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Wednesday, July 12, 2023

#COOKING WITH CLORIS--GUEST AUTHOR AND NON-COOK DEBRA H. GOLDSTEIN AND THE COOKBOOK SHE WROTE

Today we welcome back Debra H. Goldstein, author of the Sarah Blair Mystery Series as well as several other award-winning mysteries and short stories. A retired judge, Debra has also served on the boards of several writing organizations. Learn more about Debra and her books at her website where can also download a free copy of the cookbook she cowrote with her sleuth.

The Culinary Evolution of a Character and an Author

When my first two books were orphaned by their respective publishers, I knew I wanted to try my hand at writing a cozy mystery series. As I analyzed the genre, I realized there was no problem writing a small town, amateur sleuth, or even adding a cat to the story, but I had a dilemma. Most cozies highlight cooking or crafts – two things I hate. I thought my cozy career was over before it began until I realized there had to be readers who were like me. Consequently, Sarah Blair, a woman who finds being in the kitchen more frightening than murder, was born. 

 

Sarah, who was married at eighteen, divorced at twenty-eight, and only walked away from the marriage with her Siamese cat, was easy and fun to write. The problem came when I was told I needed to include recipes. As a non-cook, this again was almost a no-starter until I decided to only use recipes Sarah might actually make with simple or pre-made ingredients. Because I, in my real life, often bring Spinach Pie, made from Stouffers Spinach Souffle, when I’m asked to bring a vegetable to a potluck, that dish found its way into One Taste Too Many as Sarah’s Spinach Pie. Looking for something comical, I found the perfect recipe advertised in 1950s and 1960s magazines – Jell-O in a Can.

 

As I was under contract for more books in the series, I had to come up with more recipes that Sarah and I could both make. Not being particularly comfortable in the kitchen, I focused on drinks and hors d’oeuvres for Two Bites Too Many. The result of my efforts was inclusion of the Classic Wine Spritzer, the Howellian Catnip, and Sarah’s Sweet Potato Puffs the Convenient Way.

 

Until the pandemic closed the world, I envisioned being able to coast my way through the series by adapting recipes from some of my favorite cookbooks (Peg Bracken’s I Hate to Cookbook, and its sequel, The Appendix to the I Hate to Cookbook, and Come for CocktailsStay for Supper) or that I found online. Not so. Since March 2020, I have cooked more, with the help a few days a week of Home Chef meals, than I cooked in the previous thirty-six years of my marriage. 

 

I’ve learned to make a meatloaf that sticks together, chicken that isn’t pink when you cut into it, and a steak that doesn’t taste like shoe leather. I’ve also learned that if the digital readout on the stove reads F3, it’s on fire, while F8 means the brain has blown.

 

My experimentation in the kitchen and begging from friends for recipes gave me a different perspective for the recipes included in Three Treats Too Many. This time, I included recipes Sarah would make, but also slightly more complex things her twin, Chef Emily, would prepare, as well as vegan recipes the book’s victim was a success with. 

 

In Four Cuts Too Many, I went with comfort food, something I enjoyed during Covid times – Emily’s Egg Salad, Sal and Laurie’s Tiramisu, and Stained-Glass Jell-O. Despite becoming more familiar with my kitchen during the past few years, I’ve concluded that neither Sarah nor I will ever think of it without an element of fear over what disaster might next befall us or possibly poison those we love. I regret this, but my publisher, doesn’t.

 

My publisher has decided Sarah and my forays into the kitchen are so funny that they’ve created a cookbook of the recipes from the first four books. It’s called Simple Recipes from the Sometimes Sleuth. You can download a copy of it for free from my website. Who would ever have thought Sarah and my culinary skills would evolve to the point of having our own cookbook?

 

Five Belles Too Many

A Sarah Blair Mystery, Book 5

 

When Sarah Blair’s mother is a finalist to win the perfect Southern Wedding in a reality TV show competition, Sarah is pressed into service as Mother Maybelle’s chaperone. After the show’s producer is found dead, with Sarah’s greatest nemesis kneeling by the body, Sarah must find the true killer before any other contestants or crew are permanently eliminated.

 

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7 comments:

Debra H. Goldstein said...

Thanks for having me today!

Anonymous said...

Fun blog, Debra. Congratulations on the series and the cookbook! A personal favorite of this non-cook is the 4-ingredient cookbook.

Mary
M. E. Bakos

Pamela Ruth Meyer said...

Debra, what a brilliant spark of an idea for a character built from your own personal (and negative) reactions to 'cooking and crafts.'I love how it turned out to be the unique and compelling hook for a novel series. It's inspiring to see the birth of a new idea come to fruition. Thanks for sharing it with us.

Linda Chudej said...

Where has this sleuth been all of my life??? I don't like to cook...but I love cookbooks so how perfect for me is this series of cozy mysteries! I'm so glad Sarah's about to come into my life.

Debra H. Goldstein said...

Mary, Pamela, and Linda.... thanks for chuckling along with me. I always say that besides my downloadable "Simple Recipes for the Sometime Sleuth," my favorite cookbooks were written by Peg Bracken - the "I Hate to Cook" Cookbook and the "Appendix to the I Hate to Cook" cookbook. Appreciate you leaving comments today.

Saralyn said...

Love the way not even kitchen-trepidation can stop Debra/Sarah from writing. Clever slant on recipe collections, too.

Debra H. Goldstein said...

Thank you. I'm not much in the cook, but I can find humor in the kitchen (or avoiding it).