The family is going to rave over these budget-friendly skillet pork chops! Made with a box of shortcut stuffing mix, and lots ooey gooey cheese, our "Unstuffed" Stuffed Cheesy Pork Chops are layered to perfection. It's a dish that looks and tastes like it's fit for royalty, so there's no need to tell everyone just how budget-friendly it actually is!
- 1 (6-ounce) package flavored stuffing mix
- 1 cup sliced fresh mushrooms
- 4 (3/4-inch-thick) boneless pork chops (about 1-1/2 pounds total)
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 4 (1-ounce) slices Muenster cheese
- 1/2 cup dry white wine
- Prepare stuffing mix according to package directions, adding mushrooms to water before water reaches a boil.
- Meanwhile, evenly sprinkle pork chops with garlic powder, salt, and pepper. In a large skillet over medium-high heat, heat oil until hot. Brown pork chops on both sides, about 5 to 6 minutes.
- Leaving chops in the skillet, top each with about 1/3 cup stuffing and a slice of cheese. Add wine to skillet, cover, and cook 5 minutes or until cheese is melted and pork is cooked to desired doneness. Serve with pan drippings.
On the third Monday in February, the United States celebrates the federal holiday known as Presidents Day. The day takes place during the birth month of the country’s two most prominent presidents, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. While the day once only honored President George Washington on his birthday, February 22nd, the day now never lands on a single president’s birthday.
Across the country, most Americans know the day as Presidents Day. More and more of the population celebrates the day to honor all of the past United States Presidents who have served the country. Throughout the country, organizations and communities celebrate the day with public ceremonies.
HOW TO OBSERVE
Some businesses close, including banks and federal buildings. Celebrate your favorite U.S. president. Here are some ways to participate:
- Watch a documentary about the POTUS. For example, The Presidents by the History Channel.
- See if you can name all the presidents in order.
Challenge yourself to some presidential trivia:
- Who are the three presidents who served in 1841?
- Forty years later, this same phenomenon occurred again in 1881. Name the three presidents who served that year.
- Name the three presidents who died on July 4th.
- Who were the four presidents who were assassinated while in office?
PRESIDENTS DAY HISTORY
The origin of Presidents Day lay in the 1880s when the birthday of George Washington was celebrated as a federal holiday. In 1968, Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Bill. The bill moved several federal holidays to Mondays creating three-day weekends. During the debate on the bill, one proposal suggested George Washington’s birthday be renamed Presidents Day to honor the birthdays of both George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. Washington’s birthday is February 22nd and Lincoln’s birthday is February 12th. Although Abraham Lincoln’s birthday was celebrated in many states, it was never an official federal holiday. Following much discussion, Congress rejected the name change.
Despite the rejection, soon after the bill went into effect in 1971, and the observance of Washington’s birthday shifted to the third Monday in February, gradually Presidents Day became the commonly accepted name. Over time, the observance came to be known to many as a day to honor both Washington and Lincoln. However, today another shift has occurred and many see the day as a celebration of all the U.S. Presidents.
Answers
- Martin Van Buren, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler
- Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, and Chester A. Arthur.
- John Adams, James Monroe, Thomas Jefferson.
- Abraham Lincoln, James A. Garfield, William McKinley, John F. Kennedy
2 comments:
Good President's Day. I am reading First Principles, about the educations of and effect on of the Founding Fathers. My takeaway from the morning read was the admonition by George Washington that winning a war is not the hurdle- securing the peace afterwards is as difficult.
His comparing men who must be bold as soldiers then needing to then compromise to govern- the difficulty he wrote of- I see a great similarity to men and women who go from political campaign to governing.
It reminds me of Biblical writings of turning weapons into ploughshares. So easy to say. So difficult to do. But for the Republic to survive- it has always been a requirement we not turn on ourselves or what matters ceases to exist.
May blessings
I think I tell you this every year. When my mother was a young girl in school (a one room schoolhouse)her teacher packed up all the kids into her Model T with some in the rubble seat and took them to see their first movie: Snow White!
The kids were poor back then and no hope to ever go to a movie but their kind teacher took them. I love this story.
Happy President's Day! I read that the Founding Fathers were very young men! They look old in the pictures because they wore white powdered wigs. They were brilliant!
XO Trisha
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