Guacamole…

If there was a graveyard for the avocados that I have let spoil before I was ready to eat them, it might rival those buried at Arlington Cemetery (people not fruit). One predicament is that if I need an avocado for today, all the avocados at Walmart are rock hard and won’t be ready for 3 or 4 days. Or, I’m trying to think ahead and I’m looking for an avocado that will be ready in 3 or 4 days… and all of those avocados at the grocery are already soft and will start to turn brown by tomorrow. Also, if I buy a medium sized avocado, I don’t need to eat it all, when half would do.

[NOTE 10/31/24]: I think it was a woman customer, behind me at Pate’s who mentioned that putting an avocado in a glass of water (completely covered) and putting it in the refrigerator would make it last longer, so I tried this. Unfortunately, I forgot about this avocado and it was probably two weeks before I pulled it out and attempted to cut into it. At first I thought it was frozen. It was hard and difficult to cut around the kernel, but I did and then left it to thaw before twisting it apart. But later, when it should have been thawed, it was still hard, but not cold. I did manage to pry it apart and to my surprise it was rock hard inside. It looked fairly good, if it had been soft, but it wasn’t soft. Not sure why it took on this extreme rigidity, but maybe just a few days would work to hinder the overripening. [end NOTE]

Finally I thought through this dilemma and decided that I would cut the ripe avocado in half and eat half now and make guacamole out of the other half. I could refrigerate the guacamole and it might last for another couple of days, so I might be able to skip a day between eating the whole fruit. *I try to cycle through the different types of food/meals I prepare. I don’t want to eat steak every day, or chicken every day, or steamed cabbage for every meal, so I try to change my entrees and sides. I’ll eat chicken in a stir fry today, and a pan fried pork chop for the other meal. I might steam asparagus, cabbage or cauliflower for one side and maybe fix a cucumber/onion salad in sweetened vinegar or stewed Roma tomatoes to go with whichever other side I’ve chosen. I may choose a hot side to go with a cold side. I like a microwaved Russet potato with butter & sour cream as a side and I might eat steamed asparagus with that choice. Cabbage slaw made with Dukes’ Mayo and some Half-n-Half might go well with a pork chop. I like a hamburger or maybe a large Sweet Italian Sausage patty that I might put on a ciabatta roll (or half of a roll).

I currently like a simple ciabatta roll sandwich, made with some Dukes Mayo, a couple of slices of Wegman’s White American cheese, a slice of Sweet (Vidalia) onion and some Hillshire Farms Pastrami. Carlie C’s IGA has a small bag of Wavy “store brand” Potato Chips that sells for about $1.48. This is not a family sized bag, nor a single serving bag. I can make 3 or 4 meals with this sized bag, and not eat the whole thing at one sitting. So I put some of these chips in a plastic sandwich bag, along with the slice of onion and maybe a few grape tomatoes. In another bag, I put a wedge of “Ranch Dill” pickle or olives, keeping the dry ingredients from the wet. For the Dukes Mayo, I put some in one of my small Rubbermaid containers that have an “Easy Find” lid. And, a few weeks ago I happened to see and buy a set of eating utensils that fit in a plastic carrying case (metal spoon, knife and fork). So this sandwich is what I fix sometimes when I drive up to Wegmans Grocery in either Raleigh or Morrisville. I actually buy the pastrami, cheese and the ciabatta roll at Wegman’s and make the sandwich in my car. I either eat in the parking lot, or find a nearby city park with some shade. *It is amazing how delicious this sandwich tastes. A bite of the pastrami sandwich, then a wavy potato chip, and maybe a tomato or a bite of the dill pickle. Oh, I also buy a cheap ICE flavored drink (costs about a dollar) and may have brought a half empty frozen drink container with ice that I can pour the drink into to cool it off.

Raw peanuts at Pate’s Farm Market in Fayetteville.

I like various nuts. I have eaten a lot of raw peanuts this summer. Pate’s Farm Market, across town, has a large pile of raw peanuts for sale. There is a scoop, but I use my hand to select my peanuts, and most times I eat a mess of them right after I get back to my car. I also like roasted pumpkin seeds and cashews. *Years ago the Fresh Market offered “Wasabi Soy Cashews” and I really liked the flavor, but then they discontinued that flavor of cashew for about nine years. A year or so ago, they brought the Wasabi Soy Cashews back, but once again they didn’t sell well. I had found that I could use the wasabi soy seasoning powder that sloughed off and put it on roasted pumpkin seeds. And the flavored pumpkin seeds became my favorite over the cashews. I finally found the wasabi soy seasoning powder at Amazon, and now buy a small package about once a month. I can season quite a few pumpkin seeds from (“Wasabi Soy Seasoning Sauce Powder – Kinjirushi Brand) this one package. They are addictively delicious.

About once a month or a month & a half, I buy a whole rotisserie chicken from Harris Teeter. It costs less than $8 for the whole cooked chicken. I can make four or five meals from this one chicken so it is very cost effective. Two breasts (maybe 4 oz. of white meat each), and two drumsticks with some white meat (3 oz. each), and then pick off the remaining meat to make chicken salad. Cabbage slaw and some baked beans would go well with the chicken.

I like various seasoned beans like black eyed peas, large white lima beans, or green split peas, and I am partial to lentils with some carrots & onion. I season the beans & peas with bacon or ham hock. Some time ago I made a delicious “mess” of green beans, white potato and bacon. Beans & potatoes both mess with my blood sugar levels so I don’t fix them quite as often as I would like.

I like the flavor of German Potato Salad which is simple to make: potato, bacon, onion (maybe some celery if I have it) and vinegar & sweetener. I like the flavor, but I can’t have this often because it “messes with” my blood sugar levels.

I used to make spaghetti sauce at home (about every two weeks) but rarely do this now because I don’t need all the starchy pasta noodles. After years of using the cheap starter sauces (from Delmonte or Hunt’s), I heard about Rao’s sauce and now buy their Marinara starter. The cost difference is probably $2 for the cheaper sauces and $8 for Rao’s regular jar, but Rao’s produces a better end flavor. I add ground beef, onion, sweet (yellow or red) bell pepper, and sometimes mushroom pieces. I might add some Italian Sausage, but not always, and I will add some garlic, or garlic powder, along with some fennel seeds. I read that Italian Sausage is seasoned with fennel seeds so I thought to add this as extra flavoring. *It is a licorice flavor. I just saw a review of several starter sauces online and Rao’s was a favorite of several reviewers. I don’t know why it’s that good, but it is that good!

BREAKFASTS

I often fix fried apples and bacon for breakfast. I like using Gala apples and often use bacon grease to fry the apples (sometimes with olive or avocado oil). If I have it, I use some pepper bacon that I get from Lee’s Market near Benson, NC but also like the Gold Leaf (plain not peppered) brand from Smithfield. The Gold Leaf is a cheaper brand at Carlie C’s IGA, but I noted that Pate’s charges about $3 more per package for the same product. *My mother fixed fried apples for me the first time, but I don’t think we had them very often. They only had sugar and ground cinnamon for flavoring, but as I started to fix them fairly often I began to add most if not all of the “warm” spices. So, I added cinnamon, cloves, ginger, mace and nutmeg. I later added ground coriander (a lemony flavor) to the mix and each time I fried apples I would sift sweetener (not sugar) on the cooked apples first and then took each spice in turn and sifted it across the apples. Only recently, when I bought a set of empty glass spice jars, I decided to combine these spices into a separate Fried Apple Spice Mix. I also used some Pumpkin Spice mix, but I don’t think it includes any additional spices. *I haven’t tried it yet, or even thought about it until now, but I might try adding Amchur (mango powder) or Tamarind powder as an alternative flavoring. I think either would go well with the sweetener.

I have several flavored teas that I eat with my breakfast: Bigelow’s “Earl Grey” or “Constant Comment” (both of these I have drank probably since 1985 and was introduced to them by Rick & Linda Bell (former Marine Pilot and later a Baptist pastor). Several years ago, while on a trip to Lynchburg, Virginia I tried another Bigelow tea, “Raspberry Royale.” If you had asked me first if I wanted to try it, I probably would have said, “no.” But after I tried it, it was good hot, and good even when it got cold. I actually bought a six pack from Amazon and gave the boxes as Christmas present one year. I don’t know why I bought another brand (Taylor’s) to try some time ago, but I did. As I recall, I didn’t like the “heavy” flavor of “Scottish Breakfast” tea the first time. But, a few days later I tried it again, and I liked it a little and by the third time I tried it, “I was hooked,” and it is maybe my favorite hot tea now, with half-n-half and Equal & Sweet-n-Low sweeteners, Agave Nectar, and coconut sugar. I was reminded about Rooibos and bought a small box of this flavoring in tea bags, and they make a good cup of tea. Rooibos means “red bush,” and I don’t think it is actually tea. Probably like sassafras. *It also makes a good hot drink that goes well with sweetener and creamer. — Remember this, because it does taste better with Half-n-Half.

I also like the Starbucks Brand of “Breakfast Blend” coffee. I get this in a $9 package of their already ground coffee. *In the past, before Covid, I would buy a Harris Teeter brand of coffee bean and grind it at home, but after Covid they didn’t bring this back in bean form. **An interesting aside was that someone (probably Deborah Savage) had given me a pound of ground coffee from Cracker Barrell as a Christmas present. Because I ground my own beans, I had left this package in my cabinet, probably for several years. When Covid struck, I eventually ran out of my favorite HT coffee beans so I went to the cabinet and tried the Cracker Barrell coffee. It had a good flavor. The next day I tried it again, and it was good again. But on the third day, I finally had the thought of how ironic this coffee was. I HATED the Cracker Barrell coffee when I ate breakfast as their restaurants. I hated the flavor so much that I would order (or bring my own bag) tea instead of their coffee. But, here I was enjoying every cup of their coffee at home. But, eventually this coffee would “run out,” and fortunately it ran out just as my second (booster) Covid immunization happened. After I had my shot, I think I had a hair cut, and (maybe not it that order) then went to Cracker Barrell to eat (and buy their brand of coffee). I think they sold a decaffeinated blend and one that wasn’t. The packaging had changed. I think it had previously been a metallic copper colored theme, but now was a metallic aqua color. That may have been reversed also (the color of the packages). So, I got the Cracker Barrell coffee home and brewed a cup, It wasn’t good. I don’t think it was as bad as the restaurant version, but just not worth buying again, or continuing to drink. I spent $9 on various packages of coffee from Harris Teeter, and Walmart, etc. and finally found the Starbucks Breakfast Blend that I’ve continued to drink.

I like to fix egg salad (usually from two hard boiled eggs) for breakfast sometimes. Add a little Dukes Mayo and some margarine (Cracker Barrell Original) to the egg salad. Some polenta and bacon and a few grape tomatoes (or Campari) finish out a delicious breakfast.

Another favorite breakfast includes a microwaved egg seasoned with Dulse, celery seeds, salt and some freshly ground Indian Long Pepper. I add a little olive oil and cook the egg in a plastic onion cooker. This cooker cooks a whole onion, but can also be used for cooking a potato (white or sweet) or maybe even an apple. You put the object to be cooked in the container and it steams inside it fairly quickly (a minute for the egg and about 4 or 5 minutes to cook a potato). The egg comes out round and flat, and maybe has the texture of an omelet (or maybe a scrambled egg). I like English Muffins, but can’t have them often because of my blood sugar, but add this egg to the muffin and then a slice of cheese and a slice of Canadian Bacon and you would have something approximating an Egg McMuffin. *Add some liver pudding (mush), casing removed, mashed and mixed with some sauteed onion. And heat up some polenta and mash it up like mashed potatoes. The polenta becomes the base, and you put the liver pudding & onions on top. Also add some grape tomatoes and this is delicious. **I like tea or coffee with this breakfast.

Not for breakfast, but I also like corn on the cob (steamed in the husk in the microwave in about 5 minutes) with a little salt and margarine. I like fried okra (but I like okra in soups also) without batter, and sometimes add onion to be sauteed with it.

I have a drink that I mix almost every day, and I’ve had it each day for months and months. I have glass carafes that I add water to, leaving some room for orange & cranberry juices mixed. To this I add a packet of Pomegranate Lemonade and a packet of Iced Tea (maybe with Lemon). For some reason this drink mix, which I call “Bill’s Drink Mix & Some Juice” never gets old. I usually make it and have drunk the whole thing before midnight. *Sometimes I run out of one of the ingredients (no OJ, or cranberry juice, or one of the flavored packets [Walmart] ) and the drink is never as good. **I did like the Dragon Fruit flavoring, but eventually stopped liking it much. Walmart at one time had a Lime flavor packet and I really liked having a glass of this after eating out at a restaurant. For some reason, I didn’t like the lime flavored drink at home, but when out and about. They stopped making those flavor packets but for a while I would find one that I had misplaced at home or in the car and I would enjoy it again. No one else makes a lime flavoring.

I haven’t mentioned peppers, or seafood chowder, or a Hispanic or Indian (India) meal. I can chop up chicken, some veggies: carrots, onion, bell peppers & tomatoes and just by changing whether I add Salsa Ranchera from Herdez, or Hot Curry Paste from Patek’s I can go in two completely different directions. Have to add sweetener and/or Agave Nectar to this to “turn it” properly. Either of these would go good on top of rice or mashed sweet potato (with some cinnamon, sweetener and margarine),

Oh, I also created a Polska Kielbasa, Shrimp and Zucchini dish. The only other ingredients are onion, a little tomato (just enough to make a slightly red sauce) and some pasta shells. This also has ground cayenne, or red pepper flakes, or maybe even some diced jalapenos. This is a spicy dish. Sometimes it takes my breath, in a good way. But each item sings it’s part in the show. Not too much shrimp, or too much kielbasa or too much zucchini. Each bite a tiny island of flavor, and the tomato disappears except for the color of the slight red sauce. The onion isn’t a star, but is necessary, and the pasta shells soak up the sauce flavors. Hmmm, hmmm, good, over and over and over.

I haven’t quite mastered my stir fry. Chicken usually, but shrimp, or pork or even beef sometimes. Carrots, tomatoes sweet bell peppers and onion. Toasted sesame oil and some soy sauce with garlic powder. There is a “crunchy garlic” paste that I also like.

[NOTE 10/05/24]: I mentioned to someone yesterday that I liked a simple salad made with turmeric, vinegar, tomatoes, sweet bell peppers & sweet onion. I think I found this on a Mediterranean themed site. The turmeric gives an acrid flavor to this, and eating some olives with this would also work. *I recall that at some point I added sweetener to this. I think I saw a turmeric pickles recipe that caused me to try this. I liked the sweet acrid flavor. *I might try adding turmeric to some dill pickles. I know I like the Ranch Dressing flavor that adds to the dill spears. [end NOTE]

Jalapeno Pork, Tomato Chutney & Guacamole.

Well, I came up with a meal that works well together. It started with me fixing a version of Jalapeno Pork. I had chunks of pork that were large diced like you do beef for stew beef. To this I added several mild peppers that I sliced and diced in various sizes, and one jalapeno. I think I added some chopped onion to this also and put it all in a pot on the stove top along with a little chicken stock, S&P and probably some garlic powder. This turned out relatively good.

Trying to think of something that might go with this, I decided upon fixing a tomato chutney, which might also be called spicy stewed tomatoes with some onion, garlic powder, red wine vinegar, a little Balsamic vinegar, Equal sweetener and some Agave Nectar.

Finally, I fixed a form of quacamole in which I included a half of a small avocado, one chopped tomatillo and a little diced sweet onion. For seasoning I added S&P, some ground cumin, celery seeds, Duke mayo, and sour cream. This became the perfect foil to the spicy jalapeno pork. Very cooling.

And, I also had some flat corn chips from Mission that were salty.


I hope I can remember what all I put in this meal because it was “spot on.”

Jalapeno Pork

  • boneless pork chops cut into chunks
  • a jalapeno diced
  • a red cayenne type pepper, diced (frozen also)
  • a couple of the Ajicitos Dulces Peppers diced (these I bought at Compare & froze several)
  • diced onion
  • Green Chilies
  • Splenda & some Agave Nectar
  • S&P

Cabbage Slaw

  • Green cabbage shredded
  • Sweet Onion diced
  • Half-n-Half (just a smidge)
  • Garlic Powder
  • Fenugreek Powder
  • Dukes Mayo
  • Splenda
  • S&P

[04/13/25]: Tonight I added some Mung bean sprouts (I grew myself.), some sweet red bell pepper and a little Agave Nectar. And I had a few blue corn tortilla chips and this worked well also. [end]

[04/27/25]: Red cabbage works well as slaw. High is Vitamin C and antioxidants. More nutritious than green cabbage. I added Mung bean sprouts again, and they are crunchy like the cabbage, and their color looks good in the slaw with the red cabbage. [end]

Jalapeno Pork Recipe (Smaller Portion)

Ingredients:

  • 0.75 lbs boneless pork chops, cut into 1-inch chunks
  • 1/2 medium onion, diced
  • 1/2 jalapeno pepper, diced (remove seeds for less heat)
  • 1 red cayenne pepper (or similar), diced (adjust amount to your spice preference)
  • 2 Ajicitos Dulces peppers, diced
  • 2 oz can of diced green chilies
  • 1 tablespoon Splenda (or brown sugar for a richer flavor)
  • 1 tablespoon Agave nectar
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil (or your preferred cooking oil)
  • Optional: 1/4 cup chicken broth (or water)

Instructions:

  1. Prepare the Pork:
    • Cut the boneless pork chops into 1-inch chunks.
    • Season the pork chunks with salt and pepper.
  2. Sauté the Vegetables:
    • Heat the olive oil in a large skillet or Dutch oven over medium-high heat.
    • Add the diced onion and sauté until softened, about 5 minutes.
    • Add the diced jalapeno, cayenne pepper, and Ajicitos Dulces peppers. Sauté for another 2-3 minutes, until fragrant.
  3. Brown the Pork:
    • Add the pork chunks to the skillet and brown on all sides.
  4. Add Remaining Ingredients:
    • Add the diced green chilies, Splenda, and agave nectar to the skillet.
    • If the skillet seems dry, add a 1/4 cup of chicken broth or water to help create a sauce.
    • Stir everything to combine.
  5. Simmer:
    • Reduce the heat to low, cover the skillet, and simmer for 20-30 minutes, or until the pork is tender and cooked through.
    • Stir occasionally.
  6. Taste and Adjust:
    • Taste the sauce and adjust the seasoning as needed. Add more salt, pepper, Splenda, agave, or peppers to your preference.
  7. Serve:
    • Serve the jalapeno pork hot, with rice, tortillas, or your favorite side dishes.

I was in the IGA and saw this pork chop on sale. I knew I had a couple of thick cut pork chops thawing in the refrigerator, but this looked so good and I knew it would make the jalapeno pork (without chunking it up) and it did. .69 lbs. would be a little over 11 oz. of meat (with bone) so even cutting it in half would yield about 4.5 oz. for two meals at about a dollar a meal.


Cabbage Slaw

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups shredded green cabbage (about 1/4 of a medium head) Option: Red cabbage for green.
  • 1/8 cup diced sweet onion (adjust to your preference)
  • 1 tablespoon Half-n-Half (just a “smidge” for creaminess)
  • 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder (adjust to your preference)
  • 1/8 – 1/4 teaspoon fenugreek powder (start with 1/8 and add more to taste)
  • 1/4 teaspoon celery seeds (adjust to your preference)
  • Option: Mung bean sprouts
  • 2-3 tablespoons Dukes Mayo (adjust to your desired creaminess)
  • 1/4 – 1/2 teaspoon Splenda (or other sweetener, adjust to your preference)
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Instructions:

  1. Prepare the Vegetables:
    • Ensure the green cabbage is thinly shredded.
    • Finely dice the sweet onion.
  2. Combine Ingredients:
    • In a small to medium bowl, combine the shredded green cabbage and diced sweet onion.
  3. Make the Dressing:
    • In a separate small bowl, whisk together the Half-n-Half, garlic powder, fenugreek powder, celery seeds, Dukes Mayo, and Splenda.
    • Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste.
  4. Dress the Slaw:
    • Pour the dressing over the cabbage and onion mixture.
    • Toss everything thoroughly until the cabbage and onion are evenly coated with the dressing.
  5. Chill (Recommended):
    • For the best flavor, cover the bowl and refrigerate the slaw for at least 20-30 minutes before serving. This allows the flavors to meld together.
  6. Adjust Seasoning:
    • Before serving, taste the slaw and adjust the seasoning if needed.

Tips and Considerations:

  • Fenugreek: Since you mentioned fenugreek again, I’ve suggested a slightly broader range. Remember it has a distinct, slightly sweet and sometimes a little bitter flavor. Start with the smaller amount and add more if you enjoy it.
  • Celery Seeds: Celery seeds add a distinct aromatic and slightly bitter celery flavor. Adjust the amount based on how prominent you want this flavor to be.
  • Balance: Taste the dressing before adding it to the cabbage to ensure the flavors of the garlic powder, fenugreek, and celery seeds are balanced to your liking.

Makes 1-2 portions.


Approximate Nutritional Value per Serving:

Jalapeno Pork (estimated for roughly 1-2 servings):

  • Calories: 300-450 (This can vary significantly based on the fat content of the pork chops)
  • Protein: 30-45 grams
  • Fat: 15-30 grams (again, highly dependent on the pork)
  • Carbohydrates: 5-10 grams (mostly from onions, peppers, and the small amounts of sweetener)
  • Fiber: * Calories: 100-150 (primarily from mayonnaise and Half-n-Half)
  • Protein: 1-2 grams
  • Fat: 8-13 grams (mostly from mayonnaise)
  • Carbohydrates: 5-10 grams (from cabbage, onion, and sweetener)
  • Fiber: 2-3 grams (from the cabbage)

Combined Approximate Nutritional Value for One Serving of Jalapeno Pork and Cabbage Slaw:

  • Calories: 400-600
  • Protein: 31-47 grams
  • Fat: 23-43 grams
  • Carbohydrates: 10-20 grams
  • Fiber: 3-6 grams

Important Notes:

  • This is a rough estimate. To get a more accurate nutritional value, you would need to:
    • Weigh all your ingredients precisely.
    • Use a nutrition tracking app or website and input the exact quantities and brands of each ingredient.
    • Account for the cooking oil used.
  • The fat content of the pork chops will have the biggest impact on the calorie and fat estimates. Leaner cuts will result in lower values.
  • The amount of mayonnaise used in the slaw will significantly affect the calorie and fat content.
  • Adding blue corn tortilla chips will increase the overall calorie and carbohydrate count.


My Long Pepper grinder has stopped working and I don’t know how or why. *I figured it out. The microplane was rotating with the grinder handle, so no grinding was taking place. I used a small amount of Gorilla Glue on the outside of the grinder and it seated the microplane again, and now it is working once again. **I just did one drop of glue on the outside and not glue all around.


I was in the mood to fix some Jalapeno Pork today and found some boneless, center cut pork chops at IGA. I cut them in long strips and then crosswise to form small cubes. I ate some Blue Corn Tortilla Chips with the Jalapeno Pork I made today. I also ate some cold refried Black Beans and they were very good.

I drove to Lee’s Fresh Market near Benson today (06/25/25) in hopes that I could buy some of the thick cut pork chops I’ve bought there before. I hoped they would have some for sale, and that the price per pound would be low. It was probably about 10 am when I arrived and there were probably 10 customers around the store. I took a red plastic shopping basket and walked around to where the pork was located. I saw a package of thick cut pork chops, but I think the price was about $3+ a pound. Fortunately I continued to look and there was a package at $1.98 per pound, and then I found another at the same price. I think they said something like “Weekly Special” or “Manager’s Special.” But as I put the third package in my basket I noticed that they had another special sticker… “Buy One Get One Free.” Wow! Not only a good price per pound but a great price at half that amount. So I got four thick cut pork chops at about $4 total (plus tax) for the four. I bought 4 packages. I was planning to keep one. To take two packages down to Mary Ann’s and Ray’s tomorrow, and to see if Jeff wanted a pack. I’m not sure if Jeff or Robin eat pork chops, But when I got to Jeff’s and rang the bell and knocked on the front door, I couldn’t get anyone to come to the door. There were no automobiles visible, and although I heard the dog inside, Ashlyn never came to the door. She may have been away.

I ended up leaving a check, and a couple of bags of books for Ashlyn near the front door. I try to get her art related books that might give her ideas for when she becomes a graphic artist. One book was a small one on glass objects. One about brass doors. One about Indian (India) art, and one was a history of England during one or more of her periods of history. I also had a few of the advertising magazines that you find at the front of certain grocery stores like Wegman’s and or Whole Foods. But now that I think about it, I haven’t seen these magazines the last few times I’ve shopped at either store. Odd, I thought.

But, I’m not sure what Ashlyn expects to do as a graphic artist, but I think it would be an interesting profession to work for one of these local color magazines in some U.S. City. You would always be writing copy, or stories, and illustrating each in some way and creating other ads.

White Bean & Chicken Chili

The basic ingredients came to about $7.50. I added a clove of garlic ( large chop ), dried basil, S&P, a little Splenda, some Agave Nectar and a little lime juice. *Just a little Splenda and Agave give this chili a slightly sweet taste, and the chipotle peppers, chipotle powder, red pepper flakes, and cayenne give it a good heat. I would add some chopped jalapenos (red or green) for extra flavor and I did add some chopped yellow bell pepper.

I’ve tried something like this before, but it did not turn out well. This did satisfy! It was a little sweet, with some heat (about 3 chipotle peppers) and large chunks of Vidalia onion.

I tried this a second time, but instead of using canned white chunk chicken, I bought a whole baked chicken (original flavor) and shredded some of the white meat and added it to the chili mixture. This worked great!

I had some Mission Corn Chips left, and they went well with this chili. I see that avocado, cilantro, sour cream and Mexican cheese are suggested toppings for this. *The second time, I added a bunch of cilantro to the chili during cooking. I ate an avocado with the chili, and this was good.

I was in the Compare Grocery the other day and saw some red jalapenos (marked that way on the price card). I only got about 4 of these and took them to the checkout along with the other items I was purchasing. The girl rang up these as “Thai Red Chilis”. I think the price was about a dollar more per pound than the sign had said for the red jalapenos, so I said to her that these weren’t Thai Red Chilis but Red Jalapenos. She stopped and showed the clerk at the next register, and whatever was said, she still rang them up as Thai Red Chilis. It could be that both clerks were referencing the wrong code number, or maybe the grocer had labelled this item incorrectly in the system. But, I told her I didn’t want to purchase them and she set them aside.

Red Cayenne Peppers

Seems that the Red Cayenne Peppers are slightly different in curvature and a little bend at the end of the pepper, but Thai Red and Red Jalapenos are distinctly different.

NOTE [05/30/22]: The oven-roasted chicken was a great idea for this, but at about $7.35 for the whole baked chicken, this is a great deal. I had a couple of drum sticks, and a bunch of white breast meat that could be shredded for the chili, and/or for a sandwich, etc. I was sort of surprised at how cheap the whole baked chicken was this time. I think the price had gone up (several months ago) and was over $8.

NOTE [ 12/16/23 ]: The can of Bush’s White Chili Beans now costs about $1.98 at Walmart, previously $1.76. I did go to Compare Foods again and bought some green Jalapenos, Poblanos and some red peppers (not sure if they were red Jalapenos or some other variety. I had a small can of diced Green Chilis. I don’t see if I added some chopped onion before, but, I did this time. I used sweet onion but that is just because I have an overstocked abundance of the sweet onions. Added some cayenne pepper, some whole Cumin seeds, some dry Cilantro & dry Parsley. Did add the bit of Splenda & Agave Nectar.

Funny, was just reading above and the same thing happened again at Compare Foods. The girl at the register rang up a red pepper, but it was a couple of dollars more than what the sign had said. I had already taken a picture of the red peppers & listed price and I ended up getting these cheaper, maybe even a dollar cheaper than had been advertised on the signage.

I was fixing some Chipotle, Chicken & Avocado Soup for lunch and had thawed about three raw chicken strips. I fried the chicken in some bacon fat, and then shredded it all using about a third of it in the lunch soup. The rest I put in the small pot that I had used for the soup, with the white chili beans and other ingredients (dicing the various raw chili peppers). I’ve got the chili in the pot, on the stove-top, and cooking on low heat.

Even though I didn’t use a roasted chicken from Publix, the whole roasted chicken for about $8 from Publix is a great deal. The two drumsticks are each a good meal, and the breast meat from each side is another couple of meals, and what is left over is enough for 3 more portions… maybe for a chicken salad (with sweet bell peppers, onion, mayo and some diced celery), or a chicken salad with Romaine lettuce, Kalamata olives, Pepperoncini peppers & a dressing of olive oil, red wine vinegar, Dijon mustard, sweetener and dried Italian herbs. This is reminiscent of a Greek Salad, with which I currently have become enamored.