Culinary capers that satisfy
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For readers with an appetite for intrigue sweetened with a soupcon
of good taste, there’s hardly a more satisfying genre than food
mysteries. Laced with recipes for everything from Swedish meatballs
to a buttermilk pound cake to die for, these lighthearted whodunits
are tempting for both cooks and literary detectives.
New from Diane Mott Davidson, dubbed “the Julia Child of Mystery
Writers” by the New York Times, is “Chopping Spree.” In another
fast-paced caper, caterer-turned-sleuth Goldy Schulz returns to plan
the event of the shopping season: The Princess Without a Price Tag
Extravaganza for wealthy shopaholics.
The plot thickens when Goldy finds Aspen Meadows mall manager
Barry Dean dead in a pile of sale shoes -- stabbed with one of her
own carving knives -- and her assistant is arrested for murder.
Whether she can dig for clues between whipping up Hot Crab Dip and
Spice-of-Life Cookies is less consequential than the fun to be had
along the trail.
Descriptions of spicy Creole and Cajun treats are as captivating
as the quest for a missing cookbook in Peter King’s “Roux the Day.”
In his seventh foray into gastronomic crime, the Gourmet Detective is
tracking down an out-of-print classic that holds secrets to a
family-run restaurant in New Orleans. When a clan of female chefs
kidnaps the reluctant hero, adventures through the colorful French
Quarter ensue.
Mystery-loving chocoholics can’t help but succumb to the
temptations of “Death is Semisweet,” the latest course in Lou Jane
Temple’s food feast. Sweetening a plot launched after a blimp
advertising a chocolate shop is gunned down are recipes for Miracle
Whip Chocolate Cake, Chocolate Marshmallow Gingerbread and even
Vegetarian Chili with Chocolate. While reading about chef Heaven
Lee’s hunt for the culprit may not burn enough calories to warrant
indulging in the treats, it will provide a healthy dose of
distraction.
There’s more to breakfast than meets the lips in “Gruel and
Unusual Punishment,” the tenth offering in Tamar Myers’s popular
Pennsylvania Dutch mystery series. In her latest outing, Mennonite
innkeeper Magdalena Yoder finds herself investigating a prisoner’s
death in the local jail after consuming a meal from her inn. Recipes
for such Southern comforts as Pumpkin Grits spike the suspense, as
Magdalena munches her way through deadly doings.
Comfort food the likes of Smothered Pork Chops are the order of
the day in Katherine Hall Page’s “The Body in the Bonfire.” In her
12th escapade, New England caterer-sleuth Faith Fairchild goes
undercover to teach “Cooking for Idiots” as a guise for hunting down
the tormentor of a minority student at a local boarding school. When
human remains turn up after a school bonfire, her sleuthing turns
deadly in an inspired romp guaranteed to satisfy the appetites of
culinary mystery fans.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach
Public Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in
collaboration with Claudia Peterman. All titles may be reserved from
home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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