PEG COCHRAN/MARGARET LOUDON: Welcome to our November Around the Kitchen Table! We all obviously love food. We love to read about it, to cook it and we
love to eat it. I started thinking—just for
fun—if I opened a restaurant, what food would it serve? I like so many different types of cuisine—Italian,
French, Thai, Chinese. But what I yearn
for the most often is comfort food—but slightly elevated comfort food. So that’s
what my restaurant would serve. Since it’s
getting colder here in Michigan, I’m drawn to warmer, heavier dishes. My menu would include duck ร l’orange (old
school, I know,) Osso Bucco, pasta with a really good Bolognese sauce, roast
chicken with gravy, coq au vin and boeuf Bourguignon. Probably some soup as well like Tuscan bean
soup. For dessert? Crรจme Brรปlรฉe, flourless chocolate cake and
bananas Foster.
How about you? If you could design your own restaurant, what type of food would you serve?
How about you? If you could design your own restaurant, what type of food would you serve?
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MADDIE DAY: Well, I did exactly that about eight years ago, when I invented Pans 'N Pancakes, the country store restaurant in my Country Store Mysteries! Robbie Jordan dishes up delicious breakfasts. The regular menu includes banana-walnut pancakes, which I presented here last year. Breakfast also features cheesy grits, biscuits and gravy (both meat and miso-based), oatmeal, fruit, and the usual array of egg dishes and meats, including the Kitchen Sink Omelet, with a special added every day.
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Banana Walnut Pancakes with ham and a Bloody Mary |
For lunch she offers meat, turkey, and veggie burgers, grilled sandwiches, often a soup, plus seasonal specials. After Deep Fried Death comes out in late December, she'll add items like fried catfish, cheese fritters, apple fritters, and French fries to the menu. Many, many fans have written to say they wish they could find South Lick on a map so they could eat in Pans 'N Pancakes. I wish I could, too!
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LIBBY KLEIN: I've had friends and family try to talk me into opening a restaurant for years. No one wants to work eighteen hours a day with me, they just want free food. Once upon a time, I was going to open a bakery. I loved the idea of baking all day every day. Cookies, and pastries, and pies, and fancy desserts. Mmmm. Then I found out the baker starts at like 2 a.m. every day to make those breads and breakfast pastries and I was like - bump that! I am not a morning person. There isn't enough coffee on the planet for me to voluntarily get up at O'dark thirty day after day to make the same jelly donuts. Then I discovered afternoon tea. Now that is a schedule I could get on board with. Fancy finger sandwiches of different shapes and fillings. Light as air scones in a kaleidoscope of special flavors. And whatever luscious treats for the dessert tier that I feel like making the day before. And all to be done and dusted and home again by four p.m. Now we're talking! Sign me up for the Persnickety Baker Afternoon Tea House. Check out my gluten-free scone recipe here.
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LESLIE KARST: Having worked in the restaurant business, both as a waitress and also—briefly, during my stint as a culinary arts student—as a cook, there’s no way I would open one myself. It’s gotta be one of the hardest and riskiest endeavors there is (but thank goodness others are willing to do so, because I do love to eat out!)
But if I WERE to do so, my restaurant would either be a
taco bar, or something similar to the French-Polynesian restaurant in my
Sally Solari series, Gauguin. In fact, Gauguin was inspired by the
fictitious restaurant I invented as the project for my food costing
class during culinary arts school, where we had to come up with a menu
that made financial sense, as well as attracting customers. Many of the
menu items I came up with for that class are on the Gauguin menu in the
books: Coq au Vin au Gauguin, Tahitian Fish Balls, Papaya Chicken Salad,
and Seared Pork Chops with Apricot-Brandy Sauce (pictured above). Now I’m wishing I could actually eat at that restaurant....
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LUCY BURDETTE: I've worked in restaurants too, both as a waitress and occasionally pitching in in the kitchen--such hard work! But since this is fiction, I know exactly what my place will be like and what we'll serve. I've already written this in THE INGREDIENTS OF HAPPINESS and I'd love to have Betty's Comfort Food Shop and Bakery in my neighborhood. Here's how it goes:
As we worked, Betty explained, ‘The idea behind the shop is part bakery and part prepared comfort food. Every day there will be a different specialty main dish. I’m picturing busy mothers and fathers carrying the food out and reheating at home. They don’t have time to cook from scratch, so I’ll do it for them. The recipes will be the kind of thing your grandmother used to make. For the opening launch on Saturday, I’m going with chicken pot pies topped with herbed biscuits. These will not resemble the frozen TV dinner atrocities you might remember from your childhood – these pies will be brimming with real carrots and potatoes and peas and chunks of chicken in a creamy sauce.’
‘I’ll have a regular rotation,’ Betty continued, ‘like a beef stew on Mondays, or vegetarian stuffed shells on Friday. Or should it be spaghetti Bolognese or spaghetti and meatballs on Monday? In my mind, it’s always good to start the week off loaded with carbs because carbs make us happy and we need that on Mondays, right?’ She hurried on before I could answer. ‘If it’s only one recipe per day plus the cakes and other baked goods, I can keep up.’
Here's what the chicken pot pie might look like:
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VICKI DELANY: I have absolutely no doubt what type of restaurant I'd open, were I so foolish to do so. A tea room! I love everything about afternoon tea. The tea selection, the food, the presentation. And so, just like Lily Roberts in the Tea by the Sea mysteries, I'd have a restaurant serving only afternoon tea. Afternoon tea, served properly, is expensive and intended to be a luxury, an indulgence. Unlike Lily, I wouldn't have to worry about what I'm going to do in the off season on Cape Cod when the tourists are scarce.
As part of my research into the 2025 Tea by the Sea book, when Lily and the gang to go England, I was recently in that country. Of course, my research had to take me to afternoon tea, and my daughter and I enjoyed the Wolseley, near Piccadilly Circus. Here are some pictures.
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LESLIE BUDEWITZ: I've absolutely ADORED creating fictional bakeries and restaurants on the page in my books -- all the fun and none of the work! I too was once encouraged to open a bakery -- thank goodness I never took the idea seriously. My local baker pal is up every morning at 3:00 from April through January, baking cinnamon and caramel rolls, huckleberry hand pies, dunkers, cookies, quiches, and more. Her place is a bit like Le Panier in my Food Lovers' Village mysteries, which itself is a mashup of Le Panier in Pike Place Market in Seattle and Park Avenue Bakery in Helena, MT -- a place where you can get a Date Walnut Bar or a Chocolate Almond Espresso Cookie, paired with a great cup of coffee.
And Ripe, the deli run by Pepper's friend Laurel in my Spice Shop series is my homage to the long-gone Pasta & Co. deli in the building where I worked for years, known as the Black Box, the old Sea-First (Seattle First National Bank), or the Box the Space Needle came in. The Tomato-Basil Soup in The Solace of Bay Leaves and the Tortellini Salad in Treble at the Jam Fest are both my recreations of food remembered with love.
And that, of course, is the best flavor -- and memory -- of all.
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From age 14, I cooked at a summer resort, in two delicatessens, at a bar & grill, and in a university dormitory for 2,000 students. As Leslie K and Lucy said, the restaurant business is hard. It’s also hot and can be dangerous. I left all that behind at 22 and in real-life I’d rather not sling hash again. But my characters who run tea rooms or cafes are perfectly happy in their jobs so, channeling them, if I can have my dream restaurant, I will bring back Henderson’s Salad Table. And when I do, you’re all invited to the opening, where I’ll serve you that amazing dessert.
Here's my copy of the official Henderson’s cookbook (that's already a good start!), and a souvenir napkin with a tea stain in the corner. Good times!
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MAYA CORRIGAN: Near where I live are an assortment of restaurants that specialize in the food from a particular country—a French Bistro, a Northern Italian restaurant, a Spanish tapas eatery, a Turkish kabob place, a Mexican cantina. A little farther away I can find Greek, Thai, and Indian restaurants. The Spanish place is the only one in the area that changes its menu regularly, swapping dishes in and out of the tapas list. It's where I eat most often because I know I’ll find something new to try each time. I wouldn’t dream of running my own restaurant, but I’d invest in one with a cuisine that derived from more than one country and with a menu that wasn’t chiseled in stone. I’d particularly enjoy a Mediterranean cuisine restaurant, where I could find paella, pasta, bouillabaisse, quiche, lots of vegetable dishes, fish and meat cooked in creative ways, and for dessert, tiramisu, baklava, crepes Suzette, and tarte Tatin.
CLEO COYLE: Thanks, Peg, for this creative Kitchen table topic. Marc and I would visit every one of these lovely establishments, and we’re hungry already. As for us, we would be thrilled to open a real Village Blend coffeehouse in New York. Our ideal model would be the one that we described in our 15th Coffeehouses title DEAD TO THE LAST DROP. ![]() |
To learn more, click here. |
For our dream restaurant, we made up an entire menu (see it here), which we also published in the book. We even made a logo and created a website ๐ The Village Blend Jazz Space.com ๐ท๐ต ๐น << so that readers could listen to some of the music that we described in the story.
We wish that we could open our Jazz Space coffeehouse and supper club in reality! It's not likely. On the other hand, one never knows what the future may hold...
Click here or on our image above to visit the
"Village Blend Jazz Space" that we created online,
inspired by our Coffeehouse Mystery
Dead to the Last Drop. ~ Cleo
๐ ๐ค ๐
GIVEAWAY!
To be entered in this week's drawing
for these terrific mysteries below,
join us in the comments.
How about you?
If you could design your own restaurant, what type of food would you serve?
Join the
conversation!
Include your email address,
so we can contact the winner!
> A DEADLY DEDICATION BY Margaret Loudon
> MURDER UNCORKED by Maddie Day
> HONEY ROASTED by Cleo Coyle
> A PARFAIT CRIME by Maya Corrigan
Comments Open through
Wednesday, November 8
Don't forget to include
your email address.
๐
I think I would have a murder mystery dinner club with a limited menu that changes as often as the mystery. Would also include vegetarian meals. Say if the mystery was based in the 1920's, then we would serve meals from that era. Thank you for this chance at your wonderful giveaway. pgenest57 at aol dot com
ReplyDeleteOh, what fun that would be! I'm hearing the musical options in my head and seeing the outfits.
DeleteOooh, this sounds SO fun, Paula! I want to come!
DeleteI've only been to one like that, and I LOVED it!
Delete-- Storyteller Mary
I'd like to visit this diner!
DeleteI love Cajun food and I would design Cajun brunch place only open on weekends. Offer the typical fare for brunch only gumbo, jambalaya, etc.
ReplyDeleteJess
Maceoindo(at)yahoo(dot)com
Yummy!
Deletea vegan bakery with whole grain breads and awesome cookies
ReplyDeletefruitcrmble AT comcast DOT net
That sounds delicious!
DeleteWhen my daughter was going to school in Toronto we used to go to the Carrot Common, a health food store called The Big Carrot which used to have a small eatery attached to it. They have the most amazing gluten free, vegan foods. Everything was delicious and I never worried about cross contamination. I would most definitely open a restaurant that served lunch and dinners to go so that I wouldn't need to open early or stay late. Gluten free is more available than it used to be but I still find that there is not great variety and I do still worry about being glutened.
ReplyDeleteI know that I would always be busy with people who feel the same way.
sandra shenton 13 @ gmail dot com
My daughter would love that--she's gluten intolerant. A gluten free restaurant just opened here in Grand Rapids, MI.
DeleteYou know I would be there all the time!
DeleteA bakery
ReplyDeleteWskwared(at)yahoo(dot)com
I love our local bakery. I think I would gain too much weight if I went every day.
DeleteHubby and I love to bake. Plus hubby is an expert at grilling and smoking meats while I can fix some great sides. So if we opened a restaurant, I think it would be combining those into a good old southern, home cooked restaurant with everything cooked from scratch. It would be a place to come sit down with family or friends and stay a while to enjoy a great meal. Meals would be choice of meat and two sides served family style. There's always homemade bread to go along with every meal. Of course, no one can leave without some of our awesome desserts (cinnamon rolls, pies, cookies, cobblers and cakes - maybe depending on what day it is) and possibly taking home some too. I think we would be open for lunch and dinner saying hours of 11 to 8 in order to server both meals but leave time to prep for the next day and maybe still have some quality home time.
ReplyDeleteAlthough retired and this would be a LOT of work making it not something we would even want to do now, but it's exactly the type of restaurant they we would be looking for when wanting to eat out. I can see where word of mouth would be all the advertising one would need on a place like this too.
2clowns at arkansas dot net
Kay, it sounds absolutely delish!
DeleteI would love to have a soup and salad shop with yo go items and maybe luncheon service. I feel it’s hard to find goid take out items of these things. Oh and it would be drive through also for those that find it difficult to walk far. suefoster109 at gmail dot com
ReplyDeleteLove the drive-through idea! Ripe, the Seattle place I mentioned, is a lot like you describe, and I often took take-out home from the deli that inspired it.
DeleteI would have The Pizza Pie & Pie Place. P4 for short. We only serve pizza and pie. ckmbeg (at) gmail (dot) com
ReplyDeleteI would eat there!
DeleteTwo of my favorite things!
Deletei would have home cooking restaurant breakfast and lunch food
ReplyDeleteMy friends opened a breakfast and lunch place, which is a great idea, because then you actually get your afternoons and evenings off work!
DeleteI would have a bistro.
ReplyDeleteKitten143 (at) Verizon (dot) net
If it has steak-frites with sauce Bรฉarnaise, I'm there, Christine!
DeleteAll of these make my mouth water!
ReplyDeletelibbydodd at comcast dot net
I am good at baking so I would serve Banana Bread, Zucchini Bread, Pumpkin Bread, cookies and cakes deborahortega229@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteI would open a tea shop. I love all types of tea sandwiches, scones and tea. lmmeidam@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteWe had afternoon tea years ago in London and I loved all the delicate goodies!
DeleteYes!
DeleteI think I'd like to do something with ice cream and candies, both of which I've been experimenting with a lot of lately. I remember stopping at a place in Germany that had not just Spaghetti Eis (ice cream served to look like a bowl of spaghetti) but dishes resembling everything from bacon and eggs to steaks to salad and so much more. They looked like a lot of fun to make.
ReplyDeletekozo8989(at)hotmail(dot)com
That sounds amazing!
DeleteI would open a diner where you have so many options of all types of cuisines, appetizers, soups, main dishes, desserts and a coffee bar. areewekidding(at)yahoo(dot)com
ReplyDeleteNothing beats a diner, Robyn!
DeleteI agree! Our local diners are the best
DeleteAll of these ideas sound delicious to me. We should invite a few restaurant investors to stop by!
ReplyDelete~ Cleo
If I opened an imaginary restaurant, I would focus on lovingly prepared and healthy fresh from the farm homestyle dishes. I would serve chicken and dumplings, okra gumbo, beef and barley soup, apple dumplings, and so on. I would also feature BBQ brisket since I love it! I want to go to everyone else's imaginary restaurants too!
ReplyDeleteNancy
allibrary (at) aol (dot) com
My grandmother used to make chicken and dumplings--I miss them (and her)!
DeleteI’d do a restaurant that served soups and really good breads and desserts. sgiden at verizon(.)net
ReplyDeleteGood soup and good bread are all you need!
DeleteI would open a comfortable, relaxing and welcoming cafe filled with delectable savory sandwiches, salads, pastries and baked goodies. Teas of all types and lattes. saubleb(at)gmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteSounds heavenly. Can I bring my laptop and work there?
DeleteAs a historian I'd open a once a month event restaurant where I'd make meals researched from historic cookbooks, set tables with period china, and give some background on what and why we're eating it. Maybe this is my retirement project! bdewolfe (at) roadrunner (dot) com
ReplyDeleteI LOVE this! Just last weekend, I had a most interesting conversation with a historian who focuses on food, including community cookbooks, long-gone restaurants, and more. So interesting!
DeleteI'd be a regular at your restaurant, Beth. When I was graduate student working in a museum of world cultures, I dreamed of being a food historian and putting together recipe booklets for each of our rooms - Minoan, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, etc.
DeleteI'd definitely visit your historic restaurant, Beth!
DeleteMeals from historic cookbooks! What a great restaurant that would be!
DeleteFriends, so many great ideas here! Too many to comment on all, but I can tell you, I'd eat at every single one of them!
ReplyDeleteI'd open a bakery with cookies, pie, bars, cupcakes, cakes. All the sweet, dangerous desserts. Lol. I love to bake so this would totally be me.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the chance!
jarjm1980(at)hotmail(com)
"Dangerous Desserts" would be a GREAT name for your restaurant!
DeleteMost likely family home cooking recipes that would include Sicilian/American comfort dishes including breads and pastries. roseb2007@verizon.net
ReplyDeleteThere are no tea rooms where I live so I’d love to try that!
ReplyDeletenjcar22(at)aol(dot)com
I support you 100%
DeleteI would open a restaurant that featured good, basic home cooking and also had a space for classes not just about how to cook, but with a focus on budget and meal planning as well. Biszemom(at)gmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteWhat a fabulous idea!
DeleteI dreamed of opening a dessert Cafe, open from lunchtime to around 11pm. I would call it The Milk and Cookies Cafe.
ReplyDeleteIf I had a restaurant, I’d turn it over to my nephew cook. Let him cook what he wants. He does everything from Italian to BBQ with lots of comfort foods in between. And I’d also let him do the hours and the worrying. It’s something he’s alway talked about doing.
ReplyDeletepenmettert@gmail.com
My restaurant would feature gourmet cookies and coffee and tea. It would have the usual favorite cookies and a couple of speciality cookies and coffee each day. It would be open from 5 AM to 1 PM with a carry out that you order and pay while in line and your order would be ready when you reached the pick up window.
ReplyDeletediannekc8(at)gmail(dot)com
Sounds perfect to me.
DeleteMexican-Itslian fusion❣️ My favorite Italian restaurant on the corner had mostly Mexican staff and the Neopolitan waiter. Their staff lunches were amazing. (Sometimes they fed me.) They made incredible food that I recognized from Mexican restaurants but they used what was in the kitchen. It was always delicious and you could see the overlap of the cuisines. Ever since, I 've wanted to open that restaurant and try to hire as many of them as I could find!
ReplyDeleteP.S. I only read Kindle but thank you!
DeleteI would love to have a restaurant with different stations of the cuisine of a single country, like China or Italy. Each has regional specialties that together would make a nice buffet of items to try. egoehner(at)roadrunner(dot)com
ReplyDeleteGreat idea.
DeleteI would never willfully decide to run a restaurant, but if forced, I would open a high end tea parlor and only offer afternoon tea with all the trimmings and more. Most likely I would go out of business in a short time, but I would have a delicious time while doing it ❣️๐บ I loved reading all the replies, and see that I would have formidable competition. Good thing we all live far from each other…๐๐คฃ Luis at ole dot travel
ReplyDeleteI love the Spanish tradition of going out for tapas. People getting together sharing, small plates that can vary from place to place. pick a book and savor the different flavors as well as the company. It’s such a laid-back atmosphere and no one seems rushed. I’ve worked in restaurants when I was younger and it is extremely hard work. My head is off to anyone who can run a restaurant.
ReplyDeleteMy email address is pretrialld@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteIf I was going to open a restaurant it would be serving Comfort Food of the Meditteranean.
ReplyDeleteMARLENE ROSENBERG
marlros@msn.com
I am with Libby Klein on this one. I loved the idea of opening a bakery until I realized what time I would have to get up to bake all those delicious treats. I am not a morning person at all so that would be torture. These days I just stick to baking and cooking for family and occasionally friends. cherierj(at)yahoo(dot)com
ReplyDeleteI'm with you!
DeleteThere are so many delicious options, but I think I would go with a macaroni and cheese restaurant! c85516246 at Gmail dot com
ReplyDeleteI think I would serve small plates of food from all around the world & the US. From pimento cheese sandwiches that I grew up eating in MS to razor clam tapas I had in Spain and everything in between! mbbertram at yahoo dot com
ReplyDeleteMy restaurant would be a tea shop with a daily high tea. Unique to tea shops it would be all vegan from the food to the desserts.
ReplyDeleteCheese; soups, sandwiches, Mac & cheese, oh so many tasty choices with cheesecake for dessert of course! Makennedyinaz at hotmail dot com
ReplyDeleteMakes me hungry at 4:30 in the morning. cheetahthecat1982ATgmailDOTcom
ReplyDeleteA breakfast place serving made to order waffles, pancakes (with real maple syrup), egg dishes, muffins, toast, and really, really good coffee. lroth(at)pcext(dt)com
ReplyDeleteIt would be a deli and pastry shop with an attached bookstore and have seating for people to relax, eat, read etc. ( hope I win as today is my birthday and I would love to receive those books from these authors—some of my ).
DeleteMy restaurant would be an Eastern European comfort food just like our grandparents made. Made from scratch and delicious. Bgracie(at) hotmail(dot)com.
ReplyDeleteA delicatessen. I think I would call it Mystery Nosh. I'd serve soup like Murder by Matzo Ball soup, and sandwiches such as, Corned Beef on the Orient Express, Pastrami in Peril, and drinks like Ground of the Baskervilles( coffee). petitepoet47@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteThat sounds like a lot of fun. I'd have the Ground of the Baskervilles.
DeleteAll of your places sound amazing! Mine would be a coffee shop/bakery that created delicious baked goods for people and their pets. I would have a patio dining area where those treats could be enjoyed on site. 3labsmom(at)gmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteMy idea would be for an afternoon snack/dessert bar restaurant. With lounge chairs, small tables a fireplace, tea or coffee served
ReplyDeleteAll your fantasy restaurants sound fabulous, and I would love to visit each and taste your specialties.
ReplyDeleteI waitressed in high school, and decided the restaurant business was not for me, and besides, I hated cooking. However, over the years I became more proficient and started enjoying making delicious meals, especially from our own produce. That's enough of a fantasy for me!
I would have a variety of foods, much like a family type restaurant. However no way would I open a restaurant
ReplyDeleteI love appetizers like you get at weddings. One bite of deliciousness. How about a restaurant with a huge variety of one bites paired with a fine wine.
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy the appetizers at weddings more than the main course. They are fun and often different types of food
DeleteI love to travel and experience different cultures and their food. I think it would be cool to go into some of our empty malls and create a restaurant mecca. It has a lot of parking, set up for transportation, and don’t have to worry about the weather. Each storefront would be a different restaurant and look like a shop. There would be tables inside but also in the hall to experience a “street” experience. I would try to have them arrange so one area you would be traveling the streets of Ireland doing a pub crawl. Think of all the possibilities England, German, Spain, Italy, Europe, China, India, Africa, Brazilian, Mexican and so forth. USA would have it set up by Eastern, Middle, Western, and Southern.
ReplyDeleteIn each country’s area I would also intersperse bookstores, art stores, and mercantiles that would represent that culture.
In the center court, I would have festivals and holiday markets like christkindl. I feel when people meet and experience other people and their cultures we learn to appreciate them.
Actually I don't Like to cook. So I would have fancy sandwiches and salads!!
ReplyDeleteI'd love to start the day at Pans 'n Pancakes and then move on through the exotic comfort foods. I don't cook much anymore, so if I opened a restaurant, I'd depend on others' expertise or offer snacks and ice cream and coffee/tea.
ReplyDeleteWoohoo thanks for sharing ladies. Oh my if I could set up my own restaurant, it would be for family food. Hamburgers, steaks, food for the kiddos, lots of choices to choose from like veggies and breads and of course desserts. I would love to change the menu up once or twice a year to keep things interesting. there would be coloring pages for adults and children along with crayons. there would only be one or two televisions in the bar area. The servers would be polite and happy and full of energy, putting the customers first. quilting dash lady at comcast dot net
ReplyDeleteIf I could have my own restaurant it would be greek foods Beef Kababs etc. Great reviews on the books above they all sounds very good. Penney luvhistoricalromance at gmail dot com
ReplyDeleteI loved Lucy's idea in the Ingredients for Happiness. I would a completely gluten free restaurant. ljbonkoski@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteComfort Food/Vintage Recipes
ReplyDeleteporikathle@aol.com
I would love to have a country store type diner with home cooked food and home canned things like salsa, jams, green beans etc that customers could take home.. would even operate with the ability to help the homeless
ReplyDeleteI'd have a coffee shop/bakery. I've worked in the industry (giant sigh) and I have a very good idea in what really goes on in a restaurant. Or maybe I'd live near a beach and have a push cart containing cold drinks and ice cream.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the contest, I love all you authors ๐
Laura N.
Dlcnason1@msn.com
An old style diner open 24 hours per day.
ReplyDeletebrowninggloria@hotmail.com
It would probably be Italian.
ReplyDeletebaileybounce2@att.net
I would love to run a candy shop that offers new and the old vintage candy as well as a small restaurant inside that offers sandwiches, salads, coffees, etc. aprilbluetx at yahoo dot com Thank you for the chance to win!
ReplyDeleteI would open a coffee shop with fresh pastries and a book nook area where people could come in to relax and bring their own book or borrow one from the shelves. It would need to have plenty of outdoor space too so customers could sit and people watch.
ReplyDeleteI think I would open a pasta/wine bar. lhallson@shaw.ca
ReplyDeleteYou all have amazing ideas! And of course I would frequent anyone who has gluten free because I like not dying after I eat. Well done, everyone!
ReplyDeleteI would love to open a Greek restaurant!
ReplyDeleteI would open a kitchen with a table to seat 20 folks. I would cook many different cuisines depending on what they wanted
ReplyDeleteI would do a small cafe that served comfort foods. I lived near one like that growing up and it was always so welcoming.
ReplyDeletebmedrano34 at yahoo.com
Mac and cheese is my favorite comfort food. If they serve it, I will try it!
DeleteNot sure what type I'd open. so many ideas in all the cozies I read.
ReplyDeleteCoffee house, something that serves comfort food, bakery... list goes on and on. Lots of great ideas listed in comments!
I'm on board with serving wonderful bakery items, but not with the hours I would have to work. I'd probably end up with standard comfort foods like pot roast, meatloaf and fried chicken with pastries provided by an outstand ing local bakery.
ReplyDeleteI would have a bakery shop with a diner restaurant
ReplyDeleteRose Ward
rmward92@yahoo.com
I would open an Italian bistro. But not just the savory side but the sweet too! I love to bake so I may have to open a bakery too! I was very inspired during culinary school when we had to research & come up with a complete business model from factoring costs/overhead to theme to location & menu planning with costs & profit margins. It was apart of our final course to graduate. Have you ever seen a white peacock? Look up Isola Bella, Italy & you'll see my inspiration! Great now I want Italian Love Cake or maybe some choclate budino.
ReplyDeleteLightofheaven83@outlook.com
It would have to be a breakfast place because breakfast is my favorite meal. lkish77123 at gmail dot com
ReplyDeleteI would open a breakfast restaurant that was open all day. We have some in my area but they all close at 3pm, except Waffle House & IHOP, lol
ReplyDeleteForgot my email: wsnllplayeragent@gmail.com
DeleteHubby has been in restaurant business for almost 30 years, and he always dreamed to open his own restaurant! He's tired of operating a full-menu restaurant, so he really likes to run a mom-and-pop style restaurant that serves breakfast and lunch only..So, he would've the evening to spend with his family. The breakfast would consist of assortments of bakery because he loves to bake, as well as pan cakes and waffles, and some savory options. Lunch would have sandwiches, hamburger and some salads! Now, he's retired and really enjoys his free time to try out different dinner and bakery recipes!
ReplyDeletecwkuen(at)yahoo(dot)com
I grew up in a mostly Jewish neighbourhood in north Toronto. So I was lucky to eat plenty of yummy foods at kosher delis and bakeries.
ReplyDeleteSadly, downtown Ottawa no longer has good Jewish bakeries or delis. So I dream of opening a combo Jewish bakery & deli (with staff whoo know how to make these yummy foods) so that I could eat babka, rugelach, challah bread, corned beef platters (not Montreal smoked meat) & Matzo bowl soup!
I think I would open a bakery and book shop. I love to bake and read so why not combine the two things I enjoy the most? Oh and I would add coffee and tea in there. Always need a good morning beverage!
ReplyDeleteI would open a 50's restaurant, grilled cheese, hot hamburger sandwiches, egg, tuna sandwiches, rueben sandwiches everything comfort foods, of course macaroni and cheese.
ReplyDeletemrjrroy96@gmail.com Marjorie
ReplyDeleteI'd have a soup restaurant like the one on Seinfeld, but I'd be nicer to the customers. Take out only. Several soups each day served with a crusty roll and a cookie. There is a restaurant nearby that has the most delicious cookies about six inches in diameter. I'd want to serve cookies like those. -- phyllis@blinn.com
ReplyDeleteI think if I were to open a restaurant it would be a bakery or dessert cafe. This is a fun topic. awanstrom(@)yahoo(.)com
ReplyDeleteYou all have such wonderful restaurant ideas! I would love to open a cozy cafe that has afternoon tea and murder mystery diiners as special events. Where books are sold and some are borrowed. The food would be tasty pastries, hearty soups and sandwiches, and specialty salads. Thank you for the awesome giveaway! tracy(dot)condie@gmail(dot)com
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