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Cake day: July 4th, 2023

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  • Pork chops in garlic-butter sauce with mushrooms. I usually serve them with mashed potatoes and steamed fresh green beans. If you don't do pork, you can do the exact same thing with chicken breasts.

    3-4 thick-cut pork chops, preferably bone-in

    1 cup mushrooms, cleaned and sliced

    4 tablespoons butter

    2-4 garlic cloves, minced

    1 tablespoon fresh oregano, OR 1 teaspoon dried

    1 tablespoon fresh thyme, OR 1 teaspoon dried

    1/2 cup flour

    3/4 cup milk

    2 cups chicken broth

    Salt and pepper to taste

    Pinch of red pepper flakes (optional)

    1. Preheat oven to 350 F.

    2. In a large oven-proof skillet, combine the butter, garlic, herbs, and mushrooms over medium-high heat.

    3. When the butter has melted, push everything to the sides and add the pork chops. Sear until golden on both sides.

    4. Spread the mushrooms evenly over everything, and put skillet in the oven. Bake for around 35 minutes, or until the pork chops are at 150-160 F.

    5. Remove from oven and set the pork chops aside to rest. Tent foil over them to keep them warm. You can remove the mushrooms too if you want, but don't take away too much of the fat in the pan. You need whatever is in there for the gravy.

    6. Put the skillet over low heat and whisk the flour into the fat in the pan. No lumps! Cook for 1-2 minutes to cook the flour and keep whisking. Whisk in the milk and chicken broth and cook until gravy is thick. Keep whisking the entire time. Flavor with salt and pepper to taste. If you want, you can add a pinch (1/8 teaspoon-ish) of red pepper flakes. It balances out the richness of the butter. You can also just put hot sauce on table, if you have spice-averse guests.


  • If you want something that still tastes fresh and sweet, you can freeze your jars. Freezer jam usually uses pectin and sugar because that's how you get jam texture. Pureed strawberries are really runny. You should also anticipate losing some of the sweetness of the strawberries, unless you can flash freeze them somehow. But you would lose that if you went the fermentation route anyway.

    As written, this is a pretty terrible idea, though. You still need to do the sanitation process on the jars, and the prospect of getting kill-you-microbe soup is high without involving a preservative of some kind or a yeast to nudge the fermentation the right way. Strawberries are high in water and moderate in sugar, which makes them really hospitable to bacteria and fungus. Mold, yuck.