Home Living B Tuesday, August 2, 2022 The Observer & Baker City Herald DOROTHY FLESHMAN DORY’S DIARY Tomato time Houses without cupboards (Writer’s note: This is not a late April Fool’s joke. It’s for real. Ask someone older than I at 95.) very long time ago when I was barely able to be aware of it, the cupboards on the wall were of my Dad’s own doing regardless of where we lived. And, we moved a lot just like other folks did in those days. What I am saying is that there was a time when cup- boards like the ones now on the walls of my home wouldn’t have been left behind by the previous owners — as they were in my case when I purchased the residence — a most unusual gift. If that still isn’t clear, I need to say that a newly purchased, or usually rented, house didn’t natu- rally come with cupboards in which to store dishes and pans or clothing. Silverware came separate in their own boxes. You had to provide your own storage units. These built-ins were the property of the persons just moving out. That’s true — they took the cupboards with them just as they did their tables and chairs, beds, and other furnishings. This also included the heating and cooking devices such as the wood- burning kitchen range and the pot-bellied stove from the living room. Moving from one house to another was not an easy thing, but it seems to have been systemized by everyone in those days. In fact, I know that rooms themselves could be moved from one house to another by a carpenter to fit the needs of the family. That happened to one of the houses in which we had left. The house across the street needed an extra bed- room for the family moving in, so the carpenter just took out the nails, moved the room on skids, and fin- ished up both houses to look as though they had always been just that way. Maybe house plans were similar and the remod- eling not requiring a major undertaking. Whatever it was, needs were handled by the average homemaker, including installing elec- tric lights without the pres- ence of a licensed elec- trician. They just seemed to know how to do all of the necessary jobs, maybe learning by doing. Those were the days before licensed installers were a requirement. It is barely on the fringe of my remembrances that I see my father attaching a dish cupboard to the kitchen wall of the rental on B Avenue in Old Town into which we were moving. He was making the big wooden structure fit into the two walls of the corner and nailing it into place, saying that the walls of the house weren’t “plumb” in a not happy voice. Maybe that’s why I remember it. People in our community seemed to move from house to house in those days, fairly often within the same neighborhoods. Sometimes they just traded houses for a while and, occasionally, traded back again. A See, Dory/Page B2 123rf Celebrate the season with a tomato and chicken recipe By LINDA GASSENHEIMER • Tribune News Service R ipe tomatoes are in season. Here’s an easy way to use them. To keep their fresh flavor, the tomatoes are not cooked. Their juice and seeds are blended into a sauce and mixed with mayonnaise. The remaining tomato pulp is cut into cubes and added to the sauce. Boneless, skinless chicken thighs are used for the recipe. I like to flatten them so that the thick and thinner sections cook evenly. seeds and tomato liquid into a food Helpful Hints processor or press through a sieve. • You can use fresh Process until smooth. There should parsley or cilantro instead of be about 1/2 cup of tomato puree. basil. Mix tomato puree with the may- Countdown onnaise. Cut the remaining tomato • Make the sauce and set flesh into cubes. Divide the cooked aside. chicken between two dinner plates. • Make rice salad. Sprinkle with salt and pepper to • Saute the chicken and taste. Spoon the sauce over the complete the recipe. chicken and add the tomato cubes Shopping List on top. To buy: 3/4 pound bone- Yield 2 servings. less, skinless chicken thighs, 1 large tomato, 1 jar Per serving: 342 calories (50% reduced-fat mayonnaise, 1 from fat), 18.9 g fat (3 g saturated, Linda Gassenheimer/TNS can olive oil spray, 1 package 5.4 g monounsaturated), 156 mg microwaveable brown rice, 1 Summer chicken with sauce Aurore (tomato mayonnaise sauce). cholesterol, 34.1 g protein, 6 g carbo- bottle reduced fat oil and vin- hydrates, 1.1 g fiber, 375 mg sodium. egar dressing, 1 cucumber and one bunch fresh basil CUCUMBER RICE SALAD Staples: salt and black peppercorns. Recipe by Linda Gassenheimer SUMMER CHICKEN WITH SAUCE AURORE (TOMATO MAYONNAISE SAUCE) Recipe by Linda Gassenheimer 3/4 pound boneless skinless chicken thighs Olive oil spray 1 large tomato 1/4 cup reduced-fat mayonnaise Salt and freshly ground black pepper Flatten chicken thighs with a meat mallet or bottom of a heavy skillet to about 1/4-inch thick. Heat a nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Spray with olive oil spray and add chicken. Saute 2 minutes. Turn and saute 3 to 4 minutes or until a meat thermometer reaches 165 degrees Fahrenheit. While chicken sautes, cut tomato in half and scoop out the 1 package microwave brown rice to make 1 1/2 cups cooked rice 4 tablespoons reduced-fat oil and vinegar dressing Salt and freshly ground black pepper 1 cup cucumber cubes, cut into 1/4- to 1/2-inch pieces 1/4 cup fresh basil leaves, torn into small pieces Microwave rice according to the package instructions. Measure 1 1/2 cups and save any remaining rice for another meal. Place rice in a bowl and add the dressing and salt and pepper to taste. Toss to coat the rice with the dressing. Add the cucumbers and basil leaves and mix into the salad. Yield 2 servings. Per serving: 217 calories (15% from fat), 35 g fat (0.5 g saturated, 1.2 g monounsaturated), 2 mg cholesterol, 4.7 g protein, 41.5 g carbohydrates, 2.9 g fiber, 16 mg sodium. Do’s and don’ts of deadheading flowers JENNIE HAGEN GRANDMA’S GARDEN F or years I scorned dead- heading my flowers as abso- lutely unnecessary. And as my gardens grew and more flow- ering plants were added to the assorted collection, by July they looked pretty ragged. I had to do something different. Deadheading is simply the pro- cess of removing blossoms that have finished their blooming cycle. For some plants, it’s an easy read. They may be in focal points of your yard or line a flower bed in the front of your home that is vis- ible to those passing by. But what- ever the reason, when this part of your routine maintenance is kept up with regularity, it makes all the difference. Most annuals don’t need dead- heading. Think of a large pot filled with petunias — if you endeavored to remove the spent blossoms each day, that would be all you would do. Not very practical. There are annuals that appre- ciate regular deadheading, and their growth structure makes for easy trimming. Marigolds and zinnias are two good examples, as their upright habit and large flower size keep your trimming time to a minimum. Certain types of marigolds are an exception. Tagates marigolds may have hun- dreds of small, dainty blossoms at one time. Think of “Tangerine Gem” and “Lemon Gem,” both prolific bloomers. They require no deadheading. A word of caution is in order. It makes sense to trim as many plants as possible in one round of your garden. But there is a nasty catch here about doing too much without a purposeful break. Trim- ming foliage on some of your tomato plants increases the day- light amount to the fruiting bodies in the interior of the plant, but trimming rose blossoms may transmit tobacco mosaic to roses if trimmers are not cleaned. Toma- toes may carry the mosaic, but they are relatively benign to the virus. Once infected with the mosaic, if not treated, rose blos- soms will have brown spots, shriv- eled stems, and blossom mor- tality. So, after trimming your tomato leaves, wipe the blades with a paper towel soaked in rub- bing alcohol. Soap and water do not always remove the disease. I keep rubbing alcohol in my garden room. Dry thoroughly before moving on! See, Flowers/Page B2