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Shoebox Meals "FASHIONABLE" RECIPES--PACKABLE FOOD--AND THREE MEALS IN A SHOE BOX When your enthusiastic editor (who is also my optimistic daughter) informed me that this issue would be on fashion and travel her suggestion to me was packable food! Packable food? Hoping with all my heart she did not mean bologna and mayonnaise on white bread or peanut butter and pickle on wheat and a package of Oreo cookies, I proceeded. Having cooked under some unique conditions while moving and coping as an Air Force family her request seemed like a piece of cake (dark chocolate with white chocolate frosting, please). When you've served a planned dinner for 12 in G.I. mess kits because all of your household goods were unexpectedly packed early (leaving the Azores, Portugal for return to the U.S.) or you've cooked dinner for five for 3 days in an electric corn popper (the moving van arrived 3 days late) surely you can plan packable food for a week-end in a shoe box (with just a little cheating)! HERE'S THE SCENARIO. You're spending a week end in the country either flying or driving. You'd rather play--at what ever it is you play at--than shop for food after you arrive. OK, maybe milk, bread, butter, wine or beer and lettuce but nothing that requires onsite planning. The night you arrive your main dish is Layered Chili Cheese Casserole with baked brandied apples for dessert. Brunch the next day is Chilled Mandarin Oranges with coconut and Curried Eggs--on toast (if you stopped at the gas station/grocery) or on crackers if you didn't. Dinner that night is Hot Crab Salad. IN TO YOUR DUFFLE BAG--check out E-Bags. They're great!--tuck in
Between your unmentionables put
IN THE SHOE BOX put the following:
THE REMAINDER OF THE ITEMS that go in the shoe box are THE LITTLE PACKETS you buy at the fast food or take-out deli because they're efficient to pack, flexible to use, won't break or leak and get messy and they're sealed to stay fresh and safe (put them in a Zip Lock for extra safety). They're the perfect shoe box items. They are:
RECIPES ARE SIMPLE. FOR THE ARRIVAL NIGHT DINNER you'll find the Layered Chili Casserole in a back issue of Get Lost Magazine under "Comfort Food Dinners." Bake in one of the aluminum loaf pans. For ease crush the Fritos in the bag first. Use the recipe but add a layer of drained diced chili's on top of the cheese layer and reserve 1/4 of the onion for tomorrow nights Hot Crab Salad. Rehydrate the dried apples in the mandarin orange liquid and water following package directions. Add 2 strips of lemon zest, chopped and let sit until rehydrated. Pour off excess liquid. Add sugar, cinnamon, 1 tablespoon brandy and a little butter if you have it and bake. BRUNCH suggestion is for Mandarin Oranges and Curried eggs. Warm unpeeled eggs in hot water. Peel and slice eggs. Make sauce from four tablesoons (packets) of mayonnaise, lemon juice to taste, 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon curry powder, 1/8 teaspoon red pepper flakes, a pinch or two of sugar and a little water to thin to the proper consistency. Place egg slices on buttered toast or crackers. Pour sauce over. Sprinkle with chopped peanuts. Keep warm in oven. Sprinkle coconut over chilled drained mandarin oranges and serve. Note: you drained the oranges last night and used the juice for rehydrating the dried apple slices. DINNER IS HOT CRAB SALAD. Mix 1 can drained and rinsed crab meat with 6 tablespoons (packets) mayonnaise, 1 teaspoon lemon juice, 1/2 cup thinly sliced celery, the rest of the onion, chopped and a little curry powder. Sprinkle with crushed cracker crumbs and grated parmesan. Bake at 350 degrees in one of the loaf pans until hot and bubbly. If you bought a head of lettuce when you were at the gas station mix
Serve on lettuce and sprinkle with chopped peanuts. At this point you must have used almost everything you brought. Pop the corn and sprinkle with the garlic seasoning and TOMORROW MORNING on your way home go by Mc Donalds for and EGG McMUFFIN! Let me know how you like the idea. Love, MOM
Martha Strom has done it again, combining shoe boxes and food for couture week. Truly, have a look in the Eats archive for more brilliant stuff like this. |