Babs BookMark Issue 2 | Page 27

The weather in Virginia is a rollercoaster of a ride, especially in the winter. The temperatures can hover in the mid-seventies, then plummet to below freezing the next day. Needless to say, our home is always stocked with as many cold remedies as possible. Happily, the best remedies come in the form of comfort food, and my little cookbook is bursting at the seams. From homemade chicken soup to four-cheese lasagna, I stuff my husband and teenage boys with my personal brand of preventative medicine—lemon zest for the chicken soup, garlic cloves in the lasagna, and raw honey in just about everything else. One of my favorite recipes comes from my mom. She called it Yorky Beef Stew, but I believe it’s a variation on the delicious English popovers. The first thing that you may have noticed is that the filling looks nothing like beef stew. That’s because it’s chicken. No matter the variety, we still call it Yorky Beef. Sort of like the “green cabinet” that sits in our living room—a small chest of drawers that was passed down from my grandparents. The green cabinet has been painted white, cream, lavender, green, antique green, and lavender again. When the piece came to me, I stripped it back down to the original wood finish; but it’ll always be the green cabinet. Here’s my recipe for “Yorky Beef Stew.” THE STEW: First, you need a pot of stew—about 3 to 5 cups worth. My mom once told me that I could use Dinty Moore, though I could never bring myself to buy it. Instead, I make what I like to call “leftovers” stew. I make a roux (melted butter & flour), add broth or stock, then leftover rotisserie chicken or roast turkey along with peas, chopped carrots, chopped potatoes, corn kernels, mushrooms, garlic, onion (I like shallots), salt & pepper, a bay leaf or 2,