Sunday, June 7, 2026

Around the Kitchen Table: SUMMER FRUIT RECIPES + 9 BOOK #Giveaway!




VMBURNS: Nothing says summer like fresh fruit. Many of you may know that while I was born in the Midwest, I now live in Northern Georgia. Georgia is known as the Peach State. If you're driving around Atlanta, you'll be amazed (and a little confused) by all of the streets referring to peaches. Peachtree St., Peachtree NE, Peachtree Circle, etc., etc. Peach season starts in Mid May down here and markets and roadside stands are overflowing with peaches. Seeing so many peaches makes me start to look for recipes to take advantage of this abundant fruit. Restaurants abound with peach cobbler, but I've never been a fan of cooked peaches. But, I do love peach flavored beverages. Peach tea, peach lemonade, and peach margaritas. I fired up the grill and made grilled peaches with ice cream. It was delicious.




What about all of you? What fruits signal the start of summer for you? Do you have a favorite summer fruit recipe?



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LUCY BURDETTE: Valerie, I love peaches so much but we won't have local fruit until late August. I can't wait! We did get our first batch of cherries last week. I will look forward to making this cherry galette again this summer!



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MADDIE DAY: I also adore fresh peaches. I grew up in the Pasadena area of California with a yellow and a white peach tree in the backyard. We also had lemon, fig, guava, and apricot trees, all planted by my parents when we moved in when I was four, plus boysenberry bushes. 

Alas, a late-in-life allergy means I can eat cooked-only stone fruit like peaches and apricots (and apples and pears and cherries, oh no). Luckily, berries are fine, so the allergy doesn't rule out an Ode to Summer Fruit Tart


Local strawberries and raspberries are already ripening at my local farm stands, and the blueberry bushes I planted ten years ago are laden with baby berries. I might try a summer fruit Sangria!

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KIM DAVIS: I love this time of the year when spring and summer fruits flood the stalls at the farmers' market! Plump, juicy cherries, raspberries, and blackberries are nearly impossible for me to pass up, along with peaches, nectarines, and apricots. I often come home with too much fruit and end up having to share with others... but I get no complaints. In all honesty, I typically eat the fruit straight from the container (after washing, of course) perched over the sink to catch the juicy dribbles. The only summer fruit (well, I guess it's really a vegetable) that I cook into desserts is rhubarb. Every early summer when we'd head to Illinois to visit my husband's family, my mother-in-law would greet us with a Homemade Rhubarb Pie... it was the BEST! And I'd often finish the last piece for breakfast the next day. Fortunately she taught me how to make it but hers still always tasted better... I think it was the love she poured into it. 



In summers past I'd also visit my sister in Oregon where blackberries grew wild along just about every country road. When I'd visit, she'd often make this Busy-Day Blackberry Cobbler, a recipe passed down from our mother. It's an easy and delicious way to use up an over abundance of fruit!




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ANG POMPANO: Valerie, my favorite fruit that signals the start of summer may surprise some people because it’s sweet corn. Botanically speaking, corn is actually a fruit because it develops from the flower of the corn plant. Corn somehow manages to span three worlds at once: fruit botanically, vegetable when young, and grain when mature. 

But I’m wandering off into the cornfield here. 
 
I live in a town that still likes to think of itself as an agricultural community, so farm stands selling corn picked that very morning are only minutes away in every direction. For me, there’s nothing better than peeling back the husk of a freshly picked ear of corn, stripping away the silk, giving it a quick rinse, and eating it raw right off the cob. It beats dessert every time. 

My recipe is simple. I cut the raw kernels off the cob and toss them into a bowl with chopped tomatoes, cucumber, basil, olive oil, salt, and pepper. It’s nothing fancy, but to me it spells summer.




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LESLIE BUDEWITZ:  Here in NW Montana, we're a ways away from local fruit. My own garden gives us rhubarb, apples, and raspberries, and we're planting a new strawberry patch right now, as ours fell prey to voles. Cherries grown on the shores of Flathead Lake are short-lived and much-loved, here and beyond, though our home is in the woods at the base of the mountains and cherries won't grow in our yard. I grew up eagerly anticipating my mother's Rhubarb Custard Pie. I shared that recipe in Treble at the Jam Fest, the 4th Food Lovers' Village Mystery. (Kim featured it a few years ago on her blog, with photos pretty enough to make me want to eat the screen.) As a proud member of the People of the Pie, I believe you can never have too much of a good thing, so I put this Rhubarb Sour Cream Custard Pie to the test and it succeeded with flying colors! 

Or try your rhubarb in a muffin. I created these Rhubarb Almond Muffins a few years ago, inspired by a Raspberry Almond Muffin at my favorite local cafe. 



I'll leave you with a photo of a recent discovery, on our Great Spring Road Trip -- 3,500 miles, 7 states, 4 national parks -- the Prickly Pear Margarita. Now, prickly pear does grow in central Montana, though it's far more common in the southwest, and we discovered prickly pear margaritas and lemonade in New Mexico. I snared a bottle of juice and we made margaritas last weekend -- gorgeous and tasty! (The recipe came from the maker, often the best source.)  


Cactus is a fruit, right? Cheers!


 
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PEG COCHRAN/MARGARET LOUDON:  I love peaches, but like Lucy, ours won't be available locally until August.  Until then, the ones in the supermarket are hit or miss.  Right now cherries are in the store.  Michigan is known for its cherries.  As a matter of fact, Traverse City's airport is known as Cherry Capital Airport!  And that reminds me, it's time I made this cherry cake again!

 

 



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LESLIE KARST: Okay, I'm gonna be a little boring and go with peaches, like so many of my other Kitchen cohorts. But I mean, c'mon--there's nothing in the world like a fresh summer peach, right? 



The peaches here on coastal California are no where near as good as Valerie's Georgia peaches, but we do get delicious ones from the interior of the state where it gets good and hot in the summer. And this is one of my favorite things to do with them: Peaches and Cream with a French-Italian Twist.  A simple and delicious dessert which lets the fruit shine, it's the perfect finish to a summer meal.

 

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MOLLY MACRAE: Beautiful ripe berries are summer to me, beginning with strawberries in early June. When we lived in upper east Tennessee, we’d go down the road to pick gallons of them at the strawberry farm. We took them home, ate as many as we could and freeze the rest. When our older son was 2 1/2, he and I picked strawberries the day our younger was due. Maybe that’s why they’re both so sweet. 

For blackberries we didn’t need to go anywhere at all. We had oodles of wild ones along the edge of our meadow. There’s nothing like a ripe blackberry, warm from the sun and straight off the cane. There’s nothing like blackberry cobbler, either. 
Friends of ours had raspberries (and generously shared them). “Raspberry” was one our younger son’s first words (reduced to one syllable and more like a secret language). 

In July, we’d cross over from Tennessee to North Carolina at Iron Mountain Gap and pick blueberries in Buladean—always heeding the warning to watch out for bears. Here are recipes for BlueberryPie with a Cornmeal Crust and BlueberryLemon Bread PuddingAnd here’s a fresh fruit salad topped with gorgeous raspberries made by our younger son, still into raspberries at 43. 

 

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DARCI HANNAH: For me nothing says summer like a slice of cherry pie! Although I now live in Michigan where we grow lots of delicious tart cherries, as a kid we always spent our summers in Wisconsin, on the Door County peninsula. Door County is also known for growing cherries, and when spring hits the orchards come alive with beautiful pink cherry blossoms. It's a truly magical sight to see. Then, in July the cherries ripen, and for me there's no better time of the year. Our family used to pick our cherries in the orchard, and when we'd come home my mom made her special Door County cherry pie. It's delicious served warm with a scoop or two of vanilla ice cream. In fact, my first cozy mystery series, the Very Cherry Mystery Series was set in Door County on a cherry orchard. You can print the recipe here: 

 


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VICKI DELANY: My goodness what a fantastic selection of fruit, fruit drinks, fruit desserts, and pure yummy fruitie goodness.  Right now in the farm country of Southern Ontario rhubarb is in and strawberries soon to come.  Strawberry rhubarb bars are one of the things I love to make the most when everything is in season. In fact, it's so much my favourite, it was my very first recipe as a regular cook in the kitchen! 




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CLEO COYLE: On hot summer days, I love to whip up this VIRGIN SANGRIA, which is not only refreshing and hydrating but also uses some of my favorite summer fruits (watermelon, strawberries, and peaches), although you can adapt the recipe to your own favorites. 

Why virgin? While a white wine sangria is delicious, on a workday, I prefer that my fingers hit my laptop keyboard rather than my forehead, which means no firewater until the day is done. A virgin sangria is also a good idea for households with kids because it can be converted into an adult beverage at the time it's poured, which means one pitcher can serve drinkers and non-drinkers alike. 

Click here for my VIRGIN SANGRIA recipe (with a free, downloadable PDF), and enjoy the fruits of summer, everyone! ~ Cleo


Readers, how about you?

What fruits signal the start of summer for you? Do you have a favorite summer fruit recipe? Let us know in the comments. If you're willing to share, include the recipe, too. Comment below to be entered in this month's giveaway!

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Murder at First Slice (ARC) by Valerie Burns 

A Clue in the Crumbs (paperback) Lucy Burdette 

Essentials of Murder by Kim Davis 

When It's Time for Leaving by Ang Pompano 

Cherry Scones & Broken Bones by Darci Hannah 

All Shell Breaks Loose, (ARC) by Molly MacRae 

No Roast for the Weary by Cleo Coyle 

Treble at the Jam Fest by Leslie Budewitz 

Murder at Cape Cod Costumers by Maddie Day



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Saturday, June 6, 2026

Shrimp Po' Boy Sandwiches Lightened Up #Recipe Peg Cochran/Margaret Loudon


   

     The original poor boy sandwich came about in New Orleans during the 1929 streetcar strike.  The Martin Brothers ran the Martin Brothers Coffee Stand and Restaurant.  They vowed to feed any striking transit worker for free.  When any of them walked through the door, the kitchen staff would call out “here’s another po’ boy.”  The original sandwich was made with fried potatoes, roast beef gravy and trimmings—known as debris—in a French bread roll.  Eventually the recipe expanded to include seafood, which was inexpensive in New Orleans.
 

In a true shrimp po’ boy, the shrimp would be fried but this recipe lightens up the sandwich by baking the shrimp instead.

For the Sandwich:

1 tablespoon Creole or Cajun seasoning

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 lb. jumbo shrimp (16-20 count), peeled and deveined

4 pieces of French bread, halved lengthwise (about 4-5 inches each) and lightly toasted

2 cups shredded iceberg lettuce

2 sliced tomatoes

Sliced dill pickles (optional)

Hot sauce, for serving

 

For the Remoulade Sauce:

1 cup mayonnaise

3 tablespoons Creole mustard or Dijon, spicy brown or stone-ground mustard 

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish

1 teaspoon sweet paprika

1 teaspoon Cajun or Creole seasoning

1 teaspoon prepared horseradish

1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

1-2 teaspoons hot sauce

1 clove garlic, grated (or ¼ teaspoon garlic powder)

 

Instructions

Preheat oven to  450 degrees.

Mix together the shrimp, Creole or Cajun seasoning, lemon juice and olive oil.  Cover and marinate in fridge for 15 to 20 minutes.

Prepare the remoulade sauce:  Whisk all of the sauce ingredients together in a bowl.


 

Toast bread.  Remove shrimp from marinade and arrange on baking sheet in a single layer.  Bake 4 to 5 minutes or until pink and firm.


 


 

Assemble the sandwiches:  spread remoulade sauce on each piece of toasted bread.  Add shrimp, top with lettuce, tomato and pickles if desired.


 


 


 

  
 
When a wealthy local benefactor is slain on the farm, Monica has to figure out who wanted to cash in on the killing . . .

As Sassamanash Farms hunkers down for the long winter, Monica agrees to let the local animal shelter host their Christmas-themed fundraiser there. The draw of the event—a chance to have your pet’s picture taken with Santa—brings in animal lovers from far and wide. But when the crackling fire dies down and the festive holiday props are all carted away, Monica discovers a very un-jolly sight next to the barn—the dead body of one of the shelter’s biggest donors. With the farm’s good name in jeopardy, Monica goes to work to root out the killer.

By all accounts the victim was a charming and generous supporter of the shelter, but Monica discovers that he was loathed by those who knew him for being tight-fisted and unscrupulous. Suspecting money might be the motive, she turns her sights on his stylish wife and her lavish lifestyle, along with the manager of the struggling shelter, who stood to collect a hefty bequest from his will. But as Monica closes in on one final clue, the culprit closes in on her. Caught unawares, she’ll have to survive the brutal winter weather, as well as a cold-blooded killer . . .
 

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Friday, June 5, 2026

Garlic Shrimp Orzo with Lemon from Vicki Delany

I found the flavour of lemon in this recipe to be too strong, although the dish was delicious.  The lemons I used were very big, so perhaps they were too large. Next time, I’ll cut the amount of lemon.  Obviously, tastes vary.

The recipe calls for Orzo, but I didn’t have quite enough. Any rice-sized pasta will do fine.

This recipe is very quick and easy.  Enjoy.

Garlic Shrimp Orzo with Lemon

Ingredients:

1 cup orzo (or other rice sized) pasta

2 tbsp vegetable oil

4 cloves garlic, chopped

¼ tsp red chili flakes

¾ lb shrimp, any size, peeled. Thaw if frozen.

Zest and juice of two lemons

2 tbsp olive oil

1 bunch fresh dill, chopped

4 green onions, thinly sliced

Directions:

Cook pasta according to package directions.

Add vegetable oil to large saucepan and heat on medium.  Add garlic and chilli flakes. Sauté for about 30 seconds, stirring continuously. Add peeled shrimp and cook about 5 minutes.  

Drain pasta and stir it into the pan containing the shrimp.  Toss with lemon zest, juice, olive oil, dill and green onions.









Follow Vicki at www.vickidelany.com, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/evagatesauthor. You can sign up to receive Vicki’s quarterly newsletter at Vicki Delany – Canadian Author of Mystery Novels and Suspense Novels » Contact

Now available: The Devil in the Details, the eleventh Sherlock Holmes Bookshop novel



Coming in June: Whose Body in the Library by Eva Gates, the thirteenth Lighthouse Library mystery

 


 

 

 

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Chicken Enchiladas in Spicy Red Sauce by Lucy Burdette #giveaway




LUCY BURDETTE: we love Mexican food in our household, though it’s not that easy to get in our small town in Connecticut. Luckily for my food critic character, Hayley Snow, there is a hole in the wall Mexican restaurant in Key West where she gets a delicious meal just the right moment. (I’ve included a little snippet from the upcoming A DELICIOUS DECEPTION at the end of the recipe—to whet your whistle!)

Today’s recipe is based on one for beef enchiladas that I’ve made a number of times from Once Upon a Chef. In the past, I’ve made chicken enchiladas with a green sauce, but I couldn’t see why this amazing red sauce wouldn’t work just as well. And it did! Next time around, I would also add at least a cup of cooked beans – these could be black beans or kidney beans or whatever is available.

Ingredients.

2 cups cooked shredded chicken (I had roasted a chicken a day or two earlier thinking of this dish)

One medium onion, red or white, your choice

Two cloves garlic, finally chopped

3 tablespoons chili powder

1 teaspoon ground cumin,

1/2 teaspoon dried oregano

3 tablespoons all-purpose flour

8 ounces tomato sauce

2 cups chicken broth

Eight large flour tortillas

2 to 3 cups shredded Mexican cheese blend

(Jenn Siegel at once upon a chef also adds a chopped jalapeño, but I found our chili pepper was spicy enough for our taste. Cook’s choice!)



Chop the onion and the garlic and sauté in olive oil until soft but not brown. And the chili powder, cumin, oregano, and flour and cook this all together for another minute or two. Gradually stir in the tomato sauce and chicken broth to make a sauce.




Add the chicken, and simmer for 10 minutes.




Next put a cup or so of sauce in a greased 9 x 11 pan. Assemble the tortillas by spreading a tablespoon or two of the chicken mixture in the bottom of each tortilla, sprinkle with a thick coating of grated cheese and roll them up. Tuck them all into the pan. If any sauce remains, spread it over the top of the tortillas then sprinkle with more cheese.





Bake about 15 minutes until the sauce is bubbling and the cheese melted and beginning to brown.



Serve with a green salad or asparagus or something else in the Green family.

GIVEAWAY:  To enter the drawing for TWO Key West mysteries, one to keep and one to share, sign up for my mailing list, and leave a comment including the name of the person you'd most love to share a book with!



A DELICIOUS DECEPTION will be here before we know it—hitting bookstores on July 14! In this installment, Hayley is quite pregnant, which makes everyone around her worry about her urge to find a missing girl…


“Wait,” said Darcy. She held up her hand. “Say it again. You went back up there on your own? Are you out of your mind?”

I sat back in my folding chair, crossing my arms over the bulge of the baby. “No, just a concerned citizen. Very concerned, since you yourself pulled me into this mess in the first place. You seem to be sidelined, so I thought I could do some light investigating on my own, talking with a couple of perfectly friendly women. I did not approach or contaminate the crime scene. A little girl is missing and I for one feel some urgency about finding her.”

Darcy slumped in her chair, silent for once. Rivulets of tears ran down Louise’s cheeks. I began to open the bags of food and extract our dinner.

“Mmm, this smells very good. I’ve never eaten here. This is from the little hole in the wall on Bertha Street?” I quirked my eyebrows. Darcy was not known as a foodie. “How in the world did you find this place?”

“The deputies often stop here mid-shift,” she said, dishing up a plate of chicken fajitas, rice, beans, and guacamole and pushing it towards me. “The salsa has tons of flavor but not too much heat.”

 A DELICIOUS DECEPTION, coming July 14 at a bookstore near you!



USA Today bestselling author Lucy Burdette writes the Key West food critic mystery series including A POISONOUS PALATE and A CLUE IN THE CRUMBS. Join her mailing list right here.