Random Semicoherent Thoughts – Volume 22

I lament the demise of the potluck.  Once upon a time when you went to a potluck, you would find the best in homemade food.  You soon began to recognize who always brought the best food –  Mrs. Jones’s potatoes, Mrs. Smith’s cookies – and made a beeline for them.  That doesn’t happen anymore.  Potlucks devolved into a gathering of the best things we can find at the grocery store.  I have to admit, I’m guilty.  Despite my slightly above-average ability to cook, a trip to Kroger usually is the extent of my efforts for most potlucks anymore.


Happiness is when Ms. Boss makes a pie for a potluck.  Wait a minute, let me correct that statement – happiness is when Ms. Boss makes a pie. Period.


Desserts were the last bastion of homemade cooking.  Not any more.  I went to a chili supper the other day only to find that the overwhelming majority of the offerings came straight from a box.


Casseroles aren’t a thing anymore either.  Growing up, we had casserole all the time.  I used to make them quite a bit, but even I have given up on that one.  One of the reasons they’ve died?  They all tend to taste the same.  Take your pick:  cream of mushroom, cream of chicken, cream of cheddar. One of the best recipes I acquired was from a Mennonite cookbook on how to make cream of mushroom.  The most important part is that cream of mushroom doesn’t have to be just cream of mushroom.  Make a basic white sauce and let the other ingredients come from you imagination.


I’ve thought of another idea for a blog – go around the country and visit various church, community, or fund raising suppers and write about it.  I’m not just talking about a review of the food, write about the community that has come together around this food.  While I’d enjoy the travel, being an anti-social introvert doesn’t help with this kind of endeavor.  Besides, my current blog is more than enough.


Smoked sausage was part of my culinary heritage growing up.  A certain restaurant chain made their smoked sausage in my hometown.  Attempts to sell it in grocery stores failed miserably, but if you were a local and went the factory and said you were having a picnic they’d sell you a huge box. That happened a lot.  Spicy, smoky, juicy in a bun with mustard -what’s not to like?  They don’t even make them anymore, that’s sad.


Deviled eggs.  Deviled eggs were a favorite at potlucks when I was growing up.  My father absolutely loved them.  I miss him.

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