Thursday, August 29, 2024

Good Food Wherever You Look!

HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Standing ovation and rose petals and champagne! It is always such a joy and an honor when we are graced with the presence of the inimitable and fabulous Catriona McPherson.


(And I will never forget the key she offers to pronouncing her name: Her first name is  like the hurricane, and the last name rhymes with what you would call a human. A...person. Isn’t that perfect on so many levels?)


Speaking of perfect. Catriona has a new book! (Dandy number 16, incredible, and I fell in love with her at book 1.) And now I cannot wait to read THE WITCHING HOUR. 


But first: the Menu.


And then some very very serious discussions. About food. Yay.



Good Food Wherever You Look!

by Catriona McPherson


In the opening scene of THE WITCHING HOUR (Dandy Gilver #16), it’s Hugh Gilver’s sixtieth birthday and he has been allowed to choose the menu for his birthday celebration. 



That was the rule when I was wee: the birthday girl got to choose dinner. From my mum’s repertoire, that is; we knew better than to ask for steak tartare and choux-pastry swans on a tempered chocolate lake.


(In fact, we would have run a mile from steak tartare – raw mince and raw egg? Yukko – and didn’t know that the stuff eclairs were made of had a name.)


Hugh, aided and abetted by Mrs Tilling, the Gilverton cook, chooses to revisit his Victorian childhood and Edwardian youth with a dinner in the grand old style. The menu is:

Clear soup

Poached fish

Pigeon terrine

Gooseberry sorbet

Roast beef

Salad

Suet pudding

Cheese

Coffee and bon-bons


I imagined the soup to be chicken and the fish to be salmon, but toffs of the time wouldn’t go to town describing things on the menu so I didn’t either. 


My choice – one course and pudding – was more likely to be gammon steak, with a ring of pineapple as God intended, roast potatoes, peas and corn (the sweetest vegetables because, even though it was a birthday, you still had to have vegetables) and for pudding: birthday cake. Obviously.




I can’t imagine setting to on the kind of dinner menu that was typical among the upper classes at the turn of nineteenth to twentieth century.


Not that there’s anything on that menu I wouldn’t eat – in fact haven’t eaten – but more because nine courses requires you to eat hardly any of each dish. I find that exhausting. 


Modern tasting menus regularly give me a headache and sometimes give me the giggles. (Not that I’m against “fine dining”. I’d love to go to the Manoir au Quat’ Saisons once in my life, for instance.)


But, you know, when the menu item is six lines long and the dish, when it appears, is two polite mouthfuls or one normal one? Hilarity ensues. One time, I put my reading glasses on to try to find the celery that had definitely been mentioned in writing. Turned out it was the edible string holding together a posy of deep-fried thyme on top of the scallop.


(It might have been a lamb fillet. But it was the size of a scallop.) 


I think the meal that Dandy and Alec wheedle out of a shut kitchen in a pub, halfway through the book, sounds much nicer: tea in a brown china pot and freshly cut sandwiches of thick white bread, ham and pungent pickled something. If I was hungry, that’s the kind of food I’d fall on.


Speaking of scallops as we were, though, I recently hosted Leslie Karst and her wife Robin, for brunch on my porch. Neil said, when I told him, ‘You’re cooking for the woman who wrote JUSTICE IS SERVED? Are you nuts?’ I’ll admit, it did give me the collywobbles. That book’s subtitle is a tale of scallops, the law, and cooking for RBG. There’s a chapter on finding the right plates!


Leslie’s menu for Justice Ginsburg was as follows:


Salted cashews and rice crackers with wasabi peas

Seared sea scallop with ginger lime cream sauce

Roasted butternut squash soup with brown butter

Baby spinach, blood orange, red onion, dried cranberries, pine nuts and gorgonzola

Blackened ahi, wasabi mashed potatoes and snow peas

Patisserie


Perfect, right? A bit more detail than “poached fish” etc, but no novellas, and a special but sensible five courses plus the hors d’oeuvres. 


My menu for brunch on the porch was:


Mushroom and potato frittata

Courgette ladders*

Bacon

Sourdough and butter

Fruit salad and Greek yoghurt


And I wished I hadn’t remembered that episode of Modern Family where someone tries to sneer at Cameron by assuming he’ll serve frittata and he says, “Are we eating in 1998?” Gah.


Thing is though, when I shared Neil’s supportive (not!) words with Leslie on my porch that Sunday morning, she said something both striking and true – “The thing about people who love to cook is that they’re people who love to eat and so they love it when people give them food.”


Isn’t that the truth? As long as you’re not a picky eater – and I eat everything except two-bite eyeballs – there is no downside to someone laying down a plate of lovingly cooked or swiftly assembled food in front of you.


Posh food with wasabi, peasant food with nameless pickles, curries so hot you can see the future, Wonderbread sandwiches with olive loaf and Miracle Whip (as described in the 1980s section of Jess Lourey’s THE TAKEN ONES, which I am reading now and which makes me want to find a retro deli). It’s all good. 




I think having to eat whatever my mum made while I was growing up and only getting to choose my own dinner once a year is probably a big bit of why I’m such an omnivore now, but it does take me ages to choose in a restaurant – everything sounds lovely!


What do you think? Did you have to clear your plate as a kid? Do you like when people cook for you? What would you choose if – let’s say Leslie Karst, to make it easy – was in your kitchen right now raring to go? I’m nosy as well as greedy, see? 


HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Oh, that’s SO difficult!  Standing rib roast with yorkshire pudding and asparagus?  


And we had the three-bite rule. You had to take three bites of everything, and then you could eschew (!!) the rest.  


How about you, Reds and Readers?


(And I adored Leslie’s book!)



*Griddled zucchini – makes a lot of smoke in the kitchen but worth it and uses up a good bit of glut at this time of year.






Serial awards-botherer, Catriona McPherson (she/her) was born in Scotland and immigrated to the US in 2010. She writes: preposterous 1930s private-detective stories, including September 2024’s THE WITCHING HOUR; realistic 1940s amateur-sleuth stories about a medical social worker; and contemporary psychological standalones. These are all set in Scotland with a lot of Scottish weather. She also writes modern comedies about a Scot out of water in a “fictional” college town in Northern California. She is a proud lifetime member and former national president of Sisters in Crime.  www.catrionamcpherson.com 




THE WITCHING HOUR


It’s the spring of 1939 and Dandy Gilver, the mother of two grown-up sons, can’t think of anything except the deteriorating state of Europe and the threat of war. Detective work is the furthest thing from her mind. It takes a desperate cri de coeur from an old friend to persuade her to take on a case.


Daisy Esslemont’s husband Silas has vanished. It’s not the first time, but he has never embarrassed her with his absences before.


It doesn’t take Dandy and her side-kick, Alec Osborne, long to find the wandering Silas, but when they track him down to the quaint East Lothian village of Dirleton, he is dead, lying on the village green with his head bashed in, in full view of a row of alms houses, two pubs, a manse, a school and even the watchtowers of Dirleton Castle. And yet not a single one of the villagers admits to seeing a thing.


As Dandy and Alec begin to chip away at the determined silence of the Dirletonites, they cannot imagine what unites such a motley crew: schoolmistress, minister, landlord, postmaster, park-keeper, farmworkers, schoolchildren . . .


Only one person – Mither Golane, the oldest resident of the village – is loose-lipped enough to let something slip, but her quiet aside must surely be the rambling of a woman in her second childhood. Dandy and Alec know that Silas was no angel but “He’s the devil” is too outlandish a claim to help them find his killer. The detecting pair despair of ever finding answers, but are they asking the right questions?



86 comments:

  1. Oh, my . . . now I'm hungry!
    Congratulations, Catriona, on your newest book . . . it does sound as if Dandy and Alec have quite a mystery to solve . . . .

    If I had to choose, Hank, I think I'd pick lamb with mint sauce, roasted potatoes, and snow peas . . . chocolate for dessert, please, because there simply must be something chocolate!

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  2. I don't remember being told X number of bites, but there was usually less of something that I didn't like than the stuff I did. And I was expected to clear what was on my original plate. There weren't as many rules if I went back for me.

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    1. We had to eat all of the main course, but didn't have to eat pudding (= all US desserts) if we didn't want to. Hmmmmm, I see what they were doing.

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    2. That was Catriona, by the way!

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    3. Lord! So was that. More coffee maybe . . .

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  3. What a delightful post, Catriona. We found a little French bistro in Boston for a late lunch yesterday, and I took forever to decide what to order. I wanted everything.

    I was the only omnivore of the four kids in my family, and if Leslie came to cook, I would ask for Ruth's meal. (I highly recommend her book to everyone.)

    Congratulations on the new Dandy, one of my favorite series. You must tell us how old you are in that picture!

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    1. I couldn't stop thinking about the ginger lime cream sauce on the scallops after I read it!

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    2. Aw, thanks, Edith. Those scallops are easy to prepare, but oh, SO delish!

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  4. Welcome Catriona, and what a fun post! your menu and your book sound devine:)

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    1. Thank you, Lucy. I was trying to avoid the first seventeen step verification of the day, but in vain!

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  5. CATRIONA: Welcome to Jungle Reds!

    Happy book birthday! Look forward to reading the new Dandy Gilver mystery. I remember when you came to our Sisters in Crime meeting in California. Your name is easier in Sign Language than trying to pronounce a name. I tend to read the letters and pronounce the names as it is spelled. I learned many years ago that names and words are written differently from the way they are pronounced and it also depends on where you are. For example, the words "cake" is pronounced Ca /ek. Not sure if it is pronounced that way in Scotland.

    If I was hosting guests, I would serve something like Spinach salad if it is a hot day. One of my specialities is vegetarian lasagna so I would serve that on a chilly day.

    When I was a kid, my tastes were very bland. I did not like spicy food. I preferred fruits to vegetables. And sometimes the only thing I would eat was bread. My parents encouraged me to try tasting something new. If I tried something and did not like something, then my dad was more than happy to eat my leftovers. He could eat anything. He grew up in extreme poverty and often had to hunt for his own food to feed his siblings and himself.

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    1. Oh yes! My best-friend-from-babies across the road had a dad who got out of Berlin in 1938 after an unspeakable winter. He could eat ab-so-lute-ly anything and he made what looked like gourmet food for his family every night. Steak stuffed with whisky soaked oatmeal? On a Tuesday? For children? Their house was very different from mine!

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  6. What a fun post, Catriona! I must confess to salivating over the description of food in several reliably enticing series, especially Lucy Burdette's Key West Food Critic Mysteries. Hayley Snow regularly cooks and prepares food, samples several different dishes in real Key West restaurants and assists her mother in catering lavish feasts. I have baked some of her treats and they taste better than most bakeries' confections. I also wouldn't say no to dining with Georgie and Darcy, now that they have a French chef, and I definitely would dine with Gemma and Duncan if they ever get to sit for an uninterrupted meal!

    Childhood and food. Ah, the memories flood in. I think my father understood that it wasn't only taste but texture. No one seemed to understand that the smell of green vegetables cooked until gray, was a serious problem for the skinny little thing. I have memories of sitting at the table long after the departure of everyone else because I hadn't consumed whatever I had been told was the minimum. Alas. I'd still be sitting there today if certain adults hadn't relented.

    Your new book sounds terrific. Will you continue the series into the war years?

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    1. Judy, we are sisters in food bullying! I was typing the same thing while you were typing this. The cold mashed potatoes were the worst. Ugh.

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    2. Karen: My sister loved to take cold, leftover mashed potatoes to school. Just the potatoes, no gravy.

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    3. You poor wee sausage, Judy. My parents went down the "eat it or go hungry" route - less traumatising, I reckon. Karen, I'm sure your sister is a lovely person . . .

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  7. What a fun post, Catriona! I love to eat and to cook, and I'll happily enjoy anything Leslie wants to serve. I'm not picky if someone else is cooking. Congratulations on your latest book, which I must go off and find. Thanks for being here today.

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    1. Occasionally, witnessing someone's kitchen hygiene has dented my appetite, but otherwise I'm with you.

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  8. Hiya, Catriona! Hope you and Neil are well. Trying to wrap my head around 16 Dandy's! I remember when the first ones were only published in the UK as physical books, right? They were hard to find, so I had the early ones as ebooks.

    My family had to eat what went on our plates, alas. I was always a skinny little kid, and hated seeing the seemingly vast piles of food put in front of me; it was a battle every night. Luckily, it didn't put me off food altogether, and I will try almost anything once. And pretty much have, usually with good results. We had the same rule about birthdays. My picks were always my mom's wonderful fried chicken, mashed potatoes, peas, and cake and ice cream. I still wouldn't say no to that meal. Or any meal someone else cooks, really.

    The last meal I served to friends was a ladies' lunch: Salad picked from the garden, with a homemade Green Goddess dressing from my herbs; cherry gazpacho with cucumber and red pepper garnish (WaPo recipe), and Prosecco. Two guests brought pastries. The meal was so pretty that my friends took pictures.

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    1. It sounds visually gorgeous and very toothsome, Karen. I love gazpacho!

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    2. Karen, surprisingly, I also grew into an adult who appreciates a broad range of cuisines, flavors and textures. Although I am not as adventurous about sampling exotic meats as some commenters (Grace, for one), I don't have a problem finding something on almost any menu. I adore cooking and baking for others and will rise to any challenge, preparing food for allergy sufferers, vegans or fuss budgets.

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  9. My mom suffered through being forced to eat, so she was more understanding with us. The only things I remember not liking were liver, deviled eggs, and cornmeal mush.

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    1. I've got no idea what cornmeal mush is - polenta? grits? - but I would choose devilled eggs off any menu where they appear, and I've got liver in my freezer right now!

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    2. As an adult, I came around on deviled eggs. And mush is very similar to those, and strangely, I’ve always loved grits.

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  11. Ah, Catriona and ah, food! What a nice way to start the day! As kids we pretty much were expected to TRY everything, a bite or two at least, and except for liver and onions, I didn't complain. I enjoy cooking, and agree that it is a honor and a joy to eat a meal made by friends who also find it fun to turn ordinary (and sometimes unusual) ingredients into a pleasurable repast. The photo of your courgette ladders inspires me to throw some zuke on the grill this weekend. It's vegetable heaven this time of year, and cooking outdoors has its own magic.

    Congratulations on publication of THE WITCHING HOUR. I look forward to reading it!

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  12. I will try, try again. Welcome, Catriona! I bet Hugh is delighted to pick his special menu, no doubt with comments about how things were done in the good old days. I can't wait to get caught up with the Gilvers and Alec.

    We kids had to clean up our plates, like it or not. It was a treat to go to dinner at a local cafeteria. My usual was roast beef, mashed potatoes, green beans, and strawberry shortcake. I was laughing at the Wonder Bread sandwich. Does anyone still make olive loaf?

    As for someone else cooking for me, I'd be happy with anything!

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    1. Olive loaf is my secret vice - it's still around, but hard to find.

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    2. Olive loaf is essentially bologna studded with pimento-stuffed green olives. My local supermarket has Boar’s Head brand, so I’m not getting any for a while. Google has a picture and better description: https://www.google.com/gasearch?q=olive%20loaf&source=sh/x/gs/m2/5

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    3. Yes, Boar's Head, too bad about a reputable company allowing one plant to neglect hygiene to this degree. I can't imagine what they can do or how many years it will take to resuscitate their reputation. We just saw an update on the noon news. Devastating!

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  13. CATRIONA. Yes, I had to stay and eat all meals. Breakfast was the problem. Cereal soggy with milk made me eat slower and slower. I would eat almost anything for lunch & dinner.

    LESLIE K's RBG menu is tasty, although there was so much prep & angst to get every part of that dinner just right. I would eat whatever Leslie is willing to cook for me!

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    1. Ha! Though much of that angst had to do with the guest more than the menu, lol.

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  14. As a kid growing up no one "turned up their nose" at anything my mother cooked. If we were stupid enough to say we didn't like something my mother's comment was "all the more for us, then." So we ate what was put in front of us. Or we went without; no one was catered to. It seems to be different with kids I know today. We did, however, get to choose our birthday menu and mine was almost always pork chops in mushroom gravy with mashed potatoes. Strawberry shortcake for dessert.

    I love when people cook for me. Why is it when someone else cooks the same exact dish I cook, in the same exact way, it tastes better than when I cook it?

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  15. I don’t remember having any rules about eating other than we ate what was served. The birthday person got to choose the birthday menu and lick the beaters from the cake batter. I usually chose for my dad to make barbecued pork chops on the grill, since my birthday is in July, and chocolate cake with chocolate frosting. One time I chose lemon cake and orange sherbet.

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    1. Now you've started something, Brenda. What *is* sherbet? A drink? For me, it's a kind of fizzy powder, like early space dust, but I don't thing that's what it is here, right?

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    2. Sherbet is a sweet icy dessert that usually has some dairy but is more fruit (lemon, lime, or strawberry, etc) and ice than dairy. It can be served as a palate cleanser between courses.

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    3. No! Sherbet is kind of like Italian ice but with milk - I think. Like sorbet?

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  16. Congratulations Catriona! I love your post, especially the word collywobbles! We too were expected to clean our plates and allowed to choose our birthday dinner menu. I share my birthday with my twin (who is a minute older), but we were always in agreement about dinner--oven baked chicken, mashed potatoes, corn, and chocolate cake with chocolate icing. I can't imagine having RBG or Leslie Karst for dinner! I'd have to collywobbles too. I would probably fix something simple but good, like cod poached in butter and white wine and lemon.

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    1. Tell me the day and time for your poached cod, Gillian, and I will be there.

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    2. You had me at butter, Gillian.... (And the wine cod don't hurt, either.)

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  17. Trying to think of something for lunch so this is not a good topic. I am with Hank on the Prime Rib (rare) and Yorkshires and potatoes cooked in the pan.
    Tonight, we are a celebration of the sister being home and chemo over, and the cousins leaving from the summer. It will be crab – would prefer lobster, but needs must! Butter, buns, hot coconut rice, and in a few minutes, I will be making a (new) zucchini moist cake with cinnamon flavours and butterscotch sauce. Ice cream. Sunday more people will be here, so will try a sous vide lamb leg (the roast beef test was delicious) and need to find a recipe that involves lemon curd and blueberries (for son in law) or my grandmother’s rich strawberry shortcake (lots of butter) for daughter for dessert.
    Now as for lunch – saw a vegetable frittata cooked for King Charles which looked interesting. I wonder if I will need a nice frock and fascinator? Maybe just a fried egg sandwich…

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    1. Your celebration meal sounds wonderful - busy day ahead for you! Please, say a big Wooo-heee! to your sister and give her a hug from me.

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    2. Ooh, Margo, how quickly can I get a flight to Halifax? Your feast sounds fabulous! And you'll have to tell us how the cake turned out!

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    3. Charlene Miller-WilsonAugust 29, 2024 at 3:27 PM

      Margo, my go-to lemon and blueberry dessert is a trifle. Very yummy and easy (with store-bought angel food cake).

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  18. Congratulations! Love this post and so impressed you cooked for Leslie and her wife. Collywobbles describes it well.

    I think I'd settle for my menu last night. Barbecued ribs from the slow cooker, mashed potatoes and steamed fresh broccoli. I briefly considered adding cornbread, and would if I were serving to guests, but it was too danged hot to light the oven.

    About cleaning the plate? Nope, we had two rules in my house - you had to try at least a bite before you decided you didn't want it - that worked for me for everything except tripes which I decided was too ugly to even try, and you had to leave some for Mr. Manners.

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  19. Morning, Reds - I'm just up and caffeinated in California. Thanks, Hank, for having me back. And I will join you with your roast and YorkyPs

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  20. Good morning, everyone from Nashville! I am at Boucher, Khan, and racing around… But I am reading every single comment! I forgot about rack of lamb. Add that to my list. Catriona, you are such a rockstar! Love, love, love this, and I saw Leslie Karst last night, and pointed her to the blog! Xxx

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    1. Ah, I'm going to be missing you all. However, Jessie Chandler is here in my house right now and on Sunday I set off to visit Leslie Budewitz.

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    2. Ha ha! So much for dictation without proofreading! Bouchercon, of course!

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    3. I kind of liked Boucher, Khan, Hank!

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    4. I think I might need to fly to Montana for the convergence of Catriona and Leslie B!

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  21. The rule in our house was three bites of everything on the plate. Real bites, not baby bites. This was my mother's rule. Her mother-in-law did not like the rule. Grandma would load our plates and expected us to eat everything. In order to stop dramatic holiday dinners, mom would fix our plates. Much better.

    As adults were could choose birthday dinners. My birthday is in June and we get a heat wave just in time for my birthday. I often would change my roasted pork ribs to something lighter so the house didn't get over heated. I requested angel food cake, strawberries and whipped cream for my cake.

    I need to find this series. Haven't heard of it before today.

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    1. Of the many things that I had to learn when I came to the US (What's escrow?) the cake classification was not the least. Angel, devil, yellow, white, pound, sheet . . . ? These were all new to me. And if you do track Dandy down, Deanna, and start in the middle somewhere, email me for catch-ups if you need to.

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  22. Never understood "clear soup." As opposed to what? And a spicy meal for RBG seems about right.

    Congrats on the new book. I read all the Scot books in about a month. Loved them. This is a new series for me, so that will be fun.

    We were required to clear our plates, but our Father served up our plates from the head of the table. He customized them to our tastes, so I got the most potatoes and my little sister got most of the meat. Of most importance was that he portioned out all the broccoli before he made his own plate last. Birthday dinners included cakes but not choices.

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  23. Catriona! It made my morning to see your post--you AND a new Dandy! I can't believe it's 16 already!
    I think you were very brave to serve lunch to Leslie and Robin--when they were here visiting I took them to our fave local for fried chicken with cream gravy!

    I think we need a whole post of childhood food bullying. What horrible lifetime hang ups and hatreds formed from silly rules. Ours weren't bad, we just had to taste everything, there was no "think of all the starving children in China" at our table. The only thing I can remember ever refusing was canned peas, and I ate everything else, even liver! Imagine my surprise when I grew up and discovered how delicious fresh peas were.

    Birthday meal, hmm, so difficult. I'd take Leslie's scallops, for sure. Or maybe a very French duck confit with lentils. With a very British Sticky Toffee Pudding for dessert.

    We might want to clarify for Americans that suet pudding is probably much better than it sounds! I'd love to see a Victorian recipe.
    And now off to order Dandy!

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    1. That meal was delicious, Debs! But now you've got me salivating about duck confit....

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    2. I grew up on suet pudding for Christmas! It was awesome, especially with brown sugar rum sauce. I think there's a recipe in Mrs. Beeton's but only if you are planning to cook for a rather large household.

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    3. So much deliciousness in these comments! A can of French cassoulet (we used to bring it home to Scotland by the carload after trips) was always such an easy and consoling dinner on a cold night. And sticky toffee pudding is my favourite (as well as Eton mess). CD, come on! Dig deep - you can fry it in slices once it starts getting stale and it's even yummier.

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    4. Duck confit with Lentils???? Isn't that sacrilege? Debs, you have another 24 hrs to get your flight but you need to come to Sydney NS. She didn't get out of the hospital until 3pm and it is a 5 hr drive. Since I am taking a break - wasn't it Tuesday that Celia was supposed to have her surgery? Does anyone have any word?

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    5. Celia has posted on Facebook that she's home and glad to be there.

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  24. You are such a dear, Catriona. Thank you for including me in this terrific post! And that brunch you made for Robin and me was stupendous! (Still dreaming about that yogurt-disguised-as-clotted-cream).

    We also got to choose our menu for our birthdays as kids, but my choice--fried chicken with French fries--was nixed by my mom, who didn't relish the idea of deep frying. But that is often the menu I pick these days for my birthday when going out. Though sometimes it's steak au poivre. Or something with bèarnaise sauce....

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    1. My birthday dinner was my mother's "southern" fried chicken with gravy. I don't know what made it southern other than her being from Georgia.
      It took me years to realize what I really wanted was the gravy, made in the pan with all the yummy chicken bits after the chicken was done, rather than the actual chicken.

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    2. Yes, that yoghurt is pretty lush, Leslie. (5% Fage, everyone.) And ditto cubed on the gravy, Libby. I have been known to have a serving spoonful to top off Christmas dinner.

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    3. It is not easy to find yogurt that isn't nonfat! But well worth the trouble.

      Catriona, if you see this, will you and Jessie give one another a hug from me?

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    4. Trader Joe's! Greek Plain, full fat. It's delish!

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  25. A female detective novel is just what I love as they think so differently than a man would. This will need to go on my TBR list!
    For every meal, every day there were no choices. My mom had only a few standard meals: hamburgers, baked chicken, pork chops with stuffing, fish & chips purchased to go every Friday and beans & hot dogs every Saturday night. There was always jellow. The rule at our house was that you needed to finish everything on your plate. It was a fight with me every school day morning to get me to eat my breakfast as my tummy just did not want food that early. My sister hated the Saturday night beans. So the rule for her was that she needed to eat three beans before she could leave the table. Oh, the tears that she shed were heartbreaking! If I had to choose, there would be grilled swordfish, a green salad and a chocolate layer cake from The Beancounter in Worcester with chocolate mousse filling, a raspberry coating on the top smothered in chocolate butter cream frosting and a scoop of coffee ice cream! Alicia Kullas

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    1. I would always want someone else to grill my fish. I've got a tendency to overcook it that I can't crack.

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  26. Oh, this is thrilling!!!! I can't believe you're on #16! Love Dandy Gilver and the whole crew. As for food, I quit cooking after twenty years in the mom-kitchen trenches and will eat whatever anyone puts in front of me from the sheer joy of not having to cook myself. Also, I was raised in a "clean your plate or rot at the dinner table" family so the Hooligans were raised to take at least a "no thank you" helping. They had to try a tablespoon of whatever and then they could say "no thank you". They are both very exotic eaters now. Yay!

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  27. Leslie Karst's comment about food people is fabulous! I loved her menu for RBG, tried some of the recipes, and will be delighted to cook for you and Neil. No angst involved. And yes, I do already know the menu.

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    1. Looking forward to seeing you even more! But, truly, buttered toast and a cuppa will be welcome.

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  28. I was going to start with "if I were God," but I think that's too large of a stretch for anyone's imagination. So, I'll begin with if I were Santa Claus, Catriona McPherson would bypass my "good list" and land on the "exceptionally exquisite" list. The placement on this list is not entirely due to a beautiful dedication sent my way in Hop Scot, but that dedication is indicative of what a splendid human being she is.

    So, on to the food. Courgette ladders? I couldn't imagine what that might be, and I was most pleased when I saw it was grilled zucchini. Yum! The rest of your menu sounds just perfect for my tastes, too. I do admire your bravery in cooking for Leslie, who had cooked for RGB, although the peas in Leslie's menu are not to my taste at all. Of course, everything else she fixed sounds laboriously delicious. I would love to taste one of her meals she prepares in Hawaii with the ingredients there, so we'll pretend my kitchen is there. My favorite food in the whole world is still my mother's dressing balls with gravy, and my brother swears he can make them just like her. Of course, he hasn't invited me over when I visit my hometown to eat said dressing balls. I'm not a big fish eater, but the cobia fish my son-in-law and his father fixed for our Christmas dinner in Key West are the stuff of dreams. It made it even better that my son and daughter, son-in-law and his brother and father went out that morning and caught them fresh. It's funny but I can't remember exactly but I think it was roast beef and mashed potatoes with carrots I chose as my birthday meal. The carrots were cooked with brown sugar and butter, so what's not to love. I'm wondering now why I didn't ask for turkey or chicken and dressing balls. I guess those, except for chicken, were reserved for holidays. I just returned from a couple of days at Nashville Bouchercon (dipping my toes in the socialization water but knowing my limits so far), and the Gaylord Opryland Hotel is enormous with lots of places to eat, but the only dish I had that had several delicious ingredients I loved was Chicken Milanese. I think because my husband wass with me, I didn't explore the restaurants like I usually do.

    Now to your book, Catriona. I love the title, so evocative of a book of unexpected surprises that make one pull the covers up a little closer. As always it has a beautiful cover, and the description promises it will live up to the title.

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    1. Freshly caught fish for Christmas dinner? You're fay-uncy! I'm glad to hear that your very wise plan for Bouchercon went well, Kathy. Can't wait to see you in the Fall and give you a big hug. It's been too many years. Cxx

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  29. Hello from Bouchercon--I only now got back into the hotel room to quickly read my mail and write a short post. Hank, I saw you from a distance, but you were busy, so I didn't say hello. Hope to be able to do that before we leave. Catriona, I'm delighted to hear about your new Dandy book! I had to try everything on my plate (but only one bite), and I got to choose my birthday dinner. Believe it or not, when I was twelve, I chose steak and kidney pie (I was reading a lot of English novels, I guess). My mother bravely made it; the whole family loved it, and it became a standard. I had a very kind mother!

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    1. That is adorable, Kim. Have a ton of fun at Bcon. This is the first I've missed since 2010 but I'm enjoying all the photos.

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  30. Mom wouldn't let us waste food so no crusts cut off the bread or not eating the egg yolks. After we tried foods, my brother and I didn't have to eat the ones we didn't like. As kids, we ate more raw vegetables than cooked, and all fruits. Dad was a "try it, you'll like it" guy and urged us to try things. When we were older, we ate most things.

    As far as birthdays, I only remember choosing the cake. Mine was usually coconut.

    I tried your series a few years ago, but forgot to look for more in the library. Will do that this week, Catriona.

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    1. Hey! Thank you, Sally. And God bless libraries. Coconut cake . . . Mmmmm.

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  31. Darling Catriona! How did I miss this?
    I can’t imagine being brave enough to feed Leslie Karst. But for sure scallops would be on the menu because I know her secret.

    Loved the book but you already know that. Xo

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    1. And I missed your comment until right now!

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  32. Thank you for a lovely day reading comments and trying not to eat my whole fridge, Junglies! Happy Labor day weekend. Cx

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