Monday, January 26, 2026

T Stands for Cold, Snow and Food

    Hi everyone. Happy new week to you. And hello to everyone who stops by Bleubeard's and Elizabeth's      blog to T day. 

    Last week was another quiet week for me. It's been a relatively quiet month, even though I've  had some outings with friends, mostly I've been home. My husband is still improving from his back issues. Not as quickly as he wants to be improving, and he's had a few bad days, but he is driving again. He just doesn't have a lot of longevity yet without needing to rest his back or even more so, one of his legs. 

     Like so many other people, we also had some very cold weather and some snow last week too.  So far from this past weekend's storm we've gotten about a foot of new snow/ 30.5 cm, and it's still snowing as of this Monday night. The 2 photos in this post are not from this storm but from one we had earlier last week.  In this first photo you can see how we sheltered the bees this winter, and although I haven't yet checked them since this really bitter cold set in, last week I was still seeing signs of life in the hive.  👍


    And since I don't want the hubby to go backwards in his back recuperation,  I've been doing the shoveling and bringing up the 40 pound/18 kg packages of bio-bricks (compacted sawdust bricks) that we burn in the woodstove. By bringing up I mean carrying the bio-brick packages in from the garage, through the basement, up the stairs and then over to the woodstove. Who needs to join a gym when you can get a good workout right at home? 😈😉 For all I comment about doing these things to my husband, I am getting some muscle building exercise doing these extra chores. 


   You can also see the ice that is under the snow. Good thing there are grippers ,which if you don't know, are things you slide on your boots or shoes that have  metal pieces in the bottom that help you from slipping on the ice.


   Last week with the cold I spend some extra time in kitchen. Besides my regular food preparation I made a couple of loaves of anadama bread. Anadama bread is a traditional New England bread made with the addition of cornmeal and molasses. 

     I also cleaned out the fridge and made a big pot of soup. I'm calling it clean out the fridge soup because I added some leftover sausage and chicken, and a bag of green beans (from my garden this past summer) that were in the freezer. After I took this photo I also decided to add some green peas.


    I need a drink for T day, so here's my photo and the story that does with it.

    My husband had to go get some paperwork at his doctor's office so we went for a little drive one day.  On this drive we passed a sandwich shop we like to go to, and even though we didn't stop I got an over-powering urge for a tuna melt or tuna sandwich or something with tuna. Nothing else would satisfy me. Not far from our house there is a little market that makes sandwiches besides selling some items, and so my husband stopped. I went in to see if they had tuna on the sandwich board. (Yes, I know I could have made my own sandwich, but by this time I was actually starting to have a bit of the hangries  because it was  now mid-afternoon. )

    Anyhow, guess what? A tuna melt was their special sandwich of the day.  That made me very happy.


   The guy who waited on me was very chatty, and he mentioned he grew up in a town down at the coast that attended the high school where I taught. I asked him and yes, he did go to the school where I worked. He didn't have me (but I did recognize his brother's name), so while I waited we had a chance to talk about "the good old days" a bit. Well his good old days when he was a student, but still fun to chat.

   Lisca also asked for the sour-dough discard brownie recipe (that I showed you last week), so here it is: Sour Dough Discard Brownies

1 cup/170 grams chocolate chips
1 cup/ 227 grams of unsalted butter
1.5 cups/300 grams granulated sugar
1 cup/220 grams firmly packed brown sugar
1 cup /125 grams all purpose flour
3/4 cup/64 grams unsweetened cocoa
2 teaspoons/6 grams salt
5 large eggs (250 grams)
1 tablespoon (13 grams) vanilla extract
1 cup sourdough discard at room temperature
and then whatever you'd like to add to the brownies like nuts or chocolate chips

1. Preheat oven to 350 dgeres F/ 180 degrees C. Use a 13x9 rectangular baking pan (not sure what that is in metric) and grease it or line it with parchment.

2. Melt the chocolate chips and butter. Stir smooth, Remove from heat and whisk in the sugars.

3. In a clean bowl, mix the flour, cocoa and salt. Set aside for a few minutes.

4. Once the melted mixture is a bit cool, add the eggs. (You don't want to add them when its hot and cook them.) Add the vanilla and then fold in the flour mixture. Add in any additions like nuts of chocolate chips and then spread the batter in your prepared baking pan. 

5. Bake for approximately 38 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean. Let them cool completely in the pan before removing. 


    That's all for me today. I have plans to go on another snowy owl hunt later this week; fingers crossed it isn't too brutally cold and that my friend Deb and I see one. 🤞I hope everyone has a great T day and week ahead also.








19 comments:

  1. Poor husband.. get well soon. But the key issue might be if the dog copes well in the snow? Do his legs slip on the icy ground? How does he keep his body warm?

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  2. ...Erika, you seem to have all the bases covered at the moment. Be warm and well.

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  3. Anadama bread sounds good. Be careful with your heavy lifting-Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com

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  4. Oh, I haven't made Anadama bread in ages. I have grippers that have plastic thingies so you can wear them in the house. Prissy used to call that soup Garbage Soup. Yours made me smile. Take it easy shoveling out there.

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  5. Hearty comforting foods are the best for such freezing cold weather...imaging living in a freezer..(I think my freezer temperature is just -18C) brrrrrrr...

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  6. The spikes are great for the icy and snowy paths. Your food looks delicious, and the recipe you wrote about them looks amazing—yummy brownies!
    Get well soon, Erika!
    Have a good week! Hugs Elke

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  7. oooooh, that bread! Yes, please and thank you. Sending your hubby well wishes so that he's all the way better soon.

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  8. With you doing all this work your husband will be encouraged to feign injury for a while longer! You may have to start turning the pages on the book he’s reading! All the best - David

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  9. Good morning was not familiar with grippers-will look into those thanks Your bread looks delicious healing prayers for your husband hugs

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  10. I've been worried about your bees. I hope they make it. The difference between you and me is that you haul 40 pounds of bricks. I would take the bricks out of the bag and haul a few at a time. I'm salivating at the delicious sounding bread (is it hard?) and that soup and the funa melt looks pretty amazing too. I've never made one. I should! It sounds like you have it well under control! Well done!

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  11. Definitely soup weather! Glad hubby is improving and can get out a bit. Hope the improvement continues!

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  12. I remember those snow filled days, shoveling snow, chopping and carrying in wood for the stove. The same thing Mr. M. was out of commission with his back. I wish I had had a some grippers for my boots. Those are awesome. Nothing like homemade bread and soup. So nice to run into a someone that went to your school and that your remember his brother. A nice lunch and a diet coke. Stay warm over there.

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  13. All this food looks delicious. Stay warm and safe.

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  14. I am so sorry for your husband's back Erika and I hope he gets well soon! You have to do so much work around the house. I love the shoes with the grippers! Your food and bread look so delicious and cozy. Stay warm and thank you for sharing your lovely post with us. Very lovely and cozy. Have a wonderful rest of the week!

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  15. Good to know your husband’s back issues are improving. Good exercise for you as you say and who needs to go to a gym with all what you have to do. Pretty photos but for me I am always looking for the thaw. No one has been around as they usually do asking to shovel our driveway. The ice has made it nigh on impossible even for a much younger person. I bought two pairs of those grippers several years ago and just showed husband yours. I said I would love to know where ours are. He said probably in a box somewhere, which is our family joke. Anything we can’t find, it’s in a box somewhere and always followed with a roll of the eyes to the ceiling. We are in the mode of cleaning out those boxes but it’s a long-haul job. Your loaf and soup looks incredible and thank you for the recipe. I’m glad you found your tuna fish melt. How nice to be able to chat to about the high school. I hope you have luck on your snowy owl hunt today, keeping fingers crossed. Have a great week!

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  16. I hope that your husband continue to improve, Erika! I'm very familiar with grippers. 😂. Your clean-the-fridge soup looks a lot like mine. I bet yours was tasty. Stay warm. I hope that your bees survive!

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  17. Glad your husband's back is slowly getting better; hope you get your temporary 'workouts' while you can. (Or are you going to keep doing those chores even after your husband is back to normal and making it permanent?) Your bread looks really yummy. Keep warm and stay cozy. Anita xx

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  18. A tuna melt sounds great to me (and I just finished eating lunch!)

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  19. I've caught up but somehow landed on this post in the middle for commenting. Loved your Sunday art page, definitely looks like a museum. And hubby's goofy pic is great. I'm hungry for soup now, looks so good. And I believe I've tasted a similar bread, if so, it's yummy. Down here it's called Southern Brown Bread, made with flour, cornmeal and molasses. It looks identical. Oh and that tuna sammich looks good too. And I'm glad y'all got that new battery, they act wonky when they age. (IYKYK). And finally, if I remembered everything, I'm so impressed at your weightlifting skills! I hope hubby is getting used to his new normal, sounds like it. I think the hardest part at this stage is learning to accept you can't go back to what was "normal" before. I cannot adequately describe how hard that was for me. Memory is a very strong reflex. Hope y'all get some warm-up, stay warm! xoxo

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