Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Tag: recipe

    • Fingertip of the Day

      Posted at 4:32 pm by kayewer, on November 29, 2025

      I started a new Thanksgiving tradition last year just for fun. When I saw a recipe in the local paper to make limoncello, I thought it would be a perfect distraction project. Since I don’t drink alcohol but maybe once a year (and this is about that time for once), and I had none of the ingredients or tools, I was all in.

      Try new things, they say. It will be fun, they say. And at least it’s not cave exploring or snow skiing.

      Last early November, I popped into the local food market and Target to buy the things I would need for the first part of the preparation. I bought organic lemons, my container and jars, then went to the liquor store (all in the same strip mall) for vodka. The general opinion of my inner circle is that Tito’s is the drink of choice, so I got a big bottle and, on Thanksgiving Day, I set to work.

      First, the lemons needed to be peeled to incorporate the yellow outsides with the vodka for the flavor infusion. My vegetable peeler didn’t quite meet the task, though it had peeled potatoes under my mother’s skills for decades, so I ended up using a grater. Once the peels (more like grains) of lemon and booze were in a container, I got to watch them for three weeks while they mingled and produced a yellow concoction not unlike Mountain Dew(R).

      Once the infusion part was done, I needed to incorporate simple syrup to taste. My problem was that I had no taste by which to judge what I was making, never having actually consumed limoncello. When unsure, go with your gut, I always say. A few additions of sweet water and tasting later, I had a half dozen jars of liquid joy. They went over a treat.

      This year, I had a new vegetable peeler for the task, but forgot about getting organic lemons to make the prep faster. I had bought non-organic seedless lemons, and needed to wash them in hot water to remove the wax coating. It wasn’t a bad chore, and I enjoyed watching the plumes of wax drifting in the sink water’s eddies while I worked. It added a few minutes to the prep, but we were on schedule, and the turkey would be going into the oven at the appointed hour.

      When it came time to peel, my new device started out going through those lemon rinds like a knife through butter.

      Until that butter was my fingertip in the way.

      A moment of stinging pain, and suddenly my index finger was a leak in the dam, dripping happily like it was auditioning for a slasher movie. Direct pressure stung like heck and did nothing. I had to abandon the project for a bit and sit down with my arm above my head to slow the pulsing flow of my dark red DNA infused lifeforce from exiting my body like those movie patrons fleeing The Blob.

      After seriously considering a visit to urgent care for what amounted to a pinprick wound–what a way to spend Thanksgiving–the deluge subsided, and I was able to securely bandage the spot with waterproof tape and bandages and get safely back to the project, minus one vital finger.

      As I’m typing, the finger isn’t tender, nor has the skin color altered in any alarming way, but I do have one heck of a bandage job on there to help me when I had to work yesterday (no Black Friday off for me), and so far I’ve been able to do everything in spite of the inconvenience of that thick layer of first aid.

      The limoncello is percolating at room temperature in the kitchen, soon to become my second annual homemade gift of intoxicating wonder.

      And I can honestly say I put blood* into it, if not sweat and tears.

      *(Due to my annoyingly calm nature, I was able to avoid spilling bodily fluids anywhere near the food, and I aimed my flowing finger immediately at the kitchen sink.)

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged baking, food, recipe, recipes, travel
    • That’s Salad a Salad

      Posted at 3:05 pm by kayewer, on October 18, 2025

      Food shopping for one can be complicated. Heck, shopping for certain numbers of diners can be complicated. A family of five can have two hotdogs apiece, but does a single person want to have one hotdog a day? Or two hotdogs a day and one spare? And what about those rolls?

      Occasionally I purchase single serve heat and eat meals for myself, prepared by the store, and they work a treat. The advantages include portion control and a balanced serving of everything you need nutritionally. The downside is the cost, which can often be more than either frozen dinners or what you would pay buying larger quantities of all the fresh ingredients and breaking them down into daily meals.

      For example, a multi-pack of chicken breasts can cost a few dollars a day when you sort them into one per freezer bag and break them out when you need them. Even if you have an entire can or more than the serving size of frozen vegetables, you’re still ahead money-wise and are eating healthier by having seconds on the veggies rather than the protein.

      So for around $11-$13 each, I can have a nutritious dinner instead of drive-thru fat and sodium.

      This past weekend I found a new selection of salads at my local grocer for $9.99 each. They were presented right next to those prepared dinners I usually purchase, and so I bought one of each and tried them over three days, just to see what effect eating more Mediterranean would do for me.

      The results were promising.

      I discovered some new taste sensations, including kimchi, which I mentioned last week in my Korean lunch post. One of the salads included the zingy cabbage, harissa, farro and couscous. Another had thin-sliced beef, and the third included salmon. The dressings were tasty, the proteins flavorful, and the greens fresh and crunchy. What remained was to see the aftereffects, if any, and whether I would still feel hungry after going so light on my meals.

      The first positive thing I noticed was sleep. I went through more stages of sleep and even had dreams, which have eluded me lately. I was able to go back to sleep more easily, too. There were no digestive issues, and I wasn’t craving a bag of chips, nor did I supplement the dinner with dessert.

      This is something worth investing some time in, and I think I will spend a few weeks exploring this idea to see where it leads me. I may lose weight or gain energy. Maybe not, but trying something new opens doors and allows the spirit to get out of the mundane state of apathy. That’s something we could all use.

      This week I plan to get a few more salads and mix them in with my regular and prepared dishes. The cost per meal may go up slightly, but the advantages to my overall wellbeing may be worth it.

      Don’t tell my friends at the drive-thru.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged dinner, food, health, prepared-meals, recipe, recipes, salads
    • Korean Chow

      Posted at 3:22 pm by kayewer, on October 11, 2025

      Sometimes my social media feed presents interesting content which I didn’t ask for. Recently I began getting videos of what Korean office workers eat for lunch.

      I haven’t had a lunch in a workplace cafeteria since March 2020 when our building shut down and we began working from home. Our cafeteria was accommodating and offered great choices, and I have the late middle aged girth to prove it. Our staff would conduct barbeques outside the cafeteria for special occasions and grill chicken, burgers and hotdogs, while inside we would have actual dinner fare for lunch. This probably stemmed from the amount of time most people would be stuck in traffic going home in the evenings, to prevent them having dinner at 8:00 at night.

      Apparently Korean office staff are fed by their company at no or little expense to the employees. That’s a plus. The lunch privilege is often part of hiring contracts and something they are proud of, especially when costs are making it harder to meet such expenses.

      The videos I have seen show somebody picking up a multi-compartment tray of nearly a dozen indented shapes and approaching a rice cooker filled with the day’s selection, often multi-grain or even purple rice which one self serves with a paddle resting nearby in a bowl of water. Next often comes kimchi (fermented cabbage and/or radish) or a variant. Next would come bulgogi, which is marinated meat thin-sliced and cooked on the grill or stir-fried. Vegetables are plentiful and may include a variety of leaves, shoots or salad greens; in fact, I have yet to see a clip without a healthy green salad accompanied by a ladle of pastel dressing of some kind.

      Proteins can be squid rings, fish cakes, chicken or even pork. They all looked beautifully presented and came in fork-sized servings, though the only tools the person in the video used were a long-handled metal spoon and chopsticks. Everything is apparently washed, and with the exception of drinks, there is little to no paper waste.

      One food item that piqued my curiosity was acorn jelly or dotorimuk, which is as you would expect from a savory gelatin; acorn starch is dissolved in water, with salt added, solidified and served in blocks with an optional dipping sauce. It’s supposed to have a simple, nutty flavor.

      Another popular selection is stew or jjigae (gee-gay), cold soups, and spicy broths with the option to add ramen style noodles and heat over an individual hot plate. The tray filled up with what we might consider an extended flight of samplers but actually serve as a way to eat a little of everything and receive the nutritional values of each without going overboard.

      The beverages were often small (think five ounce sized) and consisted of teas infused with peach or another fruit. No ice. Not a lot to eat or drink, but apparently just enough for lunch.

      The obesity rate in South Korea is at a third of the population, especially for men and older adults, which seems odd considering the healthy fare I saw in the videos. There was nothing I would not be willing to try were I to find myself in a Seoul office building at lunchtime. Even an anchovy dish looked worthwhile.

      The selection of lunch line videos has been inviting, especially when the OP has submitted so many of them that I won’t see a duplicate for some time. And when I am not drooling over kimchi, I can watch a rug cleaner, a sheep shearer, or a cow farrier relieving a bovine of nails in their hooves. Or watch more Universal visitors get insulted by Megatron.

      What do they think of me in that social media algorithm mindset? I may never know. But keep feeding me.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged food, health, korean-lunch, recipe, travel
    • Fulfilling Month

      Posted at 3:32 pm by kayewer, on August 2, 2025

      Of all the months in the year, August seems to be the one with the most mixed messages to offer in the course of its 31 days. There are no official federal holidays in August in the US, which means no possible three-day weekends or breaks in the workweek. It’s the last month in the period measuring two thirds through the calendar year. It’s named for the emperor Augustus, who conquered Egypt during this time period, formerly known as Sextilis (the sixth month in the Roman calendar, until Julius Caesar invented the Julian calendar and mixed things up in 46 BC); the new name was bestowed in 8 BC.

      Schools begin preparations for the year, with colleges intaking freshmen and others starting early for the upcoming elementary and high school students. This means that some vacations end before Labor Day. However, no vacation is complete without celebratory foods, and August has quite a list of them, including Family Meals Month. Dippin’ Dots are an interesting item on the monthly roster, which includes catfish, goat cheese, peaches, panini and sandwiches. And yes, the two are recognized separately, even though one is a form of the other.

      Remember, I said it’s a mixed message month. And the food keeps coming.

      Today, the first Saturday in August, is Mead Day, when folks should consider brews of all kinds. Tomorrow, the first Sunday, is Friendship Day. This means you should be careful not to be hung over and grumpy after overindulging on Mead Day. If, by some misfortune, you do something while grumpy from too much libation, it’s also International Forgiveness Day, which gives you the chance to nab the person you’ve wronged on the way out of Sunday services. If it doesn’t work out, find a new friend, perhaps.

      The first Tuesday in the US is National Night Out, when people are supposed to spend some time post-sundown sitting outside and being visible to one’s neighbors. Unfortunately homebuilding has not included front porches in new construction, unless you’re in the South where it’s expected or even somewhat understood to be mandatory. Don’t forget bug spray.

      Then, if you missed out on Mead Day, the first Friday is an excuse to make up for it, on International Beer Day. Just be careful not to freak out if you see somebody in greasepaint and a colorful costume, because the first seven days in August include the observance of International Clown Week. Seems appropriate more than a mixed message, though, considering the behaviors of some folks when they’ve had a sip too much recently.

      August 13 and 14 celebrate filet mignon and Creamsicles, respectively. August 15 celebrates Lemon Meringue Pie Day, followed by days devoted to rum (16) and vanilla custard (17), potatoes (19), peaches (which get their own day and month) along with pecan tortes for some reason, on the same day (22). If you want to live a 600 lb. life, follow up with these lauded foods on their respective August dates: waffles (24), banana splits and whiskey sours (25), bananas by themselves along with a day for the baked custard pots de creme (27), cherry turnovers (28),chop suey (29), and trail mix (31).

      Save room for a sip of water afterward.

      August may be the best month to undertake a new habit (or break an old one), start or finish a project you’ve neglected all year, or simply prepare for the last four months to come barreling toward us before you know it. That’s what August really is; the clubhouse turn in the year’s race. Try to make the most of it.

      And have a banana split.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged august, family, food, life, recipe, travel
    • No Chef

      Posted at 4:07 pm by kayewer, on January 18, 2025

      I took a moment to look at the many pieces of paper posted on my kitchen cabinet doors. Some of the papers are mementos, or the magnets holding them there are; one says, “My friends live in Oklahoma, and they sent me this magnet.” Many of the papers being pinned to the metal surface are recipes.

      The collection started back in 2020, when I took the time that summer to attempt baking my own bread. The loaf didn’t look like anything artisanal, let alone artsy, but it was edible. Over the past five years, the number of papers has grown to include oatmeal raisin cookies, which is a favorite of a friend of mine. I also have some guidelines for banana bread, snickerdoodles, simple cakes and frostings.

      One day while going through a box of little paper slips my mother used to keep with the zeal of a typical Depression-born parent, I found a treasure in a shrimp and rice dish long thought to have been lost, and which I have since remade.

      When I follow a recipe, I make sure, first and most importantly, that it’s something I would like to prepare and eat. Next, if I have planned to prepare it, I want to have the ingredients as specified. I will hunt them down when I need to, but nearly all the recipes I keep and intend to make include what I can easily find at the Acme (or Ack-a-me, if you’re local) up the block, or one of at least three grocers within a short drive.

      However, not everybody follows such a sensible protocol.

      Occasionally I’ll see an article about people who should, perhaps, not seek out recipes online. These hilarious gems could be interpreted as evidence of our sociological decline or brain dysfunction, but one thing is certain: these social media posters have a lot to be grumpy about for no reason.

      Take, for example, the person who posted that a recipe she made for peanut butter cookies put her husband in the emergency room because he has a nut allergy. She must have read the ingredients, prepared them, then fed them to her spouse, all the while knowing he can’t eat nuts.

      Another face-palming post came from a person who, upon reading the recipe, decided to stand on a soapbox and pontificate about the presence of a few items containing sugar in the list of ingredients. She was shocked to find that people do, on occasion, prepare such things. Not her, oh no. And woe to the person who prepares this poison, as it’s sure to give one diabetes or a heart attack, and so the recipe should not appear in anything she might encounter while scrolling for recipes. Try Googling “sugar free recipes,” my friend.

      Next we have the person regretting that they missed the opportunity to fiddle with chemistry in school, who looks at a list of ingredients and decides to substitute other foods, such as limes for lemons, or sour cream for heavy cream. Sometimes the swaps aren’t really from the same family; a batch of cookies turning into a sheet of one big cookie can happen when the original poster (OP) used rice flour and egg replacer for the dough. Or substituting carrots for peaches (the final product “needed more sweetness,” the OP added). And I can top that: a carrot cake in which the–ahem–chef, substituted kale because carrots are “too sweet.” The complaint often comes with the phrase, “I followed the recipe exactly except,” which means one did not follow it exactly.

      How about the person who looked at “2/3 cup of sugar” and interpreted it as three entire cups of sugar. They should get together with the soapbox Karen and ban all sugar from the globe. Along with measuring devices.

      Or the meat-loving person who complained that a recipe didn’t contain any meat: the name of the dish and accompanying notes specified it was vegan.

      When looking at festive dishes from around the world, some people forget that a food for which a place is associated may not be in every dish. For example, a complaint about Mexican sour cream, or crema, because the preparer thought corn was involved in the recipe, even though it wasn’t mentioned anywhere in the instructions.

      A recipe is a plan of action, like any other. You can choose to do it or not, but when you commit, follow what the directions call for. Don’t skip. Don’t substitute. Don’t throw the recipe away or complain to the foodie website if you have not done so.

      I’m not sure if it’s the inability to read or follow instructions that throws these posters off-track, or if people really think they can take detours with carefully laid-out, tested and proven instructions and still achieve success. What I do know is that I have had success with every recipe I have followed, and nobody has had to go to the ER.

      My latest recipe was for limoncello, which involved three weeks of waiting for my prepared recipe to be completed. I didn’t wait one day shorter or substitute anything. In fact, the struggle to obtain the most important ingredient–the lemon zest–was the most challenging. I needed to get the yellow part off three pounds of lemons without including any pith, which would make the finished product taste a bit off. I made six festive jars for the holidays and handed them out to folks. So far nobody has given me a reason to give a one-star review.

      Will I do some of the other recipes on my cabinet? Perhaps. Will I do them properly? You can count on it.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged baking, cookies, dessert, recipe, recipes
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