Breakfast Round-Up

I’m not very good about organizing the recipes I post here in any sort of easy-to-locate fashion, so when holidays roll around I usually get emails with subject lines that say things like “Coffee Cake Recipe?” or “Breakfast Casserole Recipe?” or “WOMAN, WHY CAN’T YOU FILE THINGS SO WE CAN FIND THEM?”

Maybe notsomuch that last one. But I bet y’all think it.

Anyway, most of the requests are for breakfast dishes (I am such a fan of the two-meal option when there’s company in the house; I love to fix a big breakfast and then supper late in the afternoon…at lunch guests can have snacks or leftovers or air, it’s totally up to them), so I thought I’d put them all in one spot for you hostesses with the mostestses.

Quick Oatmeal Granola
Cheese Grits
Breakfast Casserole
Apple-Craisin French Toast Casserole
Granite Steps Coffee Cake
Crescent Roll Breakfast Casserole
Angela’s Chocolate Gravy
Pound Cake (if you have never had pound cake for breakfast, you have no idea what you’re missing)
Coconut Cake (I mean, WHY NOT? Coconut is a fruit, and I think fruit always qualifies as a breakfast food.)
Fig Preserves Cake (again, IT’S A FRUIT)

And as always, you can never go wrong with identifiable meat.

Hope you enjoy All The Butter, y’all.

Edited to add the Chocolate Gravy link – and I corrected the salt amount on the fig preserves cake, just FYI.

Are You Ready To Random?

I can’t seem to get my brain to approach anything even remotely resembling coherence tonight, and that can only mean one thing, internets: it’s time for a list.

I’m sure you’re completely not thrilled by that fact, so please do commence with the not jumping and the not clapping. It’s time to not celebrate!

1. This afternoon I worked on a grocery list for something I’m helping with at church this weekend. And do you know what made me so happy?

My grocery list says “butter (10)” – because I need to buy TEN POUNDS OF BUTTER.

Fortunately, the butter is for lots of different dishes that will be served to lots of different people. That should bring some relief to those of you who were feeling a little worried that I was just making one casserole. Like maybe an Artery Clogging Surprise or something along those lines.

2. I think Cheryl and Gilles are the frontrunners in “Dancing With The Stars,” and I think Melissa and Tony are a close second. I should also mention that I’m having a hard time forgiving Tony for wearing this shirt a couple of weeks ago (if you can call it a shirt because really I think it’s more of a leotard), but I’m working through it.

photo1

After all, he is a grown man and completely within his rights to pick a costume that makes him look like an extra in a 1984 aerobics video entitled “Step To It!”

But it could’ve been worse: he could’ve worn a headband. So I’ll count my blessings.

3. Are any of y’all watching “Mad Men”? LOVE IT. But don’t spoil it if you’re all caught up because I’m only on the second episode of season two.

4. Yesterday I looked at my search engine terms for the first time in a while, and I was especially intrigued by this one: how to dress like Jack Bauer.

Does the solution to this dilemma seem overly obvious to anyone else? Because I’m thinking that if you want to dress like Jack Bauer, you pretty much just need to put on an assortment of black clothing items and then wear them for 24 hours in a row. Maybe you need to rip the knee of your pants around hour six, and maybe you need to get some mud splattered on you around hour 15, but overall I feel pretty certain that dressing like Jack Bauer is an attainable goal for almost anyone.

I feel better now that I’ve said that.

Now do have a lovely Tuesday.

It Was A Spiritual Feast And Also The Other Kind

Melanie and I seem to have a knack for hunting down incredibly mediocre Mexican food no matter where we are. In fact, we’ve shared mediocre Mexican food every single time we’ve seen each other this last year, so we vowed and swore and declared that we would not go anywhere near Mexican food while we were in Louisiana this past weekend. Quite frankly there are some streaks that need to be broken.

Plus, I mean, we were in New Orleans, for crying out loud. And while New Orleans boasts countless culinary achievements, queso dip isn’t really one of them. Y’all should be proud of me for recognizing that because I think we all know that if there’s one food I never, ever turn down, it’s cheese.

See also: bacon.

My flight left pretty early Friday morning, so I was actually at the hotel in New Orleans by 10. Our room wasn’t ready, so I ambled over to a little coffee shop in the lobby. I’m usually a little wary of hotel coffee, but as soon as I stepped in that coffee shop I felt a wave of peace wash over me.

The Lord is faithful and worthy to be praised.

Mel’s flight got in a couple of hours later, so I picked her up from the airport and we set out to find some lunch. We were both in the mood for some deeply nutritious fried seafood, so we headed to Deanie’s since it was just a couple of blocks from our hotel – and we knew we were in for a treat when they brought boiled red potatoes to our table. With butter.

Oh yes ma’am. Please and thank you. Amen.

I had the fried seafood platter from the lunch menu, and Melanie ordered a fried crawfish poboy that I PROMISE had at least 100 fried crawfish on it. When the food arrived at the table I immediately started channeling Martha (“You’ve never seen so many crawfish! You’ve just never seen! Have you ever seen? I MEAN, THE PORTIONS! SUCH LARGE PORTIONS! Mother and I could get four meals out of that one sandwich! Have you ever?”), and while everything was absolutely delicious I have to say that the hit of our meal was the barbecued shrimp that we ordered for an appetizer. I could’ve made a meal out of nothing but some French bread and the barbecue shrimp sauce. It was so good that it would make you stand up, slap your mama, sit down, then get up and slap your mama again. DADGUM.

After lunch we rested for a little while and then drove over to the arena. It was such a blast, and Friday night’s session really confirmed some things that I’ve been thinking about a lot over the last few months (Mel and I will both be recapping the conference this week over at AllAccess). But I do want to make sure I tell you this: I’ve sat under Beth Moore’s teaching several times in the last four or five years, but she has NEVER been funnier than she was this past weekend. OH MY WORD. Yes, the subject matter was deep, and yes, we were all up in the Word, but oh my goodness every single one of us who was there laughed our heads off. It was the most fun.

There’s so much more I want to share, but it’s getting late and you’re getting bored (I’M SORRY. THE FOOD WAS JUST SO GOOD THAT I NEEDED A LOT OF WORDS.) and I need to go to bed. So in conclusion I’ll just show you a picture of the muffaletta that I had on my way to the airport Saturday afternoon. It was only 1/2 sandwich, and I kid you not: IT WAS THE SIZE OF MY HEAD.

There was no way to eat it all. But part of me wanted to swaddle it in a blanket and rock it gently in my arms all the way back to Birmingham.

I didn’t, of course.

Because I think we all know that if I’m going to swaddle and rock any sort of fried meat sandwich, there’s going to be fried chicken involved.

And I will kiss it on its forehead, and I will name it Polly.

The end.

It Is Far Too Early For This Much Nothing

So right now it’s 7:07, and I’m sitting at my gate in the Birmingham airport waiting for a flight to New Orleans.

My flight leaves at 8:20, by the way. And I’ve been sitting here for about ten minutes. Which means that I arrived at my gate a full hour and twenty minutes before departure, or in other words: JUST LIKE I LIKE IT.

I have a thing about being rushed when I fly, and that thing is that I HATE IT. My husband, on the other hand, would be totally fine with wheeling into the parking garage 15 minutes before a flight and then having to jump on some high-speed golf cart in order to make it to the gate and then sprint down the jetway and then fall into his seat seconds before the plane’s door closes so that he could look at me, smile and say, “See? We made it!”

And then I wouldn’t say anything in return because if I did say something? WHITE-HOT FLAMES WOULD SHOOT OUT OF MY MOUTH.

Anyway. I’m here. And I keep looking over at the newstand because it’s not open yet and I need for it to be open because I don’t know how I can possibly read an Us Weekly on the plane if they don’t open that newstand gate and sell me one.

(I also see on the CNN Headline News that it’s Eddie Murphy’s birthday today.)

(HAPPY BIRTHDAY, EDDIE!)

By the way, the newstand just opened. One moment, please.

Okay. I bought an Us Weekly (“Reese’s Big Decision: HE’S THE ONE!”) and a Southern Living (“Celebrate with Our Best Easter Menu EVER!”). I’m in the process of making up with Southern Living, in case you were wondering, because I’ve decided that I simply cannot live without the recipes. And the photography. And the stories about the South. And I actually subscribed again a couple of weeks ago because we got a great offer in the mail and quite frankly my coffee table has been very, very lonely without the latest issues of SL to keep it company. I won’t get my first issue for about six weeks (hence the buying of the latest issue in the airport), but I imagine that when I go to my mailbox and pull out that first issue, the angels will sing and Peaches & Herb will play softly in the background.

Or maybe, you know, I’ll just pull the issue out of the mailbox and a someone will drive by and honk their horn really loud. There’s just no way of telling. But I much prefer the former scenario to the latter.

Happy weekend, y’all.

Linky Interwebby Awesomeness 04.02.09

This post of Antique Mommy’s makes my heart hurt in a whole host of bittersweet ways.

– If you’d like to win the DVDs that accompany Priscilla Shirer’s excellent Discerning The Voice of God Bible study, you can enter a giveaway over at AllAccess. The DVDs would be a huge blessing for your church or your Bible study group – no doubt about it.

– I have watched this episode of “30 Rock” at least eight times (it’s not for little eyes or ears – just FYI). It’s the funniest 22 minutes of television I’ve seen in a sweet forever, and since we don’t have new shows tonight, I’ll probably watch it for the ninth time. And laugh myself silly.

I Wonder If Anyone Makes Shoes With Bacon On The Sides?

Remember when The Bachelor was on and Melanie and I thought a sure-fire way for the bachelorettes to know if they were reallllly ready for motherhood would be for them to take care of Jason’s little boy when he had a stomach virus?

Well. Today I thought of a new test.

I think it might be better than the first one.

Want to know if you’re ready for motherhood? REALLLLLLY ready?

Take a little boy who’s in kindergarten to buy shoes.

And you can’t go to one of those fancy stores where they let you sit in chairs while they bring you different styles and sizes. Oh, no ma’am. You have to go to a Gigantor Sporting Goods Warehouse where there are all sorts of helmets and balls and scooters and treadmills vying for your child’s attention attention while you try to find and fetch the shoes your own dadgum self.

SWEET. MERCY.

Because I’m here to tell you: after going to Gigantor Sporting Goods Warehouse to buy the little man a very basic pair of New Balance exactly like the ones he’s worn for the last seven months but now outgrown, and after 45 minutes of trying to find the right size and the right width and the right style to accommodate a super-high arch, and after getting the young’un who needed the shoes sufficiently settled down so he could try on the shoes and subsequently “go for a quick run, Mama” to see if he will be “really SUPER fast” when he wears them, I grabbed his hand, led him to the aisle with kids’ shoes and said, “Pick out the ones you want.”

I figured that if he loved the shoes enough then he would convince himself that the fit was perfectly adequate. This is a shoe-buying strategy that I’ve employed countless times in my own life, and since I was burning up hot and in dire need of a trip to the restroom, I knew that something had to give. Desperate times, desperate measures, etc. and so on and so forth.

And that is why the boy and I walked out of Gigantor Sporting Goods Warehouse earlier today with some newly-purchased sneakers that cost less than $20 and have big plastic pictures of Iron Man on the sides. They even light up when you walk. They’re ugly as all get out, and my child loves them and cannot quit admiring his feet.

Also: my child has never seen Iron Man.

Go figure.

By the way, on about four different occasions during the shoe shopping I found myself wondering WHAT IN THE SAM HILL I would have done if I’d had more than one child with me. What would I have done if I’d been trying to manage, say, an infant and a two-year old in addition to the boy who needed the shoes?

I’m not sure, but I think it would’ve involved a lot of crying.

And my hypothetical extended brood probably wouldn’t have been very happy, either.