetie twister friends Nikki (@NikkiStarr of Flylady family fame) and Teri (@TeriLinWA of Flylady fanclub fame) asked for the imperial measurements for two of my recipes. Because, as you all know, Americans don’t do metric, do they? As Eddie Izzard says, “Goddamn Commie metric system!” πŸ˜‰

Well, come on down, girls, here they are in full imperial glory!

* * * * * * * *

The first is for COLD RISEN BREAD

For metric measurements, see my old post which is here.

This is a wonderful bread recipe. No kneading involved (I’m such a lazybones aren’t I?) and it makes a wonderful spongy bread which is very similar to foccacia. Lookie here, here’s a bit I managed to save from Monday!

You’ll need:

  • a small packet or 2 1/4 teaspoons of active dry instant yeast (or one cube of fresh if you insist on using it – just remember to ‘dissolve’ it first in some of the water)
  • 2lb flour (white for ciabatta style, or mix wholemeal in for healthier)
  • 2 teaspoons salt (I love Maldon Seasalt)
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 32 fl oz or 4 cups or 2 pints cold water
  • a little bit of oil (olive if you have it)
  • dried herbs, salt and pepper (optional)

Mix the yeast, salt, sugar and the flour (keep back a cupful) in a large bowl. Pour in the water and mix well – I use a handmixer but you can use a wooden spoon if you need the upper arm exercise πŸ˜‰ Just mix until it is coming away from the sides of the bowl but is still gooey and’dusty’. Add a bit more of the flour if you need to. Do not knead!

Sprinkle on the rest of the flour, cover with plastic wrap and leave on the kitchen counter for about 4 hours. It will double in size. You can also put it in the fridge and leave it there for 12 hours or overnight. If you’re going to do the overnight thing, I’d use just half the amount of yeast because it will rise and fall again before you bake it.

Preheat the oven to 425f. Tip the dough (which will still be bubbly and wobbly) into a LARGE baking tray. Mine is from Ikea and is 15″x 12″ or 38cmx30cm. I put baking paper in the bottom of mine, for easier lift-out and clean-up.

Now, if you want to make it look (and taste) really good, mix some dried herbs and salt and pepper in a little bowl. I sometimes get out my pestle and mortar and crush together: dried rosemary, chili flakes, garlic seasoning, lemon pepper and Maldon Seasalt. Use your fingers to make indentations (holes!!) all over the dough and drizzle over a couple of tablespoons of olive oil. Then shake your herb mix over. ‘More’ is definitely very good in this context πŸ˜‰

Bake for about 30 minutes (keep an eye on it, first time you make it) until it is golden brown.

Remove from oven and sprinkle more of that lovely Maldon Seasalt on. It will keep really well in a plastic bag or box for a couple of days.

* * * * * * * * * * *

Next up, we’re making FORLOREN HARE (DANISH MEAT LOAF)

Metric measurements and original post are here.

 

I never ate meatloaf until I came to Denmark in 1998 – it’s not something that we ever ate in our family in Scotland. But I can’t get enough of it now – especially the sauce I drown it in πŸ˜‰

You’ll need:

  • 1 onion, 1 carrot and 1 clove of garlic (see below)
  • 1lb minced pork/veal/beef, any combination you like. The traditional Danish combo is Β½ veal + Β½ pork and it comes ready mixed in the supermarket.
  • Β½ cup breadcrumbs (also from a packet)
  • salt and lots and lots of pepper!
  • 1 egg
  • Β½ cup cream or milk

And for cooking it:

  • packet of bacon (long strips)
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup hot water
  • stock cube

And for the (heavenly) gravy, ‘brown sauce’ or brunsovs:

  • Β½ to 1 cup cream or milk
  • 1-2 tablespoons of Maizena (sauce thickener)
  • 1 tablespoon redcurrant jelly (you want a bit of sweetness)
  • salt and pepper (duh!)
  • gravy browning if you use it

Put a roughly chopped onion, carrot and the clove of garlic in your mixer and reduce to a pulp. I put in the onion and garlic for flavour. The carrot isn’t essential, it’s just for extra, hidden, veggies and because I always have a house full of them πŸ™‚

Add the meat, breadcrumbs, seasoning, egg, milk or cream and run the mixer until the whole thing starts to come together and starts going round the blades like a motorbike in one of those Wall of Death things πŸ˜‰

Put the mixture into a large oven dish and pat it down a bit, so it looks like a big, fat, long sausage. Cover the whole thing with strips of bacon, working from left to right or top to bottom. It’s your call! My ones look like this…

Put into a hot oven, 425f for 15 minutes until the bacon starts sizzling. Then turn down the oven temperature to 400f and pour the milk/stock mixture around the meatloaf. Continue cooking for about 45 minutes. Check in the middle that it is hot and cooked all the way through – will depend how ‘fat’ your meatloaf is.

Pour the milk/stock mixture through a strainer (if you can be bothered…) and put into a saucepan with the rest of the ingredients and bring to the boil. Adjust with more cream if necessary πŸ˜‰

For a really traditional Danish meal, serve with boiled potatoes, peas or hot red cabbage, pickled cucumber slices, asier (a strange pickled ‘white’ cucumber) and loooooots of sauce.

And as they say here – velbekomme! πŸ™‚

This meatloaf freezes well. Freeze uncooked. Wrap in foil and put in plastic bag. Defrost in fridge the night before you want to use it. Cook as directed. Then enjoy!

 

* * * * * * * * * * *

Bon appΓ©tit and have a fabulous Foodie Friday! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 4 Februay 2010

I swapped around last week’s menu a bit – we had an impromptu visit by my sister and brother-in-law – but it all went well and, as I had plenty of food in the larder, we ate like kings! πŸ˜‰

Here’s this week’s menu. We had a snow storm on Sunday and Tuesday – with no thaw in sight – so we’re still very much on ‘comfort’ food πŸ™‚

THURSDAY

  • Easy peasy one tonight as I’m driving the kids and their friends to and from the children’s movie club. Spaghetti bolognese / pasta with meatsauce / pasta med kΓΈdsovs  Don’t care what you call it, always hits the spot! I always buy wholemeal pasta.

FRIDAY

  • Oven-roasted lamb. Serving with Hasselbach potatoes (see my post One Potato, Two Potato, Three Potato, Four post for the recipe) and a spinach/feta/sundried tomato salad. No dessert tonight because the kids get their once-weekly ration of sweets.

SATURDAY

  • DBIL (dear brother-in-law) is watching the kids. DH and I are going to a ‘parents only party’ with DS10’s class. Which starts at 7pm and finishes normally at around 4am… Food and drink are provided so no cooking for me today – just need to make sure I have plenty of Cactus tablets on hand ;D

SUNDAY

  • Roast chicken legs. Will serve with chinese style noodles (will add chopped spring onions, soy sauce or ‘ketjap manis’, chopped cashew nuts) and ‘snack seaweed’.

MONDAY

  • Hearty beef goulash (will just dump it all in the crockpot) with mashed potatoes. And dumplings, just for ME! Because I’m worth it… πŸ˜‰

TUESDAY

  • Scout night for the kids (who go at different times). So, at the risk of repeating myself…spelt burgers (from freezer to oven to plate) on wholemeal buns with homemade ‘healthy’ fat chips on the side and lots of veggie sticks and Goma dressing for dipping.

WEDNESDAY

  • The jury is still out on this one. Going to have a look through my cookery books and favourite online sites (for example http://ourbestbites.com/) and try something new.

Bon appΓ©tit and happy (thank goodness it’s almost Friday) Thursday! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 28 January 2010 – Recipe for ‘healthy’ fat chips

Had a lovely run with my friends V and H this morning. We got about 6 inches of snow yesterday (yes, yes, lots of exercise from all the shovelling) and at 9am this morning the park looked just like a Christmas card…

Weather is still chilly and there’s more snow forecast the next few days. Though we might get temperatures above freezing today – woo hoo! So don’t be surprised if this week’s menu still has an air of comfort food about it πŸ˜‰

THURSDAY

  • Fish n’ chips n’ peas! Traditional British food πŸ˜‰ Homemade fish ‘fingers’ made from fresh cod (delivered by our online grocery people last night). If you want to know how we make ours, you can see the ‘recipe’ on an earlier blogpost. We’ll be having the fish with ‘healthy’ fat chips – hello to my twisters Pippa and Emma, many thanks for the inspiration! The homemade fish fingers and homemade chips can be cooked in the oven at the same time πŸ™‚
  • Here’s how to make the ‘healthy’ chips. Slice potatoes into fat chips, you can leave them to soak in water for about 30 minutes if you like. Boil them for 5 minutes (until they’re just about to go soft), pour off the water and let the chips dry until it’s dinnertime. Pour over about one tablespoon of olive oil, making sure they’re all nicely coated. Bake in a hot oven until they’re golden brown and crunchy – will take about 20 minutes. Sprinkle with sea salt. They’ll be soft and fluffy on the inside and crispy on the outside. Yum! πŸ™‚

FRIDAY

  • Chicken breast roasted in the oven and served in tortillas with lots of fresh chopped veggies. Kids are mad about tortillas and it’s great, easy food for Friday night.

SATURDAY

  • Steak salad. Big juicy steaks, rolled in black pepper, flashfried and finely sliced. On a bed of rucola salad, fried shallots, cherry tomato and feta (or maybe goat’s) cheese, balsamic dressing. Will be making a dessert – will post recipe on Saturday.

SUNDAY

  • Wholemeal pasta with garlic, bacon, courgette and any leftover chicken from Friday’s dinner. Raw spinach on the side.

MONDAY

  • Forloren Hare (Danish meatloaf, ‘mock hare’) with lots of lovely sauce, beetroot, baby potatoes and green beans. You can see my recipe here. I made up a batch of them in December and froze them (uncooked), today I’m using the last one.

TUESDAY

  • Scout night for the kids. Grilled sandwiches. Ricepudding made in the ricecooker (use the 1 hour cycle).

WEDNESDAY

  • Back after a long absence, our old family favourite…’Hurdy Gurdy’ Swedish Sausage Stew. My recipe is here. Serving with bulgur or pearl barley (made in the ricecooker). The finished dish looks like this…

Bon appΓ©tit and have a lovely ‘little Friday’! πŸ˜‰

London Calling – part two

Did you enjoy your icecream? πŸ˜‰ Well, the curtain is about to go up and we’re on to the Second Act of our London trip…

The kids had heard all about Hamley’s Toy Shop in Regent Street from a schoolfriend. We went there on Saturday afternoon and, incredibly, it wasn’t too busy. I have to say I was slightly disappointed as I thought it was going to be more ‘fairy tale’ like, more like F.A.O. Schwarz in New York). It’s not a cosy place. Just a huge shop on 5 or 6 floors with stark lighting and decor. And shelves and shelves of toys.

The kids, as you can imagine, were impressed nonetheless πŸ˜‰ DD7 stopped after the first floor and declared she already knew what she would like to buy (a Hello Kitty Build-a-Bear) and didn’t need to look any further. Manage to persuade her to take a peek at the other floors and of course, she changed her mind several times from a painting set, to magic pens to cuddly dogs…not all of them pocket-size.

She finally decided (very wisely, I must add) on a special sticker set. And DS10 got some Club Penguin cards which he had been reading about on the net (they haven’t made it over to Denmark just yet).

To our surprise the weather in London was mild – no snow to be seen – so it was nice to be able to walk around without hats, scarves and gloves as we’ve been doing back in Copenhagen for the past three months. But it rained quite a lot on Monday morning so we decided to ditch visiting the Tower of London and head indoors to the Natural History Museum. This was a real eye-opener and, in contrast to Hamleys Toy Shop, I wasn’t disappointed but highly impressed. We entered from Cromwell Street and came into a very modern part of the museum, complete with shining crystal globes.

And a huge escalator which took you up into the skies and on a journey to the centre of the earth – or so it seemed for our two little visitors πŸ™‚

We started off by looking at volcanos, earthquakes, solar system, birds etc and ended up in the museum’s current ‘star attraction’ – the Dinosaur exhibition, complete with a lifesize moving T-Rex.

The old part of the museum building looks exactly like the set from the film “Night at the Museum”. But this dinosaur sadly doesn’t chase bones… And unfortunately for Mum, there is no ‘Larry’ on duty πŸ˜‰

Older kids and adults will enjoy the Cocoon part of the museum. Here you can see ‘real’ researchers at work and there are plenty of interactive activities – what and how to pack for a field trip etc. And staff on hand to explain the equipment used when collecting specimens etc.

Had a great sandwich and caffelatte at the Deli CafΓ© (there are several places to eat) and the shops had a good range of gifts. Though I had to laugh when I saw that they were selling ‘make your own volcano’ kits. We made our own one for free a couple of weeks ago – see my Crafty Tuesday post – She’s gonna blow! But the shop did have some really nice jewellry so I splashed out (Β£4, circa $8) on a couple of gemstone rings! πŸ˜‰

Which reminds me that I need to go reapply my nailvarnish before I can wear them and post a pic…time to get moving.

Normal service will be resumed on the blog tomorrow, which means Menu Planning as it’s Thursday. Have a wonderful Wednesday! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 21 January 2010

We’ve had a busy week and our plans changed a lot (nothing new there…) so things from last week’s menu plan got moved around or substituted. Isn’t it great to have a fully-stocked pantry and freezer so you can still avoid the 4pm stress? πŸ˜‰ Here’s this week’s plan:

THURSDAY

  • Didn’t make Danish suppe (meatball and dumpling soup) on Tuesday, so doing it tonight. Will serve with bread from the breadmachine and then Eve’s Pudding for dessert. Recipe for the pudding is here. I’m using cooking apples from the apple trees in our back garden – go me for taking the time to store them in the autumn! πŸ˜‰

FRIDAY

  • Didn’t make chili yesterday (we had breaded chops, carrots and pearl barley risotto) so chili in the crock today. Rice from the ricecooker.

SATURDAY

  • Eating with friends – yeehaw! πŸ™‚

SUNDAY

  • Spelt burgers (frozen) that are baked in the oven, served on wholemeal rolls, lots of veggies and dip, tortilla chips on the side. Kiddies favourite πŸ˜‰

MONDAY

  • Chicken wrapped in puff pastry and baked. Serving with fresh spinach/rucola/tomato salad.

TUESDAY

  • Scout night has come round again… Pork fajitas, will serve with some Spanish rice.

WEDNESDAY

  • Using the crock again – beef paprika goulash. I’ve already fried up the beef strips (they’re in the freezer) will defrost the night before, then put in the crock along with paprika goulash mix in the morning. And mashed potatoes – yum!

Bon appΓ©tit and happy Thursday! πŸ™‚

Menu planning Thursday – 14 January 2010

Not going to beat around the bush…here it is! πŸ™‚

Thursday

  • We’ve five extra kids coming for dinner tonight. It’s DS10 turn to ‘host’ the school ‘dinner group’. We take four kids (two boys, two girls) from his class home with us and they play together and then eat with us. Their parents turn up around 6.30pm and stay for a cup of coffee or a glass of wine before they all go home. It’s a nice arrangement – allows the kids and grown ups to get to know each other better and, ultimately, helps keep bullying at bay πŸ™‚ If you want to read more about the social side of things at school, you can read a previous post on it here. Today we’ve also invited one of DD7’s friends to play and dine…the more the merrier! The kids will set the table and prepare the food themselves. Menu is chicken fajitas with lots of fresh salad/veggies, brownies and icecream for dessert.

Friday

  • Have invited friends for dinner. We’re going to watch”P3 Guld” show on Danish TV. It’s a music awards show and we’re hoping my sweetie friend Rasmus and his colleagues in Denmark’s finest rock band Magtens Korridorer are going to win! They’re nominated in two categories – best song and best live performance of the year. Cross your fingers and vote “P3 Guld Magtens” to #1212 πŸ˜‰ When we’re not holding our breath we’ll be eating smoked salmon, rucola and honey/dild mustard on my homemade foccacia bread. Then lamb steaks with twinkies salad and rΓΆsti potatoes and some kind of sauce. Before downing a yummy strawberry/marcipan cake from Lagkagehuset bakery (and, no doubt, squirty cream for extra effect).

Saturday

  • Will be waking DH with flags and a song today…it’s his 43rd birthday – woo hoo! πŸ˜‰ Going out for lunch or dinner. Not sure yet. Will see how the land lies…

Sunday

  • Haven’t made Blender Quiche in a while, so will do that with any leftover meat and veggies we have. I found the recipe on http://www.recipezaar.com/ (one of my favourite food sites) and you can see the (easy peasy) recipe here.

Monday

  • Lasagne made in the crockpot. Love to use my crockpot on Mondays – because I always feel so tired by the afternoon! πŸ™‚ Eternally grateful to Krista at http://www.typical-ramblings.blogspot.com/ for having opened my eyes to the wonders of lasagne in a crock!

Tuesday

  • Scout night for both DD7 and DS10, they come and go at different times. So always something easy. Today it’s Danish suppe (meatball and dumpling soup). From a bag in the freezer. I just add chicken stock and carrots. And homemade bread from the breadmachine.

Wednesday

  • Didn’t make crockpot chili or breaded chops as planned last week (our plans changed – as they often do…) so think I will do the chili today. The minced beef is already browned and in a bag in the freezer. I just have to put it into the crock with the other ingredients. Simple!

Bon appΓ©tit and happy planning! πŸ™‚