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Monday, November 30, 2015

#COOKING WITH CLORIS--GUEST AUTHOR VINNIE HANSEN AND FLAN RECIPE

Award-winning author Vinnie Hansen fled the South Dakota prairie for the California coast the day after graduating high school. Her eventual home in Santa Cruz serves as the backdrop for most of her Carol Sabala mystery series. She also loves to write short stories. Learn more about her and her and her mysteries at her website. 

When my mystery series starts with Murder, Honey, my protagonist Carol Sabala is a baker who fantasizes about becoming a private investigator. I didn’t set out to write a “foodie” mystery. At the time, the sub-genre didn’t exist. Rather I made my heroine a baker so she would be something other than the English teacher I was. I didn’t want readers to envision Carol Sabala as me. Little did I know back then that everyone who knows me would picture Carol as me even if I made her a green Martian.

Writers are admonished to write about what they know, or to know about what they write. My husband at the time was a baker/sous chef at a fancy restaurant here in Santa Cruz, the model for Archibald’s in Murder, Honey. I was able to pick his brains for the inner workings of a restaurant and baking tips.

My choices became problematic when my husband and I divorced. Good thing I gave Carol Sabala the dream of becoming a private investigator. One arc of the series is her transformation into a detective. However, to make ends meet, Carol continues to work at Archibald’s. Many of the mysteries flit back into the restaurant, and all of them contain a recipe related to the theme of the book.

Since Death with Dessert, the fifth book in the series, takes Carol to Mexico, I wanted a Mexican recipe for the book.

If you’ve traveled to Mexico, you’ve probably noticed the absence of abundant desserts. Mexican culture does not emphasize baked goods like pies and cakes, possibly because of the tropical heat or because wheat is not the commonly used grain. Many of the desserts that do exist are made on the stovetop rather than baked. Even the classic flan was traditionally cooked on the stovetop.

My own “flan” is nothing more than the custard from Betty Crocker. For Death with Dessert, I wanted a recipe for a traditional Mexican flan, the type the Mexican-American parents of my students made, a heftier and more substantial dessert. Put it this way, the flan I consider “real” Mexican flan can be cut and served like a cake.

So I hounded a worker at “my” school for her recipe. She was enthusiastic about helping but took a long time. She finally forked over a scrap of paper with a list and basic directions. I realized that she made her flan by heart. Rather than pester her for specifics, I experimented, using the most common sizes for the “cream cheese,” “condensed milk,” and “evaporated milk.” From the delicious results, my calculations must have been correct. Here’s what I came up with:

Sylvia’s Flan 
8 oz. cream cheese at room temperature
5 eggs
8 oz. can of sweetened condensed milk
12 oz. can of evaporated milk
1 tsp. of vanilla (I use more!)
2 cups of sugar to make syrup (Or less. See directions.)

Heat oven to 350 degrees F. Blend all of the ingredients except the sugar. (In spite of a ton of whisking on my part, the mixture was never 100% smooth.)

Prepare the syrup by melting the sugar slowly in a saucepan over low heat, stirring constantly. (In my opinion, this creates more syrup than necessary. One could halve the amount.) Once the sugar has melted, pour the resulting syrup into an 8-inch square pan. Let the syrup harden for 10 minutes.

Pour the mixture of the other ingredients over the syrup. Place the 8-inch pan in a larger pan. Fill the larger pan with hot water to within a half inch from the smaller pan’s top. Bake for about an hour. To test the doneness of the flan, insert a knife into its center. The blade should pull out clean.

Chill. Unmold at serving time by inverting the pan.

Death with Dessert
A dead mother.  A missing father. A mysterious man.

They all spell trouble for private investigator Carol Sabala. When Carol’s mother dies unexpectedly, Carol is left with no family—only money, grief, and an envelope. Her mother has charged her with a mission: deliver the envelope to her long-lost father. En route to Zihuatanejo, Mexico to track down her father Carol encounters the alluring Mark Escalante, who snares her in a deadly pursuit of his own.

Buy Links

Want to win a free copy? Vinnie is offering five copies of Death with Dessert through Goodreads. Click here for details.

10 comments:

Angela Adams said...

I can see this now with my mug of hot chocolate. Thanks for the recipe!

M. Johnston said...

Kudos on the idea to adjust your protag's goal when your research go-to was no longer available. Best of luck with the series.

Terry said...

Vinnie, your post was perfect for a cold, wintery day. I'm a huge flan fan (say that three times fast!) and plan (uh oh, too much rhyming) to make your recipe right away. And it's gluten free!

Vinnie Hansen said...

Angela, have you tried Mexican chocolate? Another yummy treat from south of the border.

Vinnie Hansen said...

Thank you, M. Johnston. I've completed book seven, Black Beans & Venom, the final book in the Carol Sabala series.

Vinnie Hansen said...

Hi Terry-Thanks for responding. I had originally thought to title Death with Dessert, Flimflam Flan, almost as hard to say as flan fan. :)

Vinnie Hansen said...

Hi M. Johnston--Thanks for responding. I've actually completed the Carol Sabala series with book 7, Black Beans & Venom.

Kassandra Lamb said...

I'm not a huge fan of flan (also hard to say quickly), but my husband is. I may bake this for him. Love the cover, by the way!

shannon said...

I've actually never eaten flan...I'll have to put that on my list of things to try. Love a good mystery with recipes though!

Vinnie Hansen said...

Kassandra & Shannon - Thanks to both of you for dropping by. I personally love flan. While I wanted to offer a traditional Mexican version to go with this book, I prefer the lighter, and healthier, custard from Betty Crocker.