Friday, January 30, 2026
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Beef Tips in Wine Sauce

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This week’s recipe cannot get much easier! Yes, you will find it has one of my most griped about ingredients, canned soup. However; I cannot think of an easier Christmas Day meal. A salad, good bread, and a slice of delicious pie. Keeps the cook out of the kitchen all day, and instead enjoying the holiday. I may even be making this dish for our family in Christmas 2024. Why all the simplicity? Well, we are thinking of traveling!

This recipe was shared with me several years ago when I resided in Platte City, Missouri. It’s great for the holiday because you can go to evening church services and not worry about the dinner overcooking, etc. When I was growing up this was a crucial factor because I led the music and mom played the piano, at church.

I’ve jumped ahead of Thanksgiving currently. If it’s just the 4 our us I’m thinking of Cornish game hens, I still may do them, and if more are at the table, cut them in half. I’ll probably still cook a turkey breast so we can have cold turkey sandwiches! We’re also putting our dinner off until Friday, so the kids don’t have to eat so much turkey in one day! What’s accompanying this menu is still up for grabs. Phillip says we MUST have green bean casserole, and he is down to make it. ErvIn wants pineapple casserole which doesn’t really go with the menu, but I’m thinking of cooking it in muffin tins instead of a casserole dish, for a different look. I think a new take on dressing might be in order with cranberries and nuts. Potatoes, hm….not sure yet, a rice pilaf or homemade noodles might be good too.

Geez, I guess I need to start a grocery list. Last I checked the game hens were a bit pricey. Personally; I enjoy brussel sprouts and parsnips for vegetable sides, I know I’m odd! The thought of the noodles goes back to my grandma Lucy, her noodles were simply the best.

Last week we brought a whole garage full of items from my parent’s home in Lewistown, Missouri. I don’t know which way to go at the moment. I want the Christmas up, but the garage is calling too.

We wrapped a good season of racing at the Springfield, MO tracks this weekend during the 3 day ‘Turkey Bowl’. Long is an understatement to describe the last evening, Saturday. We were dirt covered and one exhausted/cold group. We will return to the tracks in late March or early April.

Now my friends, it’s time to put this gal to bed, and publish the column. Have a great week, keep the pantry stocked and the gas bill paid! Simply yours, The Covered Dish.

Beef Tips in Wine Sauce

2 lbs. Sirloin beef cut into 1 inch pieces, thin

2 cans Golden Mushroom Soup, (10-11 ozs. Each)

1 cup red/burgundy wine

1 envelope Lipton onion soup mix

Sliced mushrooms

pearl onions, optional

3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce

Basically you are going to put everything into a covered baking dish and cook at 250 degrees for about 4 hours. Stir only one time during the cooking. This will serve 8 persons. Originally the recipe called for regular canned mushroom soup, but the color tone did not appeal to me, so the switch was made to

the Golden Mushroom Soup. I also like to use fresh sauteed mushrooms in this dish versus canned. The amount depends on the cook and guests likes and dislikes. I leave mine rather large so non-mushroom eaters can push them to the side. Usually mine is served with rice. Some fresh parsley or green onion tips would be nice on top.

Volunteer Trees

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KSU horticulture

Sometimes a tree will sprout up out of nowhere and you did not plant said tree. These are called volunteer trees and don’t belong or fit in. Though trees are a vital part of our landscapes, there are situations where volunteer trees need to be controlled.. If the tree is still small and a desirable species, you may want to consider transplanting in the spring. If it is not, active control measures would be in order. Smaller trees are way easier to control than letting them get too big!

 

Most, but not all, trees re-sprout after cutting. Cutting those that don’t re-sprout is an effective control method. For example, eastern redcedar is a very common species that will not re-sprout after cutting. Those that do re-sprout include Siberian elm, hackberry, Osage orange (hedge-apple), oak, ash, aspen, cottonwood, maple, sycamore, willow and many more. These trees will either need to be dug out or the cut stump treated with herbicide after cutting.

 

Note that when we say volunteer trees, we mean those that come from seed rather than suckers that originate from the roots of an existing tree. The recommendations given in the remainder of this article are designed to kill these volunteer trees. Using herbicides on suckers will damage, and very possibly kill, the original tree. Trees that commonly produce suckers include tree of heaven, honey locust, black locust, hackberry, western soapberry, cottonwood, poplar, willow and boxelder.

 

It is also possible for larger trees of the same species to be root-grafted. Even though root-grafted trees are not suckers, they do share materials between the individual root systems and therefore herbicides used to treat one tree can be passed to its neighbor. Let’s say we have a tree we want to control that is a volunteer and there are no other trees of the same species close enough to be root-grafted that we do not wish to harm. What do we do? If the tree is any size, you probably do not want to dig it out. That leaves using an herbicide on the cut stump. Basal treatments are also possible but that is beyond the scope of this article. First decide what herbicide to use.

 

Triclopyr and glyphosate are the herbicides most commonly available to homeowners. Triclopyr is found in many brush killers and glyphosate is found in Roundup as well as numerous other products. Read the label before purchasing to make sure that a cut stump treatment is listed. Most often the undiluted product or lightly diluted product is applied to the stump immediately after cutting. A paint brush is often used for the application though some people will dip their pruning shears in the products immediately before cutting. Regardless, it is important that the stump is treated immediately or at least within 5 minutes. Note that a paint brush with foam rather than bristles is less likely to drip.

 

Trees do not need to be actively growing to be controlled. Actually, this time of year is a very good time to treat as long as applications are made when the temperature is above freezing.

“Giving Thanks”

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Would you like to sleep better, have a healthier heart and less aches and pains? How about a lower blood pressure, a higher self -esteem and enhanced relationships? Would you believe that the Mayo Clinic and Harvard University, as well as other scientist all say these benefits can be yours with very little effort. And it doesn’t require a change in your diet or excessive exercise!

So, what is this magical therapy? GRATITUDE!!

Gratitude comes from the Latin word gratia, which means grace, graciousness or gratefulness. Psychologist’s Robert Emmons of University of California, Davis and Michael McCullough, University of Miami, were early researchers in this field. They found that 10 weeks of practicing gratitude can result in the outcomes listed above as well as: an increased happiness score, increased optimism, increased exercise, decreased physician visits, increased focus, increased patience and strengthened social connections. Wow, who doesn’t want these health and relationship benefits?

Gratitude is like a muscle that you can build with exercise and practice. There are many ways to increase your gratitude muscle such as writing thank you notes, saying thank you to others in person or just mentally, writing a gratitude journal, praying and meditating. Other experts mention benefits from a brief, positive chat with a friend, a kind gesture toward a stranger and a peaceful stroll in nature. A change in mindset can help you feel better, for example feeling grateful for a helpful friend rather than feeling frustrated that you can do the task alone.

Lets get started on this journey of gratitude. Thank you for reading this essay and for watching On Call with the Prairie Doc. Thanks to all of my friends and family for the love and support you give me daily. Thanks to my church family for your spiritual support.

Now it is your turn….

Joanie Holm, CNP is the Prairie Doc Board President and co-founder of Prairie Doc Programming. Follow The Prairie Doc® at www.prairiedoc.org, Facebook, Instagram, Youtube and Threads. Prairie Doc Programming includes On Call with the Prairie Doc®, a medical Q&A show (most Thursdays at 7pm streaming on Facebook), 2 podcasts, and a Radio program, providing health information based on science, built on trust.

Scammer’s rainfall report

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Thayne Cozart
Milo Yield

I can’t think of, nor describe, a lower form of human pest than the internet scammer. Those are the folks who with irritatingly, frustratingly — and with miserable frequency — plunge themselves, uninvited, into our lives, thereby, disrupting our daily routines, wasting our time, and adding an unneeded layer of social media distraction and annoyance.

There are many forms of these social media harassers, but, to me, the absolutely worst are the scammers trying to “assure that I’m getting all the benefits possible from my government Medicare program (euphemistically called an entitlement).”

These social flea-bites make calls to my cell phone at least twice every day, and sometimes as many as five. They pose as caring folks, only interested in my well-being, which is the farthest thing from the truth. They want to sell me additional Medicare supplemental insurance and, thereby, gain for themselves a sales commission.

From conversing with them, it’s unclear if they are employed by the government or by insurance companies, or a foreign scumbag. Any way, it should be illegal and prosecutable.

Furthermore, the phone calls appear to originate from small towns and cities all across Kansas. Strangely though, all of the callers have strongly foreign accents that I can barely decipher. Who would have guessed so many of them are have a phone-scamming job while living in so many Kansas small towns? Ha!

I’ve tried many ways to dissuade these social misfits. Calm reasoning doesn’t work. Politely asking for removal from their to-call list doesn’t work. Neither does a richly-deserved cussing out. The only method that works is not answering the phone, but even that is distracting.

However, I have developed a method that’s mildly amusing to me, and works about 100% of the time with the scammers hanging up on the call. As a public service, I’m passing along my method for scamming a scammer.

Here’s what I did just this morning when the first scammer called at 7:50. I noticed that the call supposedly originated in Burlington, Kan. When I answered, the scammer started his heavily-accented spiel. I politely interrupted and said, “I noticed that you’re calling from Burlington. I have a lot of friends there and I’m wondering how much it’s rained there this week? And, how were the crop yields this fall?

Usually, this is the point that the scammer hangs up. But, this morning’s scammer wuz persistent (maybe desperate) and tried to play the game with me. After a long pause on his end of the line, he replied (as best I could understand), “I think around 120 millimeters of rain.”

I replied, “Why, thank you, sir. I didn’t realize that the good folks in Burlington had switched to the metric system and are now measuring their rainfall in millimeters, not inches.”

Then I burst out laughing. It was then the hopefully-frustrated scammer hung up.

I’ll conclude my anti-scamming diatribe with this observation. Convicted scammers should serve at least five years behind bars!!!

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Last week, I made a suggested list of “aggie acronyms” that rural folks could use to make their communications efforts more efficient. That little gag apparently resonated with some readers and inspired them to email me some of their own suggested acronyms. Here they are:

From Missouri.: CFWT (Cutting Fire Wood Today); IHBF (I Hate Building Fence); CCWN (Combine Computer Went Nuts); EBMT (Extension Beef Meeting Tonight), and DPWST (Dinged Pickup With Stock Trailer).

From Oklahoma.: TRTE (Team Roping This Evening); BUTC (Bought Used Tree Cutter); GSB (Getting Steer Butchered) and FLEQT (Felt Little Earth Quake Today).

From Colorado: DIWP (Dusted In Wheat Planting); BSIM (Beautiful Sunset In Mountains); EMTW (Elk Meat This Winter).

From Kansas: GEO (Glad Election Over); BMASB (Bought Mineral And Salt Blocks);

CCFBF (Cleared Cedars From Back Forty); PUDS (Put Up Deer Stand); GPH (Going Pheasant Hunting), and FLWT (Feels Like Winter Today).

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A friend from Wichita sent me the following sad text message. It read, “I recently texted a short, romantic note to my wife while I was away on a pheasant hunting trip and I missed one small ‘e.’

“No problem you might say. Not so. This tiny error has caused me to seek police protection to enter my own house.

“I wrote, ‘Hi darling, I’m enjoying and experiencing the best time of my whole life and I wish you were her’!”

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For this week, here are some words of wisdom from wise folks: “Agriculture is our wisest pursuit because it will in the end contribute most to real wealth, good morals, and happiness.” — Thomas Jefferson.

“It’s clear that agriculture, done right, is the best means the world has today to simultaneously tackle food security, poverty and environmental degradation.” — Irene Rosenfeld.

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Have a good ‘un.

Which Is Which?

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lee pitts

I’ve never been a rancher but I’m proud to say that for most of my life I’ve been a cattleman. How can that be? Because a person who owns a ranch may not own a single ruminant, while a cattleman may have thousands of cattle but may not own one acre of ground.

Someone smarter than me once said that the only way to acquire a ranch is through marriage, the womb or the tomb. I struck out on all counts. I think I’m the first in my family to have owned a cow and yet they were ranchers. How can that be?

Because great grandmother Nora owned a small place where she grew walnuts that everyone in my family referred to as “the ranch”. In California where I was born, raised and reside, anything on which you could grow a bulb garden or two orange trees is called a ranch, whereas everything in Texas smaller than 30 sections is referred to as “a small little place.”

There are BIG differences between a rancher and a cattleman. A rancher owns heavy equipment including a road grader, D7 Cat, baler, bagger, Bobcat and a backhoe. The only piece of equipment owned by a cattleman is an old rusty stock trailer with sketchy wiring.

There may be 1,500 head of cattle on a rancher’s place but not a single quart of milk in the refrigerator. A rancher’s old saddle is sacked and hanging in the barn, his branding irons have been turned into towel hangers, his or her spurs are now wall hangers and old saddle blankets are now part of the decor. A purse dog sleeps in the house, is fed three meals a day plus a snack, rides in the cab and yaps out the window. A cattleman’s truck also serves as the tack room and three or four barking cow dogs are in the bed of the truck. They sleep under the front porch and eat once a day. If they get a snack it’s road kill or something they dug up themselves.

A cattleman eats breakfast at the auction market cafe with his friends and cow buyers and may not eat again until ten that night. A rancher eats three meals a day at home because the nearest restaurant or coffee shop is an hour away.

A cattleman pays real close attention to the weekly auction market report, the price of fed cattle, and shows up regularly at the auction market to take the pulse of the livestock industry. A rancher is more apt to keep abreast of the Dow Jones and NASDAQ and doesn’t go to the auction yard even if he sells his calves there.

A cattleman has a good ranch horse he and the banker bought and keeps it in his stock trailer saddled up and ready to go at a moment’s notice. He can be mounted up and on the prowl while the rancher is still dressing his horse. Both the rancher and the cattleman’s saddle, bit and spurs may have silver brands on them but the rancher’s weren’t financed with a home equity loan.

A rancher belongs to his county cattlemen’s organization, the Farm Bureau, R CALF or NCBA, serves on the board of the soil conservation district and is on a variety of committees for countless clubs. The only group a cattleman may belong to is Alcoholics Anonymous.

A rancher goes to Arizona for the winter and team ropes every weekend. A cattleman can barely get out to go to a jackpot because in winter the roads are covered with black ice and the snow drifts are six feet tall.

A rancher probably has kids who live far, far away who want nothing to do with ranching. If the rancher does own cows they are probably all black, all calve within 60 days, have electronic ear tags, are weaned for 60 days days and top the market when they’re sold. A rancher who lives on the ranch probably keeps some poultry around the place.

A cattleman doesn’t eat eggs or raise chickens, has ulcers, and his bulls run with the cows all year long because he has no other place to put them. A rancher has a hired hand, a cattleman has a wife. A rancher pays income tax every year but a cattleman only has that problem one year out of ten.