Friday, September 16, 2022

ON CARROT CAKE #RECIPES AND HEADSTONES

By Lois Winston

 

Authors find inspiration everywhere, sometimes in the strangest of places. On a trip to northern California a few months ago, I found myself walking through a quaint Victorian town one gloomy afternoon. After a rainy morning, my sister-in-law suggested it as a good place to stretch our legs.


The town didn’t disappoint. I particularly enjoyed strolling around some of the antique shops and an old-fashioned general store. However, the pièce de resistance was that hillside cemetery. Cemeteries, especially old ones, fascinate me. Several years ago, I spent hours wandering around one in Key West.


I know many people purchase their cemetery plots in advance, and some even have their headstones carved, minus their death date, which gets added after their demise. I suppose it makes life easier for those they leave behind. Sometimes people include quotes, often from the Bible or a favorite poem. Some headstones are inscribed with tongue-in-cheek sayings. However, this cemetery was the first I’ve ever come across that contained a grave with a complete recipe etched into the stone!


And it apparently isn’t even a fabulous, prize-winning recipe. According to the title, it’s only A Good Carrot Cake recipe. A look at the front of the tombstone and its companion, shows that it’s obvious this couple has quite a sense of humor. It makes me wonder about the backstory of the carrot cake recipe. 



I suppose I could have looked up the couple and asked. According to the markers, they’re both still alive, but I lacked the courage. It’s possible everyone in town knows the story behind the gravestone recipe, but I didn’t ask anyone. 
Instead, I took some photos and filed this bit of trivia away for future reference. Someday it just might show up in one of my books. I’ve already warned Anastasia.


15 comments:

  1. You definitely have to use this in a mystery with a clue hidden in the recipe.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks, Debra! I figured everyone needs a good chuckle every so often.

    Nancy, a clue in the recipe would be fabulous. Now all I need is a plot!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hilarious! And a clue in the recipe would be amazing!

    ReplyDelete
  4. that's different and fun. Makes me want to know more about those people.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Shari, it certainly would!

    Maggie, glad you enjoyed it. I'd sure like to know more about them, too.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Too funny. Might have borrow for the inevitable future. LOL

    Mary
    M. E. Bakos

    ReplyDelete
  7. You've inspired me to go cemetery-hopping. There are a million stories there, and a million mysteries.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I love walking through cemeteries looking at headstones. I love the history of it all.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Absolutely hysterical. What a find! You must must must use it in an Anatasia story.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Mary, I may have to arm-wrestle you for it!

    Saralyn, every deceased person has a story, and I'm sure most have secrets and backstories that would be great fodder for plots. The interesting thing here is that this couple is still alive.

    Carol, wouldn't it be fabulous if we could access the history of all those anonymous people?

    Gay, I don't think I have any choice at this point. It will definitely somehow find its way into the next book.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Wow. And I was just talking about carrot cake with a couple of friends. Got to share this with them!

    ReplyDelete
  12. I wonder just how good that carrot cake recipe is, T.K. Personally, I've never cared for carrot cake (although I do love zucchini cake), so I won't be whipping one up any time soon.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Lois, this is hysterical! Definitely a great way to hide a clue in a mystery.

    ReplyDelete