I cannot imagine how either of you are handling this, smonster and nora. We go through earthquake preparedness, but it's an instantaneous thing and then it's dealing with it. The slow crawl of a hurricane would be maddening for me.
aurelia, it's a lot of meat, but this is at least a month's worth of cooking. The whole thing came from us trying to have things prepped and ready to go. I did two months of Dream Dinners, which I liked most of the meals, but it was expensive.
So I got a cookbook and figured out what we could eat next month and then went to the grocery store this morning and bought all the basic ingredients and then began preparing stuff. Essentially, it's mixing a marinade or a rub and putting it on the meat then freezing it in a bag with instructions for what to do next. In all cases, it's basically thaw and cook. Then you add whatever veggies to go with it on the day of.
Grace helped me (and did a good job for the most part) which was super nice. Noah flitted in and out but he did prepare the garlic/parsley chicken. Grace, though, stood with me for 2 hours of the prep. Essentially it took from 11:30-3:00 not including grocery shopping time. But if this means we have easy-to-the-table stuff at home in the freezer, then I'm thrilled.
And doing it at home cut the cost by probably a third. At Dream Dinners, the meat comes all pre-trimmed and tenderized etc. At home, it was a lot of cursing our lack of decent knives, hitting chicken breasts with a mallet and clean up!
That is never an easy time, Nora, deciding whether to stay or go. Think about where you will feel safe if you stay - is there somewhere in your house with no windows (or can you cover your windows before the storm hits?) - and how you can keep your cats safe. If you decide to go, leave as early as you can and be prepared to be stuck in slow traffic, and arrange for a hotel room or other place to stay before you leave.
I stayed through many storms - the only one I actually evacuated for was Katrina - and was fine, fwtw. Isaac is not a Category 5.
That's pretty awesome, Kat.
Jilli,
I have just spent an unreasonable amount of time on that site. I think I want one of EVERYTHING.
I can't decide between this: [link]
or this: [link]
or this: [link]
Safety and good wishes to all those in Isaac's path! Have my fingers crossed for you all.
During a drunken evening years ago a friend commented that the texture of mushrooms reminded him of cock (he enjoyed both). Now every time I hear anyone specify that they don't like the texture of mushrooms, I assume that they also don't (or wouldn't) enjoy performing fellatio.
Kat, wow. I would love to do something like that if only I had the freezer space.
Stay safe, NOLAistas!
Good luck, smonster and Nora!
That's amazing, Kat.
Safety and much good luck to you, smonster and Nora!
Kat, I'm in awe.
Mayor Landrieu, during his afternoon press conference today, recommended stay and shelter. Nora, as far as I saw the projected path hasn't changed, nor has time of landfall. Did I miss something, or is it just people's nervousness growing as it gets closer?
Ah, Jindal called for voluntary evac of low lying areas, Orleans Parish being among them, and then there were some Facebook reports of a weather dude (Bob Breck, I think?) who had been pooh-poohing the whole system, doubling back on that and freaking that people should evacuate tomorrow morning.
However, looks like Isaac is continuing to shift westward and strength has downgraded to Cat 1, for now. It's still a TS right now, though.