Multi-published mystery author Anne Louise Bannon is
also the co-author of Howdunit:
Book of Poisons http://amzn.to/2adDfl7.
She also writes the romantic fiction serial WhiteHouseRhapsody.com.
Anne has been a journalist, a TV critic and the founder of several blogs,
including, with her husband Michael Holland, the wine education blog OddBallGrape.com.
Learn more about Anne and her books at her website.
Fried Chicken and Me
In
my new novel Bring Into Bondage, my
characters Freddie and Kathy arrive at her parents’ farm in Kansas in the
summer of 1925. Yes, there are nefarious goings-on
– this is a mystery, after all. But before that, it’s suppertime and Katie
Marie Briscow insists on doing up a full
meal for her daughter and the supposed friend who brought her out.
It
was a fun scene to write, as there’s a lot going on. Katie Marie is busily
directing supper preparations, who’s sleeping where,
and finding out how her ailing husband is doing, all the while frying chicken.
Here’s
the thing. I can’t fry chicken to save my life. I’ve used thermometers,
adjusted the temperature, egg-washed, you name it. It either comes out
blackened and still raw inside or cooked through and mushy crusted. Blech. I’ve
even accosted older women in supermarkets looking for the secret.
Please
keep in mind, as a cook, I’m pretty competent, even inspired some days. You want a nice fish meuniere? I’ve got it. Real Bolognese sauce? I’m there with bells
on. Need me to whip up a quick dinner with only five ingredients? I won’t even
break a sweat.
But
to fry chicken, like my mom did, like my
grandma did (and probably her mother before her), so not happening.
Okay.
I actually have to amend that. Not too long ago, The Beloved Spouse and I were
planning our weekly menu and there was a package of boneless chicken thighs in
the freezer. So he suggests using it, and I realized I need some photos for
this post, so I suggest frying it.
I
thawed the thighs in buttermilk, then pulled them out of the fridge almost two
hours before dinner. Yeah, that’s right, about two hours before I cooked them.
See, the one thing I’d been most worried about trying was starting with the
chicken at room temperature. We all know that letting chicken get anywhere
within the Danger Zone between 40 and 140
degrees Fahrenheit means you will be
doing the bathroom tango with that lovely couple
Sam and Ella. Or Salmonella.
Actually,
it doesn’t. Truth be told, you generally (though not always) have two hours
before the germies get going, and even
then, that’s not a guarantee that you’ll get sick. I’m not advocating
carelessness here. There are good reasons we take those precautions. But it’s
not a death sentence if you let your chicken get to room temp before frying it.
Which
is why I tried it.
And
have discovered the secret to frying chicken. Seriously. Start with everything
room temperature. I floured my chicken thighs, let them rest for a couple
minutes, then got out my cast iron pan. I poured in enough oil for it to get
about half an inch deep, put the chicken in and started the flame.
Wow.
Golden crispy on the outside, moist and done on the inside. How the heck did
that happen? This was supposed to be a document of my failure.
Sadly,
I’m in worse shape now than ever. Now that I’ve done it once, The Beloved
Spouse wants me to try again. And again. And I do need to try the experiment
with bone-in pieces from the whole bird. I’m not holding out hope, but it would
be nice to be able to make fried chicken (you should pardon the expression) on
the fly, just like Grandma did. Just like I described in my novel.
Bring Into Bondage
It's back to the
Roaring Twenties with Kathy Briscow and her socialite author boyfriend Freddie
Little. Freddie arrives for what he hopes will be a very special date with
Kathy only to find her in a tizzy and packing. There's been trouble brewing on
the family farm in Hays, Kansas, and now Ma Briscow has summoned Kathy home
because her father is deathly ill. It's about the only thing that could get
Kathy in Freddie's plane. The two fly to Kansas and are greeted by a shotgun
blast.
It's all sorted
out very quickly, and Pa is still very sick but has survived the worst.
Vandals, however, have been attacking the farm repeatedly. Kathy and Freddie
decide to stay and find out what's going on before someone gets hurt even worse
than when Pa got dunked in the creek.
Not that Kathy's
family doesn't have their own secrets. Her brother Joshua has returned home
with a new bride that he forgot to tell his family about. And Kathy's youngest
brother, Gamaliel, has an even darker secret. In town, there's nastiness afoot,
as Freddie meets a frightened young boy with telltale bruises, and then the boy
turns up dead on the Briscow farm.
Kathy and Freddie
get caught spooning behind the barn, and Pa Briscow gets his shotgun out. Even
the threat of being goosed down the aisle isn't half the trouble Freddie and
Kathy face, when there's another body found and Freddie gets arrested for
murder.
1 comment:
Love that photo! Great Summer meal.
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