Thursday, October 31, 2024

Cheese Ball Dressed as a Pumpkin! by Lucy Burdette #Halloween

 


LUCY BURDETTE: For some reason, my Facebook feed seems to be full of videos of people making food. Actually, I know the reason—I can’t stop watching them and the more I watch, the more they send me. This pumpkin look-alike cheese ball was one of them, and I determined that I must recreate it for you. I made it for some friends and was so tickled when the wife thought it was a real mini-pumpkin:). This is my Halloween recipe, but it would work for thanksgiving too! It’s all in the presentation…




Ingredients

One package Boursin cheese, flavor of your choice

Sharp orange cheese—the more orange the better 

One stem from a bell pepper




Shape the Boursin into a ball. Grate the orange cheese finely. Roll the ball into the grated cheese so the entire surface is covered. You may have to tap the cheese into place with your fingers. 




Cover the ball of cheese with plastic wrap. Tie four pieces of string around it to make 8 indentations so it resembles the sections of a pumpkin. Refrigerate. Remove the cheese from the plastic wrap, and add the pepper stem on top. 




Make sure to take the cheese ball out of the fridge an hour or more ahead of party time, so it isn’t too crumbly to cut and serve.




Serve with crackers and vegetable slices (such as the pepper you sacrificed for the pumpkin!) Happy Halloween!

Lucy circa 1982

Lucy Burdette writes the Key West food critic mystery series including USA Today bestselling A POISONOUS PALATE and A CLUE IN THE CRUMBS


You can order that wherever books are sold. If you’re all caught up, try Lucy’s first women’s fiction title, THE INGREDIENTS OF HAPPINESS.



Also follow Lucy on Facebook, and sign up for her mailing list right here.  

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Gluten-Free Spooky Black Velvet Cake #Recipe by @Libby Klein #Halloween

Libby Klein Tonight is Mischief Night in South Jersey! The night before Halloween when kids pull pranks on unsuspecting neighbors. It's one of the main storylines in my Halloween Cozy Mischief Nights Are Murder! Instead of torpedoing your neighbor's house, what better way to use your eggs than to make a moist, delicate cake with the flavor of Oreo cookies. 

I found this cake online while looking for Halloween recipes. This is one of the times I wish I was a better photographer because the photos don't do it justice. This cake was gorgeous. Talk about a show stopper. I served it at two different parties and the consensus was that I'd be making it many more times. 

This was a very easy cake to make. No need for a mixer - just a whisk will do. You will need black cocoa which you can order through King Arthur and probably Amazon. A blackberry compote filling adds to the spooky vibe. Although, I think I used too much of the black cream cheese frosting between the layers so it's hard to see the purple layers. Next time I'd double the compote so it really pops. I'd also chop my blackberries in half so the compote would stretch further.

The chocolate skulls were tricky because you have to temper the chocolate which involves a thermometer and working quickly to get the melted chocolate into the molds before the temperature drops too much. I bought a mold on Amazon and used Lindt dark chocolate.

I did very little differently from the original recipe, but I did double it to make a four-layer ten-inch cake instead of the two-layer 8-inch cake that the recipe makes. I'll give you the original recipe here.

Let me know in the comments if you make any themed foods for Halloween.

Spooky Black Velvet Cake




Ingredients

Black Velvet Cake
2 cups White granulated sugar
2 cups Gluten-free 1 to 1 OR 2 cups All purpose flour sifted
¾ cup Black cocoa powder sifted
2 teaspoon Baking soda
1 teaspoon Baking powder
1 teaspoon Salt
2 Eggs room temperature
1 cup Buttermilk room temperature
1 cup Coffee hot
½ cup Canola oil
2 teaspoon Vanilla extract

Blackberry Compote Filling
2 cups Fresh blackberries
2 tablespoon White granulated sugar
1 tablespoon Fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon Lemon zest
1 Cinnamon stick (I left this out)
¼ cup Water
1 tablespoon Cornstarch

Black Cocoa Frosting
8 oz Cream cheese softened
½ cup Unsalted butter softened
3 cups Powdered sugar sifted
1 cup Black cocoa powder sifted
¼ teaspoon Salt
1 teaspoon Vanilla extract

Decorations
Chocolate skulls - or 3 good quality dark chocolate bars and a skull mold
Fresh blackberries
Dried rose petals (I used fresh)

Instructions

 

Black Velvet Cake

Preheat the oven to 350°. Then, spray two-8 inch cake pans with nonstick spray. Line the bottom and the sides with parchment paper.

In a large bowl, sift together flour, black cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.



In a separate bowl, whisk together buttermilk, oil, eggs, and vanilla.



Make a well in the center and add the wet ingredients. Mix until completely combined. Lastly, mix in the hot coffee.




Divide the batter evenly into the two cake pans.

Bake the cakes for 30 minutes or until a toothpick is inserted and comes out clean. 

Once the cakes come out of the oven, let them cool completely before removing them from the pans.

Blackberry Compote

Place the blackberries, sugar, lemon juice, cinnamon stick (if you're using it) and lime zest inside a medium saucepan. At first I thought the lime zest was weird, but I have fallen in love with adding lime zest to my blackberries and I plan to do it from now on.



Bring mixture to a boil and cook for 5-6 minutes. Then, stir water and cornstarch together. Add to blackberries and cook until thickened. Remove cinnamon stick and pour into a small bowl. Refrigerate for 1 hour.



Black Cocoa Frosting

Inside a bowl, add softened cream cheese and butter. Sift powdered sugar, black cocoa powder, and salt. Then, use a hand mixer to beat the ingredients together until smooth. Scrape down the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula. Next, add vanilla and mix one more time to combine. I had a hard time keeping it away from my husband at this point. He kept sneaking into the kitchen to "sample" the frosting.



Making the Skulls

Chop the chocolate bars. 


Place two thirds of the chopped chocolate in the top of a double boiler on a low simmer. Using either a thermometer or a chocolate paddle with a built in thermometer like I have, melt the chocolate and bring up to 115 degrees F. Remove from the heat and add the remaining third of your chopped chocolate. Stir together until the chocolate is melted and you've brought the temperature down to 84 degrees F. Then return to the double boiler and bring back up to 89 degrees F. Pour the melted chocolate into your waiting mold. Tap it on the counter to get out any air bubbles, then leave it alone until the chocolate is set.

Assembly

Remove the cooled cakes from the pan. I used a cake leveler to cut my layers in half.

Spread a small amount of frosting onto your cake plate. Place the first layer of cake down. Pipe a circle of frosting just inside the outer edge of your layer to keep the filling inside. Then, spread an even layer of the blackberry compote inside.



Place the second layer of cake on top with the bottom of the cake facing up. This will give you a flat base when decorating.

Add frosting on the top of the cake and sides. Cover the cake with as little frosting as possible, but ensure that it's covered. Once your cake is crumb coated, place it inside the refrigerator for 20 minutes. Frost the cake with the remaining frosting. At this point I tried adding dried, candied rose petals, but as you can see below, mine had turned to dust and I had to abandon the idea and went and bought a real rose.


Top with chocolate skulls, fresh blackberries and rose petals.


This cake was a huge success with everyone who had some. My only disappointment was that you couldn't see the blackberry compote well. I'm sure its because I used too much frosting between the layers. No one was complaining.

slice



See the original recipe here: https://www.theepicureanmouse.com/black-velvet-halloween-cake/

Gluten-free baker Poppy McAllister and her aunt Ginny are looking forward to a quiet, homey Christmas at their B&B in Cape May, but unfortunately, death isn’t taking a holiday this year . . .

Ever since Thanksgiving, Poppy and her pals have been left with an unsolved mystery of the romantic kind. But at least this mystery isn’t the kind that involves murder. That all changes when the body of a fish supplier is discovered in the kitchen of her ex’s restaurant—and he’s frozen, not fresh.


For once, it’s not Poppy who tripped over the corpse, yet she can’t escape being drawn in since the victim has a note taped to him reading Get Poppy. Figures—an engagement ring isn't labeled, but the dead guy is addressed to her. Now, while Aunt Ginny plans a tree-trimming party and pressures Poppy to decode a mysterious old diary, the amateur sleuth is asked to “unofficially” go undercover at the restaurant to help the police. Until then, the only crime Poppy had been dealing with was Figaro’s repeated thefts of bird ornaments from the tree; now it looks like it’s going to be a murder-y Christmas after all.
 

Silly Libby
Libby Klein grew up in Cape May, NJ where she attended high school in the '80s. Her 
classes revolved mostly around the Culinary sciences and Drama, with one brilliant semester in Poly-Sci that may have been an accident. She loves to drink coffee, bake gluten-free goodies, collect fluffy cats, and translate sarcasm for people who are too serious. She writes from her Northern Virginia office where she serves a very naughty black smoke Persian named Sir Figaro Newton. You can keep up with her shenanigans by signing up for her Mischief and Mayhem Newsletter on her website. 
www.LibbyKleinBooks.com/Newsletter/











Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Spider Web Brownies #Halloween recipe by @LeslieBudewitz

LESLIE BUDEWITZ: At our house, while we don’t do a lot to celebrate Halloween, we do take seriously the truth that Halloween treats should be fun, and not too scary to make! That’s the beauty of this recipe. Use your favorite boxed brownie mix – we’re partial to Ghirardelli’s Double Chocolate – and add a little seasonal flair for your ghosts and goblins.

Here’s a few Halloween treats from years past: 




Puff Pastry Rattlers

Spider Deviled Eggs 



Boo Scotti 



Mummy Pizza Puffs 


Veggie Skeleton with Brain Dip

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

Spider Web Brownies

your favorite brownie mix
4 ounces cream cheese, at room temperature
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 large egg yolk
milk to thin filling, if needed

Heat your oven to the temperature recommended for your pan type and size. 

Prepare the brownie recipe as instructed and spread the batter in a greased pan, again using the size recommended for your mix. 


In a small bowl, combine the cream cheese, sugar, and flour. Mix until smooth. Add the egg yolk and mix again until smooth. Spoon mixture into a pastry bag or a small zippered plastic bag, and cut off the very tip of the bag. If your filling appears too thick, use a little milk to thin it. 



Start in the center of your pan and squeeze out a small pool of the cream cheese filling. Use the bag to draw circles around the center pool, about 1" apart. Use a table knife, wetting the tip, to draw filling out from the center pool, across the circles, to the edge of the pan. Repeat, moving around the pan, roughly every 2", to create a web-like pattern. You can use any remaining filling to create spokes where you ran the knife, if you’d like. 



Bake according to package directions, until the brownies just begin to away from the edge of the pan. (Remember that it’s easy to overbake brownies – don’t do it!) The center will rise during baking but sink a bit when the brownies cool. Cool pan on a wire rack before cutting. 



Happy Haunting! 




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!


TO ERR IS CUMIN:A Spice Shop Mystery (Seventh St. Books, out now in paper, ebook, and audio)

From the cover: One person’s treasure is another’s trash. . .

Pepper Reece, owner of the Spice Shop in Seattle’s Pike Place Market, wants nothing more than to live a quiet life for a change, running her shop and working with customers eager to spice up their cooking. But when she finds an envelope stuffed with cash in a ratty old wingback left on the curb, she sets out to track down the owner.

Pepper soon concludes that the chair and its stash may belong to young Talia Cook, new in town and nowhere to be seen. Boz Bosworth, an unemployed chef Pepper’s tangled with in the past, shows up looking for the young woman, but Pepper refuses to help him search. When Boz is found floating in the Ship Canal, only a few blocks from Talia’s apartment, free furniture no longer seems like such a bargain.

On the hunt for Talia, Pepper discovers a web of connections threatening to ensnare her best customer. The more she probes, the harder it gets to tell who’s part of an unsavory scheme of corruption—and who might be the next victim.

Between her quest for an elusive herb, helping her parents remodel their new house, and setting up the Spice Shop’s first cooking class, Pepper’s got a full plate. Dogged by a sense of obligation to find the rightful owner of the hidden treasure, she keeps on showing up and asking questions.

One mistake, and she could find herself cashing out. . .

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. 

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, and their cat, an avid bird-watcher.

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, October 27, 2024

Spotlight on Silent Nights Are Murder #SpotlightSunday #Christmas #Giveaway

 


Merry Christmas! 


Alright, not really. It's still October. But today is my turn in the spotlight for my Christmas cozy, Silent Nights Are Murder. In case you're new to the series, let me give you a quick overview. 




Poppy is a plus-sized, 44 year old widow, who returns to her hometown of Cape May, NJ, for her 25th reunion, to face off against the cheerleaders who bullied her throughout high school. One of the cheerleaders ends up dead in front of Poppy's old locker,(rude) and another cheerleader arrests her for the murder. Poppy has to prove her innocence so she can escape beach hell and her crazy Great Aunt Ginny, and get herself and her very naughty black smoke Persian - Sir Figaro Newton - back home to the safety of the Food Network and her friends - Ben and Jerry. As you can see from this shelf of books, things do not go according to plan, and Poppy stays in Cape May, turning Aunt Ginny's house into a B&B. She learns to let go of her past and embrace her new life and her new family. Fast forward 8 books later... Now it's Christmas, and Poppy has plans for the perfect holiday, but Mischief and Mayhem - aka Figaro and Aunt Ginny - plot against her. Of course the dead guy in the freezer of a restaurant kitchen with the note GET POPPY pinned to his chest doesn't invoke the holly jolly feels either. If you want to laugh your butt off for the holidays, check it out.



Gluten-free baker Poppy McAllister and her aunt Ginny are looking forward to a quiet, homey Christmas at their B&B in Cape May, but unfortunately, death isn’t taking a holiday this year . . .

Ever since Thanksgiving, when an engagement ring in a velvet box—and no gift tag—was left behind, Poppy and her pals have been left with an unsolved mystery. But at least this mystery isn’t the kind that involves murder. That all changes when the body of a fish supplier is discovered in the kitchen of her ex’s restaurant—and he’s frozen, not fresh.

For once, it’s not Poppy who tripped over the corpse, yet she can’t escape being drawn in since the victim has a note taped to him reading Get Poppy. Figures—an engagement ring isn't labeled, but the dead guy is addressed to her. Now, while Aunt Ginny plans a tree-trimming party and pressures Poppy to decode a mysterious old diary, the amateur sleuth is asked to “unofficially” go undercover at the restaurant to help the police. Until then, the only crime Poppy had been dealing with was the cat Figaro’s repeated thefts of bird ornaments from the tree; now it looks like it’s going to be a murder-y Christmas after all . . .

Silent Nights Are Murder has all the Christmassy excitement and joy that you want from the holiday season - along with a murder to solve of course. Because nothing says Christmas like a dead guy in a restaurant freezer!

Make sure you go to my website and sign up for my newsletter. There is currently a super secret preview for my next series, the Layla Virtue Mysteries, along with a special page with Layla's playlist.




Here are just some of the ways you can get your own copy in time for the holidays.


Buy on Barnes & Noble 


Silent Nights Are Murder is full of gluten-free recipes for some of my Holiday favorites including:




And


For a chance to win a copy of Silent Nights Are Murder, let me know in the comments what is your favorite Christmas or Hanukkah activity? That one thing you like to do to celebrate the holiday.




Silly Libby
Libby Klein grew up in Cape May, NJ where she attended high school in the '80s. Her 
classes revolved mostly around the Culinary sciences and Drama, with one brilliant semester in Poly-Sci that may have been an accident. She loves to drink coffee, bake gluten-free goodies, collect fluffy cats, and translate sarcasm for people who are too serious. She writes from her Northern Virginia office where she serves a very naughty black smoke Persian named Sir Figaro Newton. You can keep up with her shenanigans by signing up for her Mischief and Mayhem Newsletter on her website. 
www.LibbyKleinBooks.com/Newsletter/



Books are easier to wrap!