In a good way!
I saw a picture of a dish like this and it looked so good...
And we've had cold, wet, windy and snowy weather here all last week, all but one day...
And I remembered that in the James Herriot books Siegfried's brother Tristan was elected to cook... and all he could cook was "sausage and mash" which is sausage and mashed potatoes.
And sometimes he got busy thinking about girls (he was in veterinary school) and burned the sausage so he'd scrape it off and chop it up and put it in the mashed potatoes like that.
His older brother WAS NOT AMUSED!!!
Gosh, I love those books. I still do. Each book like a beloved collection of Jim's short stories, dealing with the animals, an age where antibiotics were just being known, a time of learning old tricks and new treatments and always the people of Darrowby.
I have his books on my keeper shelf. I will have them there until they take me out in a box because his stories of being a country veterinarian just make me laugh, sigh, think and smile... and nod in agreement.
He thought he knew so much!
And as it so often turns out, school teaches us some and the rest is learned by putting our hand to the grindstone and turning.
So this recipe pic reminded me of Tristan and Siegfried and Jim in "All Creatures Great and Small"...
And it came out great, not burnt at all even though Zach and I took a ride to go visit Lake Ontario in the midst of a Nor'easter on Sunday.
Holy cow, that wind packed a wallop! But it was so fun to see the lake whipped into a frenzy like that.
Nothing like a Nor'easter heading inland off the Atlantic.
SAUSAGE AND POTATO BAKE
Oven to 350 degrees
13 x 9" pan lined with a big sheet of foil (easy cleanup!
Six or seven potatoes (more if they're small) scrubbed and cut into bite-sized pieces
4 Italian sausage links, cut into bite-sized pieces
1/2 green pepper chopped
1 can Whole Kernel corn, drained
Put cut up potatoes in bottom of the 13 x 9 dish. Zach offered to help and I wasn't about to say no!
Dot with cut up sausage
Sprinkle chopped peppers over it (can add sweet onion chopped, too!)
Sprinkle corn over all
Sprinkle whole casserole with salt and pepper. I like coarse pepper, it's got a nice punch but any will do. You can add garlic if you want... or Italian seasoning. Just sprinkle it over, but we liked it just fine with salt and pepper.
You could also add a small can of diced tomatoes, too. Kind of a succotash touch, right? I didn't think of that until later, so next time!
Cover with foil and bake for 90 minutes (we were gone for 2 hours looking at the water and driving along the lakeshore, so ours baked a long time and was absolutely fine!
Remove foil, dot with butter, let butter melt in oven for 5 minutes or so.
Done!
We loved this and it was just enough for four people.... No one went hungry!
So the saga of the early tomatoes continues... Did I tell you about the 255 baby tomato plants that came five weeks early? No... well they did, my fault, I didn't realize the supplier didn't ship for Zone 6... they just ship 8 weeks post-order placement. So surprise, surprise, baby tomatoes arrive in late March.
So what do normal people do?
They go and buy heavy grade greenhouse plastic and turn half of their porch into a greenhouse... and they raise baby tomatoes to become big tomatoes and now I'm praying that we can plant them in two weeks, because they're growing so well! Too well!!! I've lectured them and scolded, and I've reduced the temperature of the 'greenhouse" effect, so we'll see. I'll keep you posted! It's either they live... or they don't... and the world will not end either way. But how fun it would be to have garden tomatoes to sell in August! Party bonus!!!! And to be honest, my two rockers that sit on this section of the porch aren't about to be used while it's snowing and sleeting and raining... so this might work out in the end. We'll see!
Then there was this: you can't see it so well in this pic, but it was dark, dark sky with sun on the other side of the house.... so really dark to my west, house in shadow.... east side of the house was bright sunshine! This happens especially in spring and fall because I'm right on the sunline AM and PM... This is the marsh where the spring peepers live... and lots of little critters. And this is where the bear wintered over two years in a row until Dave accidentally uncovered her hollow beneath an old fallen tree. She hasn't been back since, but she literally had her hollow about 100 feet from our house. Obviously I'm not as scary as I claim to be!!!! You can see the shadow of the house on the reeds... because the other side of the house was in bright sunlight! So funny! And no leaves, do you see that? Our soil temp is cold and the leaves want it a certain way... so Mother Nature is having a bit of fun in WNY.
Then this is a miracle... Dave asked his helper Dan to CLEAN OUT THE TRUCK without me saying anything and he did it the day before I was taking the truck to surprise Dave with a new farm wagon for our fun fall displays AND a new sprayer with a 12 foot boom.... so that Dave doesn't kill himself spraying with a backpack sprayer.
Dan cleaned the cab (I'm not going to tell you how bad it was, I'm going to let you imagine and then multiply by ten. Or more.) and the back and washed it and swept out all the wood chips from the firewood business.... and so we had a clean truck to take to pick up the wagon and sprayer!
SURPRISE, DAVE!!!!
So that was my week... I finished a mystery, my second one for the Savannah Secrets collection, and it was so much fun to write! And now.... balancing farm season and writing season and Covid 19 has me mostly at home (except for daily walks for a few miles in town) and we did get a farm helping visit from Beth & Jon and kids. Kids stayed outside to play and you know those 255 baby tomatoes.
We had to transplant them to bigger pots.
Yep.
255.
And let me say, half of my porch isn't quite big enough for 255 tomato plants in 4" pots and ME....
Ay yi yi.
Two weeks and then nice weather. That's all I need!!!! I think that's worth a prayer or two, right?
Enjoy your weekend, fellow quarantined peoples! God bless you!
Hi Ruthy,
ReplyDeleteI understand about about the truck! My husband is in construction so you can imagine his truck.
I planted a garden this year behind his shop and am babysitting tomato plants in my great room. I made mini green houses with plastic wrap.
Trying to teach on-line is interesting too. I feel like my lessons are being sucked out into space. Sigh.
Oh, Jewell, it's so good to see you!!!! And I love it when people understand about the truck. It was just as awful as I made out, but the hugeness was that it wasn't me nagging "DAVE!!!! I HAVE TO TAKE THE TRUCK TOMORROW!!!!!"
DeleteHe didn't even know I was using it, he just knew that I was highly disapproving of my back-up vehicle being a horrible, smelly mess. So that was a bonus!!! :)
Congrats on your garden and those baby tomatoes!!!! I love your greenhouse effect. Awesome!
Ruthy, I love these posts when you skip around from subject to subject with hardly a breath in between...so much like you! It makes me smile at the big dose of Ruthy-ness. :-)
ReplyDeleteThe tomatoes! Oh, my! They're growing so fast! You must be doing something right! You need an early spring.
"All Creatures Great and Small" and the other books in the series are some of my favorites, too. I was never sure what to make of Tristan when I was a teen. I'm going to have to re-read the books with my adult perspective.
Yay for the sprayer!
Finally, the sausage and potatoes. That recipe looks like a keeper!
Stream of consciousness, right? In my head, out my mouth.
DeleteI need a filter.
And it's why I can sometimes sympathize with President Trump because I do the same thing... I throw out ideas willy nilly and when I settle on an action, it works, but the process isn't always pretty.
And yet effective in the end, so I kind of assess everything that way.
Praying for that early spring! We need a few dry days to till the area and lay the black fabric. Zach and Dan (our wonderful helper) and Christina (our other wonderful helper) will do that and put the big stakes in place.... then I'll help with planting and tying. I watched some guy who can literally lasso tomato plants with twine, up and down the line.
I cannot do that.
I am not coordinated.
I need to read these again, too. Now as an older adult, I think I'll enjoy Tristan's antics more. Or not. He was such a scatterbrain as a student, but Alf/Jim made it so much fun to read! And who knew that James Herriot was really Alf Wight????? Oh, I love those stories, Jan!!!!
Okay, before I get distracted and forget, what temp did you bake the sausage and potatoes at?
ReplyDeleteNow...Oh, my word, I've never seen so many tomato plants! And you're so resourceful, turning your porch into a greenhouse. Why not? I'm assuming you'll be selling the tomatoes. I bet they'll be gorgeous.
Back to the sausage, I bet I could do this with German sausage. We always have that on hand, because all of the little towns around here have meat markets and each makes their own sausage. Another reason I love rural living. And I know it would go great with the potatoes. I bet I could even add some cabbage. Okay, I think I might have dinner planned.
Mindy, my mistake brought the tomatoes seven weeks early, so they'll be big plants... and tied right up on the stakes.... and this is the second transplant for them, into 4" pots, so I'm hopeful but I've never transplanted such big plants to the field before. But nothing ventured, nothing gained!!!
DeleteOkay, I did the dish at 350 degrees, and I think you could do it with any sausage. We did something similar years ago with Kielbasa and it came out a little greasier than I wanted.... But I think any kind can be used.
Oh, cabbage would be good!!!!! Great idea!!!
I love this recipe! I will have to try it. Did you keep the sausage in the casings?
DeleteWe usually use smoked turkey sausage around here, but it would turn out yummy, too.
Love the tomato plants! I wonder now if you'll end up deciding to do a little greenhouse again next year? :)
I hope you get leaves soon!! It's totally green here, all trees finished blooming. Looks like the middle of the summer.