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Review: Losing Sight by Tati Richardson
ARC provided by the author, I also bought my own copy. This post includes affiliate links that may kick us a small percentage at no cost to you if you use them to shop. So if this post is useful, please use them to support my work -- it's so appreciated! When things are…
We Tried Trader Joe’s Gluten Free Yellow Mini Sheet Cake
with Chocolate Frosting! I've been on alert for Trader Joe's Yellow Mini Sheet Cake with chocolate frosting after seeing u/aswewaltz posted it in NY on Reddit 8 days ago. Every trip, I was disappointed. But today...finally... TJ's in the PNW have been blessed with the new gluten free sheet cake. So let's cut into it!…
We Tried Trader Joe’s Teriyaki Mushroom Mini Bao Buns
I was skeptical when I saw that Trader Joe's newest dumpling was teriyaki-flavored. Teriyaki in a bao? I imagined a gloopy super sweet soy-based sauce overwhelming the veg filling. But now that I've tried Trader Joe's Teriyaki Mushroom Mini Bao Buns? I think it's meant to be more of a shorthand toward a sweet,…

The Best of Leftovers: The Grand Finale – Turkey Soup


Come Sunday after Thanksgiving most people have about had it with turkey. You’re craving a juicy burger with blue cheese or a fat slice of pepperoni pizza…just about anything other than poultry.

But then, you have to stop yourself.


Turkey soup comes but once a year. You might have ham or a crown rib roast or takeout Chinese at Christmas. But turkey? Maybe, maybe not. And so to celebrate the end of a long weekend we finish Thanksgiving with a big pot of turkey soup.

There’s hardly even a recipe here…you just need a lazy Saturday to make the stock and half an hour or so on Sunday. Pick over your turkey carcass (Very glam, I know. It helps if you have two big black labbies standing by to help pick up the stray pieces.) Stick the bones in the biggest pot you’ve got and cover with cold water.

Add an onion (roughly chopped), a couple of carrots snapped in half and a couple of stalks of celery. Add a bay leaf, a teaspoon of thyme, some S&P. Bring it to a low boil — and I mean low — just so a few bubbles break the surface at a time. And let it go for at least 2 hours. Three is good, too. Just make sure you have enough time to let it cool down before you put it in the fridge.

Categories: Recipes
Michelle: