In the first draft of Lavender Lies Bleeding, Pepper is home alone—well, home with the dog, but his meal routine is fairly well set. That afternoon, she’d chatted with Spice Shop customers who love her friend Edgar’s Italian restaurant, Speziato, and had bought her favorite spice, smoked paprika, to make Edgar’s signature appetizer, Baked Paprika Cheese. (It originally appears in The Solace of Bay Leaves; find the recipe here.)
Lacking the key ingredient, she made a different baked cheese appetizer. Later, I decided I didn’t need the recipe or the paragraphs that describe making it, so out they went. Here’s the original bit, unedited:
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Arf and I locked up and headed home. I fed him, then opened the fridge. Talking about Edgar and Speziato had my mouth watering for his fabulous Baked Paprika Cheese, a deceptively simple appetizer that never fails to please. Alas, no goat cheese on hand. But I had feta, so I pivoted. My mouth wouldn’t mind. I turned on the Mariners game, While the oven heated, I fished a square of feta out of its brine, patted it dry, and placed it in a small baking dish. Drizzled it with oil and popped it in. Popped the cork on a bottle of _____ and poured a glass. So good.
Laurel had sent home a container of blueberry peach salad, left over after Flick Chicks. I sliced up some leftover grilled salmon CHECK – WHAT DID NATE MAKE? and found some pita chips for the feta. When it was finished baking, I drizzled it with honey and stuck it under the broiler until the cheese had browned and begun to bubble. I added a little more honey, sprinkled on some fresh thyme from a pot on the veranda, and finished it with a dash of lemony red sumac.
Edgar would be proud.
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The recipe is simple enough to pull together quickly, as Pepper did. Serve it with pita chips, or toasted pita, naan, or sliced baguette.
Oh, and if you want to serve it alongside Laurel’s Green Salad with Feta, Peaches, and Blueberries, like Pepper did, here’s the link!
Lavender Lies Bleeding will be out July 15, in paperback, ebook, and audio. Available for preorder now -- more details below!
Baked Feta with Honey and Thyme
8 ounces brick feta, at room temperature, patted dry
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil (the amount you use will depend on the size of your dish)
1 to 2 tablespoons honey
1-1/2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves, or to taste
smoked paprika or sumac (optional topping)
For serving: pita chips, or toasted pita, naan, or sliced baguette.
Heat oven to 400 degrees. Brush a thin layer of olive oil inside an 8-ounce ramekin, small casserole, or any oven-safe baking pan that is just a little larger than your brick of feta. Place the cheese in the dish and brush top and sides with 2-3 teaspoons olive oil. Bake until the cheese is warm and soft but not melted, about 10 minutes.
Remove feta from oven and preheat broiler. Brush the honey evenly over the feta, both top and sides. Broil until the top of the cheese browns, about 5 minutes —don’t worry if the edges char a bit, as that tastes great! Do watch your broiler carefully, as the heat can vary.
Enjoy!
Take a step back in time with All God's Sparrows and Other Stories: A Stagecoach Mary Fields Collection of historical short mysteries, featuring the Agatha-Award winning "All God's Sparrows" and other stories imagining the life of real-life historical figure Mary Fields, born into slavery in 1832, during the last thirty years of her life, in Montana. Out September 17, 2024 from Beyond the Page Publishing.
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