Saturday, May 16, 2026

Creamy Parmesan Chicken #Recipe Peg Cochran/Margaret Loudon


 


 This was a quick and tasty chicken dish that is elegant enough for company.  You can get fancy if you want and sprinkle with chopped parsley before serving. The recipe is adapted from one by How to Feed a Loon.  I used Italian seasoning in place of the oregano and basil and I also added frozen peas so it was meat and a vegetable dish all in one dish.  I'm all for making things easy!  It is good served over rice or a side of pasta.

Chicken

6 6-oz chicken breasts skinless, boneless, pounded thin (or cut in half horizontally)

Salt and pepper to taste

1 teaspoon smoked paprika

2 tablespoon olive oil

 

Sauce

2 tablespoon unsalted butter

4 teaspoon garlic minced (or “jarlic”)

½ cup white wine  

1 tablespoon all-purpose flour

¾ cup chicken broth  

 ¾ cup heavy cream or half and half

½ teaspoon dried oregano

½ teaspoon dried basil

½ teaspoon salt or to taste

½ teaspoon black pepper or to taste

½ cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese  

frozen peas, optional

If your chicken breasts are thick, cut in half horizontally.  Season with salt and pepper and smoked paprika. 

 

Heat olive oil and brown chicken on both sides.  Remove to a plate and cover.


 

Melt butter in the same skillet, add garlic and sauté briefly.  Add wine and scrape up any browned bits from pan.

 

Stir in the flour and cook for one minute while stirring.  Add chicken broth and whisk until smooth and slightly thickened. 

 

Turn the heat to low and whisk in heavy cream, Parmesan, basil, oregano and salt and pepper to taste.

 

Return chicken to pan along with optional frozen peas if using and simmer until heated through.


 

 

  
 
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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Friday, May 15, 2026

Slow Cooker Chicken and Lentil Curry from Vicki Delany

I love chicken, I love lentils, I love my slow cooker, and I love curry.  So this was a perfect recipe for me.  The lentils add a depth of richness and extra flavor to the dish. Passata can be expensive, so next time I make this I might just strain a can of tomatoes and add a couple of spoonfulls of tomato paste.  


Slow Cooker Chicken and Lentil Curry

Ingredients:

2 tbsp butter

2 large onions, thinly sliced

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 ½ tbsp garam masala

1 lb chicken thighs, bone in. Remove skin if you prefer.

2/3 cup passata

8 fresh bay leaves

2/3 cup red lentils

1 ¼ cup chicken or vegetable stock

Salt and pepper

Cucumber and yoghurt topping (optional)

2/3 cup plain yoghurt

¼ small cucumber, cut into fine ribbons

Directions:

Melt butter in large skillet. Add onions and cook over medium heat until lightly browned. Add garlic and garam masala, and cook for further 3 – 4 minutes.  Place onion mixture in the slow cooker. Add chicken to the hot skillet and cook until browned, about 5 minutes.

Add chicken pieces to slow cooker. Add passata, bay leaves, lentils and stock. Cover with lid and cook on HIGH for 3 – 4 hours.

If desired, make the topping by combining cucumber slices and yoghurt.

Season curry with salt and pepper.  Remove bay leaves and discard. Serve curry topped with yogurt mixture, if desired.








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

 

 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Guest Victoria Hamilton, Slow Cooker Stuffed Peppers, #recipe @vmburns #giveaway

 

VMBURNSToday, I'm thrilled to have Victoria Hamilton in the kitchen. Victoria is the author of the Vintage Kitchen Mystery series, and will be sharing news about the newest book in the series, MASHER OF CEREMONIES. Welcome, Victoria!




Victoria HamiltonHello, readers! First, a big thank you to Valerie Burns for offering me one of her usual days on Mystery Lovers Kitchen. I appreciate it so much; I always love coming here to share a recipe. Before you get into that recipe, please don’t miss my Giveaway at the end of my post. I’m giving away an Amazon Gift Card!

In case you don’t know, Jaymie Leighton Mṻller, the heroine of my Vintage Kitchen Mysteries presents, at the end of each mystery book, a vintage recipe she has re-imagined in a more modern form. At the end of Masher of Ceremonies (Out May 19th from Beyond the Page Publishing!) it happens to be a German-origin comfort food, Schinkennudeln. If you want to know what that is… check out the book!

Here at Mystery Lovers Kitchen I have for you a recipe for Stuffed Peppers done in the slow cooker! These are easy, tasty, and warmly comforting, and yet don’t heat your kitchen up on the hottest summer day. A win-win in my books.

But first, may I blow your mind for just a sec? Did you know that bell peppers are a FRUIT?? Yes, indeed they are. They are actually a BERRY. Say what??

I didn’t know that until I did a little poking around to find out why bell peppers are called bell peppers. Was there a Mrs. Bell? Did they look like a bell to someone? And then I got totally distracted by the fact that they are berries.

Anyhoo, bell peppers, a plant of Central and South America, were called peppers simply because that was the name given to most hot or spicy plants, and bell peppers, first called so in the 17th century because, yes, someone thought they looked like a bell.

Have you ever had stuffed peppers? Though it is thought that people have stuffed peppers since they first started cultivating them, the modern iteration of this dish that we all grew up loving – or, if you were like most kids, loathing – was in cookbooks as early as the 1890s.

A word about the peppers; it’s customary to use green peppers in this dish. In truth, green, red, orange and yellow peppers are all the same plant, but the red/orange/yellow color comes when the pepper ripens. When they are green and underripe they have a stronger flavor, with a bitterness that some think pairs well with the mild flavor of rice and ground beef. However, if you are catering to fussy palates, I would advise the more colorful peppers for the milder flavor profile.

For my dish I came across some pretty ones in the grocery store called Aloha peppers. They’re striped in reds and oranges and were irresistible.



Traditionally, stuffed peppers is a baked dish, and you could bake these; they will hold their shape better. But using the slow cooker renders them soft and easy to eat, and the aim here is to make a food like peppers more appetising to those fussy palates I just spoke of! These turn out delicious, oozy, cheesy and delectably fork-tender.




SLOW COOKER STUFFED PEPPERS



(Makes 4 large, or 5-6 smaller.

Ingredients

4 large or 5-6 smaller bell peppers – see instructions to prep (Use whatever colour you like!)

Pieces of the peppers when cap is removed, diced fine

1 small onion, diced fine

2 fat cloves of garlic, diced fine

¾ lb lean ground beef

1 cup cooked rice (I used Basmati)

8 oz cream cheese

1 cup grated Monterey jack cheese

½ tsp smoked paprika

½ tsp onion powder

Salt and pepper to taste


1 – Prepare peppers. Evenly cut off the cap of the pepper, discard the stem, seeds and membrane, then dice the left-over pieces of pepper. *Note; a serrated grapefruit spoon works great for taking the membrane out of the pepper!

2 – Fry the hamburger gently, scoop out of pan and set aside. If there is too much oil in the pan, discard it. Otherwise…

3 - Dice the onion and add it and the diced red pepper to the pan and sauté in the oils from the hamburger until onion is translucent and pepper is softened. Add the diced garlic for the last minute, and cook until soft.

4 – Add cooked beef, rice, cream cheese and grated cheese to pan and warm through until the cheese is melted.

5 – Stuff mixture into prepared peppers, patting down to fill every cavity, and place the peppers in a slow cooker, with a little water in the bottom. I like a ‘casserole’ style slow cooker, but whatever you have that the peppers will fit into will work fine.

6 – Cook on low for 3 hours, or until the peppers are cooked, but still hold their shape.


Serve!

These were absolutely delicious. You could alter the ingredients if you like to make a larger or smaller batch. Enjoy, my friends, while you read my Vintage Kitchen Mystery #13, Masher of Ceremonies! 


GIVEAWAY: Comment to enter to win a $50 USD Amazon Gift Card. Draw is open to Canada and US readers and closes Midnight, May 19th! Tell me your favorite comfort food, please, or if you have ever made/eaten stuffed peppers!







A fundraiser for the local historical society nearly goes bust when someone fills the coffers with blackmail and murder . . .

The annual Tea With the Queen fundraiser always makes for a festive weekend in Queensville, drawing visitors from far and wide and giving local shops a welcome boost. This year, vintage kitchenware collector Jaymie Müller is running the event, and she’s got her hands full organizing old and new volunteers along with a surly catering crew. Then her master of ceremonies tells her he’s being blackmailed but can’t go to the police, and before Jaymie can sort that out she stumbles over a dead body at the tea.

 Despite the demands of keeping the event up and running, Jaymie can’t help puzzling over the murder. There’s no concrete evidence linking the cretin behind the blackmail scheme to the dead body, so she begins questioning everyone connected to the blackmail, hoping to expose the killer. And just as she discovers a web of relationships that leads her to the culprit, she realizes that the Tea With the Queen may have been a royal pain, but outwitting a blackmailer and catching a killer may be the death of her . . . 

BUY LINK


Social Details:

Website: http://www.VictoriaHamiltonMysteries.com (Sign up for her newsletter for all the latest!)

On Substack (Sign up for newsletter there… always FREE!): Go to: https://substack.com/@victoriahamiltonmysteries and ‘Subscribe’ for the FREE Victoria Hamilton Mysteries newsletter!

On  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VictoriaHamiltonMysteryAuthor

On BlueSky: @mysteryvictoria.bsky.social

On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mysteryauthorvictoriahamilton/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/598635.Victoria_Hamilton

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Victoria-Hamilton/e/B007T7LGAU


Victoria Hamilton is the pseudonym of nationally bestselling romance author Donna Lea Simpson. Victoria is the bestselling author of three mystery series, the Lady Anne Mysteries, the Vintage Kitchen Mysteries, and the Merry Muffin Mysteries. She also wrote a Regency-set historical mystery series, starting with A Gentlewoman’s Guide to Murder. Visit her website at victoriahamiltonmysteries.com.



Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Butter-Shoyu Chicken #recipe by @LeslieKarst


Here's another recipe from my brand new Orchid Isle mystery, Murder, Local Style

Shoyu Chicken is a popular dish in Hawai‘i (“shoyu,” the Japanese word for soy sauce, is what the condiment is commonly called in the islands), and is often part of the traditional plate lunch, along with mac or potato salad and steamed rice. But this version, which includes butter, as well, is truly spectacular, as the glaze of salty and savory shoyu along and sweet and creamy butter makes for an especially rich and tasty dish. (Feel free to use low-sodium soy sauce if you’re watching your salt intake.)

Serve the chicken with scoops of steamed rice and a green vegetable—with the excess sauce used as a gravy for the rice—for a simple and luscious meal.

 

(Note that I doubled the recipe here, and used two pans to fry the 8 chicken thighs.)

 



Butter-Shoyu Chicken

(serves 4)



Ingredients


For the Sauce


¼ cup soy sauce

¼ cup sake

3 tablespoons mirin

1½ tablespoons white sugar


For the Chicken


4 large chicken thighs, bone-in with skin, at room temperature

¼ teaspoon salt

½ teaspoon black pepper

2 tablespoons neutral oil, such as canola

½ cup sake

3 tablespoons unsalted butter

2 green onions, roughly chopped, for garnish



Directions


Combine the sauce ingredients (soy sauce, sake, mirin, and sugar) in a bowl and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Set aside.

 



Season both sides of the chicken with the salt and pepper.

 



Heat a large, heavy skillet over medium heat and, when hot, add the oil to the pan. Carefully lay the chicken in the pan, skin side down. Cook uncovered until golden brown and crisp on the bottom, about 5 minutes. Turn the chicken over and continue to cook for 3 more minutes, until lightly browned. 

 



Remove the chicken to a plate and pour off any excess oil in the pan, leaving any brown bits that remain.

 


Return chicken to the pan and add the ½ cup of sake. Cover and continue to cook over medium heat until the liquid has evaporated and the chicken is cooked through, about 7 minutes. (An insta-read thermometer inserted into the thigh—not touching the bone—should read at least 165 degrees F.)

 



Add the sauce ingredients and the butter to the pan. Once the butter melts, continue cooking uncovered over medium heat for 2-3 minutes, spooning the sauce over the chicken repeatedly until it forms a glaze. 

 




Serve the chicken with a final drizzle of sauce over it and garnished with the chopped green onions. Pour the sauce remaining in the pan into a small pitcher for diners to use on their rice and/or chicken as they wish.


🌱  🌸 🌿

 

Just Released!

Orchid Isle Mystery  #3

MURDER, LOCAL STYLE

Available for purchase here.

 

"The beauties and customs of Hawai‘i provide a striking backdrop for a murder with an unexpected motive."

Kirkus Reviews 

 


 🍍 🌴 🍹

 

Out now in paperback!

Orchid Isle Mystery  #2

WATERS OF DESTRUCTION

Buy link here

 

2026 Lefty and Agatha Award Finalist

for Best Mystery/Contemporary Mystery!

 

"Immerse yourself in Hawaiian lore and savor the portrayal of the stunning landscapes
while enjoying the entertaining mystery."

Kirkus Reviews

 



Also available

in paperback!

MOLTEN DEATH

Orchid Isle Mystery  #1

Buy link here

 

2025 Lefty Award Finalist

for Best Mystery!

 

“Karst’s first Orchid Isle novel is part murder mystery, part vividly evocative, colorful sketch of Hawaii and its history, geography, tradition, culture, food, language, and people. Armchair travelers and mystery aficionados alike will find it entertaining.”

Booklist

 


This first book in my brand-new Orchid Isle mystery series features retired caterer Valerie Corbin and her wife Kristen who, on a trip to the Big Island of Hawai‘i, swap surfing lessons for sleuthing sessions when a hike to an active lava flow turns deadly. 

 

Praise for MOLTEN DEATH:


“a compelling read that will enlighten, engage, and entertain, leaving readers longing for their next trip to the Orchid Isle.”

--New York Times bestselling author Jenn McKinlay




“a terrific debut to a series that will go on my must read list!”

--USA Today bestselling author Deborah Crombie

 

 

A SENSE FOR MURDER

2024 Lefty Award Finalist

for Best Humorous Mystery!

This newest Sally Solari mystery

is available for purchase here !

 

Praise for A SENSE FOR MURDER:

 

“[Sally is] sassy, irresistible company... Culinary cozy fans will be in heaven.”

 --Publishers Weekly

 

“An enjoyable read for mystery mavens and foodies alike.”

--Kirkus Reviews




Justice is Served:  A Tale of Scallops,

the Law, and Cooking for RBG

is the 2024 Silver Medal Winner for both the

IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award

and the IPPY Award!


Buy link here



 

 
 
Praise for Justice is Served:
 
"a suspenseful, exhilarating memoir; Karst relays her determination to serve the 'perfect' meal to RBG alongside an uplifting, enlightening portrayal of one of the most admired justices in the history of the Supreme Court." 
 

-Foreword Reviews (starred review)

 

"[This] book is a romp from cover to cover—and, just like a great meal, left me ready for more."

-Karen Shimizu, executive editor, Food & Wine-



All of the Sally Solari Mysteries (as well as my other books) are available through AmazonBarnes and Noble, and Bookshop.