Monday, June 1, 2026

Potluck Beans #giveaway and #recipe #Father's Day @Kim Davis

 




KIM DAVIS: With summer and Father's Day right around the corner, casual gatherings for barbecues and/or potlucks are starting up. A dear friend of mine, Janet, always served these Potluck Beans as a side dish to the grilled meat whenever she hosted a get together. The dish quickly became a favorite of mine and I immediately begged for the recipe. She graciously shared it with me (which I adapted to suit my tastes, i.e. ground turkey instead of beef, and bacon limited to garnish instead of a pound cooked with the beans) and since my family enjoyed it so much, I often serve it as a main course, especially during chilly winter months. What I especially like is the ease of making this dish. It relies on canned beans along with a few other staples. Once the turkey (or beef) is cooked through, and the beans come to a simmer for a short time, the dish is done and ready to serve giving you time to enjoy your family and friends! 

Be sure to scroll all the way down to find out how to win a copy of Essentials of Death



Potluck Beans
 
Ingredients

1 pound ground turkey (or ground beef)
1 medium onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
3-pound can pork & beans (or 2 large cans Bush’s Baked Beans)*
1-pound can chili beans
1-pound can cannellini beans, drained
1-pound can red kidney beans, drained
1-pound can black beans, rinsed and drained
1 cup ketchup
3 tablespoons white vinegar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon freshly ground pepper




Suggested toppings (not shown in photo)
Cooked and crumbled bacon
Shredded cheddar cheese
Sliced green onions
Pickled jalapeño rings
Sliced black olives

Instructions
In a large soup pot, cook the ground meat with the diced onions until the meat is no longer pink. Drain off the liquid/fat and discard.





Add the remaining ingredients, stirring well to combine. 





Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Reduce heat to medium-low and cook for 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Serve with your choice of toppings and cornbread.





Notes
*If you must eat gluten-free, I recommend substituting Bush’s Baked Beans. Their large cans are 1 pound, 12-ounces. It’s fine to use 2 full cans.

For gatherings, you can keep the Potluck Beans warm in a crockpot for easy serving.





💕 Click here for a free printable PDF of the recipe!💕









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About the Author:

Kim Davis writes the Aromatherapy Apothecary cozy mystery series, and the award-winning Cupcake Catering cozy mystery series. She has also written several children’s nature articles published in a variety of magazines. Kim Davis is a member of Sisters in Crime, Mystery Writers of America, and Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators.

She lives in Southern California with her husband and rambunctious mini Goldendoodle, Missy, who has become an inspiration for several plotlines. When she’s not spending time with her granddaughters or chasing Missy around, she can be found either writing on her next book, working on blogs, or in the kitchen baking up yummy treats to share.

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Connect with Kim: FacebookPinterestInstagramBlueskyBookbubGoodreadsTikTok, and website

 


I'm celebrating my new release today!




While this isn't a copy mystery, I'm celebrating the release today for my middle grade fantasy book, The Secret of Sweet Treats Kingdom, the first book in The Board Game Chronicles! Suitable for ages 7 to 11. If you have kids or grandkids who needs to do some reading over the summer, please check it out. It's free on Kindle Unlimited, and ebook and print versions available on Amazon. Print is available on Barnes and Noble as well.

What it's about: 
Amber Addison is fed up with her kindergartener sister. It’s Ava’s fault she’s missing her best friend’s birthday party, the most anticipated event in their sixth-grade class. To make matters worse, Ava has coerced her into playing Sweet Treats board game and she keeps losing to a five-year-old. When Amber’s irritation gets the best of her, she throws the game, destroying it.

As the board disintegrates, the two girls are swept into a swirling vortex and they find themselves in the middle of Sweet Treats kingdom. Ava is kidnapped by an evil queen, and Amber finds herself relying on a mint-green rabbit to help her find her way to Bonbon Castle with the hope of finding her sister. Along the way, she encounters more sweets than she could ever eat along with fantastical beings. Some will become her friend and others create danger that she must survive in order to save her sister and find their way home.

A fun recipe is included

Purchase Amazon ebook or read for free on Kindle Unlimited: HERE
Purchase Amazon print:  HERE
Purchase Barnes & Noble print: HERE



G I V E A W A Y   T I M E !!!





I'm giving away a copy of Essentials of Death, your choice of format: print, ebook, or audiobook.

Comment below and include your email (yourname at yourserver dot com) for a chance to win a copy of Essentials of Death. (Contest ends 11:59pm on Wednesday, June 3, 2026. Print and ebook limited to US residents; audiobook is available for everyone.)


Readers, do you have a favorite side dish you make for barbecues or potlucks?



Sunday, May 31, 2026

Demystifying the CIA's Avocado and Grilled Shrimp Salad plus a giveaway by Ang Pompano





Ang Pompano: I recently turned in the manuscript for the next book in my Reluctant Food Columnist Series, Simmering Secrets. I’ll admit, this one took longer than I expected. There were times when the story simmered beautifully and others when it sat there like a pot of water refusing to boil. But I kept stirring until the ingredients finally came together. 

In this installment, food columnist Quincy Lazzaro investigates the death of celebrity chef Connie Langston after she announces plans to relocate the prestigious Langston Culinary Arts Academy from Connecticut to New York. As Quincy digs deeper, he uncovers a web of culinary rivalries, hidden motives, and deadly secrets.

The Langston Culinary Arts Academy in the novel was inspired by the world-famous Culinary Institute of America, which actually began right here in New Haven before moving to Hyde Park. I always thought it was cool that the CIA became legendary in the culinary world while its roots started in my own backyard.

I also had a connection to the CIA through a friend who graduated from the New Haven campus years ago. Hearing stories about the pressure and almost military precision of professional cooking helped shape some of the atmosphere that found its way into Simmering Secrets.

Several years ago, I visited the Hyde Park campus and picked up one of the CIA cookbooks, Chef’s Notes: St. Andrew’s Café. 



After spending months untangling clues, motives, suspicious chefs, illegal dinners, and Quincy’s latest problems, I’m finally happy with how the manuscript turned out. I decided the best way to celebrate was by making a recipe from the book. I picked Avocado and Grilled Shrimp Salad with Citrus Hazelnut Vinaigrette because the dish featured several of my favorite ingredients, including citrus, grilled shrimp, and avocado. 

As I cooked, I found myself thinking about Quincy Lazzaro and the strange world he keeps stumbling into. Having worked in restaurants, I knew the hullabaloo of the kitchen firsthand: giant personalities, bruised egos, and impossible ambition are often behind the perfection that arrives at the table. Those ingredients could easily lead to murder. In real life, thankfully, they never did. It came close a few times, but those stories are better left untold.

Making something delicious felt like the perfect way to mark this milestone, although there are still edits ahead. There are always edits ahead. But for one evening at least, I traded fictional murder for grilled shrimp and a really good vinaigrette. 

Note: Before I share the recipe, a quick confession: the CIA's original version felt a little intimidating for a weeknight, so I took a few shortcuts based on what was on hand. Hazelnuts weren't available this time of year, so I substituted toasted walnuts. I also skipped the hazelnut oil. When I can find it, it's usually expensive. I used olive oil instead. If I'd had more time, I might have infused the oil with the toasted walnuts, but dinner was calling. Also, I used bottled orange juice, which reduced beautifully. 

Part of my job as a mystery writer is demystifying things, and I decided to do the same with this salad. I'm sharing the original recipe because you deserve to have it exactly as written. Still, you may decide, as I did, to adapt it to what you have on hand.

Either way, the dressing was delicious. My version was a big hit at home, and when hazelnuts return in the fall, I plan to make it again and see how the original ingredients change the dish.

Stay tuned for more news about Simmering Secrets and future adventures in the Reluctant Food Columnist Series from Level Best Books.

What about you? Do you change recipes to suit your tastes or what you have on hand, or do you follow every step to the letter? Leave your answer below with your email address, and you'll be entered in a drawing to win a copy of Diet of Death.


AVOCADO AND GRILLED SHRIMP SALAD WITH CITRUS HAZELNUT VINAIGRETTE from the Culinary Institute of America 

Serves 4





Vinaigrette Ingredients

  • 2 cups reduced to ½ cup orange juice, 
  • 1 tablespoon Gulden's mustard
  • 2 ounces champagne vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • ½ cup hazelnut oil
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • Pinch black pepper


Salad Ingredients

  • 12 each pink grapefruit (segments)
  • ¼ cup hazelnuts, toasted and coarsely chopped
  • 2 each avocados, ripe
  • 12 each shrimp, grilled
  • 4 cups baby spinach
  • 2 cups arugula
  • ½ cup sprouts, mikro greens
  • ¼ cup cilantro leaves, whole


Grilled Shrimp Ingredients

  • 12 each shrimp
  • ½ ounce lemon infused olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
  • 1 tablespoon chopped cilantro
  • Salt and black pepper to taste
  • 4 each small bamboo skewers


Method for Vinaigrette


Place the reduced orange juice, mustard, honey and vinegar into a bowl and whisk in the hazelnut oil.




Season with salt and pepper.


Method to Assemble Salad

  1. Slice avocado and fan onto outside of plate.
  2. Toss the spinach, arugula, mikro greens, and cilantro in a mixing bowl with vinaigrette and place in the center of the plate.
  3. Place 3-4 of the trimmed grapefruit segments on the greens and top with warm grilled shrimp. Garnish with some toasted hazelnuts.


Method to Grill Shrimp


Marinate shrimp in olive oil, chopped parsley, cilantro, and salt, pepper.




Place shrimp onto skewers and grill as needed.


Wine Suggestion (also from the CIA)


"Naia, Bodegas Aldail, Rueda Spain

The citrus in the wine would complement the citrus in the salad and the dressing, while the acidity found in the wine would help offset the creaminess of the hazelnuts and the avocados; enough fruit tones in the wine to complement the sweetness in the shrimp."







Ang Pompano is a mystery author, editor, publisher, and blogger. He writes the Blue Palmetto Detective Agency, and the Reluctant Food Columnist series, both published by Level Best Books. In addition to his writing, Ang is a co-founder of Crime Spell Books and serves as co-editor of the Best New England Crime Stories anthology. He lives in Connecticut with his wife and their two rescue dogs.






Diet of Death

by Ang Pompano


The first in the Reluctant Food Columnist Series


Betty Ann Green is a beloved culinary icon…who doesn’t exist. She is the brilliant, beautiful illusion created by two unlikely collaborators. Behind the façade is Quincy Lazzaro, a culinarily challenged writer whose witty, sharp prose is the public face of Betty, while those flawless, genius recipes are all thanks to his octogenarian neighbor, Mary Ticarelli.

When the arrogant diet guru, Dr. Alan Tolzer, inventor of the Westport Diet, demands a face-to-face interview, Quincy reluctantly steps in as Betty’s frontman, only for Tolzer to drop dead. The police call it natural causes, but Quincy knows better. He sees it as the investigative break he’s been waiting for.

Now, caught between a crime-solving grandma, a no-nonsense detective girlfriend, and a killer who may be one step ahead, Quincy must unravel the mystery before the killer strikes again.




Simmering Secrets

by

Ang Pompano


Book Two in the Reluctant Food Columnist Series


Coming November 2026


When celebrity chef Connie Langston collapses dead during a glittering anniversary gala at the prestigious Langston Culinary Arts Academy, struggling investigative reporter Quincy Lazzaro suspects there’s more on the menu than champagne and truffle risotto.

Unfortunately, Quincy has problems of his own. He’s secretly ghostwriting a wildly successful food column under the fake name Betty Ann Green, dodging anonymous texts from someone threatening to expose him, and trying to save his friends’ beloved South Norwalk luncheonette from ruthless developers. Now, against the warnings of the police and his detective girlfriend, Quincy finds himself pulled into a world of celebrity chefs, hidden rivalries, illegal luxury ingredients, and private dinners where the ultra-wealthy will pay fortunes to consume the forbidden.

With the help of his sharp-tongued elderly neighbor, Mary Ticcarelli, Quincy uncovers a web of simmering secrets stretching from elite culinary circles to dangerous underground supply networks tied to powerful people who will kill to protect their appetites.

As the bodies pile up and the anonymous watcher closes in, Quincy must decide how far he’s willing to go for the truth before his own carefully constructed life boils over.

Perfect for fans of Richard Osman, Carl Hiaasen, and culinary mysteries with bite, Simmering Secrets serves up murder, dark humor, found family, and a generous helping of Connecticut coastal charm. 






When It’s Time for Leaving

by Ang Pompano


The first in the Blue Palmetto Detective Agency Series



Buy Link


Al DeLucia walked away from the police—and his past. But when his long-lost father leaves him a detective agency in Savannah, Al finds himself trapped between family secrets and a murder on the agency’s dock. Partnered with Maxine Brophy, a fierce detective who doesn’t trust him, Al is pulled into a deadly search through Savannah and the Okefenokee Swamp—where the truth about the case, and his father, may cost him everything.







Blood Ties and Deadly Lies

by Ang Pompano


Book Two in the Blue Palmetto Detective Agency Series


Buy Link


Al DeLucia returns to Sachem Creek expecting a kayak race and a chance to confront his childhood bully, Abe Cromwell. Instead, he finds a dead lawyer, a web of deceit, and Abe claiming they’re brothers by DNA. Reluctantly joined by Maxine Brophy, his formidable partner and girlfriend, Al dives into a murder investigation that exposes land swindles, hidden maps, and buried family secrets. In a town where the past won’t stay buried, Al must face truths that could upend everything.







Snakeberry: Best New England Crime Stories 2025


Edited by

Christine Bagley, Susan Oleksiw, Ang Pompano, and Leslie Wheeler


BUY LINK


Every year the anthology brings welcome surprises and satisfactions, and this year is no different, featuring stories by 21 of New England’s best crime writers.


Includes “Minnie the Air Raid Warden” by Ang Pompano.














Saturday, May 30, 2026

Crispy Rice Cereal Chicken #Recipe Peg Cochran/Margaret Loudon

  

 


This was a real crowd pleaser.  My granddaughter gave it five stars.  I always have chicken breasts in the freezer but I didn't have any tenderloins.  I pounded chicken breasts until they were fairly thin and then cut them into strips.  Same effect but less expensive than tenderloins.  You can use name brand rice cereal for this but the store brand works just fine too.  You can also play with the spices and add or eliminate depending on your family's tastes.  Confession time:  I forgot the flour and just dipped mine in the egg and cereal.  It was still delicious.  This recipe is adapted from What Molly Made.

1 1/2 lbs chicken tenders tendon removed (or chicken breasts pounded thin and cut into strips) 

1/3 cup flour gluten-free if needed

2 large eggs

2 cups rice cereal

1 teaspoon kosher salt

1 teaspoon garlic powder

1/2 teaspoon onion powder

1 teaspoon paprika
1/4 teaspoon black pepper

 

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

 

Place flour in one dish and beaten eggs in a separate dish

 

Combine rice cereal with salt, garlic powder, onion powder, paprika and black pepper.  Place in another dish.

 

Dip each piece of chicken in flour, then in egg and finally in rice cereal.

 

  


 

Place in a single layer on a baking sheet and bake 12 to 15 minutes or until temperature reaches 160 degrees.  Chicken will continue cooking to 165 degrees

 



  
 
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 . . .
 

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