Main Dish Frito Pie

MAIN DISH FRITO PIE

Happy Wednesday, friends.
May your day be as beautiful as you are!

Presenting Daymaker’s Wednesday Reader.

BEGINNING WITH

LESLIE ELMAN’S FASCINATING FACTS AND TRIVIA
Always, ALWAYS intrigues me.
And I feel more interesting knowing more than I knew.
Who knew that the patches on a soccer ball were more than just decoration?
Not me!

QUICK QUESTION
What will I never do again?
Ride in a helicopter unless it’s a ride or die scenario
Years and years ago when Peter and I moved to Texas, I worked at Dallas Jet Center.  Some of the Traffic Watch helicopters would fuel up at Dallas Jet Center.
I was invited to join one morning to ride along with the Traffic Watch helicopter and I jumped at the chance and climbed in the helicopter.  I sat in the back next to one reporter, headphones on as she reported what she was seeing regarding traffic.  In the front was another reporter for another station doing the same riding shot gun to the very skilled pilot.  (Who I learned later was a helicopter pilot in Viet Nam.)
There were numerous other helicopters in the sky doing the traffic watch reporting thing as we were.

Then Jim, our pilot, communicated to the other helicopter pilots via however they communicate with one another after Traffic Watch shift was over and announced he had a special passenger on board (moi) and “let’s show her what we can do”.
So, all these helicopters hovered over a field of tall grass and they all did some really cool stuff — turning the copters in a circle — making the grass swish back and forth — and kinda did a party helicopter dance sort of thing.

Yeah, it was SUPER COOL and I feel very fortunate to have been a passenger that day and experience a once-in-a-lifetime experence.

THAT and helicopters don’t do the Traffic Watch any longer.  At least not to my knowledge.  Cameras and technology have replaced them.  **sigh**

However,  years have marched on and — for whatever reason — I’m super uncomfortable with heights — so I’d not jump in a helicopter again unless it was a ride or die scenario.

RECIPE (!)
Grandma’s MAIN DISH
Is good-ol’-warm your soul, spoon lickin’ good.
I added Frito Pie to Grandma’s recipe title of Main Dish — we actually had no clue at the time what Frito Pie even was.  It was simply Main Dish.  ha!

TRACY BECKERMAN’S
Slice-of-Life humor never fails!

GRATITUDE ALL (!)
For being part of the Daymaker Readable Art Community
+ sharing + engaging + love.
We love you back!

Catch ya Friday.
Same time
Same place

Ready?
Set
Enjoy the read!

Main Dish Frito Pie

POP QUIZ

  1.  THE CAPTAIN AND CREW OF THE BRIGANTINE MARY CELESTE FAMOUSLY DID WHAT IN 1872?
    a)  Claimed Puerto Rico as a U.S. Territory
    b) Sailed the first U.S. trade route to China
    c) Tried to start a war with France
    d) Vanished
  2. VIRGINIA IS ONE OF FOUR U.S. STATES THAT ARE OFFICIALLY CALLED COMMONWEALTHS.  WHICH OF THESE STATES IS NOT A COMMONWEALTH?
    a) Alabama
    b) Kentucky
    c) Massachusetts
    d) Pennsylvania
  3. WHICH BEST DESCRIBES THE PATCHES THAT COVER A STANDARD BLACK AND WHITE LEATHER SOCCER BALL?
    a) 12 hexagons and 20 pentagons
    b) 12 pentagons and 20 hexagons
    c) 32 hexagons
    d) 32 pentagons
Frito

QUICK QUESTION

WHAT IS THE ONE THING
YOU WILL NEVER DO AGAIN?

Comfort Food

POP QUIZ ANSWERS

  1.  The Mary Celeste was found in December 1872 floating in the Atlantic; her captain and crew had vanished and were never seen again.
  2.  Kentucky, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Virginia are commonwealths.  Alabama is not.
  3. The surface of a soccer ball is covered by 12 pentagons and 20 white hexagons.

~ COPYRIGHT 2025 LESLIE ELMAN
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

ONE REASON WHY BIRDS AND HORSES
ARE NOT UNHAPPY IS BECAUSE THEY
ARE NOT TRYING TO IMPRESS OTHER
BIRDS AND HORSES.
~ DALE CARNEGIE ~

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

GRATEFULNESS MAKES THE SOUL GREAT

RIDDLE ME THIS

WHAT HAS WORDS BUT NEVER SPEAKS?

Main Dish

MAIN DISH FRITO PIE

This recipe was one of my grandma’s surprise-suppers. 
Grandma was an artist in the kitchen: homemade breads, cookies, green beans, mashed potatoes, fried chicken, pork chops … you name it – she made it.  And she made all the very best.  Labor of delicious love!
Every now-and-then she’d serve this comfort food gem for supper.  Kids (young and not so young) gobbled it up and asked for seconds — with a “please” and “thank you”.

HERE’S HOW WE MAKE IT
INGREDIENTS:

  • 2 pounds ground beef
  • 1 package chili seasoning
  • 3 cans Rotel and green chilies
  • 1 – 28 ounce can crushed tomatoes

IN A LARGE SOUP POT:

  • Brown beef, over medium high heat – making sure to crumble beef with a wooden spoon as it cooks thoroughly.
  • Drain off grease – or dab the grease with a few paper towels and discard paper towels.
  • Add package of chili seasoning, and canned tomatoes.
  • Simmer on low for about an hour, stirring every once in a while.

NOW WE ADD
AND STIR IN WITH THE BEEF AND TOMATOES:

  • 2 cups cooked rice
  • 2 cups small pasta noodles cooked al dente (think macaroni style), drained
  • 2 cans yellow corn, drained
  • 3 cans seasoned chili beans

SIMMER ON MEDIUM-LOW
AN ADDITIONAL 30 MINUTES
STIRRING EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE

Until mixture in pot is hot and happily getting along together.

READY TO SERVE

For each serving:
Place a hand full of corn chips in the bottom of a large soup bowl and ladle Main Dish over the top.
Garnish with shredded cheddar cheese on top.  And a cold glass of milk on the side!

RIDDLE ANSWER

A BOOK

Main Dish Frito Pie

LOST IN SUBURBIA

THE DE-STINKIFICATION OF THE DOG
BY TRACY BECKERMAN

I wouldn’t say I’m nose blind to the smell of my dog, but typically, I don’t realize he needs a bath until the board of health shows up and condemns the dog, his bed and our house.

My husband will usually smell him before I do.

Maybe it’s because he’s out of the house all day, and when he walks in the door, the smell hits him like a basketball to the face.

“Oh, wow, the dog!” he said one day when he got home, putting his hand over his nose.  “Don’t you smell that?”

“Maybe a little,” I admitted.

“When’s the last time he had a bath?”  he asked.

“Um, what year is it?”

Once my husband pointed out that our home was starting to smell like a Superfund site, I realized the time had come to de-stinktify him (the dog, not my husband) before the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was called in to set up a hot zone around the perimeter of our house.

I called to make an appointment at a new grooming service I’d heard good things about.  But it was booked solid by other people who no doubt had their own Superfund dogs.

I figured waiting a few days wouldn’t make a huge difference since the level of air quality in the house was already at DEFCON 5.  I made the first available appointment, then sprayed the dog with air freshener for a couple of days until they could get him in.

The first hint I got that the new groomer might not be the right one for us was in the waiting room.  The space was wallpapered in a pink-and-green print with little French bulldogs on it, and there were fuchsia-colored beanbag dog beds in the shapes of dog bones spread around the room for dogs to recline on until their appointments.

A bowl of free-range ostrich bites was on the counter, free for all the pampered pups in the room who preferred their ostriches organic.

I looked at my dog, who seemed as stunned by the opulence as I was.

Apparently, the clientele here was used to a certain level of comfort and cuisine.  Then there was my dog.

He liked to sleep on bricks and eat dirt.

We waited for a short time before it was our turn.

“Bowie Beckerman,” a voice rang out.

We approached the counter.

“Are you getting full-service grooming today?”  asked the technician.

I figured it probably included a wash, vacuum and undercarriage spray like we got for the car.  So I nodded yes.

Would you like rose, eucalyptus or lemon-scented spa bath for Monty?”  she continued.

I raised my eyebrows and glanced down at my dog.  He had his head between his legs and was busy taking care of his own personal hygiene.

“Um, just regular dog scent if you have it,” I replied.

“We can do a plain cut or a cut, color and curl,” she said.  “It’s very popular with poodles!”

“Just a plain cut, please.”

“We can offer him a special non-GMO beverage and a light snack between procedures, if you’d like.”

I looked at the dog again.  He was chewing on his foot.

“That’s OK.  Just some plain water for him will do.”

“Okey-dokey,” she said cheerfully.  We do ask you to pay in advance.  That will be $175.”

“WHAT?”  I exclaimed.  “And that’s without all the extra stuff?”

She nodded.

“Here,” I said handing her the dog’s leash.  “You keep the dirty dog.  I’m going out and adopt a clean one.”

~ Tracy Beckerman is the author of Amazon Bestseller, “Barking at the Moon:  A Story of Life, Love, and Kibble.”
COPYRIGHT 2025 CREATORS.COM

Fascinating Stuff

FASCINATING STUFF

  • Rudolph Diesel is famous for two things:  the internal combustion engine that bears his name and his mysterious death at sea.  On a short ferry trip from Belgium to England in 1913, Diesel drowned after falling — or jumping — overboard into the English Channel.  Such a dramatic departure fueled speculation that he’d been murdered, although it’s more likely that despair over financial worries drove him to take his own life.
  • Sharks, Komodo dragon lizards and snakes have proven repeatedly that it doesn’t necessarily take two to tango:  females can give birth just fine without ever having contact with a male.  The phenomenon is called parthenogenesis — from the Greek for “virgin birth”  — and it may occur with animals in captivity as well as the wild.  Strangest of all, in every documented case of parthenogenesis, the offspring have been male.
  • To create the effect of a swarm of locusts in Terrence Malick’s 1978 film, “Days of Heaven,” cinematographers had helicopters fly overhead dropping peanut shells and sycamore seed pods to resemble insects in flight.  They filmed the scene in reverse so the “locusts” appeared to rise from the wheat fields instead of falling from the sky.  Richard Gere, Brooke Adams and the other actors in the scene had to walk backward during the filming so their movements would look right in the finished version.
  • On July 15, 1544, in the Scottish Highlands, two rival clan factions were locked in battle.  On one side were the Frasers and Macintoshes; on the other side were the MacDonalds and Camerons.  The day was hot and the fighting was fierce and at some point — as the story goes — the combatants stripped off their chainmail and continued fighting in the garments they wore underneath their protective gear.  That’s why this conflict is known to historians as the Battle of the Shirts.
  • The World Footballgolf Association establishes official rules and governs international play in the sport of footballgolf.  (That’s European football — what Americans know as soccer — plus golf.)  Played on an 18-hole  course, a round begins when competitors tee off by kicking the ball from a designated area toward a hole.  They keep kicking until they reach the green and sink a putt.

~ COPYRIGHT 2025 LESLIE ELMAN
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

the end
7 replies
  1. Marty says:

    Daymaker’s quote from the great DALE CARNEGIE, American writer and lecturer caught my attention so much that I went to our bookcase and pulled out my worn underscored copy of HOW TO WIN FRIENDS AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE. Oh, how I love this book. I recall my dad, a business man, attended one of his “in person” courses in Kansas City, MO. He applied many of his teachings not only to business but in teaching his 6 kids and many grandchildren how to master the principles of human relationships. Amazon sells this same used for $6.28.

  2. Carol says:

    How cool that you got to ride in a traffic helicopter with traffic reporters (was Suzy Humphries the female reporter you referenced?) and that they performed for you afterwards! I might have been a bit overwhelmed myself but wow! What an experience!

    When I was growing up, my mom used to make Frito pie with canned chili, onions, cheese and Fritos. It was one of my favorite meals. Think I will try your grandmother’s elevated version of same – it sounds like a perfect meal!

    Always appreciate your fun facts and words of inspiration.

    Thanks, Daymaker.

    • Cheryl Clarson says:

      Hi Carol!

      I’m unsure if reporter’s name was Suzy or not. I should have paid closer attention – in my defense – I was so awestruck by the experience I didn’t have all my thinking skills in place. ha!

      Thank you, friend, for your time and attention to Daymaker and being one of our very finest cheerleaders!

      Gratitude!

Comments are closed.