It's already proving to be a pretty busy stretch of weeks and that is impacting my usual focus on meals. After my rushed trip to Richmond Monday and the long drive over to Vance County and back on Tuesday, the simple solution for sustenance Tuesday night was my longtime much-loved childhood go-to of oatmeal, boosted with brown sugar and extra cinnamon, and the unnecessary addition of small butter slabs. There's always a celebration if it's breakfast for dinner, no?
The on-going chronicle of all things related to the George and Laura Roediger House (c. 1905) in the historic Holly Avenue Neighborhood of downtown Winston-Salem, NC. More info and pictures can be found at RoedigerHouse.com. [Mobile users: CLICK TO SEARCH the blog.]
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Sunday, March 22, 2026
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Meal No. 4063: Roasted Broccoli Cheddar Soup
Threats of severe storms and tornadoes brought a premature end to my day at St. Christopher's School in Richmond last Monday, although I still had time to complete a presentation with the lower school faculty. The trip home was a bit rainy but otherwise blessedly uneventful and I got back to the house with enough time to dig a batch of broccoli cheddar soup out of the freezer and drop it into the sous vide immersion circulator to bring it gently up to a serving temp. It was hearty and cheesy and filling, and just right for the weird weather I was taking shelter from that evening.
Friday, March 20, 2026
Meal No. 4062: Fluffy Buttermilk Pancakes
A short overnight in Richmond is what started my week, but before hitting the road last Sunday I made a mid-day meal of buttermilk pancakes. They were accompanied by some leftover bacon from a couple of days prior, and this time I may have steadied my hand enough so as not to overdo the bourbon barrel-aged maple syrup that I poured over top. I'm sticking with this recipe, because it always pleases, even though I know I've got a collection of others that it would not hurt to try.
"Best Tips for Making Pancakes: Fluffy Buttermilk Pancakes," by Joanne Ozug on the Pioneer Woman website. [Published 10 May 2017]
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Meal No. 4061: Steak Salads
Too much good eating left me badly in need of a salad last Saturday night. I'd already prepped homemade Thousand Island dressing and I'd grabbed some leafy greens on the last grocery run. I pulled prepped filet mignons from the freezer and dropped 'em into the sous vide immersion circulator and then finished them with a good pan sear. Once diced, they sat atop the salad gloriously, and it was a pretty awesome supper.
"Thousand Island Dressing," which was based on a version from Graybert on GeniusKitchen.com.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Cinnamon Brown Sugar Rice Krispies Treats
After a long absence, it seemed time to bring back cinnamon brown sugar rice krispies treats last Friday night. Not that we really needed a dessert but I do like to make something sweet and this was an easy one to pull together after supper. I might've made 'em all of a half dozen times, starting in 2024 when this version of RKT popped up on my radar. Any earlier versions from long ago never quite seemed right to me, but this here recipe is a keeper.
"Cinnamon Brown Sugar Rice Krispies Treats," from Christine Goff and published on JustAPinch.com. [Updated 24 November 2025]
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Meal No. 4060: Chicken Bacon Ranch Subs
Last Friday's meal for three was partially experimental, although the overall central feature had appeared here before in other forms. So that evening we sat down to chicken bacon spicy ranch subs, along with an abundance of aged cheddar and peppercorn kettle chips. An unscheduled chilly but full-sunshined afternoon bestowed a feeling of freedom and offered time for making a batch of bahn mi rolls, and they were imperfectly formed and a bit well-browned but perfectly tasty. I made a fresh batch of spicy ranch dressing and cooked up some more chile-rubbed bacon. So as not to overlook anything essential, I converted some remaining cherry tomatoes into tomato dice in hopes it might perch well enough in the smooshed sandwich as to help us look past the absence of beefsteak tomato slices, as it seemed essential to get this right in nearly every respect. (They ended up on the side, though.)
Based loosely on "Chicken Bacon Ranch Baked Subs," from Brandi Skibinski of The Country Cook. [Published 09 March 2025]
"Bahn Mi Roll," from Natasha Syanova of Natasha's Baking. [Published 07 August 2023]
"Spicy Ranch Dressing," from Alexa Blay of Key to My Lime. [Published 09 March 2021]
"Chile-Rubbed Bacon," by Rick Martinez. In "D.I.Y. B.L.T. O.M.G.: Bake Better Bacon (Upgrade Idea No. 1)," Bon Appétit, July 2016, p. 44.
Monday, March 16, 2026
Meal No. 4059: Chicken Katsu (A Japanese Fried Chicken Street Food)
It's been almost a decade since I made a much-loved recipe for chicken katsu, also known as Japanese fried chicken and often thought of as "street food." In the middle of the 2010s, it showed up here quite a few times, regularly accompanied by vinegar sushi rice and a soy-mirin-onion sauce. That was the direction I went this past Thursday night, much to the delight of the three of us in the Holly Avenue collective. Well-satisfied and happy to have time to bask in dinner's afterglow with ongoing conversation at the table, the testament to simple pleasure in good company was pronounced and convincing.
That warmth of fellowship seemed all the more fitting given how winter so pointedly reasserted itself that morning. After an exceptionally warm multi-day teaser of springtime, in rolled a bold front of cold and a turbulent upheaval of conflicted air masses, and then a protracted deluge of downpours followed the choppy winds of change. Ominous rolls of thunder came on forcefully enough that morning to rumble the sturdy timbers of this grand old manse, but still and steady was my most excellent Sumner as he cozied close and comfy along and across my outstretched legs.
Safely sequestered inside, the morning coffee was consumed and a decent start on my next Allende novel was achieved, but by late morning I had to switch over to PowerPoint presentation preparation thanks to an impending session in Richmond that I had high hopes for. Given the 20-degree tumble of temps from wake-up to yogurt snack, a little slideshow distraction was a useful occupation to avoid discomfiting awareness of meteorological misery.
Once the clouds moved out, we were graced with stunning sunshine and fully blue skies, and cruel harsh winds to counteract what might otherwise have been a glorious Winston-Salem afternoon. Still: the brilliant blooms on the lone surviving cherry tree were stunning against the fully blue heavens later that afternoon.
"Japanese Fried Chicken," from Cuisine at Home, Issue 98, March/April 2013, p. 44-45.
"Vinegar Sushi Rice," from Cuisine at Home, Issue 98, March/April 2013, p. 45.
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Meal No. 4058: Grilled Ribeyes
A three-item value-pak of nicely-priced beef steaks formed the heart of last Wednesday's plan for dinner: grilled ribeyes, seasoned only with salt and pepper, but cooked to a pretty solid medium-medium rare in spite of their thinner cut. Red-skinned potatoes were transformed into scallion-and-sour-cream mashed potatoes, and I made a red wine demiglace cream sauce to ride over top. It was a triumphant weeknight dinner, if I may say so, given how much I love warm weather and steak and the joy of good people around the table.
This take on mashed red potatoes was inspired by "Sour Cream and Onion Smashed Potatoes," by María del Mar Sacasa. In Cook's Country, February/March 2009, p. 9.
Creamy Peppercorn Sauce loosely adapted from “Steak au Poivre," by Dawn Yanagihara. In Cook's Illustrated, September & October 2001, p. 8-9.
Saturday, March 14, 2026
A Record-Breaking False Spring
The false spring that's played out over the last week was record-breaking on a couple of days, and as it came to its triumphant end on Wednesday before temps plunged down closer to normal, it at least tied the 1967 record of 86°F, at Piedmont Triad International Airport.
Sumner and Scarlett found it to be exceptionally pleasing for some front yard hang time, which means a couchant perch to watch for Sumner, and plenty of sniff and startle for Scarlett.
Here at the Roediger House, I only saw it get to 85°F, and the breezes were strong and it was delightful. The Bradford pear's short-lived blossoms are already being pushed aside by the emerging green leafing, and the lone surviving nearby cherry tree is in full strut.
A couple of the camellia bushes are also busting out in bloom, out behind the house, so I snagged a couple of photos to memorialize this stage of our seasonal progress.
Because I planted a staggered row of these bushes between two evergreen trees, I am once more testifying to poor landscape planning, and they will either have to be moved or I'll just have to dig 'em up and do away with them.
But for now, I appreciate their earnest coloring and gorgeous display as I peer out the kitchen window when I'm working at the sink.
Friday, March 13, 2026
Quanto Basta and Unneighborlyness
Oh, Quanto Basta: our longtime across-the-street Italian restaurant! Over the years, we have gotten to know not only the fine folks who work there but also plenty of the regular customers who park in front of the house and are warmly greeted by the pooches.
Last year, on a summer afternoon, while we were enjoying a pleasant sit under the huge Bradford pear tree in the side yard, I saw a couple walking past your back kitchen door where the washpit is. The gentleman liked the look of your mop left drying there from the weekend cleanup and decided to take it with him.
Just as I thought I might step out and confront him, I remembered when the amazing film students from the UNC School of the Arts asked to use your empty parking lot across from the house, while they were filming here on a Sunday and Monday. You know: days that the restaurant is closed. And you hard-heartedly said: “Nope!”
You were the only nearby property owners who were unwilling to help these film students out. So I thought to myself, as the gentleman with your mop exchanged glances with me: “Enjoy your fine new mop, sir!”
It’s a neighborhood. Either we are in this together, Quanto Basta...or we are not.
Thursday, March 12, 2026
White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Toffee Cookies
'Tis true I was once a much more frequent baker of cookies, and it was regularly to the joy of the household and often to the benefit of educators with whom I might be working the next day. It's the latter consideration that got me busy with a batch of white chocoloate macadamia nut toffee cookies last Sunday morning, before I hit the road for a couple of days in Virginia in two different schools. Not exactly suitable for breakfast but that didn't stop me from the unrivaled delight of sampling the goods straight off the sheet pan on which they'd just been transformed by 13 minutes at the right temp. After so many, many years of thinking I could be content with the recipe from the package, I'm so glad Christina Marsigliese of Scientifically Sweet actually figured out what really could make these cookies perfect.
Adapted from "THE BEST White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies," from Christina Marsigliese of ScientificallySweet.com. [Published 19 February 2025]
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Creamy No-Bake Cheesecake
Saturday night's supper did a number on all three of us so I'm sort of glad that the dessert I'd prepped was a light one. Or at least conducted itself with the appearance of such. Brought back for the first time in about two-and-a-half years was the creamy no-bake cheesecake perfected by the former Pastry Wizard of SeriousEats.com, Stella Parks. Plenty of tasty treats have made their way to the Roediger House table thanks to Stella, who is remarkable at avoiding our disappointment or displeasure. If this James Beard award-winning cookbook author, New York Times bestseller, and excellent recipe developer is willing to tell me a thing or two, I'll sure listen.
"Easy No-Bake Cheesecake," by Stella Parks, BraveTart and pastry wizard, and now an Editor Emeritus of SeriousEats.com. [Recipe Updated 30 October 2019 and 21 September 2025]
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Meal No. 4057: Bacon Egg & Cheese Buttermilk Biscuits
Saturday was the final full day of Eastern Standard Time for the outgoing winter months, and it was another Holly Avenue crew at the dinner table, which gave me the chance to use up some buttermilk and some bacon and to give in to a hankering for biscuits. The central feature: bacon, egg, and cheese biscuits, all from scratch. The biscuits were a bit malformed but still darned delicious, and it had been a while since I'd made chile-rubbed bacon in the oven. The baked scrambled eggs were light and fluffy and enhanced with a Swiss-and-Gruyère cheeses-to-pleases. It proved to be an unexpectedly filling meal, though, and we were all sort of miserable in a good way afterwards.
"The Food Lab's Buttermilk Biscuit Recipe," from J. Kenji López-Alt, Culinary Consultant for SeriousEats.com. [Published 07 August 2015 / Updated 19 December 2025]
"Chile-Rubbed Bacon," by Rick Martinez. In "D.I.Y. B.L.T. O.M.G.: Bake Better Bacon (Upgrade Idea No. 1)," Bon Appétit, July 2016, p. 44.
"Baked Scrambled Eggs," from Heather Johnson of TheFoodHussy.com. [Published 09 September 2019 / Updated 08 February 2026]
Monday, March 9, 2026
Meal No. 4056: Grilled Pork Kebabs with BBQ Glaze
After an almost-full week of work down in southeast Georgia, it was pretty nice to be back in place at home this past Friday. Friend and neighbor Jonathan was back on hand for supper and hanging out, and it was a perfect evening for grilling. So we had pork kebabs with a sweet barbecue glaze, a pot of roasted garlic quinoa gave good grains, and an abundance of herbed roasted asparagus rounded out the plate.
We reveled in a high temp in record territory that fine Friday in Winston-Salem, hitting 83°F at the local weather station and 84°F on the Roediger House Tempest.
Lots of sunshine (but gentle breezes to moderate the sun's bake) meant plenty of good time on the driveway with the pups and with our dinner guest when he arrived.
And the next sign of spring was emerging on the Bradford pear tree, with a few early blossoms and plenty of ready-to-burst buds. I am so glad that the end of winter is nearly here, and I welcomed the time change over the weekend that lets me indulge these pleasant evenings even longer!
"Grilled Pork Kebabs with Barbecue Glaze," by Andrea Geary. Recipe was an online extra from Cook's Illustrated and based on "The Best Way to Grill Pork Tenderloin," Issue No. 134, May & June 2015, p. 6.
Sunday, March 8, 2026
Meal No. 4055: Spiced Pecan & Blue Cheese Salad with Chicken
February exited the scene on a Saturday this year, and it turned into a lovely late winter day. I'd hoped to work out an evening for a special salad offering, based on the signature version at a local favorite special occasion restaurant. With herbed sous vide chicken as its centerpiece, on a bed of spring mixed greens, the bowl was a tribute to the iconic spiced pecan and blue cheese salad from Ryan's Steaks, Chops, and Seafood. I offered myself an abundance of sliced cucumber and not quite enough grape tomatoes, and the sweet and sour vinaigrette was generously splashed all over.
That final day of February had a particularly enticing event late morning: a Bobby Boy Bake Shop meetup with Ericka and Jesse Morgan and their family. Ericka was one of the graduate students in my social studies education program at Wake Forest University, graduating in 2004. I hadn't seen her in about 20 years, though, and now with five kids and an incredibly busy daily life, this reunion was an understandable long time in coming. It was terrific, of course, and her kids are just marvelous.
And it was pretty nice to then come home to my own superstars:
"Spiced Pecan and Blue Cheese Salad," inspired by the signature salad at Ryan's Steaks, Chops, & Seafood (an excellent Winston-Salem restaurant). "Sweet and Sour Vinaigrette" from The Ultimate Southern Living Cookbook, compiled and edited by Julie Fisher Gunter. Birmingham, AL: Oxmoor House (1999), p. 373. "Cinnamon Vanilla Glazed Walnuts" recipe from McCormick & Company. Thanks as always to Jimmy Randolph for helping me track down those recipes.
Saturday, March 7, 2026
Meal No. 4054: Baked Herbed Chicken Thighs
When Friday night rolled around a week ago, it was the end of a busy stretch of days. But hunger struck early that evening and so I went ahead and put together a dish of herbed baked chicken thighs, using an approach that helps them come out tender and so very juicy and also well-seasoned. Roasted cumin-coriander cauliflower was its own mound of temptation on the plate, and some herbed-garlicked whole green beans found their way to the small bit of open territory off to the side.
Friday, March 6, 2026
Copycat J. Alexander's Carrot Cake
It seems to me that the only J. Alexander’s Restaurant I’ve ever encountered was up in Winchester, VA, and I might have eaten there two or three times. But I do not recall getting to try its featured carrot cake, so having a copycat recipe for it is due not to compulsion but to coincidence. Might I nonetheless be glad for how well it served to guide my dessert-making for four of us last Thursday night? Absolutely. While I’ve no plans to abandon the much-loved three-layer version that dear friends (who at the time lived in Winchester!) recommended years and years ago, this sheet cake take will be perfect for a re-make.
Bradley took some back home to Boone to share with his family, and apparently his younger son Russell thinks Daddy needs to visit Dr. Ray-Ray again soon and come home with more of that carrot cake.
Based on "Copycat J. Alexander's Carrot Cake," from Jamie Lothridge of MyBakingAddiction.com. [Updated 19 April 2019 / 28 March 2024]
Thursday, March 5, 2026
Meal No. 4053: Penne alla Vodka
A dinner gathering of four on Thursday of last week featured penne alla vodka and homemade garlic breadsticks. A bit oversauced on the penne and overproofed where the breadsticks were concerned, the gents at the table were still gracious as they dispatched the viddles.
That Thursday proved to be quite the busy day. The North Carolina Council for the Social Studies has brought its annual conference to Winston-Salem, and friend and former grad student Bradley Phillis kindly invited me to co-present a session with him. We walked in the rain that morning from the house to the Benton Convention Center and enjoyed a warm reception from our audience, leaving us both pleased and also inspired for future collaborations.
Late that afternoon, just before dinnertime, a team of students from the UNC School of the Arts were here to plot, plan, and review various areas and rooms of the house as they anticipate filming here Easter weekend. A few of them are returners and it was good to see them; others are new faces and I can only hope future projects bring them back as well.
Based on "Penne alla Vodka," from Daniel Gritzer, Senior Culinary Director of SeriousEats.com. [Updated 21 September 2025]
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Meal No. 4052: Skillet Beef Stroganoff
The comfort of the latest Amy convergence last Wednesday was a chance to see if she’d be pleased at the reappearance of skillet beef stroganoff, a rewarding go-to menu item when there are mushrooms and ground beef and a short window of prep time. She responded in the affirmative.
Based on "Beef Stroganoff Hamburger Dinner in a Skillet," by Emeril Lagasse. Found online at The Food Network and also on Emerils.com.
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Meal No. 4051: Cheddar-Crust Chicken Pot Pie
As we approach the almost exact 40-year mark of knowing one another, my good friend and fellow UNC alum Kelly found his way back over to the house for a dinner visit last Tuesday night. Bearing a couple of fine gifts, the absolute best of which was his presence, Kelly joined us at the table for a supper of cheddar crust chicken pot pie and roasted herbed whole green beans. We were on the second of a couple of frigid-feeling days after the previous week's welcome warm-up, and I was absolutely committed to something that would be fully comforting. In this, there was success.
Tuesday morning brought welcome signs of our crocus resurrection, and I shall giddily celebrate Spring’s arrival especially after a January of winter’s enduring onslaught and about a thousand dollars sent to Duke Energy and Piedmont Natural Gas to cover it.
"Chicken Potpie with Cheddar Crust," from Food Network Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 8 (October 2011), p. 132-133.
Monday, March 2, 2026
Meal No. 4050: Meatloaf Minis
Last Monday's dinner for three of our Holly Avenue crew was pretty scrumptious: mini meatloafs, roasted spiced potatoes, and roasted herbed broccoli florets. A hearty bottle of rioja alongside, a few chai spice cinnamon oatmeal cookies, and a comfortable casual evening hang: that was a fine way to start the week.
"Mini Meatloaf," from Lauren Allen of Tastes Better from Scratch. [Published 20 February 2023]
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Cinnamon-Chai Oatmeal Cookies
After having been jovially admonished the previous Saturday, when I conducted my final all-day seminar with this final cohort of aspiring administrators in an Educational Leadership masters program at High Point University, for not having brought a batch of cookies for class, I knew I'd have to rectify the error before seeing a portion of them for our instructional coaching rounds the following Monday. So I extended my kitchen time last Sunday night past dinner clean-up to make a fresh batch of cinnamon-chai oatmeal cookies. These are such rewarding cookies to make, and I had a couple hot out of the oven that night. Then, I bagged up most of the rest to take with me Monday to Vance County, about two hours away from Winston-Salem. They were reasonably well received by the crew.
Based on: "Caramel-Chai Oatmeal Cookies," in Cuisine at Home, September/October 2013, p. 47.













































