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text 2018-01-29 14:20
Food in Fiction: A Writer’s Delicious Story Device

 

Waring! A mouth watering post. 

 

-- A guest post by Evy Journey --

 

 

We can’t live without it. Yet sometimes, it can be poison.

 

When we gather together to celebrate or even commiserate, we usually offer food and/or drink. Even at funerals. On first dates, we’re likely to take our potential amour to dinner or, at least, meet her for coffee or a drink. Sometimes we binge on food to calm our nerves.

 

We are what we eat. So, when Evy Journey writes novels, she includes food/eating scenes.

 

She says they’re a delicious way to help define mood or setting, as well as activity. Even character. They can also draw readers in emotionally. Plus, she loves writing cooking and dining scenes.  

 

For instance, in Hello My Love, Book 1 of her trilogy, Between Two Worlds, the main characters reconcile at an Indian restaurant where they order tandoori lamb and mango lassi. Choosing an ethnic eatery offers a glimpse into their personalities—open and exposed to things exotic or often unfamiliar to Americans. It also serves to subtly situate where the story happens (a fairly cosmopolitan city). Three of Evy’s five novels are set in the San Francisco Bay Area.

 

Hello, My Love! (aka: A Modern Love Story) (Between Two Worlds Book 1) - Evy JourneyHello, Agnieszka! (Between Two Worlds Book 2) - Evy JourneyWelcome, Reluctant Stranger (Between Two Worlds Book 3) - E Journey

Between Two Worlds series

 

There’s always a good cook in her stories, including a mother who only prepares Polish dishes in Hello Agnieszka (BTW, Book 2) and the computer nerd hero of Welcome Reluctant Stranger (BTW Book 3). So when she ramps up food talk in her latest novel Sugar and Spice and All Those Lies - Evy JourneySugar and Spice and All Those Lies, it seems natural and inevitableGina, the heroine, cooks at a Michelin-starred restaurant catering to a rich and privileged clientele.

 

Evy warns, though, that S&S&ATL uses cooking and food as a device to show how the heroine grows. In that sense, food isn’t really the focus of the story although there are ample references to it.

 

Rather, the story shows us how food affects those who make them and those who consume them. It’s more about the cook’s passion for creating dishes that give pleasure (and life). And more about how we relate to food than how it makes us salivate, lick our fingers, tease our taste buds, or what satisfies our cravings.

 

REQUEST->

 

Has she cooked any of the dishes in her latest book?

 

Yes, she has. When she mentions a dish in a scene, it’s one she’s familiar with, either from having eaten it or cooked it.

 

Evy often uses this teaser to S&S&atL:

Chanterelles Garnished with Cream and Mayhem.

She says it captures both the culinary and crime aspects of the novel.

 

Has she made the chanterelles dish?

 

Many times, and without using a recipe. For her, when it comes to savory dishes, recipes are merely guides. She claims to be a use-what-you have, taste-as-you-go adventurous foodie. Below she’ll tell you how she prepares it.

 

 

It’s a different story when it comes to baking. She does follow recipes. To the letter when she first tries it. Then, she’s likely to tweak it when she makes the recipe again.

In the book, Gina’s mother is the daughter of a murdered French chef. She inherited her father’s passion for cooking and passes it on to Gina. In one scene, she serves her guests gougère and fig tart with almond cream.

 

Evy has made both dishes a few times. She first tasted fig tart with almond cream in Paris and has been hooked on it ever since. She shares her recipes below, adapted from one she uses for Pear Tart.

 

 

Making Chanterelles in Cream Sauce

 

Evy  talks about how to make this dish in a An adventurous Foodie in Paris: A Simple Plate of Chanterelles. The only caveat she has is to use more chanterelles than onions. :

 

A pound of girolles (common French word for chanterelles) goes a long way in both quantity and taste; and they are easy and fast to cook—even away from home. Sauté some sliced onions or shallots in oil or butter until soft, dump the sliced girolles in, splash that leftover white wine, salt and pepper to taste, cook at high heat until soft and nearly dry, about 5 minutes. Before serving and with the heat still on, spoon some crème fraîche (or good sour cream) into the mix. If you have it and like it, sprinkle a little tarragon, and you’re all set. Go vegetarian and place a sunny-side up or poached egg on top and you will feel like you’re eating at a king’s table. For meat eaters, we’ve served this with sausages from a charcuterie. All good on top of couscous or just savor it with a crusty baguette.

 

 

A Couple of Pastries

 

Alain Ducasse’s Gougères  Recipe

Gougères are cream puffs with cheese. You don’t need to fill them.

 

The traditional recipe uses gruyere but Evy has substituted other kinds of cheeses and increased the quantity as much as half a cup more. You can make a lot of these and freeze some to serve another time. They last months in the freezer.

 

Ingredients

1/2 cup water

1/2 cup milk

1 stick (4 ounces) unsalted butter, cut into tablespoons

Large pinch of coarse salt

1 cup all-purpose flour

4 large eggs

3 1/2 ounces shredded Gruyère cheese (1 cup), plus more for sprinkling

Freshly ground pepper

Freshly grated nutmeg

How to Make It

Step 1:  Preheat the oven to 400°. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper. In a medium saucepan, combine the water, milk, butter and salt and bring to a boil. Add the flour and stir it in with a wooden spoon until a smooth dough forms; stir over low heat until it dries out and pulls away from the pan, about 2 minutes.

Step 2:  Scrape the dough into a bowl; let cool for 1 minute. Beat the eggs into the dough, 1 at a time, beating thoroughly between each one. Add the cheese and a pinch each of pepper and nutmeg.

Step 3:  Transfer the dough to a pastry bag fitted with a 1/2-inch round tip and pipe tablespoon-size mounds onto the baking sheets, 2 inches apart. Sprinkle with cheese and bake for 22 minutes, or until puffed and golden brown. Serve hot, or let cool and refrigerate or freeze. Reheat in a 350° oven until piping hot.

 

Notes

When making the choux pastry, it is important to be sure that each egg is fully incorporated into the batter before adding the next. Don't worry if the batter separates and looks curdled at first. Keep beating, and it will come together nicely.

If you use 1½ cups cheese, reduce butter to 6 tablespoons.

 

Fig Tart in Almond Cream

Evy loves anything in almond cream. This is a versatile recipe. You can substitute other fruit.

You can use figs fresh, but you may need to lightly stew others like pears (very good in almond cream).

 

Tart Shell

2 tablespoons sugar

1/3 cup ground almonds

11/4 cups flour

6 tbsp butter

1 pinch salt

1 egg

1 tbsp sour cream (or more as needed)

 

Evy makes the tart dough the easy, lazy way: Throw the first five ingredients into a food processor and whirl until the butter is well incorporated. Then, add the egg and sour cream (or lemon juice)  and whirl again until you have a coherent mass. The sour cream helps tenderize the tart shell. Chill.

Use your own techniques if a food processor doesn’t do it for you.

 

Almond Cream Filling

6 tbsp butter, softened

2 large eggs

1 cup almond powder

4 tablespoons cane sugar

Figs (cut in half and enough to line the tart shell.

Almond extract or vanilla

Apricot jam to brush over the figs when the tart is baked (0ptional).

For the almond cream, whisk together or whirl in a food processor sugar, butter, and almonds until well mixed. Mix in the the eggs one by one.

Roll out the dough on a floured surface and place it in a tart shell.

Spread the almond cream on the bottom of the dough. Place fig halves on top of the almond cream.

Bake for 30 minutes on 350F. Cool before cutting into wedges.

Yum!

 

Follow Eve Journey's blog on BookLikes: 

http://evictoriajourney.booklikes.com/

 

Don't miss our interview with Evy and win Sugar and Spice and all Those Lies!

 

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text 2016-05-25 00:56
Author Tuesday Interview and Giveaway – Kenneth Logan

It’s time for my favorite day of the week, Author Tuesday!

 

This week we are featuring an interview with Kenneth Logan author of of True Letters From A Fictional Life publishing on June 7, 2016 (see my review here).

 

It currently has a 4.15 star rating on Goodreads and you can pre-order it from Amazon.

 

In addition to his interview Kenneth is giving away a copy of True Letters From A Fictional Life. So please enter away, using the Rafflecopter here (US only). Giveaway will be open till 11:59 pm MST Monday, May 30, 2016.

 

Please provide a quick intro about yourself and your writing.
truelettersfromafictioalife

I grew up in Freehold, New Jersey. Before moving to Brooklyn, I taught high school English in Vermont and San Francisco. I’m just finishing my third year of a doctoral program in literacy education at New York University. True Letters from a Fictional Life is my first novel.

 

1) Why should people read your book?

I’m told the story’s a funny and realistic portrayal of the quiet turmoil experienced by some gay high school kids. (The quiet turmoil’s less funny than other parts of the story.) Apparently many people still believe that gay people choose their sexual orientation. It’s a misconception that contributes to a lot of hate and misery. I hope this book goes at least a little way toward helping people understand what it’s like to grow up as a gay kid in a straight world. And for readers who closely identify with the main character, I hope it’s a story that gives them courage and makes them feel less alone.

 

2) Where is your favorite place to write?

At the moment, I don’t have a favorite place to write. I write anywhere I can whenever I can do it. I’m getting better at writing on the subway.

 

3) What are you currently working on (new book, remodeling your home…)?

I’m working on my second novel and my dissertation. The new novel involves a suburban cult and aerial drones and a couple of boys who are reluctant thieves. The dissertation explores the relationship between students’ reading comprehension performance and vocabulary knowledge. If anyone would like to finish the dissertation for me, please get in touch.

 

4) What is your favorite comfort book (the book you re-read because of how it makes you think/feel)?

I reread David James Duncan’s essay The Mickey Mantle Koan often. It’s just a beautiful piece of work. It brings me back to kicking the ball around in the front yard of the house where I grew up, and it reminds me why some of us spend so much time scribbling in the first place—there’s something we’re trying to get right.

 

5) What is the next book in your TBR (to be read) pile?

The Road by Cormac McCarthy. I’ve never read it. Shameful, I know.

 

6) Turn on your music player and hit shuffle – what song/artist comes up first?Logan photo

Pinocchio by Miles Davis

 

7) What’s your random talent (balancing a spoon on your nose, saying the alphabet backwards…)?

I can do a pretty convincing Glaswegian accent because my parents are from Glasgow, Scotland. When I was in high school, I listened to Billy Connelly’s comedy routines to hone the skill. I’m way out of practice at the moment.

 

8) Ask the reviewer – what question have you always wanted to ask a book reviewer?

Do you have a particular person in mind when you’re writing reviews—for instance, a specific friend or family member—or do you write for the general reading public? Laura – I write a review that I would want to read. I am always interested in the details of the book as a whole, not just the synopsis. That is why I include a brief overview of the plot, writing, pacing, world built, emotions and characters as well as my feelings and observations on the book.  

 

Connect with Kenneth – @KennethLogan14

Source: 125pages.com/author-tuesday-interview-giveaway-kenneth-logan
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text 2016-04-01 07:01
It’s My Blogiversary!!

blogiversary

 

Welcome to 125Pages’ 1st blogiversary!! I am so excited and can hardly believe it has been a full year since I went down the internet rabbit hole and discovered book blogging. It has been a busy year, but it has also been fun and rewarding. To celebrate my first year I have a packed schedule of reviews, guest posts, surprises and giveaways for you to enjoy. All giveaways will be hosted on my main site 125Pages.com. Check out the main article and enter here.

 

officecelebration

 

I have reviewed 204 books so far this year and will add another 24 by my official anniversary date (April 22) for a grand total of 228 reviews my first year.

 

I will have had 20 authors participate in Author Tuesday by the end of April.

 

I started the United States of Books with a bunch of amazing bloggers.

 

I have a whole new look from when I first started. The Wayback Machine has a great archive if you really want to check it out. It is very different now, and I am very thankful that we have an amazing graphic designer at the office who just emailed me my (current) header one day as he said he could not take the boring of the old one.

 


 

Now on to the fun stuff. I am celebrating, but you are the real winners. Here is the list of guest posts and giveaways for the month. 

 

soexcitedgif

 

April 1 – A guest post by author Amy Avanzino on how she finds inspiration for her writing. This post will feature two Kindle copies of her fantastic novel Wake-Up Call for grabs. Will run April 1 – April 7.

 

April 8 – Grace over at Rebel Mommy Book Blog will talk about how and why she chooses the books she does to review. A shiny $20.00 Amazon Gift Card will be this weeks prize. Will run April 8 – April 14.

 

April 15 – A guest post from author C.H. Armstrong about a historical event that ties in with her fantastic historical fiction book. There will be two prizes. The grand prize will be a signed copy of The Edge of Nowhere and an Oklahoma Cherokee Rose Rock (US only) and first prize is a digital copy of The Edge of Nowhere. Will run April 15 – April 21.

 

April 22 – Hayley from Rather Too Fond of Books will come and tell us how she goes about blogging and the kinds of things that seem to attract more followers (she is at over 2,000 in just about seven months). This post will feature your choice of 4 Clamshell candle tarts from NovellyYours* (US Only) as your reward. Will run April 22 – April 28.

 

April 29 – Nicole from Feed Your Fiction Addiction joins us to walk us through running her fantastic Monthly Wrap-Up meme. Your choice of a BunnyHell* mini book necklace (INT as long as the shop delivers to your country) is on tap for one lucky winner. Will run April 29 – May 5.

 

I will also have my two regularly scheduled Author Tuesday giveaways. April 12, 2016 – Amy Avanzino author of Wake-Up Call with two more Kindle copies, and on April 26, 2016 – Tegan Wren author of Inconceivable with 2 Kindle copies of her book!

 

All of my April Soapbox Saturday discussion posts will have a $10.00 Amazon gift card reward drawing for participating. Just comment or link to your recent discussion posts to enter. All giveaways will be open till the next Soapbox Saturday posts. April 2, April 9, April 16, April 23 and April 30.

 

likeitmore

 

Now if that’s not enough for you, we have the actual blogiversary giveaway! One winner will receive a $50.00 Amazon Gift Card and 2 winners will receive a copy (Kindle or physical) of any book mentioned on my site. It can be a review, a Top Ten Tuesday, a Waiting on Wednesday, in a wrap-up, whatever! If you can find it, you can have it! (Provided it is already published, as I cannot provide ARCs and if physical that Book Depository* delivers to your country.) (INT) Enter this one via the Raffle copter here. Giveaway will be open April 1 to May 6, 2016.

 

behappy

 

Thank you all for your support and kind words over the last year. Year one has been amazing and I’m sure year two will be even better!

 

 

 

*I am not affiliated with these companies, I just like their stuff.

 

 
Source: 125pages.com/its-my-blogiversary
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