Sunday, January 12, 2025

PLEASE WELCOME OUR GUEST JENNIFER MORITA #GIVEAWAY

 

PEG:  I am thrilled to welcome our guest Jennifer Morita with a fascinating recipe I'm sure you'll want to try!

 

BUTTER MOCHI by Jennifer Morita

Butter mochi is the go-to recipe you’ll thank me for.

As a working mom, Girl Scout leader and mystery author, I need a tried-and-true dish to bring to the office potluck, school bake sale or book launch that’s foolproof, fast, and a guaranteed crowd pleaser.

And this chewy, but not too sweet, dessert from Hawaii ticks all the boxes.

Butter mochi is a mashup of Japanese mochi and Filipino bibingka, a delicious byproduct of immigrants who left their homes to forge a better future and swapped recipes working in the sugarcane fields.

It’s always a hit at parties, even here on the mainland where guests may mistake it for cornbread but ask for the recipe after the first bite.

Made with sweet rice flour, butter mochi is also gluten free.

It’s easy to experiment with this classic butter mochi recipe, adapted from Ono Hawaiian Recipes. The lilikoi and ube versions I made for the last Girl Scout bake sale sold out, and my Mexican chocolate twist has a nice kick.

A jar of guava jam at the Japanese market near my house changed my game plan for the Ghosts of Waikiki launch party in December. It was a hit, and my book sold out.

Butter mochi is now my lucky recipe, too, and I’m already playing with flavor ideas for my next author talk for the Friends of Sutter Library in February.

What’s your favorite failsafe recipe?

 

Classic Butter Mochi

½ cup unsalted butter

2 cup granulated sugar

4 large eggs

1 tsp vanilla

16 oz (1 box) mochiko sweet rice flour (I always use Koda Farms brand)

2 tsp baking powder

12 oz can evaporated milk

14 oz can coconut milk

 

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9x13 inch baking pan with butter and set aside.


 

Melt butter and mix with sugar in a large bowl. Add vanilla and eggs when cooled and mix well.


 

Combine with dry ingredients, mochiko flour and baking powder.  Next add evaporated milk and coconut milk, and mix using a spatula to break up any lumps.


 


 


 

Pour the batter into the baking pan, then drop lightly onto the counter a few times to release air bubbles.

Place the pan onto a cookie sheet to protect the bottom from overbrowning and bake for 1 hour.

Let the butter mochi cool to room temperature before cutting.


 

Itadakimasu!

 

What’s your favorite failsafe recipe?

 

GIVEAWAY!  Jennifer is giving away a signed copy of Ghosts of 

Waikiki to someone who leaves a comment below.  Let us know 

what your failsafe recipe is! Please include your (disguised) 

email.  Sorry, US only.


In this atmospheric debut mystery, an out-of-work journalist and the homicide detective who broke her heart must cipher out a murder before the clock runs out, perfect for fans of Naomi Hirahara and Jane Pek.

After the newspaper she works for folds and the freelance assignments no longer pay the bills, Maya Wong reluctantly returns to her native Hawaiʻi to ghostwrite controversial land developer Parker Hamilton's biography. But when the Hamilton patriarch is found dead under suspicious circumstances, Maya is unwittingly drawn into the investigation.

Maya’s family and friends aren't happy about her work for Hamilton. And now, with her ex, Detective Koa Yamada, on the case, she’s forced to contend with the very person she was determined to avoid.

All too soon, Maya is dodging assailants and digging for clues while juggling girls’ nights out with her old BFFs and weekly family dinners. Convinced the police are after the wrong man, Maya is determined to stop the killer before it’s too late.

Exploring timely issues in Hawaiʻi, including locals getting priced out of paradise,
Ghosts of Waikīkī is an engrossing mystery in the vein of The Verifiers.

Former newspaper reporter Jennifer K. Morita believes a good story is like good mochi - slightly sweet with a nice chew.

 

Her debut mystery, GHOSTS OF WAIKĪKĪ, is about an out-of-work journalist who reluctantly becomes the ghost writer for a controversial developer. When she stumbles into murder - and her ex - she discovers coming home to paradise can be murder.

 

Jennifer writes for a university in Northern California, where she lives with her husband and two daughters. When she isn’t plotting murder mysteries or pushing Girl Scout cookies, she enjoys reading, experimenting with recipes, leisurely hikes, Zumba and Hot Hula.

 

You can reach Jennifer at www.jenniferkmorita.com
 

43 comments:

  1. chicken and rice. Easy to make. cheetahthecat1982ATgmailDOTcom

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    2. I have many, many variations of chicken and rice that I make for the family, especially those weeknight dinners. How do you make yours?

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  2. welcome Jennifer! I enjoyed your book--I think your character made this dish, didn't she?

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    1. Thank you so much for reading my book! I'm so happy you enjoyed it. Yes, Maya made butter mochi in the book 'cause it's so easy you can even make it in a condotel. :)

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  3. Pasta and meatballs. ( 2010.Margaret.l at gmail com )

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    1. Forgot to put my name Margaret Luvisi. Sorry

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    2. Great dish! My kids LOVE spaghetti and meatballs. I make a bit batch so there's lots of leftovers for the week.

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  4. Thank you so much for the BUTTER MOCHI! Always love to experiment with new to me ingredients. This not only fits that bill, but sounds yummy.

    My go to recipe that’s relatively easy to make and is always sure to please is the Ozark Honey Oatmeal Cookie. I’ve never taken it someplace or to some event that I’m not asked for the recipe. The good thing about this recipe is that unlike most cookies that seem to get hard with time, this cookie gets better with time lasting a long time (although mine never seem to stick around to prove it) making it an easy fix to make ahead of time or to be shipped guaranteed to arrive just as good or better than when shipped.

    OZARK HONEY OATMEAL COOKIES

    Ingredients
    ½ cup shortening
    1 ¼ cup of sugar
    2 eggs
    1/3 cup honey
    1 teaspoon soda
    1 teaspoon salt
    1 ¾ cup flour
    2 cups quick-cooking oats
    1 cup flaked coconut
    1 cup finely ground pecans
    Directions
    Heat oven to 375 (in my oven I use 350) degrees.
    Mix shortening, sugar, eggs, honey, soda and salt thoroughly.
    Stir in remaining ingredients. Refrigerate dough for a short while makes it easier to use a cookie scoop for me.
    Either shape in rounded teaspoons or scoop of a small cookie scoop (I use level with the top of mine). Place on ungreased cookie sheet about 2 inches apart.
    Flatten cookies with sugar coated flat bottom glass.
    Bake 8 to 10 minutes (bit longer in 350 degree oven and I rotate pan after 7-8 minutes) or until lightly brown. Immediately remove from baking sheet.

    Thank you for the chance to win a copy of GHOSTS OF WAIKIKI. Would love the opportunity to read and review this book, which is already on my TBR list.
    2clowns at arkansas dot net

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    1. This looks yummy! I like that it has oatmeal and nuts - I love cookies with a crunch. I will definitely give this a try! Thanks so much for sharing!

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  5. Thanks for recipe and giveaway, book looks like a good read and since your new to me looking forward to reading in print format

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    1. I also favor print books. I hope you enjoy GHOSTS OF WAIKĪKĪ and good luck on the giveaway!

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  6. My failsafe recipe is spaghetti and meat sauce.

    Nancy
    allibrary (at) aol (dot) com

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    1. That is a family favorite for us, too! Once in a while, when we have prime rib, I use the bone to make my meat sauce and it is to die for!

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  7. My failsafe recipe is a Broccoli Salad to which I add golden raisins. My name is Tamara and my email is tamaradee60ATgmailDOTcom. Thanks.

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    1. Sounds yummy! And healthy, always a bonus. I have a favorite broccoli salad that uses dried cranberries (and chopped bacon, LOL!)

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  8. A recipe that I always depend on and is a healthy favorite is chopped salad with baked salmon. Easy and delectable. saubleb(at)gmail(dot)com

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    1. I love salmon in my salads! I will give this a try. Thank you!

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  9. My failsafe recipe is meatloaf. Thank you for this chance. areewekidding(at)yahoo(dot)com

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    1. Meatloaf is fantastic! I have a recipe from Food & Wine magazine that I've been using for years. I like mine with baked potato.

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  10. What a fun idea! Your variations sound tempting, too.
    libbydodd at comcast dot net

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    1. It's a lot of fun to play around with different flavored mochi. Hope you try it!

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  11. Looks like a fun read, thanks for the chance! My fail-proof recipe is either a simple three ingredient peanut cluster candy or potato salad. Both always go and everyone wants to know how to make them. makennedyinaz at hotmail dot com

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    1. It's always good to have sweet and savory options for those potlucks. Good luck on the giveaway and I hope you enjoy my book!

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  12. Yummy! Thanks so much, Jennifer. I only know mochi from Japan (and love it), so these flavor variations are intriguing.

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    1. You're welcome! I hope you try it. It's fascinating how dishes and recipes are adapted over time and immigration.

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  13. My recipe is for brownies. Thanks for the chance! Annelovell12@yahoo.com

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    1. I like my brownies with nuts, and I like the edges and corners. People at bake sales will look for the edges and corners of butter mochi, just like for brownies.

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  14. As you know, Jennifer, I made mochi for the first time last month, so now I guess it's time to make some butter mochi, which I just adore! Question: what makes the mochi batter so pink in your photos? It doesn't seem as if that amount of vanilla would do it.

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    1. It's so much fun to experiment with mochi recipes! I used guava jam for the batch of butter mochi in the photos. I hadn't planned to, but when I was buying ingredients for my book launch butter mochi I saw a jar of guava jam and decided to try it. It was really good!

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  15. My failsafe recipe is the six hour pork roast that I make when I feel like something i know comes out right every time. I get it ready the night before, stick it in the oven and bake it the next day. It's good an an entree or as BBQ beef or tacos.
    diannekc8(at)gmail(dot)com

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    1. I love the versatility of this dish! Sounds like the perfect recipe for a weeknight dinner with leftovers to use throughout the rest of the week.

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  16. Welcome to the kitchen, Jennifer! The recipe sounds wonderful. Thanks!

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  17. Mine is my fudgy brownie recipe. I love fudgy brownies. Thanks for sharing your recipe. I will have to try it for dessert next time I make karaage and rice balls. cherierj(at)yahoo(dot)com

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    1. Butter mochi is the perfect dessert for karaage and rice balls! Try Google Sheldon Simeon's Chocolate Birthday Butter Mochi recipe because it's like a chewy, mochi brownie. I skip the icing part, and sometimes I use Mexican chocolate instead of chocolate chips.

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  18. Thank you for the recipe and the chance to win! My favorite fail-save recipe is for Lemonade Jello - 4 small (or 2 large) boxes lemon jello, 1- 12 ounce can of frozen lemonade concentrate, 12-18 ounces cool whip, Make jello with the boiling water; add lemonade concentrate; chill until consistency of egg white; fold in cool whip. I've made this with lime jello and limeade concentrate. Next time I will try cherry jello with limeade concentrate.

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  19. My Mother's lasagna.

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  20. Great answer! I I love lasagna 'cause it's delicious, and I can freeze half of it for another meal. Even better when it's your mother's recipe.

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  21. The butter mochi sounds so good! I don’t know if I have a fail safe recipe. One of my favorites is potato soup. awanstrom(at)yahoo dot com

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    1. Sounds delicious! I love a good soup in the winter.

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  22. Gkathgoldin@yahoo.comJanuary 16, 2025 at 11:32 AM

    What a fabulous recipe. We adore the islands and the food.. Deliciousness💗 I will need to find the sweet rice flour then it's a go.
    Thanks so much. My favorite recipe is a potato casserole from my grandmother. I adore potatoes and my gran. The best of both for taste and comfort💗

    Gkathgoldin@yahoo.com

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