It's
Cozy Food Friday!
That means it's time to share a recipe from
another great cozy mystery!
The month of August, and all this month, I have had the pleasure of hosting the great authors that make up
The Cozy Chicks.
I've featured awesome recipes from their book
THE COZY CHICKS KITCHEN
A Killer Collection of Recipes by the
Bestselling Authors of the Cozy Chicks Blog
SECOND EDITION
This fantastic cookbook contains recipes from cozy mystery favorites,
Ellery Adams / J.B. Stanley
Lorraine Bartlett / L.L. Bartlett/ Lorna Barrett
Deb Baker / Hannah Reed
Kate Collins
Mary Kennedy
Mary Jane Maffini/Victoria Abbott
Maggie Sefton
and
Leann Sweeney
Lisa's Note: Author Duffy Brown is also a Cozy Chick and will be featured on Cozy Food Friday, however, she is not in The Cozy Chick's Kitchen.
You can follow The Cozy Chicks blog here...
Today's featured recipes are from
ALL the Cozy Chicks!
That's right, a recipe from each wonderful author!
Let's get started!!!
AUNTIE KIKI'S FUN FALL DIP
by Duffy Brown
(Note: This recipe is not in THE COZY CHICKS KITCHEN)
Ingredients
1can black beans rinsed
1 can corn or use fresh corn from the cob about 3
1/2 yellow and 1/2 red pepper
1 jalapeƱo pepper seeded
1 fresh tomato cut and seeded
Red onion
1/4cup chopped cilantro
Mix together 1/3 cup apple cider vinegar, 1-1/2 teaspoon sugar, dash salt and juice of 1 lime
Pour over above ingredients.
Refrigerate until ready to use.
Serve with Tostitos Scoops
ELLERY'S DARK CHOCOLATE BANANA BREAD
by Ellery Adams
Ingredients
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
4 1/2 ounces butter (1 stick plus 1 tablespoon), soft enough for mixing
1 cup superfine sugar
4 ripe bananas, good and smashed
(Ellery likes to use her fists!)
2 eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup dark chocolate chips
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees
Sift the flour and baking powder into a large bowl.
Mix the butter, sugar, bananas, eggs, and vanilla extract in a medium bowl. Add chocolate chips.
Add to the flour mixture and stir to combine. Do not over mix. Ellery likes to fold the dough careful until just mixed. This makes the bread light and airy.
Pure the batter into a lightly greased and floured 8 x 4-inch loaf pan and bake for 1 hours and 15 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.
Cool in the pan before turning out onto a wire rack.
Yield: 1 loaf (12 - 16 slices)
STUFFED PEPPER SOUP
by Lorraine Bartlett / LL Bartlett
Ingredients
2 pounds ground sausage (mild or spicy, your choice)
2 quarts water
1 28-ounces can diced tomatoes, do not drain
1 28-ounces can tomato sauce
2 cups cooked long grain white rice
2 cups chopped green pepper
1/4 cup brown sugar, firmly packed
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
In a large sauce pan or Dutch oven, brown the sausage and drain.
Add the remaining ingredients and bring to a boil.
Reduce heat. Cover and simmer for 30 - 40 minutes or until the peppers are tender.
Serve with a loaf of warm, crusty bread.
Yield: 8 - 10 servings
KITTY'S FRIED DOUGHNUTS
by Deb Baker (aka Hannah Reed)
Ingredients
5 cups white flour
4 teaspoons baking power
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup mashed potatoes
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 eggs
1/4 cup melted butter
1 cup butter milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 teaspoon grated lemon rind
oil for frying
confectioners' sugar or granulated sugar
cinnamon (optional)
Sift together the flour. baking powder, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon.
Add mashed potatoes and sugar. Mix well.
Blend with eggs and melted butter.
In a separate bowl, combine the buttermilk, vanilla, and lemon rind.
Add to flour mix, blend well, cover, and let stand for 15 minutes.
Roll out the dough and cut with a doughnut cutter.
Fry in oil in a pan or deep fryer until golden brown. Turn with a fork, then brown the other side.
Remove and lay on a paper towel to drain and cool.
Shake the doughnuts in a bag with granulated or confectioners' sugar.
Try 1/2 cup confectioners' sugar and 1 teaspoon cinnamon for a special treat.
Serve warm. Yield: 18 doughnuts
ALL PURPOSE GRAVY
by Kate Collins
Ingredients
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 carrot, peeled and chopped fine
1 stalk celery, chopped fine
1 onion, minced
1/4 cup flour
2 cups low sodium chicken broth
2 cups low sodium beef broth
1 bay leaf
1/4 teaspoon thyme
5 whole peppercorns
Melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium-high heat.
Add the veggies, cook until soft an well-browned, about 9 minutes.
Stir in the flour and cook, stirring constantly, until thoroughly browned, about 5 minutes.
Gradually whisk in the broths and bring to a boil.
Add the bay leaf, thyme, and peppercorns.
Simmer, stirring occasionally, until thickened, 20 to 25 minutes, skimming off any foam that forms on the surface.
Pour gravy through a fine mesh strainer (or cheesecloth) into a clean saucepan, pressing on the solids to extract the liquid. Discard the solids, or combine them with the leftover gravy and use as a vegetable sauce over leftover potatoes or rice for another meal.
Serve with any type meat.
This recipe can be refrigerated in an airtight container up to 4 days, or frozen. Reheat over a low heat, whisking to recombine, or microwave 1 to 3 minutes, stirring until smooth.
Yield: 4 cups
GLAZED PECANS
by Mary Kennedy
Ingredients
2 teaspoons butter
2 tablespoons brown sugar
2 teaspoons light corn syrup
pinch of salt
1 cup pecans
Melt butter in a skillet, add the brown sugar and corn syrup; stir until combined.
Add the pecans and cook, stirring constantly for five minutes.
Make sure all the pecan pieces are covered with syrup.
Spread on a baking tray covered with parchment paper and cool.
You might want to double the recipe; these are delicious and will go fast!
Yield: 6 servings
CHICKEN ROASTED WITH APPLES
by Mary Jane Maffini
Ingredients
2 tablespoons butter
1 chicken (about 4 pounds)
2 - 4 apples, peeled and diced (about 2 cups). Gala or Fuji or any one of the sweeter varieties.
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
1/2 cups chicken stock
2 bay leaves
1 teaspoon chopped fresh thyme or dried (you can use rosemary instead)
salt and freshly ground pepper
Preheat over to 350 degrees.
Heat butter over medium high heat in a Dutch oven or ovenproof pot large enough to hold the chicken.
Brown the chicken on all sides, about 2 minutes a side, until golden.
Remove chicken from the pot.
Add apple and sautƩ for 2 minutes or until lightly golden.
Add cider vinegar, chicken stock, and bay leaves, and bring to boil.
Sprinkle the chicken with thyme, salt and pepper.
Baked covered for 60 minutes. Remove cover and bake for another 15 minutes or until the juices run clear.
Remove the bay leaves.
Cut up the chicken and serve with the apples and sauce.
Yield: 4 servings
AUNT HELEN'S GINGERSNAPS
by Maggie Sefton
Ingredients
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon plus 2 tablespoons ground ginger
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 sticks (3/4 cup) unsalted butter, softened
1 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar
1 large egg, room temperature
1/4 cup unsulphured molasses
2 tablespoons freshly great lemon peel
1/4 to 1/2 cup granulated sugar
Preheat over to 350 degrees.
Lightly grease cookie sheets.
Mix flour, ginger, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt in a small mixing bowl.
Cream butter and brown sugar together in a medium bowl, mixing well for at least two minutes until well-blended, pale and fluffy, scraping the bowl with a rubber spatula.
Beat in egg, then the molasses and lemon peel until blended.
Slowly add half the flour mixture, mixing with a wooden spoon just until blended, then add the remaining flour, mixing well.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and chill for 15 minutes.
Roll rounded tablespoons of dough into approximately 1 1/4 inch balls.
Roll the balls in the granulated sugar and place 2 inches apart on a prepared cookie sheet(s).
Bake just until puffed and cookies look dry---anywhere from 9 to 14 minutes, depending on your oven. (Do not overbake or the cookies will become hard).
Cafefully remove the cookies with a metal spatula to a wire rack to cool.
Maggie usually doubles this recipe when I make it, because those amounts are easier to work with. But---be prepared for a lot of cookies.
(Not: At Colorado altitude of 5000 feet, Maggie sets her oven to 325 degrees. Adjust your over accordingly).
Yield: approximately 32 cookies
SLOW COOKER SPOONABLE LASAGNA
by Leann Sweeney
Ingredients
1 24-ounce jar of your favorite marinara sauce
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 pound ground beef
1 small onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic minced
1 16-ounce container whole milk ricotta cheese
1 cup shredded Parmesan cheese
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese
1 teaspoon oregano
1 10-ounce container refrigerated Alfredo sauce
1 package lasagna noodles-uncooked
Brown ground beef, onion and garlic in the olive oil.
Add the marinara sauce and simmer.
Meanwhile, combine the ricotta, Parmesan cheese, salt and oregano.
Ladle enough of prepared sauce in the bottom of the slow cooker to just cover.
Break the lasagna noodles. Place about 1/3 of the package over the sauce.
Spoon the cheese mix in globs over the noodles; spoon 1/3 Alfredo sauce over this.
Top with a layer of mozzarella and then more sauce.
Repeat the layers, ending with a layer of sauce and mozzarella.
Cover and cook on low for 8 to 10 hours.
It is spoonable the first day, but the second day, after chilled, it can be cut like regular lasagna.
Yield: 6 - 8 servings
Bonus Recipe
RASPBERRY BARS
by Mary Kennedy
(Note: This recipe is not in THE COZY CHICKS KITCHEN)
Ingredients
1 package yellow cake mix (regular size)
2-1/2 cups quick-cooking oats
3/4 cup butter, melted
1 jar (12 ounces) seedless raspberry
preserves
1 tablespoon water
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
In a
large bowl, combine cake mix, oats and butter until crumbly.
Press 3 cups of the
crumb mixture into a greased 13 x 9-in. baking pan.
Bake 10 minutes.
Cool on a
wire rack 5 minutes.
In a small bowl, stir
preserves and water until blended.
Spread over crust.
Sprinkle with remaining
crumb mixture.
Bake 25-28 minutes or until lightly browned.
Cool on a wire rack.
Cut into bars.
Yield:
2 dozen.
I don't know about you, but I'm starving!
Which one are you going to try first?
You can find
THE COZY CHICKS KITCHEN
at
Welcome to our kitchen! The kitchen is the heart of the home. This sense of warmth and companionship is what The Cozy Chicks try to invoke in our novels. And now, our cookbook will allow you to enter the heart of our cozy mystery worlds—the stories of our characters, of their authors, told through food. For a short while, our heroines have taken a break from crime solving to don aprons and wield spatulas and wooden spoons. And they’d like nothing more than to spend some time with you. THE COZY CHICKS KITCHEN is chock full of mouthwatering gems. Everything is here: main dishes, desserts, salads, soups, drinks, and did I mention desserts? Don’t miss this fabulous collection. I’ve got both the ebook version and a hardcopy. Get yours today! --Julie Hyzy, New York Times bestselling author of the White House Chef and Manor House mysteries The Cozy Chicks Are Bestselling Authors: Ellery Adams / J.B. Stanley, Deb Baker / Hannah Reed, Lorna Barrett / Lorraine Bartlett, Kate Collins, Mary Kennedy, Mary Jane Maffini/Victoria Abbott, Maggie Sefton, Leann Sweeney
And fellow Cozy Chick, Duffy Brown (Not in The Cozy Chicks Kitchen)
To learn more about The Cozy Chicks,
check out their blog
Learn more about each author on their websites
www.elleryadamsmysteries.com
www.elleryadamsmysteries.com
A very big thank you to all the wonderful authors that make up The Cozy Chicks.
Thank you for your books, your recipes, and your amazing kindness to you readers.
Keep reading to check out my installments of
Book Beginnings on Fridays
and
The Friday 56
Book Beginnings on Fridays is a meme hosted by Rose City Reader
Share the first sentence (or so) of the book you are reading
Keeping The Cozy Chicks Kitchen theme going...
My Book Beginnings for this week...
WELCOME TO OUR KITCHEN
Pull up a stool and let us pour you a cup of coffee. We'll have a chat as a pot of tomato basil soup bubbles on the stove. While the soup is simmering, feel free to sit back, relax, and listen to the sizzle of lemon chicken cutlets crisping to a golden brown in the frying pan. By the time we catch up on work and family and start discussing the last book we've read, the buttery cinnamon scents of the apple ginger pie baking in the oven will curl around our shoulders like a warm shawl and coax a sigh of contentment from our lips.
The Friday 56 is a meme hosted by Freda's Voice
Rules: *Grab a book, any book. *Turn to page 56 or 56% in your eReader (If you have to improvise, that's okay.) *Find any sentence, (or few, just don't spoil it) that grab you. *Post it.
Continuing with The Cozy Chick Kitchen theme...
My Friday 56...
Since page 56 is a recipe, I'm going to continue with the beginning...
Friends, food, and fellowship. That is what home feels like. And the kitchen is the heart of the home. The sense of warmth and companionship is what The Cozy Chicks try to invoke in our novels. And now, our cookbook will allow you to enter the heart of our cozy mystery worlds---the stories of our characters and their authors, told through food. For a short while, our protagonists have taken a break from crime solving to don aprons and wield spatulas and wooden spoons. And they'd like nothing more than to spend some time with you.
Enjoy!
As always, please leave a comment and
let me know what you think!
I would love for you to follow my blog by
clicking on the link in the
upper right hand corner of this page.
?????????????????????????????????
Answer to Whodunit Wednesday
(& Thursday)
A HALLOWEEN HOMICIDE - SOLUTION
"The accident was definitely staged," Sherman whispered to his friend. "Someone came in the back way, probably bringing the mask and candy, too. Miss Cleghorn was pushed down the stairs and the scene was set. You were meant to come to the exact conclusion you came to."
"Get off it," Wilson growled. "Every death isn't a murder."
"Those pearls at the top of the stairs? You try slipping on them and see if they stay in place. In a real accident, the string would break. At the very least, the pearls would have slid out from under her feet."
"Oh." Wilson took a deep breath. "I see your point."
"If I were you, I'd question Emma. We never mentioned that Miss Gleghorn had fallen down the stairs, and yet she instantly assumed it."
How did you do with this one?
I guessed whodunit!
However, I completely missed the bit about the pearls.
See you next week for another Whodunit!
So many amazing looking recipes in this post my mouth is watering! This looks like a fun cookbook! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThank you for stopping by, Katherine!
Deletethanks for sharing our book and our recipes! Trust me, they're all great!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Leann! I want everyone to know about all you great ladies!
DeleteOK I am drooling now. Lol!
ReplyDeleteDawn, my stomach was growling while typing all this!
DeleteThis is so fantastic, thank you for so much for featuring us and our recipes!! Wow, this has inspired me to start cooking.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mary! When you start cooking, write down those recipes for us!
DeleteThis is spooktacular, Lisa!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ellery! It was a lot of fun!
DeleteSo many great recipes and with the change of season is the change of food. Put away the grill and drag out the slow cooker…it’s chili time, pot roast and apple butter! Yummmm. Thanks for having the Cozy Chicks!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing you great recipes with us, Duffy!
DeleteIt's lovely to be here today! Thanks for telling everyone about the Cozy Chicks and our cookbook.
ReplyDeleteKeep on with all your cozy fun here, Lisa!
Hugs.
MJ/VA
Thank you, Mary Jane! And you can bet I'll keep on with the fun!
DeleteGah! I’m deeply curious! Who did it!? Was it really a murder!? Excellent observation on the pearls too; makes complete sense.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I’m definitely going to try your dip recipe; yummy!
Here’s mine:
Sparrow’s BB & Friday 56
Claudia, I missed the pearl bit altogether.
DeleteI'm so hungry now. Especially for that Dark Chocolate Banana Bread and the soup. Yum Yum! LOL I'm going to save these for the holidays.
ReplyDeleteI like the bit about the pearls. I wonder if they should have broken? Do they break that easily? I've dropped mine and they stayed intact. Hmm. another mystery:)
Have a happy Halloween and thanks for the mystery and delicious recipes.
Here is my 56 - http://fuonlyknew.com/2014/10/31/the-friday-56-43-paradise-rot/
Made me hungry too, Laura. And you make a good point about the pearls.
DeleteOh my goodness. I am so glad I just ate dinner or I would be starving while trying to make dinner. :)
ReplyDeleteThat bean/corn salad looks so good. Well...everything does except the gingersnaps. LOL!!! I don't like gingersnaps. All the rest looks YUMMY!!
I sure wish I could make gravy. :)
THANKS.
Happy Halloween!!
Elizabeth, LOL I love gingersnaps. That was one of the ones making me so hungry!
DeleteElizabeth, I am not a gravy maker, but THAT recipe will make the best gravy of your life - and it's easy! I serve it at Thanksgiving in place of turkey gravy because my big Irish family loves it better. give it a try.
DeleteNow I am starving! LOL
ReplyDeleteHappy Halloween and happy weekend!
Thank you for coming by, Freda. I've been gone a lot of the day, so I didn't make it to any of the 56 sites today. I'm going to check them out tomorrow! Have a great weekend yourself!
DeleteYum! Those recipes look delicious, thanks for sharing but I'm now very hungry.
ReplyDeleteHope you have a wonderful weekend.
Here is my Friday 56!
Wow, these look terrific! It's a good thing I just ate or my stomach would be making noises. Thanks!
ReplyDelete