 My mom's a great cook but everyone who loves cooking knows that it loses its magic when you have to do it every night, and usually for a family with at least one picky eater. Now entering its third year, this gift has become a new tradition. (And trust me, if your dad is shifty like mine, you'll want to include the "no photocopying" stipulation. I learned this after year one.) Another stipulation: the food can't be "weird." Once I shared the most delicious goat cheese and ratatouille phyllo turnovers. Dad's comment: "Don't you ever make anything normal?" Now that I think about it, I'll post that recipe soon; just not in the Mom and Dad category.
 My mom's a great cook but everyone who loves cooking knows that it loses its magic when you have to do it every night, and usually for a family with at least one picky eater. Now entering its third year, this gift has become a new tradition. (And trust me, if your dad is shifty like mine, you'll want to include the "no photocopying" stipulation. I learned this after year one.) Another stipulation: the food can't be "weird." Once I shared the most delicious goat cheese and ratatouille phyllo turnovers. Dad's comment: "Don't you ever make anything normal?" Now that I think about it, I'll post that recipe soon; just not in the Mom and Dad category.
 Tonight's meal was fresh grilled ahi tuna sandwiches with homemade baked beans. I marinated the fish in 1/4 cup olive oil, 3 Tbsp. soy sauce, 1/2 small diced onion, 2 cloves minced garlic, and 3 Tbsp. Italian seasoning for about 3 hours. I grilled it on a cast iron grill pan, and served it on a homemade bun (thanks, bread machine!) with lettuce, onion, and tomato. I made a quick spicy tartar sauce with 1/2 cup mayo, 1 Tbsp. Sriracha chili sauce, 2 Tbsp. ketchup and 2 Tbsp. pickle relish.
Tonight's meal was fresh grilled ahi tuna sandwiches with homemade baked beans. I marinated the fish in 1/4 cup olive oil, 3 Tbsp. soy sauce, 1/2 small diced onion, 2 cloves minced garlic, and 3 Tbsp. Italian seasoning for about 3 hours. I grilled it on a cast iron grill pan, and served it on a homemade bun (thanks, bread machine!) with lettuce, onion, and tomato. I made a quick spicy tartar sauce with 1/2 cup mayo, 1 Tbsp. Sriracha chili sauce, 2 Tbsp. ketchup and 2 Tbsp. pickle relish.
 The side dish was Baked Bean Quintet, photocopied from an unknown cookbook many years ago at an office potluck.
 The side dish was Baked Bean Quintet, photocopied from an unknown cookbook many years ago at an office potluck.
Baked Bean Quintet
6 pieces sliced bacon (I never use this)1 cup chopped onion
1 clove garlic, minced
1 16-oz can butter beans, drained1 16-oz. can lima beans, drained
1 16-oz. can pork and beans in tomato sauce1 16-oz. can red kidney beans, drained
1 16-oz. can garbanzo beans, drained
* Janet's Easy Way: Eliminate bacon; dump all other ingredients in a crockpot and cook on low for 8 hours. Way easy. Also, don't worry about getting the beans the recipe calls for; any 5 kinds of beans are fine.

 

 
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