Baked Halibut Fillet Recipe

BAKED HALIBUT FILLET RECIPE WITH WILD RICE AND CAESAR SALAD

Greetings Daymaker family –

How is the first week of Autumn going?  Good here.
Rained most of the day yesterday.  Good thing.
Temps are still warm during the day, but they’re dipping down to ideal upper 60s low 70s at night!

Presenting Wednesday’s Reader –
Jam packed full of fun, interestings, inspiration and a terrific baked Halibut recipe!

BEGINNING WITH —

  • AUTUMN INSPIRED ARTWORK
    Love the colors!
  • TRIVIA AND FASCINATING FACTS FROM LESLIE ELMAN
    Leslie never disappoints to intrigue me – with – “Wow!  Never knew that, but now I do!”
  • QUICK QUESTION
    Coke or Pepsi?
    I am a keen observer that people are die hard fans of one or the other
    I’ve always been a Pepsi girl.
    Back in the day I was a Diet Pepsi junkie.
    Not so much anymore.
    But every now and then, I’ll grab a Pepsi just because it sounds appealing/tastes good and a satisfaction guaranteed walk down memory lane.
    How about you?
  • ONE TINY LITTLE FROG’S STORY
    Is super cool and inspiring.
    Definitely a life reminder to shut out the neigh-sayers and just keep on going.
    Reminds me a lot the childhood story,  The Little Train that Could.
    And!
    So takes me happily back to the enormous hand painted banner my mom had year-after-year on one entire wall of her 1st grade classroom in Shepherd, Montana.
    A friendly, giant caterpillar with the bold words on its back that read , “Inch by Inch, Life’s a Cinch.”
  • RECIPE (!)
    BAKED HALIBUT FILLETS
    Had to share this while the temps haven’t fallen to the brrrrrr zone when soups/stews/chili are first choice of go-to for dinner time.
    A terrific recipe and gotta serve the wild rice + Caesar salad as sidekicks.
    No disappointments for this little end of the season trio!
  • TRACY BECKERMAN’S
    FROZEN FOREHEAD STORY
    Is a *Yikes*  and * Quite Humorous* piece!
    Me?
    I’ve not done the injections for a more youthful appearance thing.  Always kinda wanted to.
    However, Tracy’s column today convinces me that I won’t ever be tempted.  Ha!
    I always thought  Mr. Spock was the coolest dude on the Starship Enterprise.
    Exception being if I saw a little of Mr. Spock looking like ME in the mirror!
  • MERCI, DANKE, GRAZIE, GRACIAS
    For sliding by this beautiful Wednesday and giving us a read + sharing + engaging
    We are grateful.
  • AND (!!)
    STACY’S WORLD IS BACK FRIDAY
    Totally —
    Don’t. Wanna. Miss.

Catch ya Friday
Same time
Same place

POP Quiz

POP QUIZ

  1. WHAT IS CONSIDERED A PERFECT SCORE IN A SINGLE GAME OF 10-PIN BOWLING?
    a) 100
    b) 200
    c) 300
    d) 500
  2. TRINITROTOLUENE IS MOST COMMONLY USED FOR WHAT PURPOSE?
    a) Making explosives
    b) Treating heart ailments
    c) Insulating space satellites
    d) Paving roads
  3. WHICH SPECIES OF WHALE TAKES ITS NAME FROM THE RUSSIAN WORD FOR WHITE?
    a) Beluga
    b) Minke
    c) Narwhal
    d) Sei

Baked Halibut Fillet Recipe

QUICK QUESTION

DO YOU PREFER
COKE OR PEPSI?

Baked Halibut Fillet Recipe

POP QUIZ ANSWERS

  1. A perfect score in a single game of 10-pin bowling is 300.
  2. Trinitrotoluene, better known as TNT, is most commonly used for making explosives.
  3. Beluga whales, which are white when they reach adulthood, take their name from the Russian word for white.

~ COPYRIGHT 2024 LESLIE ELMAN
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

ONE TINY LITTLE FROG’S STORY

There once was a bunch of tiny frogs who arranged a running competition.

The goal was to reach the top of a very high tower.

A big crowd gathered around the tower to see the race and cheer on the contestants and the race began.

No one in the crowd really believed that the tiny frogs would reach the top of the tower.

You heard statements such as:
“Oh, WAY too difficult!”
“They will NEVER make it to the top.”
“Not a chance that they will succeed.  The tower is too high.”

The tiny frogs began collapsing one-by-one.  Except for those who in a fresh tempo were climbing higher and higher.

The crowd continued to yell:
“It is too difficult!!!  No one will make it!”

More tiny frogs got tired and gave up.

But ONE continued to climb higher and higher.

This one just would not give up.

At the end all the tiny frogs had given up climbing the tower.  Except one – and after a big effort was the only one who reached the top.

Then — all of the other tiny frogs naturally wanted to know how this one frog managed to do it.

A contestant asked the tiny frog how — the one who had succeeded — how he’d found the strength to reach the goal.

It turned out that the winner was DEAF!

The wisdom of this story is:
Never listen to other people’s tendencies to be negative or pessimistic because they take your most wonderful dreams and wishes away from you.  The ones you have in your heart!

Always think of the power words have.  Because everything you hear and read will affect your actions.

ALWAYS be POSITIVE and, above all, be DEAF when people tell you that you cannot fulfill your dreams!

Always think:  I CAN DO THIS.

~ from my wonderful email collection
this one circa 2001

WE CAN’T BE BRAVE
WITHOUT FEAR.
~ MUHAMMAD ALI ~

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED:

LET YOUR REGRETS GATHER DUST

RIDDLE ME THIS

WHAT FLIES FOREVER
AND RESTS NEVER?

Baked Halibut Fillet Recipe

BAKED HALIBUT FILLETS

Halibut has been dubbed “Prime Rib of the Sea” for a reason – firm and meaty and outstanding.
Mark this recipe as — dinner delish and quick.

HERE’S HOW WE MAKE IT –
INGREDIENTS:                  
Serves 2-3 depending on appetites

  • 1 pound halibut fillets
  • 1/4 cup chives, chopped
  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • salt and pepper
  • 1/4 cup freshly-grated Parmesan cheese

PREHEAT OVEN TO 350*

PLACE HALIBUT FILLETS
In a buttered, ovenproof baking dish

IN A MIXING BOWL COMBINE:
Chives, sour cream, pepper, salt and cheese until thoroughly combined

POUR MIXTURE
Over top of halibut – making sure to cover all the fillets equally

BAKE – UNCOVERED
In prepared oven for about 20 minutes

GARNISH
With lemon wedges and fresh, minced parsley

  • SERVE WITH
    Long Grain & Wild Rice
    (I’m a big fan of the little Rice Roni box of Long Grain and Wild Rice – delish and easy)
  • Small Caesar salad
  • Glass of favorite beverage

~ Recipe from my friend Kimberly outta Portland. 
It’s her mom’s recipe and people have raved about this light, delightful dinner for-ever!

RIDDLE ANSWER

WIND

Baked Halibut Fillet Recipe

LOST IN SUBURBIA

ATTACK OF THE FROZEN FOREHEAD
BY TRACY BECKERMAN

Recently I noticed that the shallow lines on my forehead had started to morph into wandering rivers.  Since I wear my hear very short, there wasn’t really any way to cover them up, and I complained to my husband that I was starting to look old.

“How old do you think you look?”  he asked.

“Around 60,” I replied.

“You are around 60,” he said.

“Yes, but I don’t want to look 60.”

“What’s wrong with looking 60 when you’re 60?”  he asked.

“I’d rather look 40.”

“But you’re not 40.”

“I know that,” I said.  “I just want to look younger than I am.”

“Just tell everyone you’re 70 and they’ll all think you look really good for your age,” he said.

Without two X chromosomes, my husband would never understand my concerns.  So I sought out the counsel of my 60-year-old friends who all, mysteriously,  happened to have smooth foreheads.  They also had eyebrows that didn’t move, but I overlooked that because their foreheads were so smooth.  The secret, they said, was to get a shot of botulinum in my face to smooth everything out.  I’m not sure why I agreed to inject a known toxic substance into my forehead, but they all seemed pleased with the results, so I decided to give it a shot … no pun intended.

I made an appointment with a dermatologist and got the shot.  Then a funny thing happened.  I discovered I had muscle weakness above one of my eyes that had heretofore gone unnoticed … until I got the shot.  Unfortunately, when the miracle forehead smoother interacted with the secret muscle weakness, it created something worse than small lines in my forehead.

It made one of my eyebrows drop.

So now, instead of looking like a gracefully aging 60-year-old woman, I looked like Mr. Spock.

Naturally, this wasn’t really the look I had been going for.  I went back to the dermatologist to register my complaint and ask if there was a way to get me to look like a human again instead of a Vulcan.  She said there was nothing she could do, and another shot could possibly make it worse.  I was stuck that way for six months.  Then she held up her hand, told me to “live long and prosper,” and boldly sent me on my way to boldly go where no other middle-aged woman with a droopy eyebrow had gone before.

I assumed she meant the mall.

I figured I could probably find a solution there, and if not, there was nothing like retail therapy to make you feel better when you look like an alien.

Unfortunately, if I had thought that covering up small forehead lines was hard, covering up a droopy eyebrow was darn near impossible.

First, I tried getting oversized sunglasses to cover the problem.  But when I wore them inside, I couldn’t see and kept walking into things.  Clearly, having a fat lip would not solve the problem.

Then I considered getting an eyepatch.  But I was pretty sure looking like a pirate wasn’t much of an improvement over looking like a Vulcan, plus I would have to walk around saying “argh” and “shiver me timbers” all the time.

Finally, I consulted the smartest woman I know.  I called my mom and told her about the shot of botulinum and the droopy eyebrow and Mr. Spock, and after some thoughtful consideration, she came up with the most logical conclusion.

Stay home.

~ Tracy Beckerman is the author of the Amazon Bestseller, “Barking at the Moon:  A Story of Life, Love and Kibble.”
COPYRIGHT 2024 CREATORS.COM

Fascinating Stuff

  • Dick Weber was professional bowling’s first bona fide superstar.  A founding member of the Professional Bowlers Association, Weber won 30 PBA Tour titles in his career and is one of only two bowlers to win PBA championships in six different decades.  (The other is Johnny Petraglia.)  Lesser-known fact:  It’s likely that Dick Weber was the model for the silhouetted bowler in the PBA logo.
  • Toss around words such as “phlyarology” and people might think you’re talking nonsense, which, in a way, you are.  From the Greek “phluaros” (silly talk), phlyarology does indeed mean “talking nonsense” — and a phlyarologist is a person who engages in phlyarology.  Though the practice is widespread, the word itself is uncommon.  It seems to have been coined in an article about a meeting of clergymen that was published in an English periodical in 1867, possibly never to be used again.
  • With steel in short supply, President Woodrow Wilson approved construction of ships made from reinforced concrete to supplement the U.S. Navy fleet during World War I.  The largest was the SS Selma.  Launched on June 28, 1919, the day that Germany signed the Treaty of Versailles to end World War I, the Selma never saw active duty.  It was used briefly as a commercial oil tanker, suffered damage to its hull and eventually was scuttled near Galveston, Texas.
  • The story of Jonah and the whale appears in both the Old Testament of the Bible and in the Quran.  Although the details vary slightly, both accounts begin with Jonah being commanded to preach to a community of nonbelievers.  When he can’t accomplish this successfully, he hides on a boat that becomes caught in a life-threatening storm.  To save his fellow passengers, Jonah is cast into the sea, where he is swallowed by a whale.  His life is spared because of prayers of repentance he makes inside the belly of the beast.
  • More than a mile wide and twice as high as Niagara Falls, with hundreds of millions of cubic meters of water cascading over its surface, Victoria Falls — on the Zambezi River between Zambia and Zimbabwe — is one of the world’s great waterfalls.  Nineteenth-century Scottish missionary/explorer David Livingstone named the falls for Queen Victoria, but its indigenous name, Mosi-oa-Tunya, meaning “the smoke that thunders,” is more evocative.

~ COPYRIGHT 2024 LESLIE ELMAN
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

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4 replies
  1. Carol says:

    Baked Halibut is a must try! And so easy!!

    Loved the wisdom of the Frog story and Muhammed Ali. And Tracy Beckerman’s mom. Always love Tracy and her humorous spin on life . Left today’s column with a smile.

    Looking forward to cooler fall temperatures – AND Stacy’s World on Friday!!!

    Reply
  2. Marty says:

    Daymaker, I was always a Pepsi lover for a thousand years, but for some odd reason recently Pepsi began to taste weird to me so I switched to Coke. I now have a smile on my face when I drink Coke! And on to the Halibut Fish. I love individually wrapped frozen halibut from Costco but could not figure out a good recipe. Now, thanks to Daymaker, I have it and back to the freezer I go to fetch my halibut for dinner this week. Thank you.

    Reply

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