Monday, March 31, 2014

Pork Tenderloin with Mushroom Sauce in One Pot


Last New Year's I happened upon the best piece of pork I've eaten in a long while. There wasn't much of a recipe to it. I just salt and peppered it and popped it into the oven to roast. I think the key was the cut. It was rack of pork. I hadn't planned on making anything of the sort, and there was only one at the store. I figured it was meant for us.

Otherwise, the only cut I bother buying anymore is the tenderloin. Don't confuse it with a pork loin. The tenderloin is small, usually between 1 and 1.5 pounds. They're larger on one end and taper off completely on the other end. Pork loins run about 2 to 4 pounds. They're much bigger in comparison. 3 to 4 inches across with no tapering.

Pork loins are what my mother used to roast so beautifully. They're so lean now, though, that they really benefit from low, slow cooking. You'll note that for my tenderloin, the oven temperature is 400, yet it turns out soft and moist.

Interestingly, the National Pork Board says pork should only cook to 145 and should rest for 3 minutes. Hmm. I'll try that next time, but my pork went to 162 and was perfect. Just a little bit rosy inside when cut. I'll let you be the judge of the appropriate temperature.

This makes quite a bit of mushroom sauce. It would be great on pasta or with potatoes so you can savor every little drop.


Pork Tenderloin with Mushroom Sauce

oven-safe pan with lid

2 tablespoons olive oil
1 small pork tenderloin (see note above)
salt
pepper
1/2 onion
1 celery stalk
1/2 teaspoon marjoram
8 ounce package cremini mushrooms (or white mushrooms)
3/4 cup chicken stock
2 tablespoons flour

Preheat oven to 400.

Heat the oil in a large oven-safe pan. Rinse the tenderloin, pat dry and rub with salt and pepper. Brown the tenderloin. Remove the tenderloin from the pan. Add the onions, celery and marjoram. Saute until the onions begin to soften. Add the mushrooms. When the mushrooms soften, add the chicken stock and stir in the flour. Nestle the pork tenderloin in the middle, cover and cook in the oven for 30 minutes. The meat should be around 160-170 when you take it out. Allow the pork to sit 5 - 10 minutes before slicing. Serve with mushroom sauce over it.


Use one pot. Less washing!

Sauce cooks along with the meat.


Coming in June!

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Welcome Agatha Nominee Barbara Ross with a guest post

To learn more about
Barbara Ross and her
work, 
click here.


Please welcome our guest to Mystery Lovers' Kitchen, the talented Barbara Ross.

The first book in Barbara's series, Clammed Up, has been nominated for the 2014 Agatha Award for Best Contemporary Novel, and she's here today to tell us about her new entry, Boiled Over, coming out this May. 
Take it away, Barbara! 

~ Cleo


I’m happily looking forward to May 6 and the release of Boiled Over, the second book in my Maine Clambake Mystery series. 

The book takes place at the height of the summer season, when running the Snowden Family Clambake leaves little time for solving mysteries. But when a charred foot tumbles out of the clambake fire and one of Julia Snwoden’s employees is accused, she has to join the chase for the real killer.

That chase leads Julia to a camp where Mi’kmaq tribe members from Canada stay when they come to Maine to harvest the wild blueberry crop. She stays for dinner and eats these delicious camp-style beans.

“They taste something like New England baked beans,” Julia said.

“And who do you think invented those?” Her host smiled at her. “All the tribes in Maine, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick cooked beans mixed with maple syrup and bear fat in clay pots buried with hot coals.”

“The beans in this are bigger than I’m used to.”

“Soldier beans. Now grown all over, but native to this region.”


* * * * 

Baked Camp Beans

This recipe is adapted to be made at home (as opposed to at camp).

Ingredients:

1 pound soldier beans
1 Tablespoon vegetable oil
3 thick slices slab bacon, chopped
3 thick slices salt pork, chopped
1 onion, chopped
1 large celery stalk, diced, leaves chopped
1 carrot, diced
2 Tablespoons apple cider vinegar
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
1/2 teaspoon dried basil
1/2 cup tomato sauce
1/2 cup molasses
1 Tablespoon Dijon mustard
2 quarts water
salt and pepper to taste

Directions:

Soak beans for one hour. Heat oil in large saucepan. Render bacon and salt pork in oil for about three minutes. Add onion, celery, and carrot and sauté for another three-four minutes. Add remaining ingredients and bring to a boil. Turn down heat and simmer for one hour. Preheat oven to 300 degrees F. Put beans in a bean pot or covered casserole and cook in the oven for four hours. 
(Slow Cooker Alternative: after simmering, place in a slow cooker on high for four hours.) Check occasionally. Adjust seasonings. If you think it’s necessary, remove cover for last hour of cooking to thicken.



Barbara Ross

Barbara Ross is the author of Clammed Up, which was nominated for a 2014 Agatha Award for Best Contemporary Novel as well as the RT Book Reviews, Reviewer’s Choice Best Book Award for Amateur Sleuth. The second book in the series, Boiled Over, will be released in May 2014. Barbara’s short story, "Bread Baby" in Best New England Crime Stories 2014: Stone Cold was also nominated for an Agatha Award. She writes at her home overlooking the harbor in Boothbay Harbor, Maine. You can visit Barbara’s website at www.maineclambakemysteries.com






Thank you for joining us today
in the Kitchen, Barbara!

Book Giveaway

The first book in Barbara's
Clambake Mystery Series, the 2014
Agatha Nominated CLAMMED UP.


This giveaway is now closed.
The winner has been announced.
To see the announcement,

 click here.


Thank you all for your
wonderful comments!


Saturday, March 29, 2014

Necessity is the Mother of Invention


Lucille Mazzarella, the character in my Lucille Series (Unholy Matrimony—just released—and Confession Is Murder) is a big believer in home cooked meals.  As Lucille would say, “I ain’t feeding my Frankie or my Bernadette no meals that come out of a cardboard box.”  Every Sunday Lucille cooks dinner for the whole family—husband Frankie, daughter Bernadette, her sister Angela and her husband, her best friend Flo (who is in charge of bringing the cannolis for dessert), Father Brennan from St. Rocco’s and Cousin Louis and Cousin Millie who are Frankie’s father’s cousins once removed.

But even Lucille sometimes doesn’t feel like running to the A&P to get groceries after a busy day of tracking down a murderer.  That’s when she assesses the contents of her pantry and figures out how to make something with what she has on hand.

This dish came about much like that.  I didn’t want to leave our warm, cozy home to brave the (interminable) cold and snow to buy something for dinner.  I rummaged around and found some boneless chicken thighs and a box of thin spaghetti.  I always have cans of diced tomatoes on hand, some wine or vermouth and onions. 

I’m sure there’s a “real” recipe for this type of dish and it may even have a name, but in this case it was a matter of pulling things from the pantry and freezer and coming up with something for dinner!

I’ve done something similar with pork chops, and I imagine you could use chicken breasts, but I think the thighs have more flavor.  You can add mushrooms or not…depending on whether you have any!

 Chicken thighs—I think I had around five
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 onion, chopped
1 tsp. minced garlic
Dash of wine (red or white—about ¼ cup or so)
Mushrooms if you have some on hand
1 15-ounce can diced tomatoes
Salt to taste

Heat oil and sauté onions and garlic until onions are soft.  Push onions and garlic to one side and brown chicken thighs on both sides—about 2 to 3 minutes per side.  Add mushrooms, if using, and saute briefly.  Add splash of wine to pan to deglaze, stirring to incorporate any browned bits on the bottom of the pan.  Add tomatoes and cover.  Simmer for about 30 minutes until chicken is done and flavor has developed.

Serve over spaghetti or pasta.

Use a splash of red wine or white.


Simmer ingredients until chicken is done and flavor has developed

A tasty dinner without a trip to the grocery store!



The hilarious Lucille Mazzarella is back and planning a wedding. But even the worst Bridezilla can’t create the wedding drama she’s about to face in this second book in the series. 

Desperate to see her pregnant daughter Bernadette married before the baby comes, Lucille is engrossed in all things wedding. Nothing will distract her from planning this Mazzarella main event. Nothing, that is, except for the murder of the mother of the groom. 

Just when things couldn’t possibly get any worse, Lucille is named as the prime suspect, and it’s a race against time as she and her best friend Flo struggle with shady financial dealings, a family that isn’t at all what it seems, a groom that might not be all man, and a little bundle of joy that might make an appearance before the mother can say I do. 

Available at Amazon or Barnes & Noble and Smashwords





Stop by my web site or catch up with me on Facebook @pegcochran










Friday, March 28, 2014

Cracker Pudding

by Sheila Connolly


I may have mentioned that my Orchard Mysteries are set in a colonial house that was built by an ancestor of mine around 1760. I’m not sure if I mentioned that the owners in the later nineteenth and early twentieth century were still of the same family (and I’m related in different ways to both spouses). 

The woman of the house, Olive Barton Warner, kept a series of diaries, and the first (that we know of) was written in 1880 when she was about forty. Mainly she describes what she did, day to day, along with her two teen-age daughters. Husband Eugene took care of the outside stuff, like milking the cows and managing the farm and selling the produce they didn’t consume themselves (yes, including the apples from their orchard).  Although to give him credit, he did help peel apples for Olive now and then, and since she made anywhere from six to 14 pies on any given day (I can give you the dates!), that was a significant contribution.

 
I find the diaries fascinating (it’s just a little weird to know that kitchen, where Olive stood, where the barn was, what the view from the kitchen window looked like, and so on, because I’ve been in the house several times), because she provides details of what she cooked (bread, biscuits, cakes, and all those pies). She made butter every few days. She refers to what they ate for dinner only occasionally, except that apparently whenever they had meat with dinner (rarely) it was worth mentioning.  There are other wonderful details about what they wore and how they made or remade it, what kind of housecleaning they did, and who they either paid calls on or entertained in the house. It’s a delightful snapshot of country life in 1880. 

More than once Olive mentioned making “cracker pudding,” which I had never heard of. So I started hunting for a recipe. On the Internet there are a lot of references to Amish or Pennsylvania Dutch cracker pudding, which includes coconut (really?). That’s clearly not the right one: there were no Amish in the real town of Granby, Massachusetts, which became the fictional town of Granford in my books.

So I dug deeper, and came up with a recipe from the New England Country Store Cookbook by Peter W. Smith (which I do not own and which does not appear to be available for sale anywhere at the moment) which fit the bill.  It was called “Common Cracker Pudding,” and the author claimed that the recipe was over a hundred years old. Yup, that’s the one.

The recreated general store at Old Sturbridge
Village--note the barrels
 The problem is, “common crackers” are no longer widely available. You know, the kind general stores kept in barrels by the counter? Nabisco used to make them, but they stopped a while ago. (The Amish recipes all seem to want to use Saltines, but that’s not the same thing.) I did track down one source: the Vermont Country Store. And they shipped the crackers out the next day. I now have enough for several batches of Cracker Pudding.

 

 

New England Cracker Pudding 

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Generously grease an 8-cup casserole dish.

 

3 pints (6 cups) whole milk
1 pint (2 cups) common cracker crumbs (break them up with a rolling pin)
1 cup granulated sugar
1 Tblsp softened butter
1 tsp salt
½ tsp cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla (optional)
1 cup seedless raisins

 
Mashed with my own vintage rolling pin

After pulverizing the crackers (the crumbs don’t have to be too fine), soak the cracker crumbs in two cups of the milk until soft (reserving the rest).

 

Mix in the sugar, butter, salt and cinnamon and spoon it into the casserole.

 


Bake for one-half hour. Remove the casserole from the oven and stir in the raisins. Carefully pour the remaining four cups of milk around the edge of the pudding (don’t just dump it in the middle).
 

 

Return the casserole to the oven and bake for another 2-1/2 hours. Yes, this is a long slow recipe, but it doesn’t take much tending once it’s assembled. Olive made it in March and April, when it was still cool enough in Massachusetts to keep the oven on all day—I wouldn’t try it in August!

 

It’s not a very sweet dessert, and some older recipes suggest adding a dollop of jam.
 
 

The next Orchard Mystery, Picked to Die, won't be published until October (and I don't have a final cover yet), but here's the most recent one, Golden Malicious:
 
Since this story includes an insect infestation and the US Department of Agriculture appears in the book, this will be a raffle item at the Entomological Society of America annual meeting. Who would have thought!
 

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Key Lime Parfaits @LucyBurdette



 LUCY BURDETTE: Here's a dinner party blooper story for you. (The palm trees have nothing to do with this, but I loved the way the photo turned out. And maybe you'll feel like you're in Key West after consuming one of these parfaits...) Anyway, I offered to bring dessert to a dinner--And decided to try to construct this recipe for the outing. But once we arrived with four glasses in hand, I realized there would be 8 people at the table, not the four I expected. Luckily, these parfait servings were enormous, so we could easily divide each in half. (Not as pretty, of course.) Not one bite was left on the table.

Beep! Beep! Beep! There's a calorie alert associated with this recipe. You should not go in with the idea (as I did) that a Key Lime Parfait would be a light dessert because  of the citrus...

With that warning out of the way, here's the story behind the recipe. I've been working on my fifth Key West mystery (DEATH WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS) which features a New York chef who's just opened a restaurant in Key West. She wants her new menu to reflect some of the tastes and history of the island. Since a key lime parfait is one of the desserts she offers, I'd thought I'd better make one for you!


Key limes are smaller than regular limes--and here I have to tell the truth--kind of a pain to juice. John helped me and it took all the limes in a pound bag to end up with 1/2 cup of juice. (Next time, I might try the recipe with regular limes.)





INGREDIENTS

5 whole graham crackers, crushed, to make about one cup
2 tablespoons melted butter
1 tablespoon brown sugar

1 14 oz can sweetened condensed milk
1/2 cup key lime juice


key lime zest
2 cups whipping cream
1/4 cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
 

Preheat oven to 350. Crush the graham crackers. (Easy way--place the graham crackers in a ziplock bag, seal the bag, and roll them to crumbs with a rolling pin.) 

Mix the crumbs with the melted butter and brown sugar. Spread this on a foil-covered baking sheet and bake for ten minutes or until golden. Let this cool, then break into crumbs again.

Meanwhile, whip the cream with the powdered sugar and vanilla. (I used my food processor, which was a snap.) Set half of this aside for the topping.



Mix the condensed milk with the lime juice. The citrus will cause the milk to thicken. Gently stir in one cup of whipped cream. 







 
Now comes the fun part, in which you layer the parts you've prepared. I chose wine snifters--next time I would try something taller and thinner, as these servings were BIG. Luckily for our waistlines and cholesterol counts, we cut them in half to serve.

Layer in some of the baked crumbs, then some of the key lime mixture, and repeat. When you have distributed all the ingredients, top with dollops of whipped cream and sprinkle with more crumbs and some zested lime if you want a stronger flavor.

Lucy Burdettes Key West Food Critic mysteries are available wherever books are sold!

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And now, the Christine Wenger giveaway results from Sunday!

I printed off the responses to my blog, cut them up, and had my hubby draw three out of a paper  bag.

The winners of a set of my cozies are (drum roll):

Sue Farrell

Fish Mom (don't know her real name!)

Sharon Jesse

All three ladies need to write me with their mailing address, and I'll drop them in the mail ASAP!!

I'd like to thank all those who responded so wonderfully to my blog, my cozy mysteries, and for the trip down memory lane complete with comfort food!

For those who want to take a chance on DO OR DINER and A SECOND HELPING OF MURDER, I'd love to hear what you think.  Write me at: writetochrisw at aol dot com or send real mail to P.O. Box 1823, Cicero, NY 13039.  I respond to each message!

Thanks everyone and congrats to the winners!

Chris Wenger, AUTHOR OF THE COMFORT FOOD MYSTERIES (PENGUIN OBSIDIAN BOOKS)

DO OR DINER - RELEASE DATE: AUGUST, 2013

A SECOND HELPING OF MURDER - RELEASE DATE: APRIL 1, 2014

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Pork in a Slow Cooker #recipe


From Daryl aka Avery:



I just got back from attending the Left Coast Crime conference in Monterey. I grew up in the Northern California area, and I often visited Carmel, a darling shopping and art destination right next door to Monterey, but I remembered Monterey not being up to snuff. Well, let me correct that opinion. Not only does it have a fabulous aquarium, but the town has changed. It's pretty. A shopping mecca. The wharf is kitschy fun.  The sea otters that abound are playful and loud! Bark-bark! And the history of Monterey is incredible, because of its expansive bay. I've shared a number of photos of the area on my Facebook page. CLICK HERE to view more.


Me with Mary Jane Maffini (Victoria Abbott)
and Jenn McKinlay (former MLK'er)

I often find I run on adrenaline at a conference. Go, go, go. Smile, laugh, have fun! It's wonderful to connect with readers. It's also fun to touch base with so many good friends. We talk family, writing, and the biz. It's a wonderful refresher that inspires me to get back to the computer and create.


But then I get home, and I'm exhausted! So for a week, I want easy food. Easy, easy.
The three of us the next day,
being goofy!



As you've probably notice, I've been posting EASY recipes more often. My protagonist in the Cookbook Nook series isn't a cook...yet. She's trying to learn, but recipes with either too many ingredients or too many steps unnerves her. She's getting better. She's challenged herself with a few recipes and they've turned out successfully. I know some real people who also request easy recipes. My stepdaughter, who has a bit of fear in the kitchen, took to this recipe in a second!


But don't think easy means bland. This is really really tasty! And you can prepare it all a day ahead and plop it into the slow cooker first thing in the morning, set the timer, and leave the house for 8-10 hours. How cool is that??  Serve with a crisp salad.

PORK IN A SLOW COOKER

Ingredients:

3-5 pound butt pork roast (I used Farmer John's brand)
8-10 dashes of Worcestershire sauce
4 tablespoons of your favorite dry rub spice
1-2 teaspoons salt (if your dry rub spice is salt-free)
1 onion, sliced

3 carrots, chopped

Directions:

The day before, place meat in a plastic with the dry rub. Cover all over. Seal the bag and set in the refrigerator.


When you’re ready to cook, place the seasoned meat and vegetables in the slow cooker. Add dashes of Worcestershire sauce to the top of the meat until it is well covered.




Cook on low setting of slow cooker for 8-10 hours. Leave meat in the slow cooker on the “warm” setting for about 4 more hours or until the meat easily will pull with two forks. Internal temperature of pork roast should be between 190º F and 205º F.

Remove from slow cooker and allow to rest about 5-10 minutes. Then, slice or pull for serving, basting with pan juices from slow cooker.

Serve warm.







The winner for last week's giveaway is

Kaye K.

Congrats. I'll be getting in touch with you!

******************


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Hey, notice the new title in the grouping below???  Stirring the Plot, coming October 2014!