Featuring guest authors; crafting tips and projects; recipes from food editor and sleuthing sidekick Cloris McWerther; and decorating, travel, fashion, health, beauty, and finance tips from the rest of the American Woman editors.

Note: This site uses Amazon affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Showing posts with label truffles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label truffles. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2016

#COOKING WITH CLORIS--GUEST AUTHOR KATHY AARONS AND IRISH CREAM #GANACHE

Kathy Aarons is the author of the nationally bestselling Chocolate Covered Mystery series. Research for the series was such a hardship: sampling chocolate, making chocolate, sampling more chocolate, and hanging out in bookstores. Learn more about Kathy and her books at her website. 

Being a Chocolatier is Not for Wimps

When I started writing the Chocolate Covered Mystery series, I had no idea how to make chocolates. Luckily for me (and the readers), I didn’t have to create the recipes myself. I was able to use my local chocolatier’s recipes. Isabella Knack, owner of Dallmann’s Fine Chocolates, was a wonderful resource not just for recipes but also for insight into the life of a chocolatier.

All of what she taught me went into the character of Michelle Serrano. The long hours of creating products and running a small business with all the complications of suppliers, employees and customers. The crafting of new recipes and taste-testing on (what had to be) enthusiastic volunteers. The balance of work, family and life. The challenge and joy of matching customers to their favorite truffles.

Of course, I had to test all of Isabella’s recipes (a nice perk!) to ensure that they worked.

Over the course of three books, I’ve become a little better at making truffles, even though they’ll never be the pieces of art that Isabella creates. It’s easy to understand why someone would make this a career – just the scent of melting chocolate alone is worth all of the work.

And how fun it must be to give other people so much happiness in one little bite!

The following recipe is in Behind Chocolate Bars, the third book in the Chocolate Covered Mystery series. It was one of the most delicious recipes I’ve ever tried – simpler than it looks and totally amazing to taste.

(I visited Isabella in her kitchen and the attached photo is the finished product of this recipe, although she didn’t use premade molds. Those fancy truffles are the result of air-brushed melted chocolate.)

Irish Cream Ganache (yields 100 pieces)

Ingredients:
3/4 cup Heavy cream
1/4 cup Glucose syrup
1-3/4 cups Dark chocolate
4 tsp. Butter
2 T Irish Cream

Premade chocolate molds – available at candy shops and online

Combine the heavy cream and glucose syrup in a saucepan and bring to a boil. Pour the hot cream mixture over the chocolate and let sit for 2 minutes.

Using a spatula, stir the mixture in small circles of the bowl until it emulsifies.

Stir the soft butter into the ganache until it’s incorporated. Add the liqueur, stirring until the mixture is homogeneous.

Pipe into premade chocolate molds. Chill

Behind Chocolate Bars
Double, Double-boil, and Trouble…

Best friends and business partners Michelle and Erica have a monstrous to-do list as they prepare for the annual West Riverdale Halloween Festival. Their shop, Chocolates and Chapters, will have a booth at the event, where Michelle will serve spooky delights while Erica displays an assortment of spine-chilling books. Thank goodness the teenagers from Erica’s comic-book club are chipping in to help. But one of their volunteers winds up in trouble after a woman’s body is found in an abandoned house—with the teen’s superhero key ring close by.

The teen swears he didn’t do it, but he’s obviously hiding something—leaving Michelle and Erica with a witch’s cauldron of questions. Soon they discover that the dead woman was tricking a whole bunch of people out of more than just treats. Now these two friends must go door-to-door if they hope to unmask a killer…

Buy Links

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

TRAVEL TO FRANCE WITH GUEST AUTHOR LISE McCLENDON

Chateau de Puymartin, Dordogne, France
photo by Manfred Heyde
Lise McClendon is the author of 11 mysteries and thrillers, and also writes as Rory Tate. Her latest release is The Girl in the Empty Dress, now available in print and e-book, at all major retailers.Learn more about her and her books at her website.  

Novelist, Take Me Away

Does setting matter? As a writer and reader I enjoy the “take-me-away” aspect of new and different places in fiction. Off to a foreign land without all the inconveniences of travel. I’ve used settings as far away as Moldova but my two novels set in France are close to my heart.

The books feature Americans, but they rely as much on their setting as almost anything else. Far from the stylish boulevards of Paris and the sunny beaches of the Côte d’Azur, their setting is the Dordogne province, originally called the Perigord. This southwestern region is a fertile land known for its wine, foie gras, duck confit, and black truffles. Its back roads wind through deep canyons, with villages clinging to cliffs. Here the Hundred Years War was fought and Nazis laid waste to the land. Remnants of war and violence remain.

Dordogne River
photo by Luc Viatour/www.Lucnix.be
Much of the first book, Blackbird Fly, is centered around small village life. In the second book, the Bennett sisters, all five lawyers, take on a walking tour of the Dordogne. Merle Bennett, the middle sister, is turning fifty. The “girl” in the title of the sequel, The Girl in the Empty Dress, is a law colleague of one sister. Rude and demanding, her secrets become the key to unraveling several mysteries.

History really comes alive in these old places where the ‘bastide’ walls are still solid after 800 years. But the delicacies of this area are the real delights. Black Perigord truffles are famous around the world. Difficult to harvest, they are becoming scarcer as climate change alters their natural habitat in these sunny hills and valleys.

Dogs are often trained today to hunt truffles. A highly trained truffle dog is very valuable to any truffle hunter. In The Girl in the Empty Dress the women come across an injured dog in a ditch. This dog, they soon find out, is famous for its truffling exploits. How it got to be injured and out on its own sets off the mystery.
Truffles
photo by Poppy

I went on a French walking tour myself. Six women, a love of wine and cheese, and winding trails through the vineyards made for a fabulous time. Later I saw a “Sixty Minutes” story on truffles. They interviewed a dog owner who had his prized truffle dog stolen. He searched for years in vain for her. I decided to write about a stolen truffle dog. In trying to plot the story, the walking tour came back to me. The dynamics of a small group are always interesting. The sixth wheel, the woman who is secretive and annoying, sets up the conflict. As a writer, once you come up with the central conflict you’re off to the races.

A delicious setting doesn’t hurt of course.

The Girl in the Empty Dress
Merle Bennett is spending another summer in France, vacationing with her four sisters, tramping around the back roads of the Dordogne. The sixth member of the tour is a law colleague, Gillian Sargent. When Gillian finds an injured dog along the roadside and wants to keep it for her own, the idyllic summer trip of sisterly bonding and wine drinking turns dark and dangerous. In this corner of southwest France of dark, oaky wine, rocky hills, and earthy truffles, Merle must juggle sibling bickering, her teenage son, two boyfriends, and the law. All she wants is to unwind in the golden light of France. But France has a few tricks up its sleeves again. Thanks to a sad little dog and a woman with too many secrets.

Buy Links