Please welcome our good friend, Erika Chase, author of the Ashton Corners Mystery Book Club series as our guest today. Take it away, Erika!
I love used
book sales and every fall, I can be found volunteering at a huge two-day event
in town. The down side is that I come home laden with new finds while the space
is not readily available. That’s not been known to stop me, though. And this
year was no different. Out of the armload of books I found, one in particular
gets a place of honor on my coffee table. It’s called A Table in Tuscany, Collected and Illustrated by Leslie Forbes. It’s filled with classic recipes from
Italy and the most stunning color drawings from around the country.
So, here’s
this wonderful book calling out to me. (I love all things Italian!) And I responded by choosing one particular recipe to try
first. Puttenaio or Prostitutes’ Stew. Looks hearty for a cool fall evening, doesn’t
it?
Well, it is. I loved it, as did my guinea pigs, ah, guests.
Cooking it
is easy. It’s the prep work that takes the time. Lots of chopping involved, so
beware.
PUTTENAIO
1 lb. green peppers
2 large potatoes
1 stick celery
1 large carrot
1 lb. Portobello mushrooms
1 large onion
1 lb. ripe
tomatoes, peeled and seeded
2 zucchini
4 slices of prosciutto
¼ pt. olive oil
Small handful of fresh herbs such as parsley,
rosemary, thyme or basil (I used rosemary
as I have a large plant gracing my kitchen)
Sea salt
(I prefer Celtic sea salt)
2 cloves garlic, crushed
(Please note, the original recipe called for 2
eggplants but I substituted the mushrooms since one of my guests has a
sensitivity to nightshades. Also, since tomatoes at this time
of year are not very flavorful in this area, I added half a small tin of tomato
puree. Another addition of mine was the prosciutto – because I like it!)
2. Heat the oil in a large saucepan and
cook everything except the tomatoes and the herbs for 10-15 minutes.
3.
Add the salt and tomatoes, cover and
cook over a high heat for 10 minutes. Then simmer for 1 hour. 15 minutes before
the end of cooking add the fresh herbs.
This can be
served hot or cold; I’ve tried it as both and prefer the hot. Also, next time,
I’m tempted to add, as one of my male guests suggested, chunks of beef. It can
also be made entirely meat-free. Your choice.
Erika Chase
is the author of the Ashton Corners Book Club Mysteries for Berkley Prime
Crime. The fourth book in the series, BOOK FAIR AND FOUL, came out in August
and the fifth, LAW AND AUTHOR, will be released next spring. Those cats look a lot like the two she lives with.
She’s been
nominated for an Agatha Award for Best First Novel, and an Arthur Ellis Award
from Crime Writers of Canada for Best Short Story.
Erika is
now working on a second series, under her own name, Linda Wiken. The Culinary
Capers Mysteries will debut later next year, from Berkley Prime Crime. Some people foresee even more cookbooks in Erika/Linda's living room.
Find out more HERE!
Thanks for warming us up on this chilly November day, Erika!
ReplyDeleteHugs,
MJ/VA
Delicious sounding recipe (I would put in sweet red, rather than green peppers). The book was a lucky find. Did it have any information about the origin of the name "Prostitutes Soup?"
ReplyDelete(Nancy R)
Erika – Welcome to the Kitchen! Your dish looks wonderfully healthy, like an Italian ratatouille. Pasta puttanesca I've heard of, but not the stew. I love your addition of prosciutto--and the story of how you found the recipe and the book (appropriate for a book lover *and* detective). Thanks for sharing both with us today...
ReplyDeleteHave a delicious week,
~ Cleo
You know, I have fallen into a cooking rut. It is amazing how that happens since I love cookbooks, too. The real chuckle is that I own a copy of the same cookbook but have not been leafing through my cookbooks like I used to do. This is a good reminder.
ReplyDeleteWelcome, Erika. This looks like something I have to try--I love everything in it! How do you manage to grow rosemary inside?
ReplyDeleteA lovely idea for November.
ReplyDeleteSome of the prep time can be cut, if needed, by taking advantage of a grocery salad bar.
This looks great Erika and welcome. Now that it is getting colder this will be wonderful to make.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the new series, Linda! Culinary capers – that sounds so exciting! I love this stew. It sounds wonderful. I, too, am curious about the origin of the "prostitute" name!
ReplyDeleteLinda/ Erika, congrats on the new series. So excited for you. Get ready to be busier than you can imagine!
ReplyDeleteDaryl / Avery