Saturday, October 31, 2009

Ghost Potatoes, Monster Eyeballs, Halloween Pizza -- Oh My!

Halloween is such fun! I'll be writing a Domestic Diva Mystery that takes place at Halloween next and I can't wait. But don't look for it until the fall of 2011.

Since so much candy and sugar is consumed on Halloween, I figure the important thing is to let the little ghosts and goblins fill up on something semi-healthy before they head out the door. The quickest way to do that is to incorporate Halloween into lunch or dinner. I started thinking about potato ghosts on a pizza, but honestly, a Halloween pizza is the fastest meal for a busy mom or dad to fix, so I decided to do them separately after all. If you're pressed for time, you're probably not going to be inclined to mash potatoes. Ghost Potatoes are fabulous, though, and can be served for an adult dinner party, too. The best news is that you can mash the potatoes in advance and store them in your fridge until you're ready to bake them.


GHOST POTATOES

3 pounds white potatoes
3/4 cup milk (I used skim)
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter

2 egg yolks
salt
raisins

1. Peel potatoes and cut into large cubes. Place in large pot with enough water to cover them. Add 1 teaspoon salt. Bring to a boil. When they boil, turn down the heat a bit and cook them until easily pierced by a fork, about 15 - 20 minutes.

2. Drain the potatoes. Mashed potatoes are best when the potatoes are put through a ricer. However, in the interest of laziness, I usually put them in my KitchenAid mixer to mash them.

3. Pour the milk into a 2-cup Pyrex measuring cup, add the butter, and microwave until nicely warm, but not hot.

4. Whisk the egg yolks a bit with a fo
rk, then add just a bit of the warm milk to them and whisk again so they won't seize when added to the hot potatoes. Add the yolks to the milk in the measuring cup.

5. Mash the potatoes in the mixer, slowly adding the milk mixture. Mix until mashed, but don't over-mix, or they'll get gummy. Salt to taste.


6. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.

7. Butter a shallow baking dish. I used a glass Pyrex pie pan.

8. Spread about 1/3 of the potatoes on the bottom of the pan. Spoon the potatoes into a pastry bag with a large tip. Don't have one? Use a plastic freezer bag and snip a hole in the corner. Squeeze out ghosts!

9. Cut the raisins lengthwise and slice into little bits. Place two
raisin pieces on each ghost as eyes.

20. Bake about 20 minutes. The tops should have a tiny golden tip.


NOTE: I had some leftover potatoes that had not been baked, so I scooped them into a container and stuck them in the fridge for two days. When I took them out, I preheated the oven to 400 degrees, and found they were very malleable. Your imagination (or in my case, lack of artistic talent) is your only limitation. I pressed the potatoes into a funky goblin shape, decorated him with almonds, and popped him into the oven. He tasted just as good as the ghosts had days
before!







And now, for the very busy --

Halloween Pizza


1 frozen pizza (Cheese works best, but
almost any will do.)

Use anything you happen to have in the freezer,
the fridge, or the pantry.

olives (excellent for eyes and nostrils)
hard cheeses
pepperoni
red or orange peppers

pecans or walnuts (make great teeth!)
Canadian bacon

Cut into eyes, nose and vicious teeth. If you're using cheese (I used Gouda for the eyes), heat the pizza before adding the decorative cheese or it will melt out of shape.


Monster Eyeballs

What kid could resist these bloodshot monster eyeballs?

watermelon

olives
frozen peas -- or -- marshmallows

Use a melon baller or an ice cream scoop to carve eyeballs out of watermelon. Add a slice of olive. Place a frozen pea or a piece of
marshmallow in the center of each olive slice. (The frozen peas will thaw and be perfectly edible. If you need them in a hurry, heat a few in a pot of water.) These can be made ahead of time and refrigerated. A fun way to start the day at breakfast!

~ Krista






to all our readers from the whole gang at Mystery Lovers' Kitchen!



Friday, October 30, 2009

Cleo Coyle Talks with a Real Ghost Whisperer (and shares a Halloween recipe for Kettle Corn)



HAMLET - Act 1. Scene V.
Ghost: Pity me not, but lend thy serious hearing/ To what I shall unfold.
Hamlet: Speak; I am bound to hear.


If you are a regular reader of this blog, then you know me as the author of the Coffeehouse Mysteries. As it happens, I also write a 2nd mystery series called the Haunted Bookshop Mysteries in which a prim, New England widow named Penelope McClure solves murders with the help of a dead private detective who was gunned down in her bookshop sixty years before. (To learn more about my Haunted Bookshop Mysteries, just click here or on the book cover.)

Because of the popularity of my ghost series, Random House recently approached me to blurb a debut novel co-written by the real ghost whisperer, Mary Ann Winkowski. Needless to say, I was honored to be asked.


Mary Ann is an amazing woman. She served as the inspiration for the creation of The Ghost Whisperer television show starring Jennifer Love Hewitt, and Mary Ann still serves as a consultant for the show. (It's an excellent show, by the way. If you've never caught it, you're in luck: It's on tonight -- and every Friday night at 8 PM on CBS.)

So who is Mary Ann Winkowski?
To virtually meet her now, hit the play arrow
in the video below and remember...


“There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy…”




If you would like to meet Mary Ann in person,
drop by her Web site and check out her book signing schedule
for November by...
CLICKING HERE



Mary Ann's new novel (just released by Random House) is titled The Book of Illumination: A Novel fom the Ghost Files, and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it; to wit...

"An authentic ghost whisperer reveals the workings of her mind and heart in this absorbing novel that sheds light on earthbound spirits in need of guidance home. An illuminating tale."

~ Cleo Coyle


or on the
book cover to learn more...



I was also very happy when Mary Ann agreed to answer a few of my questions about her work and her new book...


CLEO:
In your novel, The Book of Illumination, your main character Anza O’Malley, can see and speak with the dead. Her grandmother also had this psychic gift and helped Anza develop it when she was still a young child. Anza, of course, is based on you and your own experiences. When did you first discover your gift? Like your fictional character, Anza, did your own grandmother also help you develop it?

MARY ANN: I think the best answer to this question is that when I was seven I discovered that not everybody could do what I could. Believe me it was an eye opener. My grandmother had been taking me to funerals of friends and relatives from the time that I was four, so I just naturally assumed that what I did was not something special. My grandmother was my teacher and my mentor from the very beginning. She realized what I could do, and she helped my gift to grow.

Photo (left) of Mary Ann at age 2
with her Grandma Maria.

Photo courtesy of www.MaryAnnWinkowski.com.
Click on the picture to visit Mary Ann's Web site.


CLEO: In your experience, what are some of the principle reasons spirits stay behind here on earth? Is it always their choice?
MARY ANN: It is always unfinished business in one form or another. A young mother dies suddenly. Obviously she does not want to leave the future of her children to someone else, she chooses to stay. A suicide victim wants someone to know why they took their life. A homicide victim wants some sort of justice. Someone who values an earthbound procession and refuses to leave it behind. The reasons go on and on. In death as in life we have a marvelous gift called free will. At death we do have the choice to cross over or remain.

CLEO: I love the title of your novel, The Book of Illumination, because the story is not only about searching for a priceless, stolen illuminated book, but about helping earthbound spirits cross over into the light. Like Anza, can you really re-create a light for the spirit to cross over? What do you think that light is exactly? Where does it come from? Where do you believe a spirit goes when it walks toward the light?

MARY ANN: My grandmother taught me how to create the white light. The hardest part about learning how to do it was making the opening big enough for a spirit to go into, and keeping it open long enough for them to cross. I believe that the white light is a gift for all of us from God. It is there for all of us to use for protection. I know I could not have gotten through my two daughters learning how to drive without the white light. There was not a time that they left the house that I did not cover their car in the white light. I never get on an airplane without first visualizing the white light covering the plane. I believe that there is an afterlife. The light is present for all people who die. I would visualize it as being the way for our spirits to travel from our earthly plane to the next level. I sincerely believe that there is someone at the end of the light with a clipboard directing where you will go. I do not believe that we enter at the same level.

CLEO: What made you decide to team up with Ms. Foley and write The Book of Illumination?


MARY ANN: My book agent Jennifer Gates introduced us. I love Maureen’s style or writing. She has a marvelous work ethic and I truly enjoy working with her
CLEO: You’ve said that all children can see spirits. What would you advise someone to develop this gift? Can it be developed after childhood?

MARY ANN: I was very fortunate to have my grandmother in my younger years. She gave me the guidance and kept me on the right track. If your child has a gift, I think that it extremely important to be supportive, but not overbearing. Let the child develop the gift at their own pace. Never be critical or over analytical. If the gift remains after childhood I truly believe that if a person works hard enough they can redevelop it.

CLEO: Thank you so much to Mary Ann Winkowski for joining us today at Mystery Lovers' Kitchen!

And finally...below is my Halloween recipe for you: Cleo's Kettle Corn. I'll be popping up this sweet, crunchy treat tonight, just in time to watch The Ghost Whisperer. I hope you'll enjoy some, too, while you read Mary Ann's new Book of Illumination!


To Get Cleo's Recipe for
Sweet Kettle Corn

The recipe will appear in PDF format.
You can print it out or save it to your computer.

For more of my recipes or to find out more about the books
in my Haunted Bookshop or Coffeehouse Mystery series,
click this link to my virtual home at
http://www.coffeehousemystery.com/
Happy
Halloween!

~ Cleo Coyle
author of The Coffeehouse Mysteries

& The Haunted Bookshop Mysteries as Alice Kimberlyhttp://www.coffeehousemystery.com/





To leave a comment,
click the comment link below...

Our Contest!

Win a $25 Gift Card to Williams-Sonoma
Gourmet Food and Kitchenware Store
!



In early November, we're going to have an Iron Chef Week. Each of our mystery writing cooks will post a recipe with the same secret ingredient. To enter our drawing for the gift card, all you have to do is send an e-mail, suggesting a future Secret Ingredient to:

MysteryLoversKitchen@gmail.com

NOTE: You must be a follower of our blog for your entries to count. Just click on one of the "follow" buttons in the right column and you're all set. (If you don't see a right column, just hit the REFRESH button. When the blog reloads, you should see it.)

One entry allowed per day per person. The winner will be announced right here on November 9th! (Again, if you're not following our blog, another winner will be selected...so be sure to follow!)



Good luck!

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Halloween Parties

RileyAdamsFoodBlogPostpic_thumb_thumb

My kids love Halloween.

Tuesday I was at a costume store, finding the perfect costume for my daughter. She wanted to be cute, but spooky. She picked a zombie cheerleader costume. My son has the flu, but hopes to recover by Saturday. He wanted pure horror. I bought all kinds of gross stuff for him to glue onto himself, paint on himself, etc. He seemed delighted.

Food6 One of the best parts about Halloween are the treats.

Wednesday, my daughter and I went to our friends’ house for a Halloween party. Cute decorations, accumulated over the years—spiders’ webs, ghosts, witches. The children all seemed like colorful decorations, themselves. There were several Hannah Montanas, a mummy, a fairy, a gypsy, a Flapper, and my own zombie cheerleader. :)

Everyone brought in goodies. Like these:

020

019

And these:

021 015

Food7

Food1

The children played games like “A Gift from Mummy,” “Mr. Bones’ Relay Race,” and a variation on Hot Potato, where the kids passed a stuffed pumpkin and tried not to be the kid holding it when the music stopped.

Then they had a blast playing freeze tag. They’d cut a rug on the dance floor until the music stopped, and they froze in place.

The most fun? We got to visit with our friends and celebrate the holiday together. Thanks to my friend Caroline for inviting us! Hope everyone has a Happy Halloween with lots of treats!013

Win a $25 Gift Card to Williams-Sonoma gourmet food and kitchenware store! In early November, we're going to have an Iron Chef Week. Each of our mystery writing cooks will post a recipe with the same secret ingredient. To enter our drawing for the gift card, all you have to do is send an e-mail, suggesting a future Secret Ingredient to: MysteryLoversKitchen@gmail.com
NOTE: You must be a follower of our blog for your entries to count. Just click on one of the "follow" buttons in the right column and you're all set. One entry allowed per day per person. The winner will be announced right here on November 9th! (Again, if you're not following our blog, another winner will be selected...so be sure to follow!)

Riley/Elizabeth
Pretty is as Pretty Dies –Elizabeth Spann Craig
Delicious and Suspicious (May 2010)—Riley Adams

http://mysterywritingismurder.blogspot.com

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Monstrous snacks!


We are Halloween people,
the sort who string pumpkin
lights all over the house, start
sketching our jack-o-lantern
faces weeks in advance, know
all of the words to The Monster
Mash and start buying candy
to give out a month ahead
of time because you have to
sample the goods, if you know
what I mean.



My sons have been lobbying for the front yard to be converted
into a full graveyard and have great plans to put in some coffins
so they can jump out at unsuspecting trick or treaters.
Oh yes, we do love Halloween.

Now being a candy-freak, I have to be ever vigilant that I do
not let my love of all things sweet get out of control, especially
with my dudes. I am always looking for the healthy alternative and
one of my favorite resources is Family Fun Magazine. It is always
loaded with great ideas for fun and food all year round. The following
two snack ideas were found at www.familyfun.go.com/magazine/
and I can testify that the dudes loved them, both the making and the
eating!

Monster Fingers and Eyeballs!


Ingredients:

Cheese sticks
Green Bell Pepper
Carrots
Cream Cheese
Sliced Olives

For the monster fingers, unwrap a cheese stick and make three slices where each knuckle should be. Then take a short strip of green bell pepper and put it on the end to create the finger nail. I've found that a dab of cream cheese under the pepper helps to keep it in place.

For the monster eyes, slice the fat end of a large carrot to about an inch thick, put a dab of cream cheese on it and then press in a sliced black olive.

Spooky and yummy and best of all nutritional! Now go scare up some candy.


Happy Halloween from me and my monsters to you and yours! Boo!


Jenn McKinlay SPRINKLE WITH MURDER March 2010

aka Lucy Lawrence STUCK ON MURDER Sept 2009

www.jennmckinlay.com

NEW CONTEST ANNOUNCEMENT!!!

Win a $25 Gift Card to Williams-Sonoma gourmet food and kitchenware store! In early November, we're going to have an Iron Chef Week. Each of our mystery writing cooks will post a recipe with the same secret ingredient. To enter our drawing for the gift card, all you have to do is send an e-mail, suggesting a future Secret Ingredient to: MysteryLoversKitchen@gmail.com

NOTE: You must be a follower of our blog for your entries to count. Just click on one of the "follow" buttons in the right column and you're all set. One entry allowed per day per person. The winner will be announced right here on November 9th! (Again, if you're not following our blog, another winner will be selected...so be sure to follow!)

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Caramel Apple Dip ... seriously?

First off – Big Woo-Hoo shout out to Cleo. Wow!! Espresso Shot hit #3 nationwide! That’s huge!
And well deserved. Congrats, Cleo! I plan to help celebrate by placing Espresso Shot at the top of my TBR pile (which I can’t get to until January at the earliest), and ordering Holiday Grind!

OUR NEW CONTEST: Win a $25 Williams-Sonoma Gift Card! For details on how to enter, simply scroll down and see our contest announcement...


Apples and Halloween just go together so well, don't they? When my husband buys Affy Tapple packages and sets them on the countertop, I know I'm sunk. Can't help myself. Those beauties call my name -- even from other rooms. Healthy? Not so much, except for the apples. Delicious? Oh yeah.

Some time back my eldest daughter told me about a recipe her boyfriend's mother shared with her (Hi, Bonnie!) that I had never heard of before. Talking with friends, it seems an even split. Some people have heard of this, but many, around here at least, have not.

Once I heard how easy this was supposed to be, I knew I had to give it a try. Maybe this is old hat for you, but it's completely new to me.

Halloween is full of scary things, right? Well, the prospect of an exploding can had me terrified, but I promise, everything worked out just great.

Caramel Apple Dip
(seriously?)

Take one can (about 14 oz) of Sweetened Condensed Milk (NOT evaporated milk) and remove the label. Place the can in a deep dutch oven and cover with water. Turn heat on high until water is boiling.


~ You're starting to see why I was skeptical, right?





Boil for 3 -4 hours, making sure the water level never drops below the top of the can (if it does, this is where you run the risk of the can exploding). Add water as necessary to keep levels high.
After 4 hours, remove can from water with tongs, place in fridge to cool.

Open can and you should have some creamy caramel.
Slice apples, chop nuts... serve...
And happy dipping!

In our family we like to point and say, "Isn't this delicious, dip?" That's one of those jokes that was old ten years ago, but we refuse to let die...

Julie

My White House Chef Mystery series includes State of the Onion, Hail to the Chef, and Eggsecutive Orders (coming in January). All from Berkley Prime Crime.

Sign up for my newsletter at http://www.juliehyzy.com/

Monday, October 26, 2009

Trick or Treat!




This week we're celebrating HALLOWEEN in our recipes. Isn't that fun? Six different ways to TRICK OR TREAT! I'm curious to see what the others come up with, aren't you?

I think I've told you before that my character, Charlotte Bessette, likes to experiment with food. Well, I do, too, and I inspired to do so this week because I took a tour of Ohio and fell in love all over again with FALL. The colors and the rolling hills, the fields upon fields of corn, and the wonderful flavors of foods that I tasted. I stayed at the best little bed and breakfast called Acorns at the White Oak Inn, in Danfield, Ohio, out in the "middle of nowhere" (as they advertise), and I was treated like family. The innkeeper, Yvonne, is a terrific chef and spoiled me rotten. I then went on a tour of the Amish country with a fabulous guide named LaVonne who runs Amish Tours of Ohio, who works out of Berlin, Ohio. What an insight to a very different culture.

In honor of Halloween and Fall, I decided to use pumpkin seeds as an ingredient in a fall salad. Actually, this salad uses all the elements of the season. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did


FALL SALAD WITH PUMPKIN SEEDS
(for two)

Ingredients:
1/4 cup raw pumpkin seeds
2 Tbs. olive oil
1/2 tsp. salt

Directions:
Baste a 9” square baking pan with the oil.
Sprinkle in the seeds so they’re flat on the bottom.
Sprinkle with salt.
Bake at 400 degrees for 10 minutes, stir so they get coated with oil on all sides. Flatten them on the bottom and bake 10 minutes more until they’re a golden brown.

Remove and reserve.





SALAD

Ingredients:
2 cups raw spinach
4 sticks baby corn
6 slices cucumber
1/4 zucchini, chopped thin
2 Tbs. craisins
1 Tbs. olive oil
4 Tbs. pumpkin seeds
1 oz. cheddar, cubed or shredded

Directions:
Pile spinach on a plate, adorn with cucumber, corn, and craisins.

Heat 1 Tbs. olive oil in sauté pan. Drop in zucchini, sauté quickly until light brown. Divide over two salads.

Drizzle with dressing (recipe to follow)
Top with pumpkin seeds and cheddar.
This is melt in your mouth good, if I do say so myself!


Dressing

Ingredients:
2 Tbs. olive oil
4 Tbs. balsamic vinegar
1/8 tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. basil
1/8 tsp. ground pepper

Directions:
Stir together and shake well. Divide between 2 salads.

Yum!




Note: I used Australian Cheddar. It's got a nice tang to it. Sharp without a bite. The pumpkin seeds really give this salad a crunchy and nutty zing!


If you want to check out other recipes or learn more about the upcoming Cheese Shop Mysteries, check out my website: http://www.averyaames.com/. There's lots to read.




And LAST BUT NOT LEAST, we have another contest!!


Win a $25 Gift Card to Williams-Sonoma gourmet food and kitchenware store! In early November, we're going to have an Iron Chef Week. Each of our mystery writing cooks will post a recipe with the same secret ingredient. To enter our drawing for the gift card, all you have to do is send an e-mail, suggesting a future Secret Ingredient to: MysteryLoversKitchen@gmail.com

NOTE:
You must be a follower of our blog for your entries to count. Just click on one of the "follow" buttons in the right column and you're all set. One entry allowed per day per person. The winner will be announced right here on November 9th! (Again, if you're not following our blog, another winner will be selected...so be sure to follow!)





Sunday, October 25, 2009

Our Guest Author - Lorraine Bartlett



Welcome, LORRAINE!


Lorraine is a New York Times bestselling author.

She writes the Victoria Square Mysteries, featuring Katie Bonner, manager of Artisan's Alley. The first book, A MATTER OF MURDER, will debut in 2010.

As Lorna Barrett, she writes the Booktown cozy mystery series featuring Tricia Miles and her mystery bookstore, Haven’t Got a Clue--which includes her cat, Miss Marple. This series includes her bestseller, Murder is Binding. New out is Bookplate Special.

As L.L. Barrett, she writes the Jeff Resnick psychological suspense series.


To make Lorraine comfy in our cozy little format, I asked her the following questions. Her new Booktown novel, Bookplate Special, includes a restaurant. I had to assume she'd have a recipeto share, right?


What does your protagonist like to eat?
Tricia is very weight conscious. She allows herself to salads and tuna plates, a bagel for breakfast and lots of coffee. However, her sister, Angelica, eats and loves EVERYTHING and is always trying to get Tricia to broaden her food choices. Eventually, Tricia is going to do some serious thinking about her eating habits (book #4 in the Booktown Mystery series, Chapter & Hearse, which will be released on August 3, 2010.)


Is the food served at the restaurant in your book or does she cook it herself?
Most of the food is prepared by Tricia’s sister, Angelica, who opens a small café in Bookplate Special, The café is called Booked for Lunch. They only serve lunch—which is pretty much soup and sandwiches. Angelica loves to bake, too. The recipes included in most of the Booktown Mysteries are Angelica’s.


What/who is her favorite Food Network show/cookbook/celebrity chef?
Angelica would like to be the next Paula Deen, and probably wishes she was as young and skinny as Giada Delaurentus. (Although she secretly thinks Giadia has to be bulimic to be a cook and stay that impossibly thin.). Angelica’s appalled that Sandra Lee starts most of her recipes with box mixes. She thinks everything should be made from scratch.

What’s her favorite cheese?
I really couldn’t say. I’m not much of a cheese hound myself (I cook and/or eat mozzarella, parmesan, Swiss, and cheddar and that’s about it), but I’m sure Angelica would be quite knowledgeable if I did a bit more research.




Would you care to share a recipe with us?
I’d be delighted. I made these mini spinach quiches for Bookplate Special and had to make the recipe several times before I was happy with the amount of cheese. (I wanted more, More, MORE!) My husband was very happy with all those test batches and has encouraged me to make more of them.

Mini Spinach Quiches

½ cup butter or margarine, softened
1 package (3 ounces) cream cheese, softened
1 cup all-purpose flour
3 slices bacon
¼ cup chopped green onion
2 eggs
½ cup half-and-half cream
½ cup grated Parmesan cheese
¼ teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg 1 (10 ounce) package frozen spinach, thawed and well drained (use your hands to squeeze out the water)



In a small mixing bowl, cream butter and cream cheese. Add flour; beat until well blended. Shape into 24 balls. Press balls into the bottom and the sides of greased mini muffin cups.

Preheat oven to 350º degrees. In a skillet, cook the bacon until brown and very crisp; drain. Sautee the onions in the same skillet with the bacon drippings, cook for 5 minutes, or until tender, stirring constantly; drain. Place the onions in a medium bowl. Crumble the bacon into small pieces, and add in with the cooked green onion. Add the eggs to the bacon and onions; beat well. Stir in the cream, salt, nutmeg and the Parmesan cheese. Add in the squeezed spinach; mix well to combine. Divide the mixture into crust-lined cups (do not overfill).

Bake for 25-30 minutes, or until puffed and golden brown. Cool in pan on wire rack for 5 minutes. Serve warm or cool. Store leftovers in the refrigerator.

Makes 24




Thank you, Lorraine, for offering such fun insights into your writing and a delicious recipe, to boot!



AND DON'T FORGET:


Win a $25 Gift Card to Williams-Sonoma gourmet food and kitchenware store! In early November, we're going to have an Iron Chef Week. Each of our mystery writing cooks will post a recipe with the same secret ingredient. To enter our drawing for the gift card, all you have to do is send an e-mail, suggesting a future Secret Ingredient to: MysteryLoversKitchen@gmail.com

NOTE:
You must be a follower of our blog for your entries to count. Just click on one of the "follow" buttons in the right column and you're all set. One entry allowed per day per person. The winner will be announced right here on November 9th! (Again, if you're not following our blog, another winner will be selected...so be sure to follow!)

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Dust off the Panini Maker


I think one of the most clever kitchen gadgets to come along recently is the panini maker. It's perfect for busy moms and vegetarians. If you've read The Diva Runs Out of Thyme or The Diva Takes the Cake, you know that Sophie and her mom are into panini sandwiches. A panini maker is basically a light press that heats on both sides. They're very easy to use, everyone has great sandwich ingredients in the fridge most of the time, and they're ready in a snap. Nothing, but nothing, is as fabulous for melting cheese in a sandwich. If you have a grilled cheese lover in the house, a panini maker is a must. Over at Food Network, Bobby Flay has a recipe for Grilled Banana and Nutella Panini -- who wouldn't eat that?



A word of caution, though, these gadgets get unbelievably hot. I would advise keeping little fingers away from them.




Sometimes I think I don't use my panini maker enough. So when I saw this clever idea, I had to try it. I love eggplant, but if you've cooked eggplant, you know it will absorb as much oil as you give it. A panini press is the perfect way to cook eggplant quickly, and without oil. I've tried eggplant slices with and without oil in the panini press, and honestly, there isn't much difference. I do however, like to salt sliced eggplant and let it "cry" for about a half hour before cooking it. Some say it reduces bitterness, and I think that's true.

So, for my quick panini lunch today, I sliced eggplant, salted it, and let my panini maker warm up. I also fried an egg. I slipped the eggplant into the panini maker and let it cook for about two minutes. The amount of time depends on the thickness of the slice. I also cooked the rest of the eggplant slices in the panini maker, two at a time, for use at dinnertime.

Almost any bread works well in a panini maker. For my lunch I used a Food for Life English Muffin made of sprouted whole grains, and added just a touch of mayo to the insides of the muffin. Then I assembled my sandwich -- muffin bottom, slice of eggplant, sprinkle of parmesan cheese, egg, salt and pepper, then the top of the muffin. The whole sandwich went back into the panini maker for a few minutes and it was delicious!

You can see that hundreds of combinations of ingredients would work. I also like the panini maker because if you have one person who loves tomatoes or avocado and another who doesn't, it doesn't take any extra time to make that special panini for each individual.


If you don't have a panini maker and you're thinking about buying one, there are a couple of things to look for. The most important thing is that the top is attached in a manner that allows it to float and come down flat on top of the sandwich. You don't want one that is hinged in the back -- it will squish the back of the sandwich. The other thing that I love about my panini maker is the detachable grilling surfaces. They pop out and can go into the dishwasher as soon as they're cool, which means very easy upkeep.

And now I'm off to try bread and chocolate in the panini maker. Hmm, I can see this will take a lot of experimenting on my part. The things I do for this blog . . .

~ Krista




New Contest Announcement!


Win a $25 Gift Card to Williams-Sonoma gourmet food and kitchenware store! In early November, we're going to have an Iron Chef Week. Each of our mystery writing cooks will post a recipe with the same secret ingredient. To enter our drawing for the gift card, all you have to do is send an e-mail, suggesting a future Secret Ingredient to: MysteryLoversKitchen@gmail.com


NOTE: You must be a follower of our blog for your entries to count. Just click on one of the "follow" buttons in the right column and you're all set. One entry allowed per day per person. The winner will be announced right here on November 9th! (Again, if you're not following our blog, another winner will be selected...so be sure to follow!)


Good luck!

Friday, October 23, 2009

Cleo Coyle's Mocha-Dipped Rum Macaroons (with video!)




My recipe today was inspired by one of my favorite Halloween candies.
But first I have a quick, happy announcement...


Espresso Shot is
#3 in Mystery Nationwide!
My editor just informed me that Espresso Shot hit the #3 position on Barnes and Noble's paperback mystery bestseller list. As we sophisticated mystery writers like to say on such occasions: "Wee-haa!!!" The book is also ranked #31 on B&N's overall fiction list (Wee-haa! x2).


For anyone new to this blog,
Espresso Shot is my
7th Coffeehouse Mystery.
You can read
more about

Espresso Shot,
including a
free excerpt by
clicking here.

Needless to say, there will be much rejoicing and dinking of coffee in the Coyle household this weekend. This weekend also marks the one week countdown to one of my favorite holidays: Halloween! And thoughts of that holiday actually inspired this recipe...


Cleo's Mocha-Dipped Rum Macaroons

(with video!)



Do you have a favorite trick or treat candy? After hours trekking our chilly, dark, “haunted” neighborhood in Southwestern Pennsylvania, my sister and I loved upending our pillow cases and dumping our sweet loot out on the living room floor. Sorting and ranking would follow.

Clark Bars were popular when I was growing up (no surprise since they were made in nearby Pittsburgh), but I didn’t really like them much (so I ranked them as a "dud" candy). Baby Ruths, Peanut M&Ms, and Mallow Cups (remember those?!) were big winners, and I especially loved Almond Joys and Mounds bars.

Did you rank your candy, too?! My husband said Clark bars were not a dud for him. He loved them! His dud candy was Good & Penty. (Woops, dating ourselves!)

Given my Almond Joy and Mounds addictions, I still think coconut and chocolate are a superior combo. My little macaroon recipe for you today includes both of those flavors along with the more mature flavor notes of rum and coffee. I especially like drenching those little coconut haystacks in mocha glaze, which really dresses them up for the dessert plate of anything from an elegant dinner party to a simple family supper (at least it does at chez Coyle, lol).



These cookies also pair extremely well with a hot, fresh pot of French roast or a demitasse of espresso.

In fact, "espresso with rum" is such a classic combo I included it in the Recipes and Tips section of my upcoming release, Holiday Grind, along with "espresso coconut-rum" and 80 pages of other coffee and non-coffee holiday recipes.



(You can read more about my 8th Coffeehouse Mystery, Holiday Grind, and read brief summaries of the rest of the books in my series by clicking here.)

Back to the cookies! Today's recipe gives you two ways to make my Mocha-Dipped Rum Macaroons. The first is with rum extract and the second is with real rum (dark not light).

While the rum extract is quicker and easier and does give you a nice flavor, I do think the real rum version is well worth making. The flavor is truly amazing, especially when paired with coffee.


The real rum version also gives your cookie a moister inside--another bonus because the trademark of a truly great coconut macaroon is a crispy exterior and a soft, chewy, moist center.

So here without further ado is my recipe of the week. (Just click the link below and the recipe will appear in PDF format)…



To get Cleo Coyle's recipe for...
Mocha-Dipped Rum Macaroons

Click here


The recipe will appear in PDF format.
You can print it out or save it to your computer.


For more of my recipes or to find out more
about the books in my culinary mystery series,
click this link to my virtual home at
http://www.coffeehousemystery.com/



CLEO'S HOW-TO VIDEO

Once again, in my ongoing bid for
this year's Academy Award, I give you (below) the
happy 50's homemaker version of a helpful how-to
foodie video
or HOW TO DIP CLEO'S MACAROONS!

(And, kids, if you try this at home,
don't foget the retro music!)



To see video,
click the play arrow in the lower left
of the frame above...



Until next time
~Cleo Coyle
"Where coffee and crime are always brewing..."