Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Scallops and Snow Pea Salad -- a midwinter treat from @LeslieBudewitz

Friends, we are super excited to welcome a new cozy cook to the Kitchen crew tomorrow! Be sure to pop in and meet her -- we know you will love her books and recipes! 

LESLIE BUDEWITZ:  Mr. Right and I love scallops. A couple of times a month, a local seafood company parks its funky little wagon outside a bar in the village where we live, selling beautiful frozen seafood. These scallops aren’t cheap, but they are so good!

And when served in this dish, they are as simple and tasty as they can be. Left Coast Crime in 2025 was held in Denver, home to Savory Spice, in a historic district near the river. A group of readers and I made the short trek from our hotel and had a tour of the shop, as well as some taste treats. As one of them said, she half expected Pepper from my Spice Shop series to emerge from a back room!



We spent a fair amount of money between the 8 or so of us, and I’m sure I wasn’t the only one who scored an extra jar or two of spice as thanks. Mine was Saffron Salt, and we love it, in apricot blondies I’ll share later this year and these scallops. It’s a specialty item, not always available, so when we started using it, I had to think of substitutes I could recommend to you. The blend includes sea salt, saffron, and vanilla, but honestly, I think any could small-crystal salt (or a larger crystal you grind) would be great in these scallops, whether it’s got added flavor or not. I’m eager to try them with a smoked salt. So scan your spice rack or ask for suggestions at your local spice shop.

This recipe originated with Savory Spice, but I have adapted it quite a bit.

And gosh, it’s a pretty dish, isn’t it. I think it would make a lovely main dish for a Valentine’s Day dinner for two!

Have you discovered any new-to-you herbs, spices, blends, or other ingredients lately? Do tell! Inquiring eaters want to know! 

PS: I finally figured out how to embed a PDF of the recipe for easy printing. 
Scroll down to the 💕 for the link. 

Scallops and Snow Pea Salad (adapted from Savory Spice)

For salad:

12 ounces of snow peas, stemmed and sliced diagonally

3 tablespoons rice vinegar

2 teaspoons honey

½ teaspoon kosher salt, plus more to taste

1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, plus more to taste

4 radishes, thinly sliced


For scallops:

1 pound fresh or thawed sea scallops

2 teaspoons saffron salt (see note above) 

1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 

2 tablespoons vegetable or canola oil


Make salad: 

In a medium saucepan, bring several inches of water to a boil. Add snow peas and cook about 2 minutes, until bright green. Quickly drain and rinse with cold water to stop the cooking. 


Use a wide-mouthed pint jar with a tight-fitting lid to create the dressing. Add the vinegar, honey, salt, and pepper to the jar. Close and shake to mix. (Note that because there is no oil, you won’t see the usual emulsification.) Taste and add more salt or pepper if needed. 

Place the snow peas in a bowl and add the sliced radishes. Toss with the dressing and set aside. 

Cook the scallops:

Pat scallops dry with paper towels. Sprinkle with saffron salt or your substitution and black pepper. In a large skillet, heat the oil over medium heat until it begins to shimmer. Pour off any excess. Add scallops and cook 2 to 3 minutes a side, until golden brown. Scallops should release from the pan easily; if they stick when you try to turn them, continue to cook and try again after about 30 seconds. If necessary, cook in batches to prevent overcrowding the pan. 


Arrange the snow pea salad on plates and top with warm scallops. 

Serves 2-4. 




At Seattle Spice Shop, owner Pepper Reece has whipped up the perfect blend of food, friends, and flavor. But the sweet smell of success can be hazardous . . .  

Spring is in full bloom in Pike Place Market, where Pepper is celebrating lavender’s culinary uses and planning a festival she hopes will become an annual event. When her friend Lavender Liz offers to share tips for promoting the much-loved—and occasionally maligned—herb, Pepper makes a trek to the charming town of Salmon Falls. But someone has badly damaged Liz’s greenhouse, throwing a wrench in the feisty grower’s plans for expansion. Suspicions quickly focus on an employee who’s taken to the hills. 

Then Liz is found dead among her precious plants, stabbed by a pruning knife. In Salmon Falls, there’s one in every pocket. 

Pepper digs in, untangling the tensions between Liz and a local restaurateur with eyes on a picturesque but neglected farm, a jealous ex-boyfriend determined to profit from Liz’s success, and a local growers’ cooperative. She’s also hot on the scent of a trail of her own, sniffing out the history of her sweet dog, Arf. 

As Pepper’s questions threaten to unearth secrets others desperately want to keep buried, danger creeps closer to her and those she loves. Can Pepper root out the killer, before someone nips her in the bud?

Available at Amazon * Barnes & Noble * Books-A-Million * Bookshop.org * and your local booksellers!


ALL GOD'S SPARROWS AND OTHER STORIES: A STAGECOACH MARY FIELDS COLLECTION, now available in in paperback and ebook 

Take a step back in time with All God's Sparrows and Other Stories: A Stagecoach Mary Fields Collection of historical short mysteries, featuring the Agatha-Award winning "All God's Sparrows" and other stories imagining the life of real-life historical figure Mary Fields, born into slavery in 1832, during the last thirty years of her life, in Montana. Out September 17, 2024 from Beyond the Page Publishing.  

“Finely researched and richly detailed, All God’s Sparrows and Other Stories is a wonderful collection. I loved learning about this fascinating woman . . . and what a character she is! Kudos to Leslie Budewitz for bringing her to life so vividly.” —Kathleen Grissom, New York Times bestselling author of Crow Mary

Available at Amazon * Barnes & Noble * Books-A-Million * Bookshop.org * and your local booksellers!


Leslie Budewitz is the author of the Spice Shop Mysteries set in Seattle's Pike Place Market, and the Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries, set in NW Montana. As Alicia Beckman, she writes moody, standalone suspense, most recently Blind Faith. She is the winner of Agatha Awards in three categories: Best Nonfiction (2011), Best First Novel (2013), and Best Short Story (2018). Her latest books are To Err is Cumin, the 8th Spice Shop Mystery and All God's Sparrows and Other Stories: A Stagecoach Mary Fields Collection, in September 2024. Watch for Lavender Lies Bleeding, the 9th Spice Shop Mystery, on July 15, 2025.

A past president of Sisters in Crime and former national board member of Mystery Writers of America, Leslie lives in northwest Montana with her husband, a musician and doctor of natural medicine. 

Swing by Leslie's website and join the mailing list for her seasonal newsletter. And join her on Facebook where she shares book news and giveaways from her writer friends, and talks about food, mysteries, and the things that inspire her.







Sunday, February 1, 2026

Around the Kitchen Table: Our Favorite Chocolate Desserts + 6-Book #Giveaway!

 

KIM DAVIS: February always means a couple of things to me: first is Valentine’s Day – whether you celebrate yourself, a loved one, or a friend, it’s still a day to cherish love and to share chocolate (or eat it all yourself)! One of my go-to chocolate cake recipes is this Tunnel of Fudge Cake which is featured in my Valentines’ Day-themed cozy mystery, Chocolate Can Be Deadly, along with other chocolate recipes.



The second is my husband’s birthday which comes the day after Valentine’s Day. Since his birthday is practically intertwined with Valentine’s Day, we forego the commercialization of the holiday and instead focus on what is important to us, like family. Given that we have a special needs granddaughter, we skip eating out (too many crowds and long waits, even with reservations, which doesn’t work well for her), and instead, I cook a dinner and dessert of my husband’s choosing. Lately, his favorite has been these No-Bake 
Chocolate Cheesecakes in a Jar (many thanks to Korina Moss for introducing us to her delicious recipe!), and he requests these fun dessert jars often.

 



Calling all chocoholics: do you have a favorite chocolate dessert, whether you make it or buy it? 

 


💘💝💖



LESLIE KARST: I'm not much of a baker, being a "pantser" kind of cook (baking requires measuring and weighing--oh, no!). But I do like desserts, and I do love chocolate. And one of my favorite things to make here in Hawai'i where bananas are so plentiful and delicious, is this Crispy Fried Banana Sundae with oodles of chocolate sauce.

 

 

 

Yes, you do have to prepare it to order--i.e., right before service--but if you have all the ingredients ready to go, it's quite simple. And so tasty! 
 
Happy Valentine's and Galentines Day to all! 


 

💘💝💖



LESLIE BUDEWITZ:  Years ago, a friend gave me a button reading "If wearer is found depressed, administer chocolate immediately." Still a motto to live by. In that spirit, I've posted a LOT of chocolate recipes here over the years. Two well-suited to this cold, dark time of year -- any wonder that we break it up with a sweet, romantic celebration? -- are my Almost Flourless Chocolate Cake and these Salted Chocolate Sablés  I first made the cake right after my neighbor gave me a pressed-glass cake stand that had belonged to her mother, an avid cake baker, who had just passed away, and I love thinking of her whenever we use it. (I never met her, but I adore her daughter!) You can see the lovely gold edging in this photo.





The cookies are a delicious recreation of a favorite from Le Panier, a French bakery in Seattle's Pike Place Market that shows up in both my cozy mystery series -- as itself in the Spice Shop mysteries, and as the namesake of a bakery in Jewel Bay, in my Food Lovers' Village mysteries



From my heart to yours. 


💘💝💖



MADDIE DAY: With my anniversary falling on Valentine's Day, you can bet I love coming up with chocolate desserts. My first post here as a regular blogger was Mocha Kahlua Valentine's Cookies


I've also posted about Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookies.



And my recipe for Mexican Chocolate Mini-Cakes came straight from Nacho Average Murder, in which Robbie Jordan went back to her native Santa Barbara for her high school reunion - and a California-flavored murder investigation.

 

 


Check out my post here on the 13th for a yummy Chocolate Sour Cream Bundt Cake! 


💘💝💖



ANG POMPANO: I don’t make chocolate desserts often, but Annette does and her Surecelle Chocolate Cookies come from a cherished family recipe. “Surecelle” means “little sweets” in the New Haven Italian-American dialect, where they’re especially popular. 

I’m obsessed with these. They aren't your traditional Italian bakery cookies, so you likely won't find them in a cookbook, but they are rich, chocolatey, and wonderfully nostalgic. Hints of cinnamon, toasted nuts, and orange peel are what really make them special. 

They’re baked in loaves, frosted with melted chocolate once cool, and then sliced into thick cookies. They’re perfect for Valentine’s Day... or for sneaking a few when no one’s looking. 

Annette and I are away right now, but I'll try to post the recipe soon. In the meantime, we wish everyone a Happy Valentine’s Day!



Surecelle Chocolate Cookies:
Little Sweets from New Haven
(Ang's recipe post to come.)


💘💝💖


LUCY BURDETTE: This may get me banned from the blog, but chocolate is not my favorite! If I need to choose, it will be homemade cake. This Guinness cake turned out really well so I will share it with you! 


💘💝💖



PEG COCHRAN: Ah Chocolate. How do I love thee? Let me count the ways...I adore chocolate, especially dark chocolate. Hubby likes milk chocolate and our granddaughter likes white chocolate so we never have to fight over a box of candy! Oddly, I don't care for chocolate ice cream and I hear that's fairly common among chocolate lovers. I'm sure there's a brand out there that does it well but I haven't found it yet. I'm not crazy about chocolate layer cakes but any kind of flourless chocolate cake is right up my alley. And brownies! Especially these Palm Beach Brownies that combine chocolate and mint and these frosted Celebrity Brownies!



💘💝💖


MOLLY MACRAE: As with my children and grandchildren, whom I love oodles and oodles and more than tongue can tell, I don’t choose favorites among chocolate desserts. Like Peg, though, chocolate ice cream does nothing for me. I have a couple of recipes for chocolate layer cakes that I bet Peg can fall in love with. One is called Ultimate Chocolate Cake and the other is Total Blackout Cake. I haven’t made either one in years. Hmm. I’ll see what I can do about that.

In the meantime, here’s a recipe for FlourlessChocolate Whisky Cake. It’s fantastic and includes a surprising ingredient.


And here’s a picture of Night Sky Cake. The cake, but not the recipe, makes an appearance in Heather and Homicide, book 4 in my Highland Bookshop Mysteries. It’s chocolate cake with a swirl of lightly sweetened mascarpone inside and on top, sprinkled with flakes of Himalayan salt. When asked about the cake, Basant (the shopkeeper who created the recipe) says it’s “The night sky brightened by a path of moonbeams and sparkling stars.” Sometime later this year I’ll post the recipe for Night Sky Cake. Not for Valentine’s Day, though.


On Valentine’s day my post will be Depths of Sin Hot Chocolate—oh my goodness are you in for a treat. 
 



💘💝💖


CLEO COYLE: Happy February birthday to your husband, Kim! (And to me.) I’ll be celebrating my own birthday tomorrow (Feb. 2nd) along with Groundhog’s Day. My cake of choice will be a Mocha Chiffon Roll Cake from our local Red Ribbon Bakeshop. But for general Chocolate Therapy, especially in winter, I’m happy to prescribe these DOUBLE-CHOCOLATE BROWNIE MUFFINS. They are incredibly easy to make and the perfect RX for all our fellow chocoholics out there. Have a delicious winter, everyone. Stay cozy! ~ Cleo 




GIVEAWAY!

To be entered in this week's drawing
for these terrific mysteries below,
join us in the comments, and be sure
to leave your email address.

What about you, readers?
Do you have a favorite chocolate dessert, whether you make it or buy it? 

Join the
conversation!



👇


Chocolate Can Be Deadly by Kim Davis 

Bulletproof Barista by Cleo Coyle

A Poisonous Pour (ARC) by Maddie Day

Diet of Death by Ang Pompano

Murder with Ganache by Lucy Burdette

There'll Be Shell to Pay by Molly MacRae


🔎📚🔍

Comments Open 
Through Wednesday 
February 4, 2026

Be sure to leave 
your email address. 


💘

Saturday, January 31, 2026

French Butter Cake #Recipe Peg Cochran/Margaret Loudon

 


   

This cake was so easy and so delicious.  Using oil instead of butter made it extremely moist.  At first, I thought the oil was never going to blend in and I'd done something wrong but I kept whisking and eventually it coalesced into a smooth batter.  It's a simple cake that is a blank slate for the toppings of your choice--keep it simple with some powdered sugar, or make it fancy with fresh fruit or whipped cream.  It's a lovely dessert but is also something you might have with a cup of tea or even for breakfast if you're feeling decadent!  

For the cake:

½ cup plain yogurt or Greek yogurt

1 cup granulated sugar

3 large eggs

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

¼ teaspoon almond extract

1½ cups all-purpose flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

½ teaspoon salt

½ cup neutral flavored oil

For the glaze:

⅓ cup granulated sugar

3 tablespoons butter

1½ tablespoons water

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

 

For the cake:

Preheat the oven to 350˚F.  Spray a 8-inch round cake pan with baking spray. Line bottom of pan with parchment paper and spray parchment paper.

Combine the yogurt, sugar, eggs and the vanilla and almond extracts. Whisk until well blended.


 

Add the baking powder and salt. Whisk to combine then add the flour and whisk again just until all of the flour is blended in. 

Add the oil and stir well. Don't worry, at first it will seem to separate but keep stirring till smooth.


 

Pour the batter into prepared pan.


 

Bake for 30-40 minutes, until a toothpick or cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean. Do not overbake.


 

While the cake cools a bit, prepare the glaze.

For the glaze:

Combine sugar, butter, water and extracts in a small saucepan. Cook over medium heat stirring frequently until the butter is melted and the sugar has dissolved. Do not boil. 

Using a pastry brush, slowly brush the glaze all over the top of the cake, using about a quarter of the mixture.

Flip the cake out onto a cooling rack set over parchment paper (to catch drips). The bottom of the cake will now be the top.


 

Brush the remaining glaze over the top and sides of the cake until all the glaze is gone. Allow cake to cool for at least 30 minutes before serving. Sprinkle with powdered sugar if desired before serving or top with whipped cream or fresh fruit.


 

  
 
When a wealthy local benefactor is slain on the farm, Monica has to figure out who wanted to cash in on the killing . . .

As Sassamanash Farms hunkers down for the long winter, Monica agrees to let the local animal shelter host their Christmas-themed fundraiser there. The draw of the event—a chance to have your pet’s picture taken with Santa—brings in animal lovers from far and wide. But when the crackling fire dies down and the festive holiday props are all carted away, Monica discovers a very un-jolly sight next to the barn—the dead body of one of the shelter’s biggest donors. With the farm’s good name in jeopardy, Monica goes to work to root out the killer.

By all accounts the victim was a charming and generous supporter of the shelter, but Monica discovers that he was loathed by those who knew him for being tight-fisted and unscrupulous. Suspecting money might be the motive, she turns her sights on his stylish wife and her lavish lifestyle, along with the manager of the struggling shelter, who stood to collect a hefty bequest from his will. But as Monica closes in on one final clue, the culprit closes in on her. Caught unawares, she’ll have to survive the brutal winter weather, as well as a cold-blooded killer . . .
 

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