Where do you get your ideas?
I get this question all the time. Most of the time I have no
clue. But with my latest book, A Taste of Hope, out on April 8, 2015, I can
draw a map about this book beginning inkling of an idea to the words “The End”
on the last page on the manuscript.
My heroine, Hope Monahan, initially showed up in Mike’s Best
Bet, the first book in my At The End Zone series, set in my fictional town of
Addington, Massachusetts, on the north shore of Boston. We don’t actually see
Hope. She’s a caterer who works out of her kitchen and is famous for her
version of shrimp in puff pastry. She also stays low key in the second End Zone
book, What Ian Wants, but the shrimp puffs show up on the buffet table at a
couple of gala events.
Finally, in Charming Dave, the third End Zone book, we meet
Hope. Her business has grown to the point where she’s opened her own Earth to
Table restaurant called Hope’s.
Even though her life progressed in the course of the books,
I didn’t plan to write a book for Hope. Just wasn’t there on my radar screen.
Then I went to RWA National in 2011 and went to listen to an
editor/agent panel. It came to the part of the panel when the panel talked
about what they were looking for, what they’d like to see. One of the agents said
that she was crazy about reality shows and competitions. That’s when Lucien
Durand, the hero of A Taste of Hope tapped me on the shoulder.
He let me know that he was the Gordon Ramsey of Cajun
cooking and would love to show Hope how to cook. Lucien owns several
restaurants world wide, all called L’Enfer, a.k.a. Hell.
International playboy chef versus small town locovore chef?
Absolutely.
Thus No Hope in Hell was born.
Hope and Lucien led me on a merry chase. I couldn’t trust a
word Lucien said for like the first six chapters of the book. Then two
secondary characters, Shane Baker, Hope’s sous-chef, and Angelique Durand,
Lucien’s baby sister started acting up.
Since we couldn’t use Hell on the cover of the book, No Hope
in Hell became A Taste of Hope.
Here is one of Hope’s favorite dessert recipes:
Rose and Champagne
Sorbet
Ingredients: 2 cups of gently packed rose petals from
culinary grade (pesticide free) roses – Hope grows her own.
1 cup plus
2 tablespoons of caster sugar (superfine sugar)
3 cups of
cold water
3
tablespoons of freshly squeezed orange juice
1 cup brut
or extra dry champagne
1
tablespoon of Nielson-Massey rose water
orange
zest, or thin strings of orange peel
Directions: Process the rose petals with the sugar in a food
processor until the mixture turns into a smooth paste. Stop the scrape down the
sides if you need to. Add ½ cup of the water and process again, about 10
seconds. Add in the remaining 2 ½ cups of water, the orange juice, champagne
and rose water.
Pour the liquid through a fine sieve. Freeze the mixture in
an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s directions.
While the sorbet freezes, candy the orange zest or orange
peel strings and some rose petals. Garnish the finished sorbet with the orange
peel and rose petals.