Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Not'cher MinnesOtan Fud

When we moved from the upper midwest to the PNW seven years ago,
I thought I had moved to another country. 
The people were different, the accents were different,
the traffic was different, the clothing was different.

The food was different - really, really different.

At times the differences were so overwhelming, it would drive me to tears. 
I kept telling myself that if the early pioneer women could make it,
I could make it.

The first time we had a team from work over, we'd lived here only a year. 

We still cooked MinnesOtan. 

I prepared the best I knew,
Velveeta Cheese chili dip, barbecued Little Smokies and spicy meatballs.
I also had a veggie and fruit tray, rolled-out sugar cookies,
fudge and a few other favorites. 

I was pretty proud of myself, until I noticed the guests hardly ate anything.

Recently, we had my husband's new team over to kick off the new year.  
My amazing kids helped me update our company menu
to see if people would actually eat our food.   
Grace, my neat freak, helped with cleaning. 
Bethany did the cooking and Jon did the dishes.  
Beka traipsed around helping everyone with her cheerful attitude.

We didn't burn anything.
We didn't break anything.
We didn't drop anything.
We didn't melt anything.
We didn't get our hair caught in anything.

We had a wonderful day working together.

Stuffed mini Portabella mushrooms



Sockeye Salmon Dip, Kalamata olives, Manzanilla olives



Dill Havarti, Brie, Gouda, Smoked Gouda and French Abbaye Cheeses
It looked amazing with the fresh, lush clusters of grapes, 
but I forgot to take a picture.
We served the tradtional fruit and vegetable trays.

We didn't buy the standard Wheat Thins and Triscuits,we bought those fancy crackers.
 I know, right? 
Compared to the generic crackers I bought in early marriage,
 Wheat Thins and Triscuits are upscale.
(Wanna' know a secret?
We still buy them when we don't have company.)

For desert we had chocolate truffles, dark chocolate covered acai berries,
and Grace's white-chocolate dipped strawberries.

The best part of the evening?

The guests ate the food.

We enjoyed animated conversation and people would often pop up
to refill their plates.

I suddenly realized why my Gramma loved to see people eat -
there's such a satisfying feeling of knowing company is enjoying your food.
Or, in my case, my daughter's food.

The food  we served was definitely
not'cher Minnesotan fud.

*****
What's your favorite food items to serve guests?

Have you had any failures like mine?

I'd love to hear your stories.

6 comments:

  1. For one of my first company meals (Aaron's uncle and aunt) I made spaghetti. It wasn't the first time I had made spaghetti, but for some reason the noodles didn't turn out right. We kept finding chunks of stuck together noodles. Thankfully the pie for dessert turned out fine.

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  2. I love reading this and I have never really thought about the differences in appetites across our nation, but of course it would be true :). I especially loved the cheese platter.

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  3. I would eat that! Yummmmm! Not so much on the Velveeta dip, though.

    Do I have failures? Uh, yeah, every time we have company over. Which is why I almost never do that anymore.

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  4. I had Sunday dinner company once and burned everything so badly there wasn't enough for everybody to eat. It was sooooo embarrassing!

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  5. That all looks soo good! I think I may be a native of the wrong state... ;)

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  6. Your spread looks amazing!
    What I love about christian fellowship and hospitality is that folks (mostly) don't mind what you serve up and hunger for the good company most of all. I stick to trusty favourites for visitors to try to avoid embarrassing failures!

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