Sunday, May 3, 2026

Around the Kitchen Table: COMFORT FOOD CLASSICS + 7-Book #Giveaway!





CLEO COYLEThere are foods that we eat, and foods that feed our souls. Comfort food classics are the dishes that calm rough days, bring sighs of satisfaction, or maybe take us back to familiar family tables with every bite. What are your top three favorite comfort foods: savory or sweet? Mac and cheese, fried chicken, and mashed potatoes are at the top of the list for my husband Marc. As for me, a bowl of pasta or slice of lasagna brings me back to my Italian family’s table. And a hunk of blueberry pie or a fresh doughnut with coffee always makes me smile.

When I'm craving that old-fashioned cinnamon-sugar doughnut taste, I often bake up these Coffee Shop Doughnut Muffins ☕ and (yes) they pair wonderfully with a hot cuppa joe...



What about all of you? What are your three favorite comfort foods: savory or sweet? And if you have any recipes to share, please do!


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MADDIE DAY: True comfort foods for me are always starchy. Polenta with a spicy West African sauce. Cheesy grits. Warm bread slathered thickly with butter. Baked potatoes. Pasta with a creamy coating. Something soothing that sticks with you and goes down easy.

Mystery Playground hosted my Cheesy Grits recipe to celebrate When the Grits Hit the Fan back in 2017.


Certain of my mother's sweet baked concoctions also bring great comfort and solace. Other than the Christmas cookies I bake each holiday season, I also love her poppyseed cake, which I shared here as Marilyn's Poppyseed Cake.



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KIM DAVIS: I've found that just spending time in the kitchen, mixing and baking, provides some comfort all on it's own. Making bread is at the top of my comfort food list. From the anticipation of waiting for the dough to rise, the yeasty aroma as it bakes, and then slathering the hot-out-of-the-oven bread with creamy butter... swoon-worthy! I frequently make this No-Knead Rustic Bread



Mac and Cheese is another one of my favorite comfort foods. However, the calories (and cholesterol) contained in a typical serving of the dish undoes the level of comfort it should bring. I found a recipe for mac and cheese that uses cauliflower as the base, did several tweaks to suit my needs, and found out I liked it every bit as much as the typical dish. I call it Sneaky Mac and Cheese because it's a good way to serve some extra veggies without most people suspecting.  



And to satisfy my sweet tooth when comfort is needed, gooey chocolate-y brownies, warm from the oven, is what I call perfection! 


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PEG COCHRAN/MARGARET LOUDON: For me, comfort food is usually something simple that warms you inside and out.  A favorite is a bowl of pasta Bolognese, which reminds me of my grandmother.  Actually, pasta with any kind of sauce always makes me feel good.  Another favorite comfort food is a simple roast chicken--especially if accompanied by mashed potatoes.  Finally, I'd have to say shepherd's pie always feels comforting.  It's something I can make from memory and contains one of my other favorite comfort foods--mashed potatoes.  
 
 

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VICKI DELANY: Looks like some of my favourites have already been mentioned. As they say about literature: classics are classic for a reason. However, tastes do change. I used to go straight to Kraft Dinner (what Americans call mac and cheese), the stuff in a package with strangely coloured powdered cheese. I had that again a number of years ago for the first time in a long time when I needed a comfortable, reliable staple - I couldn't stand it. Spaghetti Bolognaise is high on the list as is a great big bowl of hearty soup, something like my butternut squash and sweet potato soup.  For snacking when you need a good hug, nothing beats a traditional English scone (no flavouring, no icing, just sconey goodness). The type to be served with jam and clotted cream. (Or clotted cream and jam as per your preference.) Here's my normal recipe which just happens to be the version Lily bakes in her Tea by the Sea Tearoom.  





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LESLIE KARST: Having grown up in Los Angeles in the '60s and '70s, my comfort food is definitely Mexican cuisine. My mom would often make tacos dorados (fried so that the tortillas are crispy and golden brown) when we were kids, and later in life I learned to cook lots of other dishes. Some of my favs are calabacitas (which means "little squash"), a stew with pork, zucchini, and corn, best eaten by scooping it up with a soft, warm flour tortilla:
 
 
And I also adore this simple Mexican plate dinner:

 

¡Que sabroso!  

MADDIE DAY: Leslie, thanks for the reminder! As someone who also grew up in southern California, Mexican food is also total comfort food for me, especially a warm steamed tamale, although I've never made them. A simple quesadilla is often a lunch or solo dinner for me and I've shared several quesadilla recipes here.
 
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VMBURNS Comfort food feeds the soul and reminds me of home. The one food that does that for me are fried pork chops. I LOVE fried pork chops. My mom made great pork chops. She didn't enjoy cooking, although she was a great cook. I suspect her aversion to cooking had something to do with the fact that she worked in the cafeteria at my elementary school. By the time she got home from work, the last thing she wanted to do was prepare another meal. She preferred to eat at restaurants and have others serve her, instead of being the server. Needless to say, we ate out a lot. The exception was on Sundays. My mom cooked almost every Sunday. In fact, she'd often start cooking on Saturday night or early Sunday morning, so dinner would be ready by the time we got home from church. One of my favorite Sunday meals was fried pork chops. Just eating them reminds me of home. 


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MOLLY MACRAE: My mom’s mashed potatoes were nothing special yet oh so special. They always had a few lumps, which we loved. She mashed them using a fork, adding oleo (we didn't call it margarine), milk, salt and pepper. I can’t remember the last time I made them myself, probably some distant Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner. 

My sister Jenny’s Fläskpannkaka (oven pancake) hits the comfort spot, too. Warm syrup poured over it is just right for a winter night supper. In summer? Cover it in berries!


ChickpeaNoodle Soup is a vegetarian alternative for that comfort food classic - Chicken Noodle Soup. 


And what about a good old grilled cheese sandwich? I can feel its hug right now.


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ANG POMPANO: The foods I think of as comfort food are the ones we ate often when we were first married. Tuna noodle casserole, which we actually had again tonight, was on regular rotation when we were just starting out. Teachers are paid once a month, so by the end of it we were counting every penny twice. That’s when meatloaf with mashed potatoes showed up, something hearty and filling that carried us through. My third comfort food goes back even further, to my childhood, when an aunt would take me out to lunch every Saturday. I almost always ordered tomato soup with a grilled cheese sandwich (I'm with you Molly), potato chips, and a milkshake. It’s still my go-to Saturday lunch, although I skip the milkshake now.


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LESLIE BUDEWITZ: In Death al Dente, my first Food Lovers' Village mystery, my girl Erin Murphy -- who is half Italian, as you can tell by her name -- muses about her discovery when she left home that while comfort food to her was anything her mother made involving pasta and tomatoes, to many others, tomatoes were spicy and comfort food tended toward the soft, smooth, and creamy. Mac and cheese, custard, grilled cheese, bread pudding. (I'd include an excerpt, but I'm traveling this week without access to my files.) 

Our favorite mac and cheese recipe comes from The French Country Table by Laura Washburn, and it doesn't look like I've ever shared it here. But Fettucine Alfredo -- what my father called fancy mac and cheese when I, in my first apartment out of law school, made it for my visiting parents -- is a wonderfully grown-up version. 


When I asked Mr. Right about comfort food, he mentioned several favorites, including chocolate chip cookies, and vanilla ice cream with our Chocolate Cabernet Sauce. As we talked on, some of the same themes emerged as others have mentioned -- the foods our mothers served when we were sick (custard), recipes associated with grandmothers and other favorite people, and traditional family favorites (Christmas cookies come to mind). Dishes that call up memories, warm us physically and emotionally, and connect us with the people we love. Food with a story. 

Here's wishing you all the comfort and joy your heart -- and tummy -- desire. 

Readers, how about you?

What about you? What are your three favorite comfort foods: savory or sweet? 
Comment below to be entered in this month's giveaway! 

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A Poisonous Pour
by Maddie Day

Bulletproof Barista by Cleo Coyle 

All Shell Breaks Loose (ARC)
by Molly MacRae

Essentials of Murder by Kim Davis

Shot Through the Book by Eva Gates

A Clue in the Crumbs by Lucy Burdette

Diet of Death by Ang Pompano


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Comments Open 
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May 8

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Saturday, May 2, 2026

Lemon Cake with Mix and Instant Pudding #Recipe Peg Cochran/Margaret Loudon

 

 


I wanted to make a cake for Easter dinner and it had to be gluten free.  I also wanted it to be easy (who doesn't, right?) I decided one of those cakes you doctor up a mix with things like a pudding mix would be great.  (Spoiler:  it was!) Unfortunately, I couldn't find a box of lemon pudding or a box of gluten free lemon cake mix.  No problem, I substituted a gluten free white cake mix and vanilla pudding.  The lemon flavor from the lemon juice and zest might have been more subtle but it was still good.  This is also meant to be baked in a pretty bundt pan but I have horrible luck getting the cake out of mine so I decided a plain, utilitarian tube pan would be safer.  You're supposed to dribble the glaze artfully over the top of the cake.  Well, that didn't quite work out for me.  I obviously need more practice!  But the cake was glazed and that's really the most important thing, right?  This recipe was adapted from one The Seasoned Mom.

 

CAKE:

1 (15.25 ounce) box lemon cake mix (can substitute white or yellow cake mix)

1 box instant lemon pudding mix (can substitute vanilla)

¾ cup water

¼ cup freshly-squeezed lemon juice

½ cup vegetable oil

4 large eggs

 

GLAZE

1 ¼ cups confectioners' sugar, sifted

2-3 tablespoons freshly-squeezed lemon juice

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Preheat the oven to 350°F. Grease and flour a Bundt cake pan, or tube pan or use cooking spray.

Using  an electric mixer on medium-high speed tbeat together the cake mix, dry pudding mix, water, lemon juice, oil and eggs for about 2 minutes.


 

Pour the batter into the prepared pan.   


 

Bake for 40 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the cake comes out clean.


 

Cool for 10 minutes in the pan, then invert onto a wire rack to cool completely before glazing.

Whisk together the confectioners' sugar, 2 tablespoons of lemon juice, and the vanilla extract until you have a thick, pourable glaze. Add more lemon juice to thin, or more sugar to thicken.  Drizzle over the cooled cake.


 


  
 
When a wealthy local benefactor is slain on the farm, Monica has to figure out who wanted to cash in on the killing . . .

As Sassamanash Farms hunkers down for the long winter, Monica agrees to let the local animal shelter host their Christmas-themed fundraiser there. The draw of the event—a chance to have your pet’s picture taken with Santa—brings in animal lovers from far and wide. But when the crackling fire dies down and the festive holiday props are all carted away, Monica discovers a very un-jolly sight next to the barn—the dead body of one of the shelter’s biggest donors. With the farm’s good name in jeopardy, Monica goes to work to root out the killer.

By all accounts the victim was a charming and generous supporter of the shelter, but Monica discovers that he was loathed by those who knew him for being tight-fisted and unscrupulous. Suspecting money might be the motive, she turns her sights on his stylish wife and her lavish lifestyle, along with the manager of the struggling shelter, who stood to collect a hefty bequest from his will. But as Monica closes in on one final clue, the culprit closes in on her. Caught unawares, she’ll have to survive the brutal winter weather, as well as a cold-blooded killer . . .
 

Amazon

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Friday, May 1, 2026

Parisian Chocolate Lemon Pie from Vicki Delany. Part Two: Filling and Topping.

Last time I gave you the recipe for the pastry in this modern twist on a lemon meringue pie.  Here’s the filling and meringue topping.



Parisian Chocolate Lemon Pie. Part Two: Filling and Topping.

Ingredients

Chocolate Layer:

  •  115 g dark chocolate (about 4 oz), chopped

Lemon Filling:

  •  3 tablespoons cornstarch
  •  2 tablespoons granulated sugar
  •  1/4 teaspoon salt
  •  egg yolks , lightly beaten
  •  1 tablespoon grated lemon zest
  •  1/4 cup lemon juice
  •  4 1/2 teaspoons unsalted butter , softened

Meringue:

  •  egg whites
  •  1 cup granulated sugar

Method

Your pastry has been blind-baked and cooled.

Chocolate Layer: In heatproof bowl set over saucepan of gently simmering (not boiling) water, melt chocolate, stirring, until smooth. Spread over cooled crust; refrigerate for 10 minutes.

Lemon Filling: In heavy-bottomed saucepan, whisk together cornstarch, sugar and salt; whisk in 2 cups water. Bring to boil over medium-high heat, whisking constantly. Reduce heat to medium-low; simmer, whisking constantly, for 3 minutes. Remove from heat. Gradually whisk one-quarter of the sugar mixture into egg yolks; whisk back into pan. Cook over medium heat, whisking constantly, for 2 minutes.

Remove from heat; whisk in lemon zest, lemon juice and butter until melted. Cool to room temperature. Scrape into baked crust; smooth top. Refrigerate until set, about 1 hour. (Make-ahead: Refrigerate for up to 1 day.)

Meringue: In large heatproof bowl set over saucepan of gently simmering (not boiling) water, whisk egg whites with sugar until sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat; beat until stiff peaks form and mixture is cooled completely, 10 to 15 minutes.

Pile meringue over the pie filling, being sure it touches the edges. Bake in 400°F oven until golden, 8 to 10 minutes. Let cool completely. 













Follow Vicki at www.vickidelany.com, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/evagatesauthor. You can sign up to receive Vicki’s quarterly newsletter at Vicki Delany – Canadian Author of Mystery Novels and Suspense Novels » Contact


Now available: The Devil in the Details, the eleventh Sherlock Holmes Bookshop novel


Coming in June: Whose Body in the Library by Eva Gates, the thirteenth Lighthouse Library mystery

 

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Thursday, April 30, 2026

Lemon Lime Lavender Scones by Lucy Burdette #giveaway

 


LUCY BURDETTE: Since we've arrived at the end of April, I think it's safe to start talking about Key West food critic mystery #16, A DELICIOUS DECEPTION (coming July 14.) 

Hayley Snow’s mother Janet has a bustling catering business in Key West, and these days, she gets lots of wedding and wedding-adjacent party requests. In this 16th book, she’s catering a wedding with a lavender and lemon theme. (Really? In Key West in November?) She made these scones as a practice run and offers one to Hayley with tea at a fraught moment. This would also be a lovely addition to a Mother's Day brunch, or really any special occasion. To celebrate spring and mothers and mother figures and a new book coming in July, I'll be giving away a copy of the new paperback edition of A CLUE IN THE CRUMBS, coming from Worldwide Mystery. Leave a comment here, but also join my mailing list for an extra chance to win!



PS Before baking, I looked at recipes on Sally’s Baking Addiction and Fork in the Kitchen for inspiration. The lime was added at the last moment when I realized I was short a lemon.


Ingredients


2 cups all-purpose flour plus more for sprinkling

1/2 cup granulated sugar

2 and 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

2 teaspoons dried culinary lavender

zest of one lemon and one lime

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup (8 Tbsp) unsalted butter, frozen

1/2 cup heavy cream, plus 2 tablespoons for brushing

1 large egg

1 and 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

optional: coarse sugar for topping


Preheat the oven to 400.


Zest the lemon and lime and rub the zest into the sugar with your fingers. Whisk the lemon-lime sugar together with the baking powder, salt, and flour. Add two teaspoons, more or less to taste, of culinary lavender. Set this aside. (I used one teaspoon because I didn’t know how much I’d like the taste—it was very mild.)



Grate the frozen butter with a box grater and mix this into the dry ingredients. (The secret to light scones is cold ingredients.) Whisk together the cream, the egg, and the vanilla. Pour the wet ingredients over the dry and mix lightly. 



Scrape the batter onto a surface covered with parchment paper and a bit of flour. With floured hands, shape the dough into a ball and press the ball flat. Cut the disk of dough into triangles. Move the scones to your freezer for 15 minutes, then brush with additional cream. 



Bake for about 20 minutes (depending on size) until lightly brown on top. Cool the scones before icing. 




Lemon Lavender Icing


4 tablespoons heavy cream

1 teaspoon dried culinary lavender

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

1 and 1/4 cups confectioners’ sugar




Heat the cream to a simmer. Remove from heat and add the lavender to steep for fifteen minutes. Strain the lavender out of the milk and add the lemon juice. Whisk in the confectioner’s sugar to desired thickness. Frost the scones and enjoy!


USA Today bestselling author Lucy Burdette writes the Key West food critic mystery series including A POISONOUS PALATE and A CLUE IN THE CRUMBS. Join her mailing list right here.


Coming July 14--isn't it gorgeous?


Book 15 in the Key West series, THE MANGO MURDERS, is in bookstores now!

The trade paperback edition of A POISONOUS PALATE is out now! 




And the trade paperback edition of A CLUE IN THE CRUMBS is out now!