Sunday, April 5, 2026

Around the Kitchen Table: Celebrating Spring! + 8-Book #Giveaway!

     


PEG COCHRAN/MARGARET LOUDON:  Spring is finally here.  The season is a symbol of renewal, growth and rebirth and much anticipated after the long winter.  Just like the season changes, does your dinner menu change with it?  I find myself turning toward lighter dishes and putting away my recipes for soups and stews until it’s fall.  Salads like this Asian chicken salad are on the menu again along with lighter dishes like chicken satay or these chicken gyros done on the grill.
 
 

🌷 πŸ₯— πŸ“


MADDIE DAY: Oh, yes. Even when New England seems to have an iron grip on winter, the long days still draw me to brighter flavors and lighter tastes. 

I always host Easter lunch, and serve a cold poached salmon with a dill-sour cream sauce and sliced cucumbers. 


It's pink, white, and green, and so lovely. Even though our local asparagus won't be out until May, when I'm invited to a potluck I often hunt down a bunch of spears grown farther south, steam them, and lightly dress with a homemade vinaigrette. When I've planned my garden well, I'll have salad greens to cut sometime in April, but dreams of incorporating local strawberries has to wait for June.

In my first guest post for the Kitchen, I shared an herbed spring-garlic quiche recipe. You don't have to wait! 



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LESLIE BUDEWITZ: Here in Northwest Montana, the calendar may say "spring," but the weather has other ideas! Spring flowers and early spring vegetables don't really crop up for a few more weeks, and even hardy bulbs like daffs and crocus aren't quite in bloom. But that doesn't stop us from pretending! Mr. Right and I are huge fans of asparagus, and I've shared a lot of asparagus recipes here, including this fabulous Puff Pastry with Asparagus, Brie, and Honey  -- tasty little pockets of spring! 

 


This Asparagus Soup with Cumin, from To Err is Cumin: A Spice Shop Mystery, bridges the gap between the calendar and the clouds nicely, with the comfort of soup and the warmth of cumin on one side and the delight of spring green on the other.  Lemon is another bright taste that suits the changing seasons, whether you use it in a main dish, like this Lemon Arugula Pasta, or this creamy but light Lemon Mousse

Here's to lighter, brighter days, my friends, in the kitchen and beyond! 


🌸 πŸ’ 🌸


KIM DAVIS: Since I live in coastal Southern California, we don't have a huge swing in seasonal temperatures. Honestly, it can be 90+ degrees any time of the year even during the winter (thank you... NOT... to the Santa Ana winds), and a chilly, overcast mid 60s in the summer which we call June-Gloom. We never quite know what we'll be getting outside of our 10-day forecast. We're also blessed to have local, fresh produce year round so I've never really cooked according to the season. Instead I choose whatever sounds good or whatever suggestions my family come up with or whenever a new recipe catches my eye. 

Fresh garden salads (often from lettuce we've grown ourselves) are served just about every day, and I serve fish at least once a week like my Salmon with Maple & Dijon Sauce or my Baked Parmesan Pesto Tilapia. Another family favorite that I make year round are Zucchini Taco Boats which are probably more aligned with spring/summer. But if someone has a craving for beef stew or chicken tortilla soup in the middle of an August heat wave, I'll happily prepare the dish and crank up the air conditioning. 



Wishing you all a delicious spring! 


🌸 πŸ’ 🌸


LUCY BURDETTE: In Connecticut, spring means the vegetables at the farmer's market and John's asparagus are in! Peas, chives, arugula, broccolini, overwintered carrots--I love them all. Here's a recipe I'd forgotten about, with veggies on polenta with Parmesan crisps



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LESLIE KARST: Here in Hawai‘i, of course, the weather doesn’t change a whole lot with the seasons, but since March is traditionally the rainiest month of the year, often bringing the famous Kona storms (and the state sure saw that happen this last March!), the arrival of April can mark the return of the typical mild trade wind weather. So yes, cold dishes and salads!

One of my favorites is this simple and delicious ramen salad, always a hit at potlucks. 

And this green bean salad with queso fresco is also quite refreshing. Or how about this Japanese restaurant-style salad, with a yummy mayonnaise based dressing with soy sauce and a bit of sugar? And to top off any of the above, may I recommend making your own pickled onions—so easy and such a great addition to so many foods! 
 

🌿 πŸ… 🌳


VMBURNS: I'm not sure that Georgia got the memo about the weather. A couple of weeks ago we had snow, and yesterday I turned on the air conditioning. But, I'm starting to look for lighter meals like this Cowboy Pasta Salad. With the addition of ground beef, it's hearty enough for when the weather is fickle, but doesn't require a lot of time slaving over a stove or oven. Plus, it's super tasty. 


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DARCI HANNAH: Living in Michigan, and after our bitter cold winters, the slightly warmer days of spring are very welcome. I look forward to more sunshine and longer days. Once spring is here I start craving lighter meals. However, the temperature in Michigan can fluctuate so greatly from one day to the next, going from sixty degrees and sunny down to twenty degrees and snowy, that it's hard to fully embrace salads and cold dishes. I look forward to Easter where we often see asparagus at the stores for the first time all year. Our family also loves to celebrate with leg of lamb and mint jelly. There's just something about the taste of mint jelly that reminds me of spring! As our dinners get slightly lighter from stews and heavy pastas to more chicken and fish dishes, I also start to crave brighter and more citrus-y flavors. Since I'm a baker that directly translates into treats like lemon bars and lemon scones that I bake for my family and friends. Honestly, I think the changing of the seasons affects my baking more than my cooking! 


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MOLLY MacRAE: During my years working in delicatessens, from the late 60s into the mid-70s (my salad days?), I noticed an interesting phenomenon. Every spring, when the world started turning green with tender shoots and leaves, people just wanted to eat it up. It made me wonder. If we hadn’t served the beautiful green salads they craved, would they have gone back outside to join the rabbits for a good graze? Here’s a recipe for a delicious arugula, carrot, and chickpea salad any self-respecting rabbit might love. 




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CLEO COYLE: When you find yourself shivering in a freezing garage at 3 AM, blowing a hair dryer on a frozen water pipe and praying it won’t burst, you jump for joy at the first sign of springtime, and Marc and I are not just happy but relieved to see those tiny green buds finally appearing on our trees here in Queens and cherry blossoms blooming up the street. Soon the wild violets will be peeking their purple heads up in our back yard, and we’re looking forward to those, too, along with some Mason Jar Cold Brew Coffee...


As for the food, we tend to eat more fresh vegetables at this time of year, but we still love our baked treats like this Easy Melted Gelato Cake. You can adapt the recipe to any gelato flavor, though the pistachio (pictured below) nicely celebrates the season of green. And in that spirit... We wish you all a Happy Easter and Happy Spring! ~ Cleo


Readers, how about you?

Does your menu change with the seasons or are you just as likely to whip up a pot of soup in the summer as well as in the winter?  Comment to be entered in this month's giveaway!   


Murder Uncorked by Maddie Day 

Murder at the Lemonberry Tea by Darci Hannah 

Where the Bodies Are Berried 
by Peg Cochran 
 
Essentials of Murder by Kim Davis 
 
Snakeberry by Ang Pompano 

All Shell Breaks Loose (ARC)
by Molly MacRae 

A Deadly Feast by Lucy Burdette 
 

Bulletproof Barista by Cleo Coyle 



πŸ”ŽπŸ“šπŸ”

Comments Open 
Through Wednesday 
April 8

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27 comments:

  1. My menus do change. I don't do soups in the summer for example. I like lighter fare such as potato salad, BBQ, and deviled eggs. Fall and winter is when I don't mind turning on the oven so lots more casseroles and baked goods. cherierj(at)yahoo(dot)com

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  2. I do like lighter meals as the weather gets warmer. A favorite summer meal is fresh shrimp sautΓ©ed in butter, white wine and frozen peas added at the last minute, over white rice It's accompanied by a mixed salad and a cold class of that white wine!

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  3. I eat lighter meals and grill more as the weather gets warmer. We eat salad as a main dish more often when it is warm. Happy Easter!

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    Replies
    1. I love grilling when the weather turns warm although I have been known to go out on the deck in my boots and fire up the grill in the winter.

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  4. I do prefer a good soup in the winter when it's so cold outside,but that being said I would still enjoy it in the summer, as long as it's not over 85 degrees outside Because the thought of anything but cold food when it gets that hot outside is not for me.
    thejellybean1093{at)gmail(dot)com

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  5. Happy Spring and Happy Easter to everyone celebrating. Here is Michigan the weather can swing to 4 seasons in any given day! During the winter months I love to make soup. Spring I start to move toward grilled foods and fresh veggies. email: lsum1258 (at) aol (dot) com

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  6. In the summer we tend to grill a lot. It makes clean up easy after dinner and the kitchen doesn't get too hot. We also garden, so we have a lot of fresh veggies to eat in the summer. anitalklaboe@aol.com

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  7. Happy Easter!

    Thankfully spring has arrived here in Arkansas outside of the chance yet for a slight drop in temperature at night for the next week or two. Nature reminds us that it’s spring with the blooming of the tulips, lilacs and dogwood trees. Longer days and warmer weather, fit for reading on the front porch, tends to change our supper menu. With it being warmer, it’s time to fire up the grill or smoker and cook most of the main courses outside (Hubby’s duty) – like grilled chicken or pork chops or smoked pork shoulder. I work on the side dishes inside where they seem to be lighter dishes like steamed veggies or a salad of some sort. Here in the south where it seems everything is fried, it’s nice to change over to things that are steamed or chilled. Our farmer’s market starts up this next week, but it will be a few weeks before things like tomatoes and squash can be found. Hubby’s grown our vegetable plants from seeds he harvested last year. They have grown to where they will be planted in the raised bed this next week. Oh, how I can taste those fresh off the vine maters already! Even deserts change come spring. With strawberries coming off soon, there’s using them as a side to a fresh baked angel food cake or made into homemade ice cream. Then comes the blueberries where a dessert with a nut-based crust, topped with a cream cheese based layer and then finally topped with a fresh made blueberry filling layer.

    Thank you for all the reminders of some amazing dishes that I physically added to my menu suggestions for the upcoming spring and summer months.

    Someone will be the extremely fortunate if selected. I would LOVE to be that someone. 😊Thank you so much for the chance!
    2clowns at arkansas dot net

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    Replies
    1. It's going to be awhile yet before our farmers markets open but it's something to look forward to!

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  8. We'll do more meals on the stove as it gets warmer, so as not to heat up the house with the oven and have the AC work extra hard. And there will be garden veggies eventually. It's just getting to be time for asparagus and rhubarb to start coming up, though with the odd weather we've had this year it's hard to say.
    kozo8989(at)hotmail(dot)com

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    Replies
    1. I can't wait for asparagus season. It's still very expensive here.

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  9. I’m a seasonal cook lighter meals in the hotTexas summers and heartier comfort foods in the colder months. Carter.karen@gmail.com

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  10. My menu changes but I can make soup all year long! Tried all new Easter recipes yesterday ... salmon and asparagus was so easy to make!

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  11. I live in Southeast Texas where we don't have a lot of winter weather, so I cook the same things year round. There will be more stews and chilis when we do get cold weather though. Thank you for the chance at these fabulous books! 3labsmom(at)gmail(dot)com

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  12. Happy Easter everyone! I live. nlap3414@gmail.com in Upstate New York. The weather here is still nippy. We go up and down with 60 degrees days and then the next day it will be the low 40's. Our meals do change with the seasons from hearty meals in the Fall and Winter to light meals in the Spring and Summer. The only change to that is that we love homemade soup and we make it all year long. nlap3414@gmail.com

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  13. My menu changes with seasons and occasionally I will eat soup
    don.stewart@zoominternet.net

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  14. When spring finally comes, we are so ready for it! fresh asparagus and lighter menus. then strawberry shortcake! thanks for the chance! annelovell12@yahoo.com

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  15. We eat the same main courses all year. But in Spring it is nice to get asparagus and strawberries. Thanks for the chance at all these wonderful books. ckmbeg (at) gmail (dot) com

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  16. In the winter we use the oven more often. In the warmer weather we try to use the air fryer more but we tend to eat the same thing when using either of them. Which is chicken and pork chops. I do eat soup anytime of the year Thank you for the opportunity!
    . tnscoobydoo@yahoo.com.

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  17. Thank you for the wonderful recipes! there is still snow in the U.P., but it's stopped for now and it's a sunny Easter morning.

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  18. My menus changed in the winter when I would make chili for my husband. Now our menu is still the same throughout the year even ice cream all year round!!!!! Happy Easter!

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  19. My menu is different, in the summer it's more salad and fruit. In the winter it's more casseroles and heavy meals.
    Kit3247@aol.com

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  20. I love to eat seasonally, using the best fruits and vegetables that are available at the time. Eating seasonally is more affordable and it keeps my menus from getting jaded. I love to shop the farmer's markets for the best produce that I use in my meals. I love the recipes included in this post!

    Nancy
    allibrary (at) aol (dot) com

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  21. My menu changes with the seasons. Summer is more lighter foods like salads, fruits and sandwiches. We also enjoy bbq food in the summer. Winter is more casseroles and soups. Hubby will cook with his smoker a lot more, too. I definitely bake more in the winter!

    Thank you for the chance!

    Happy Easter! 🐰 🐣

    jarjm1980(at)hotmail(dot)com

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  22. I like lighter meals in the summer salads, pasta, crock pot meals. I do make pot roast in the summer and Lasagna. Deborah Thank you for the recipes. deborahortega229@yahoo.com

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