SIMPLE GRILLED CHEESE

2023 was a rough year for us.  It began on my birthday at the end of April (worst birthday ever).  A few days before my birthday, I noticed a large lump in my groin.  I had an appointment with my PCP on my birthday, and pointed it out to her.  Ultrasound showed “a lump.”  Very helpful information.  CT scan, however, showed an abcess that apparently developed after a particularly bad bout of diverticulitis about a month earlier. My doctor sent me to the ER, where I spent 14 hours in what could have passed for a bus station except not as nice.  I spent 4 days in the hospital, had the abcess drained by interventional radiology, consulted with a colorectal surgeon, and discussed surgery sometime in the future. 10 days after I was discharged the abcess recurred, and I spent another two nights in the hospital having it drained again, and the surgery I’d dreaded for years — which I could no longer put off — was scheduled for the beginning of June on the day we were supposed to leave for vacation.  Oh, and our beloved Jasper, our 11-year-old duck tolling retriever, quit eating on my birthday (that’s for another post).

As it turned out, I had three fistulas secondary to the diverticulitis that needed repair.  When I met my surgeon for the first time in the hospital, he declared me a “disaster.”  Apparently his mother didn’t teach him that if you can’t say something nice about someone you shouldn’t say anything at all.  Over the course of the next 4 months my vocabulary expanded with words and phrases that I hope never to have to use again, including colon resection, loop ileostomy, nerve conduction velocity, GGE (10 out of 10 do not recommend), stricture, diversion colitis, flexible sigmoidoscopy (10 out of 10 do not recommend), and takedown surgery.  Each surgery and complication presented its own challenges.  Thankfully, by the holidays I had recovered from everything (except the PTSD), and the gut problems I had struggled with for so long disappeared.   I had one more surgery this year — completing a trifecta of abdominal surgeries — right before my birthday (of course, why not ruin as many birthdays as possible?) to repair a HUGE (my surgeon’s description) hernia that developed at the site of the last two surgeries (as my surgeon declared to his fellow in my presence, “if anyone’s going to have a complication it’s going to be her”).  I am reminded often that it could have been so much worse.

Although I have no complaints with the excellent care I received throughout, it was inevitable that there would be indignities along the way, and indeed there were.  I dealt with these mostly by treating them as out-of-body experiences. Friends and colleagues had a general understanding of what I was going through, but for the most part, it made people uncomfortable to talk about.  I certainly wasn’t ready to blog about it back then.  But as you’ll soon see, the experience has provided inspiration for several recipes, and this post provides context.

Seeing as this is, after all, a food blog, I have a little recipe.  Before and after my surgeries I was on a low-residue diet, which is basically low-fiber foods, and is apparently difficult for the general population to understand.  Whole-grain products, nuts, and most fresh fruits and vegetables were out.  One of the foods I could eat, however, which I had shunned for decades, was white bread.  Who knew a slice of buttered white toast could be so tasty? (10 out of 10 recommend.)  It also makes a perfect, easily digestible, grilled cheese sandwich (and only American cheese will do!).  Don’t get me wrong — I know how to make much more elevated grilled cheese sandwiiches — our favorite is made with jarlsberg and prosciutto on artisan bread with pesto (told ya).  But every once in a while, when my world seems off-kilter, I treat myself to one of these most basic comfort foods.

SIMPLE GRILLED CHEESE
Author: 
 
Ingredients
  • 2 slices white bread
  • 2 slices American cheese
  • Salted butter, softened
Instructions
  1. Heat a nonstick skillet over medium heat. Butter one side of a slice of bread and place it buttered side down in pan. Top bread with the 2 slices of American cheese. Butter one side of remaining slice of bread and place on top of cheese, buttered side up. Cook until bottom is golden brown, flip using a spatula and cook other side until golden brown. Remove to plate, slice on the diagonal, and serve immediately.

Lightly buttered with salted butter — unsalted won’t taste nearly as good

Golden brown — Goldilocks would say this is “just right”

Sandwiches taste better cut on the diagonal

 

GRAPEFRUIT, AVOCADO, AND RADISH CRUDO

I found this Wedgwood plate at an estate sale:

The United States Supreme Court, number 4 in a series of 4.  I bet you, like me, won’t be able to sleep until you know what the other three in the series are.  Mystery solved — I found a complete set listed on eBay, which also includes the Capitol, the White House, and a panorama of the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial.  Whew — now we can all sleep at night.

I’ve never had a case go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, although we tried once when I was a new lawyer working in NY.  The partner I was working with sent me to D.C. to file our hopeful little petition for certiorari in person.  He put me in a cab with a trial bag filled with our 40 copies, and in no time I was on the Trump Shuttle, (which flew hourly between NY and D.C.).  In case you are wondering, this is what a trial bag looks like:

Unfortunately, the oversized trial bag was awkward to carry and the petitions kept shifting in the bag, and as I was navigating the aircraft’s aisle, a critical button popped off of my dress.  I buttoned my heavy winter coat up and tried not to think about it.  But it was no longer cold out, and by the time I got to the Court I was hot, sweaty, cranky, and looking a wee bit crazy.  I announced that I was there to file a petition for certiorari, and the clerk looked at me said “Are you filing in forma pauperis?” which basically means “are you a poor person who can’t afford the filing fee?”  Defeated, I said, “I knew you were going to ask me that,” and explained about the missing button on my dress, which was probably TMI.  He assured me that he asks everyone that, but I didn’t believe him.  He gave me a safety pin for my dress and accepted my 40 (unsuccessful) petitions for filing.  In case you are wondering, this is what the safety pin looked like:

The honorable plate and memories of my one and only trip to the United States Supreme Court, the highest court in the U.S., is the inspiration for this recipe for Grapefruit Crudo, adapted from Bon Appetit, with its pretty grapefruit supremes and virbrant colors.

Supreming grapefruits (or any citrus) is easy, and makes them so much nicer to eat.  Cut the top and bottom off the grapefruit, then cut off the rind, trying not to take too much of the flesh with it.

Then slide your knife between the membranes to release the individual segments:

This salad (or crudo) is interesting, beautiful, and delicious.  It looked especially pretty on my green platter — I’d suggest laying some little gem or Boston lettuce leaves on your platter before assembling the salad to achieve a similar look.

5 from 1 reviews
GRAPEFRUIT, AVOCADO, AND RADISH CRUDO
Author: 
 
Ingredients
  • 2 large grapefruits, supremed (cut into segments)
  • ½ small red onion, thinly sliced
  • 1 large watermelon radish, peeled and thinly sliced
  • 3 tablespoons fish sauce
  • 1 tablespoons fresh lime juice
  • 1 teaspoons honey
  • 1 tablespoons roasted and salted cashes, chopped
  • 1 avocado, peeled and thinly sliced
  • 1 Fresno or other red Chile, thinly sliced
Instructions
  1. In a small bowl, whisk together fish sauce, lime juice, and honey.
  2. Shortly before serving, arrange radish slices around edge of serving platter.. Arrange avocado slices inside watermelon radishes. Mound grapefruit and red onion in center of platter. Drizzle fish sauce mixture over salad, garnish with cashews and Fresno chile slices, and serve.

Beautiful!

Like an Iron Chef, your cuisine will reign supreme