Meal Planning Tips and Tricks

By Mercedes Lee

I get it, I do. On top of everything else we’re required to provide as parents, employees, community members, now there’s the additional pressure of providing a nutritionally sound dinner, 7 nights a week, at a reasonable hour, that appeals to the picky palates in the house.

As someone who lives and breathes organization and is a chowhound to boot, I have a series of tips and tricks I’ve learned that help my family successfully navigate the dinner gauntlet smoothly (most of the time) with minimal tears (most of the time).

This month’s tip is about DOUBLE DUTY DINNERS. Make your work count – twice! Repurposing one dish into another later in the week is a cost-effective way to stretch ingredients, labour, and time into tasty results. This month’s pot roast, based on an Ina Garten recipe but simplified for all of us who don’t live in the Hamptons, is a delicious one-pot dinner that requires nothing more than keeping the leftovers in the same pot, thinning out the liquid, and dumping in some barley and mushrooms to be turned into a delicious soup for later in the week. WIN!

Pot Roast with Vegetables
Serves 4-6

1 4-5lb pot roast (or any big hunk of meat labelled “braising”)
all purpose flour
olive oil (regular cooking oil works)
2 onions, chopped
2 celery stalks, chopped
4-5 cloves of garlic
2 cups of red wine (recipes will tell you “never cook with wine you wouldn’t drink” but I say that’s rubbish. Cook/drink cheap wine and no one will judge. No one will judge if you omit the wine entirely)
1 176ml can of diced plum tomatoes
1 cup of beef stock or beef broth (if using beef broth, buy reduced sodium or no salt)
three sprigs of thyme
three sprigs of rosemary
salt and pepper to taste
2 cups baby carrots
1 tablespoon unsalted butter

1. dust the roast with flour all over. In a large dutch oven, heat a few glugs of oil over medium high heat. Sprinkle the roast all over with salt and pepper. Sear the roast in the pan until all sides are golden brown. Take the roast out and set aside on a plate.
2. throw the chopped onions, celery, and garlic into the pan, and sauté until softened (about 3-5 minutes), stirring ocassionally.
3. Take the wine (if using, if not, substitute equal amount of water or more beef stock/broth), dump it in the pot and stir the bottom with a spoon, scraping up any browned bits.
4. Add the tomatoes, the beef stock, the thyme and rosemary back into the pan. Put the roast and any accumulated juices into the pot, cover with a tight fitting lid, reduce the heat so that it’s barely simmering, and then let cook for 1 ½ – 2 hours, or until the meat is tender*
5. About 30 minutes before you’re ready to serve, you can add the baby carrots, and the butter.
6. Before serving, taste for seasoning and add more salt and pepper as required.

Serve hot (you can either take the pot roast out and slice, or the meat should be tender enough that you can just break off chunks), with the carrots with a side of boiled potatoes or mashed potatoes.

*This dish is very forgiving. If you forget it and it spends an extra hour braising, no harm! If you let it get to the point where all the liquid is reduced, just top it up with more.

You could add 3 cups of frozen peas in the last 15 minutes of cooking, and then you get two vegetables in one dish! You could also add other chunks of root vegetable, or even little boiling potatoes, for a one pot meal. You could park the whole pot in the oven at 350F for the same amount of time. After step 3, you could throw everything into your slow cooker, set it on low, and have dinner ready when you get back (if you’re okay with the baby carrots being very soft, they can go in at the beginning, too).
potroast
Round 2: Beef, Barley, Mushroom Soup
To turn this into a delicious beef, barley, mushroom soup, keep everything in the same pot. The day you’re ready for soup, add ½ cup of pearl barley, maybe half a pound of sliced button or cremini mushrooms, and 4-6 cups of additional stock, broth, or water, and let it simmer until the barley is cooked through. Taste for seasoning and add salt and pepper. You can add more liquid to get the desired amount of soupiness. Serve with a salad and some bread and butter and there you go, dinner is done…like dinner? Err… The soup is pictured below served with a roasted red pepper, goat cheese panini.
beefbarleysoup

Walk-a-thon Funds

The school raised over $10,000 in last fall’s walk-a-thon and teachers now have access to those funds. As part of the “Inspiration” theme, teachers and students have brainstormed ideas on what inspires them to help direct where their class funds should be spent. Funding may be directed toward sports, arts and culture and involve things like field trips or enrichment experiences.

So far, classrooms have spent walkathon funds in a variety of ways:
Ms. Vacrinos JK/SK: paint materials for special art work ($80)
All JK/SK Classes: theatre performance ($720)
Mr. Lam & Mr. Mighton Grade 7/8: video camera equipment ($960)

NEW!!! iPad minis

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The School Council from last year (2013/2014) had allocated funds (from our fundraising efforts) to go towards a “big purchase”. The 20 iPad minis were delivered just before the Holidays!!

The Council decided to purchase the minis for a number of reasons, one being that they complement the inventory of 20 iPad minis that been given to the school via the Model School program. The Model School iPads were designated for use by the Grade 1 to 3. The 20 new iPad minis will be available for use to all the grades.

Through our fundraising efforts the School Council continues to support many other purchases and activities to further your child’s education.

Ward council Representative needed

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The Roden School Council is looking for a parent volunteer to attend Ward Council Meetings on behalf of the Roden School community.

The following is an excerpt from Jennifer Story, our Trustee. It explains the role of the Ward Council Representative and the meeting commitments. As our Ward Council Representative, you would be asked to report back to the school council any pertinent information acquired at the meetings.

A major priority for me as your School Board Trustee is to facilitate the sharing of information and best practices, provide opportunities for skill development, and build a community of support around our family of schools.

One way to accomplish this is through regular Ward Council meetings. TDSB Ward 15, Toronto-Danforth, has a vibrant and active school community. I want to do all I can to ensure your continued success as school community leaders and support you as you work through any challenges you, our schools and our Board as a whole, may face.

To that end, I will be holding the first Ward Council meeting of the new year on:

Tuesday February 10 from 7:00-9:00 pm at Frankland Community School in the library (816 Logan Ave). Childcare will be available.

The Ward Council meetings for the remainder of the 2014/2015 academic year will be held on:

Monday March 23 from 7:00-9:00 pm at Greenwood Secondary School in the library (24 Mountjoy Ave)

Thursday April 23 from 7:00-9:00 pm — location TBA

Tuesday May 19 from 7:00-9:00 pm — location TBA

Monday June 22 from 7:00-9:00 pm — end-of-school meeting and social; location TBA

Please also know that the meetings are open to anyone who wants to attend.

Please feel free to share this notice with your school communities.

At the February 10 meeting we’ll have a conversation about ways to build a supportive and successful school community in Toronto-Danforth.

I’ll be seeking your input on the following questions:

What do we want to accomplish with our Ward Council meetings

Which guest speakers/workshops/topics would we like to consider

What issues (TDSB, general education or community based) would we like to learn more about

These discussions will help us determine how to best use our time for the remainder of the school year.

At the first meeting we’ll also be electing a Ward Council Chair, as well as our Ward’s representatives to the Parent Involvement Advisory Committee (PIAC), and the French as a Second Language Advisory Committee (FSLAC). We will be electing one representative and one alternate for each committee. If you would like any more information regarding what each of these roles entails, please feel free to contact me by email at Jennifer.Story@tdsb.on.ca .

Please also let us know if you will need child minding or translation services, by sending an email to my Constituency Assistant, Maxeen.Paabo@tdsb.on.ca .

Thank you, and I hope to see you there.

Sincerely,

Jennifer Story
Trustee, Toronto District School Board
Ward 15, Toronto-Danforth

Please send an email to communications@roden.ca if you would like to volunteer for this role.

Parenting Workshop: How to Side-step Power struggles

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How to Side-step Power struggles

Check out our next FREE Parenting Workshop (How to Side-step Power struggles) offered in English and Urdu/Hindi. The workshop is presented by Joanne Gallagher and Farzana Yusuf of the East End Community Health Centre.

Date: Wednesday January 21st.
Time: 6:00pm to 7:30pm
Where: Roden, Library

Refreshments available. Also Childcare available and pizza for the kids.