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Friday, March 15, 2024

An old-fashioned breakfast that makes a great dinner

 

Picture courtesy Freepik.com

Today’s recipe, Farmer’s Breakfast, is a memory from my mom’s kitchen. As many of you know, I’m slowly putting together a cookbook of food we ate in the fifties (my teen years), and I’ll call it, I think, Mom and Me in the Kitchen. It turns out so far to be a whole lot of recipes from my mom and, in truth, a tribute to her. So a bit about Mom is maybe appropriate.

Alice Marie Peterman Peckham MacBain was born in Kankakee, Illinois, in 1900. Grandpa Peterman was an engineer on the Illinois Central line and Granny (Anna) was a housewife. The couple were first generation Germans. Mom never talked about her childhood much, but I gather the food was heavily influenced by German dishes. I know she loved sausages and hated sauerkraut. I think today’s recipe traces back to her childhood. I can easily imagine Granny Peterman cooking it, though by the time I knew her Granny did little but sit in a chair.

Mom lived through the Spanish Flu epidemic, two world wars, and the Depression. The Great Depression left an indelible mark on her. I never heard her mention what life was like in those years. But when I was with her in the kitchen, I saw the clear signs. We saved bits of string, tied into one huge ball; bits of foil, rolled into a ball for the war effort in the Forties though I have no idea where or how she delivered these treasures.  We massaged color pills into blocks of—lard, I guess. It was white, and those little red pills were supposed to turn it the color of butter so we would be fooled. In her new 1950s kitchen, Mom had a special space for storing used paper towels—she would wipe a counter with a clean towel and then stash it; next time there was a floor spill, she pulled out that once-used towel. She countenanced no waste: when I had my own home, feeding a family of six, I didn’t save tiny bits of leftovers—it was pointless (until I learned to make soup). Scraps wouldn’t feed all of us, but when visiting Mom would say sarcastically, “I know. Just pitch it.” In her last years, when we moved her out of her house, we found tiny baby food jars in the back of the refrigerator with who knows what—whatever it was, much of it had begun to mold. I am, by contrast, not a frugal cook but sort of living alone, I save leftovers for lunch and hate to see food wasted. Mom’s saving ways definitely have had an effect on me.

Soup of the week illustrates Mom’s frugality. She put those saved leftovers to good by using them in what I came to call soup of the week. A dab of this, a bit of that meat, a few spoonfuls of a casserole, some fresh vegetables—it all went into the soup pot, perhaps augmented with chicken broth or canned tomatoes. I used to do that for my kids. Even though it almost always turned a muddy brown in color, they liked it.

Mom had a lot of sadness in her life, but she kept a positive outlook on life. Through the death of one husband, the loss of an infant of six months, the prolonged death of her sister due to cancer, Mom mostly kept a wonderful sense of humor. I can still see her telling stories of when all the aunts and uncles were young—tears of laughter would roll down her cheeks as she told those stories. And I have my own stories of Mom’s laughter in the kitchen—it is probably my best memory of her.

One of the frugal dishes I remember was what she called farmer’s breakfast. Mom fried some bacon, then fried potatoes in the grease. She added sliced green onions and grated cheddar cheese and then stirred up some eggs and poured them over the mixture. Once the eggs solidified and held together, she served it. I loved it, and when it came my turn and I served it to my children, they too loved it. What’s not to like? I somehow forgot all about it until a recent email from America’s Test Kitchen (one of my favorite sources) featured Bauernfrühstück (German Farmer’s Breakfast). There it was—Mom’s dish. So, here’s my adaptation of the recipe, a blend of my memories of Mom and the amounts recommended by America’s Test Kitchn (not all ingredients are the same):

Farmer’s Breakfast (serves four)

Ingredients

4 slices bacon

Four green onions, chopped

2 llbs. Yukon Gold potatoes

1 cup cheddar, grated

6 eggs, beaten

½ tsp. salt

¼ tsp. pepper

Ketchup

2 Tbsp. butter, if needed

Directions

Fry the bacon until crisp. Removed from skillet and drain on paper towels.

Peel the potatoes or not—Yukon gold have such thin skins. I’m sure, however, when I was a teen, we never heard of Yukon gold and Mom used good old Russet or Idaho potatoes which she would have scrubbed and peeled. Dice the potatoes (you might want to sprinkle an extra bit of salt on them) and fry in the bacon grease, getting as good a crisp crust as you can. IF there is not enough grease, add a Tbsp. of butter. Stir in green onions and sauté briefly. Stir in grated cheese.

Separately add salt and pepper to eggs and beat until well blended. Over medium heat, stir eggs into potato mixture, stirring to make sure the eggs are well incorporated. While they eggs cook occasionally use a spatula to lift up the mixture and let uncooked eggs run under it where they will cook. When eggs solidify to the point you want (don’t get them too hard), crumble the bacon in and stir again. Serve hot immediately with optional ketchup.

This is like spoon-feeding your family cholesterol, and I recognize it’s not a dish any of us should eat often. But sometimes, it’s just perfect. A few of our neighbors occasionally get together for an event we call “Brinner” (breakfast as dinner). The next time we do, this is what I’ll bring.

 

 

 

 

 

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