Read The Body In The Bog Online
Authors: Katherine Hall Page
Next to eating good dinners, a healthy man with a benevolent turn of mind, must like, I think, to read about them.
âW. M. T
HACKERAY
Faith and I would add “and woman” to the sentence, but Thackeray was definitely onto something. We enjoy reading about food. And for many of us, reading about food
and
murder is the real frosting on the cake. Why is the pairing of gastronomy and crime so seductive?
Dorothy L. Sayers delights us with her descriptions of Lord Peter Wimsey's meals, with perhaps the best title in the annals of culinary crime: “The Bibulous Business of the Matter of Taste.” That short story describes a six-course dinner, with the emphasis on the identification of the wines accompanying each course. Only the real Lord Peter is able to correctly name all of them. I like the breakfasts best and entertain fantasies of Bunter appearing at the door of my bed
chamber, tray laden with tea, kippers, coddled eggs, and a rack of toast.
Meanwhile, across the Channel, Madame Maigret is taking excellent care of her husband, preparing traditional French dishes that Simenon writes about in mouthwatering detail. It is no wonder Maigret tries to get home for lunch so often. I would, too, if someone was whipping up
coq au vin
and a
tarte à la frangi-pane
(a particularly sinful custard pastry) for me.
On our own shores, we have Nero Wolfe, whose attention to food is as obsessive as his devotion to his orchids. He and Fritz Brenner, his chef, range over a number of cuisines in the pursuit of their art. Fritz is so gifted that he even makes milk toast “superbly.” Why on earth would Archie ever look for his own apartment? Would you?
It would be simple to say that each author uses food as a way of characterizing each sleuth, a way of extending our knowledge of the kinds of people they are, and leave it at that. An idiosyncrasy perhaps? But it's more. We get hungry when we read these books, and I'm sure the authors did, too, as they wrote. How could it be otherwise, given the emphasis they place on the joys of the table? Food is important. It makes a statement on its own. Whodunit is irrevocably joined to whoateit.
Faith doesn't have a cook, nor do I. If we want something tasty, we have to make it ourselvesâsomething, fortunately, both of us like to do. We hope you will enjoy these recipes, and when you're ready to sit down to the fruits of your labor, prop a good mystery up in front of your plate!
FAITH'S YANKEE POT ROAST
2¾ pounds beef bottom round, tied
1
/
3
cup olive oil
3 large carrots
4 medium potatoes (Faith likes Yukon Golds)
3 medium onions
3 cloves of garlic
½ teaspoon thyme, more if using fresh
Salt and pepper
1 bottle Samuel Adams lager, cream stout, or the equivalent
Preheat the oven to 350° F.
Brown the meat in the oil on all sides in a large casserole with a lid or in a Dutch oven.
Peel the carrots and potatoes. Cut the potatoes and onions into quarters and the carrots into two-inch pieces. Mince the garlic. Layer the vegetables around the browned meat and add the thyme, salt, and pepper.
Pour the beer into the casserole and bring it to a boil, uncovered, on the top of the stove. After it boils, turn the heat off and cover the casserole. Place it in the oven and cook for one hour. Remove and let cool. Refrigerate overnight.
This tastes best when made a day ahead. Skim the fat from the top, cover, and reheat in the oven. Remove the meat, slice it, and arrange with the vegetables on a warm platter. Sprinkle with finely chopped parsley. Heat the juices on the top of the stove. You may want to add some flour to thicken. Adjust the seasonings and serve the gravy separately.
ALEFORD BAKED BEANS
4 cups Great Northern beans or pea beans, dried
Pinch of salt
¾ pound well-streaked salt pork
3 tablespoons Dijon mustard
¾ cup molasses
¾ cup dark brown sugar
1½ teaspoons salt
1½ teaspoons fresh ground pepper
1 cup boiling water
1 large yellow onion
Soak the beans overnight and drain. Add a pinch of salt and enough water to reach two inches above the beans. Bring to a boil and simmer for an hour. Drain and reserve the liquid. The beans should be barely tender.
Preheat the oven to 400° F.
Scald the salt pork by letting it sit in boiling water for ten minutes. Cut two thin slices and place one in the bottom of your bean pot or casserole. Cut the other into small pieces and set aside. Score the rind of the remaining piece with a sharp knife and set aside also.
Mix the mustard, molasses, brown sugar, salt, and pepper with the boiling water. It's easiest to do this in a large glass measuring pitcher.
Layer the beans in the pot with the pieces of salt pork and the mustard/molasses/sugar mixture, burying the onion in the middle. Place the large piece of salt pork on the top, rind up, and pour the remaining liquid mixture over it. If there is not enough liquid to
cover the beans, use some of the water you reserved when you drained the beans. Be careful not to use too much liquid. You can always add more as the beans bake.
Put the lid on the pot, or cover on the casserole, and bake the beans at 400° F. for thirty minutes. Turn the temperature down to 200° F. and bake for six to eight hours, checking to see that the beans do not become too dry. Uncover the container during the last hour of cooking.
Â
Baked beans were the Puritans' answer to the Crock-Pot and provided them with a tasty meal during the Sabbath. The pot would be placed in the fireplace on Saturday morning, or handed over to the baker, who would call for it and place it in the community oven, usually in a nearby tavern. After cooking all day, the beans were ready for Saturday supper and Sunday breakfast. Traditionally, Bostonians eat their beans with brown bread, but Faith has served them straight from the pot with everything from focaccia to corn bread. Beantown's pot is earthenware with a narrow throat, but this recipe tastes fine cooked in any deep casserole with a cover, such as a Dutch oven.
This makes a great many beans. For the next meal, add barbecue sauce, drop a poached egg on top, or give some to your neighbors.
CARDAMOM RAISIN BREAD
1 quart milk
1½ cups sugar
½ cup butter
1 teaspoon ground cardamom seeds (or 1 tablespoon of preground cardamom)
2 cakes compressed yeast or two packages of yeast granules
1 teaspoon salt
1 package seedless raisins (approx. 15 ounces)
1 package golden or muscat raisins (approx. 15 ounces)
2 eggs, beaten
12 cups flour (approximately)
1 egg yolk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 tablespoon sugar, mixed together for the glaze
Preheat the oven to 350° F.
Heat the milk and sugar, then add the butter and cardamom. When the butter has melted, cool the mixture to lukewarm in a large mixing bowl. Add and dissolve the yeast. Add the salt, raisins, and beaten eggs. Mix together well and then add enough flour to make a firm but elastic dough. Cover the dough and let it stand in a warm place until doubled in bulk. Then knead it well and form into two round loavesâor four standard-sized bread loaves. Place these in greased pie tins or loaf pans and let rise until doubled again.
Bake for one hour. Brush loaves with the mixture of egg yolk, vanilla, and sugar when they come out of the oven.
Once you've made it, you'll get the knack. It needs to rise for a long time and you also have to watch that the top doesn't get too brown or burn in the oven. You may have to cover it with foil near the end. You can also make the dough in a braid.
This cardamom raisin bread is a Norwegian recipe from the real author's grandmother. We've always made it for Christmas. In Norwegian, it's called
Julekake
, “Christmas cake.” I now make it year-round.
PATRIOTS' DAY PANCAKES
½ cup milk
2 tablespoons melted butter
1 egg
½ cup sour cream
1 cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
4 tablespoons sugar
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla
½ cup raspberries
½ cup blueberries
Mix the milk, melted butter, egg, and sour cream in a bowl until smooth.
Sift the dry ingredients together in a separate bowl and then add all at once to the liquid ingredients. Stir until mixed. The batter will be a bit lumpy. Add the vanilla and stir again. Fold in the berries.
The pancakes cook more evenly if you can find blueberries and raspberries of approximately the same size.
Cook on a hot griddle over medium heat. Serve immediately with a dusting of powdered sugar. (Some people also like butter.) Makes eighteen to twenty-four pancakes, depending on size. You may also wish to add more fruit, but not too much or the pancakes get mushy.
In the book, the children pour syrup on them, but they taste far better without it.
CHOCOLATE CRUNCH COOKIES
½ pound unsalted butter
1 cup brown sugar
1 egg yolk
2 cups sifted flour
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1½ cups dark or semisweet chocolate bits combined with ½ cup toffee bits
½ cup toffee bits for top-ping
Preheat the oven to 350° F.
Cream together the butter and sugar. Add the egg yolk and beat until smooth. Add the flour, mix, then add the vanilla. At this stage, Faith uses her hands, as the dough tends to be crumbly. Knead until smooth.
Spread the dough in a greased nine-by-twelve-inch baking pan and place in the middle of the oven. Again, Faith finds that it is easier to pat the dough evenly into the pan using her hands.
Bake for twenty-five minutes and take the pan out of the oven.
Distribute the combined chocolate and toffee bits evenly over the cookie layer and bake for four minutes more.
Remove the pan from the oven and immediately spread the melted chocolate and toffee bits. Sprinkle what is now the frosting with the remaining toffee bits.
It is important to let the cookies cool completely in the pan before cutting into squares.
This is a decadently rich cookie and makes either twenty-four or thirty-six cookies. It's up to you.
N
OTE ON
R
ECIPES
:
As with Faith's other recipes in
The Body in the Cast
and
The Body in the Basement
, all these will taste just fine with healthwise modifications such as Egg Beaters, low-fat sour cream, 1 percent milk, butter substitutes, and the like. Unfortunately, the cookies definitely need the real thingâthe best chocolate bits you can find and real toffee bits. Think of them as a reward for all those rice crackers you eat.
I would like to acknowledge George Gabriel, “Captain John Parker,” of the Lexington Company of Minute Men, and David Hackett Fischer, author of
Paul Revere's Ride,
for their help with the historical portions of the book. Thanks also to Robert Hilton for the title and sundry bog information. My special thanks to the best agent in the books, Faith Hamlin.
K
ATHERINE
H
ALL
P
AGE
is the author of thirteen previous Faith Fairchild mysteries. Her first book in the series,
The Body in the Belfry
, received the Agatha Award for best first mystery novel. She also won an Agatha Award for her short story “The Would Be Widower,” and
The Body in the Lighthouse
was nominated for a Mary Higgins Clark Award. She lives with her husband and son in Massachusetts. You can visit her website at
www.katherinehallpage.com.
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“Sparkles like a Yankee pond on a bright autumn day!”
Washington Post Book World
“Mystery that will make the reader chuckle while they try to figure out who done it.”
Trenton Times
“An expert at the puzzle mystery.”
Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
“Satisfying and surprisingly delicious.”
Los Angeles Times
“Faith is a gem.”
Toronto Globe & Mail
“Forget about your diet. It's time you sampled this author's marvelous treats.”
Jackson Clarion-Ledger
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