I've been mostly a lurker 'round these parts recently, but count me in for this! My husband was recently laid off and my company was just bought (eeek! who knows...I might last 'til Easter, we'll see) - we're doing o.k. but every responsible action, no matter how seemingly small, helps. Right? We just took delivery of a quarter cow and have 100 lbs. of local pork coming, plus a good amount of canned fruit and veg from the summer. We should be in good shape if we're careful and responsible.
Tonight's dinner is meatloaf, confetti couscous, baked cauliflower. If I'm feeling inspired after this afternoon's swim lesson I might also make cornbread (the leftovers of which can be tomorrow's breakfast). Tonight after the kids go to bed I'm planning on making a cheese pizza to go into tomorrow's lunchboxes.
Another "use it up" idea I'm mulling is making some tortillas. I love having tortillas around, but don't at the moment. I could run to grab some - they're pretty cheap - but I've actually got the ingredients on hand. Can't be too hard, right? People have been making them at home for generations so I figure I ought to be able to figure it out.
I recently splurged on the new "Make it Fast, Cook it Slow" cookbook written by Stephanie O'Dea (of the 365Crockpot blog). It is hands down the single best slowcooker cookbook I've seen. I prefer to use foods as non-processed and/or as natural/whole as possible (avoiding, say, cream 'o whatever soups, commercial bbq sauce and the like) so "Fix it and Forget it" wasn't as helpful as I'd hoped. Ms. O'Dea's family has some dietary requirements that influenced her recipes so that they nearly all call for minimally processed ingredients. I've made several things from both the book and the website and found them all excellent.