Beth Cato's Blog, page 160

August 23, 2012

Publication week!

I've noticed that acceptances and rejections come in waves, as do publications. This week is a good one; the next will be the first week in September.

My poem "The Unicorn" is over in The Pedestal Magazine. This is my first pro genre poetry publication. This is kinda funny, since Pedestal was also my first pro fiction publication.

Then on Friday, my story "Cartographer's Ink" will be published through Daily Science Fiction's email list. If you'd like to read it on Friday or over the weekend, you can sign up for their list over here. My story will be on their website a week from Friday, August 31st.
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Published on August 23, 2012 06:00

August 22, 2012

Coffee Coffee Cake Muffins

I am always on the look-out for recipes that include my secret weapon: espresso powder.



"What's so special about espresso powder?" you ask. Well, in brownie batters, it's like Robin is to Batman. It's the sidekick that never gets the credit or glory, looks goofy in tights, but saves the day... well, every day. See, I don't like drinking coffee, but I love the flavor embodied by espresso powder. You might say it provides a certain OOMPH! BAM! POW!



Okay, I'll stop.

I will add that I'm biased towards King Arthur Flour's espresso powder, probably because I'm something of a King Arthur Flour fangirl.

In this particular recipe, espresso powder is used to add a crisp coffee taste to coffee cake-style muffins. These are delicious and tender, and a bit messy because of that crumble topping, but you'll want to wet a finger and eat up every crumb.

BAM! KAPOW!



Coffee Coffee Cake Muffins

Recipe from Joy the Baker.

Makes 12 muffins.

Muffin base
10 Tablespoons unsalted butter
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons whole milk
2 large eggs, room temperature
2 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup sugar
2 1/4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt

1 1/2 teaspoons instant espresso powder mixed with 1 1/2 tablespoons warm water

For the Topping
3 Tablespoons cold, unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
3 1/2 tablespoons sugar
1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line muffin pan with paper or foil liners.

Melt butter in a small saucepan over medium heat until little brown bits appear in the pan. Monitor it as the butter browns completely. Remove from heat.

In a medium bowl, whisk together milk, eggs, and vanilla. Add the brown butter and stir to combine.

In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Add milk and butter mixture all at once, and stir gently to combine.

Divide half of the batter among muffin cups. Stir the espresso and water mixture into the remaining batter in the bowl. Add the espresso batter onto each of the muffin cups, smoothing it to make sure the pale batter is covered.

For the topping, combine all of the ingredients in a bowl, and with fingers or a fork, mix until the mix is crumbly. Sprinkle evenly over the batter in the cups.

Bake until a wooden pick inserted into the center of a muffin comes out clean, about 18-20 minutes. Watch them--don't over-bake! Use a fork to gentle pry them up and set them on a rack to cool. Serve warm or at room temperature.

OM NOM NOM.



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Published on August 22, 2012 07:28

August 19, 2012

Sunday Quote is sick of it being 110-115 degrees

"I like to say there are three things that are required for success as a writer: talent, luck, discipline... [Discipline] is the one that you have to focus on controlling, and you just have to hope and trust in the other two." ~ Michael Chabon
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Published on August 19, 2012 06:01

August 17, 2012

Palom

If you follow me on Facebook or Twitter, you already know the gist of what I'll talk about here.

I have two cats, Palom and Porom. Back when I was twenty, I married my sailor husband and abruptly moved from California to South Carolina. Our family cat Adventure--more like a sibling than a pet--was battling skin cancer on his nose, and had for several years. I had to say good-bye, knowing I would never see him again.

In South Carolina, I was utterly isolated. I didn't know a soul other than my husband. I was lonely and sad. We were extremely poor--as in, living on ramen, didn't even own a car. However, after being married a month, we had a little extra wedding gift money arrive, and we used it for something special: two kittens at the local SPCA. Black tabbies, brother and sister.

That was in 2000. These cats were true Navy pets, moving with us from South Carolina to Washington, between two houses there, and then to Arizona in 2007. In 2008, my first big story sale was to The Ultimate Cat Lover, telling about how hard it was to leave Adventure and about adopting Palom and Porom. It was very fitting to me that my goofy cats earned me my first substantial paycheck as a writer.

They have had health problems over the years, especially Porom. She's grotesquely fat, the laziest cat I have ever known, and had half of her tail amputated a few years ago. Palom was the super healthy one, loud, obnoxious, into everything, greeting visitors at the door and attempting to groom them all as well.

And now Palom is dying of cancer.

It's been sudden. Aggressive. In July we noticed he was losing weight and his fur didn't have the same luster. Two weeks ago, I found a large tumor right between his front legs. He has never liked to be carried, so we never touch him there. The cells came back as sarcoma. Within the past week, it's spread a few inches towards a leg. Since Saturday, he's been limping, and this super-active-bouncy-cat is already at the point where he's failing in a jump onto my lap. He's barely moving much at all, sleeping most of the day. He's lost a pound in ten days, over three pounds total.

I can try to describe how I feel with words, but even as a writer, there are times when language is inadequate. I'm stunned. Heartbroken. Angry.

This is why I write healer characters. This is why I wish, most fervently, I could take away the pain, the limp, and have my brash and nosy cat back.

Instead, all I can do is love him. Love him, love him, love him.

It just doesn't feel like enough.
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Published on August 17, 2012 06:00

August 15, 2012

Bready or Not: Biscoff/Nut Butter Truffle Bites in Chocolate Chip, Snickerdoodle, or Ginger Snap

It's summer. It's hot. It gets hotter if you have the oven on for hours as you bake. So! How about a sweet something that can 1) Be made as a healthy version, 2) Makes a small amount so you're not inundated with sweets, and 3) Can be frozen to make it last longer, and 4) Is easily modified to taste like different kinds of cookies?



Of course, if you looked at point #1 and know the first ingredient mentioned in the title, you can ascertain I went with an *ahem* less healthy version for this chocolate chip version. That's because Biscoff Spread (also sold as Speculoos at Trader Joes and elsewhere) is, essentially, pureed cookies blended with oil and crack cocaine to make a peanut butter-consistency paste. It can also be used just like peanut butter in various baked or non-baked goods.

You can make these even healthier with almond or other kinds of nut butter. The Snickerdoodle and Ginger Snap versions pictured below use almond butter. As the original recipe notes, this can be made gluten-free by using coconut flour and carob chips.

If you don't keep ground flax seeds around, give it some thought. They are loaded with omega-3s and are super healthy. I like to add a tablespoon to smoothies or as yogurt topping; it has a subtle, nutty taste. It's cheap if you can buy it in bulk as meal or grind the flax seeds yourself.

#2: Depending on how you divvy the dough, this only makes 12-18 truffles. Enough to fulfill your sweet tooth without going crazy.

#3: These suckers FREEZE. Just make them into balls, place them on the wax paper, and stick them in the freezer. Once they are solid, drop them in a freezer bag and keep them stashed away. They thaw super-fast--if you make teaspoon-size truffles, stick them in the fridge, and within 10 minutes they are soft enough to eat. In your hand, they are soft enough to eat within five minutes.

#4: This is a Special Edition of Bready or Not, as it not only has a modifiable recipe, but also comes in three versions!

Recipe modified from the version at Momables.

Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Bites

1/2 cup creamy Biscoff Spread OR creamy almond butter OR other nut butter
1/4 cup, plus 1 tbsp honey or maple syrup
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 cup, plus 1 tbsp all-purpose flour OR coconut flour
3 tbsp ground flax seed
1/4 tsp sea salt
1/4 cup mini chocolate chips or carob chips

Place all but the last ingredients together in a small mixing bowl. Blend together. Add in chocolate chips, stir again. If it's too wet, add a little more flour; if it's too dry, knead in a teaspoon of water. Using a cookie scoop or tablespoon, dole out dough onto a wax paper-covered small cookie sheet. Roll in hands to smooth out.

Refrigerate at least 30 minutes before eating. Keep chilled. Makes 12-18 truffles.



---

I found variations on this recipe over at The Nourishing Home. Since all of the steps are posted above and pretty straightforward, I'll just list the ingredients below. I did modify the Snickerdoodle recipe to add one more ingredient, because a Snickerdoodle isn't a Snickerdoodle without the taste of cream of tartar.



Snickerdoodle Truffle Bites

1/2 cup Biscoff Spread OR creamy almond butter OR other nut butter
1/4 cup, plus 1 tbsp honey or maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 cup, plus 1 tbsp all-purpose OR coconut flour
3 tbsp ground flax seed
1/4 tsp sea salt
1 pinch cream of tartar

----

These really do taste like nutty ginger snaps. The ginger taste carries a little heat when these are fresh, but it mellows after they meld for a while. Therefore, if you want stronger flavor, up the ginger amount.



Gingersnap Cookie Dough Bites

1/2 cup Biscoff Spread OR creamy almond butter OR other nut butter
1/4 cup, plus 1 tbsp raw honey OR maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 tsp molasses
1 tsp ground ginger
1/4 cup, plus 1 tbsp all-purpose OR coconut flour
3 tbsp ground flax seed
1/4 tsp sea salt

----

OM NOM NOM
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Published on August 15, 2012 06:00

August 12, 2012

"I Wish": A Tale for the Niteblade Blog Train

I'm taking part in the Niteblade Magazine Blog Train. You can read the previous entry, and tomorrow the blog train will roll onward. Check it out!
---
After giving up on writing for years, NaNoWriMo gave me the necessary push to make an effort again. The first few years--2004, 2005, 2006, 2007--I only wrote in November, and I eventually realized that writing one month out of the year wasn't good enough, not if I wanted to make a real go of it.

Around this time, I also found the NanoLJers group on LiveJournal. The moderator, Rhonda Parrish, had links back to her own publication--Niteblade Magazine. I read through an issue and was awed by the content and that every story was illustrated. I thought to myself, "I wish I was good enough to be published there."

I was just a baby writer then, working on short stories for the first time, and dealing with rejection for the first time. And not very well, I might add. One rejection left me a crying, depressed mess for three solid days (including my birthday). Yeah, I was pretty pathetic. I considered giving up on writing completely.

I didn't.

Instead, I kept on writing. I worked on my novel. I worked on my short stories. I was an active participant on NanoLJers and also began to follow and comment Rhonda's personal journal. I kept reading Niteblade and various other publications. I had a few acceptances. After a year of making conscious efforts to improve my writing, I took a big risk. I submitted to Niteblade.

I was rather sneaky about it, though. Rhonda only knew me by my LiveJournal name, celestialgldfsh. In my cover letter, I didn't mention that we knew each other. I figured that if she rejected my story, I was sparing myself some awkward embarrassment.

Instead, she enthusiastically accepted that story, "The Pacifier," and two more stories involving the same characters. Later that year, Niteblade published the trilogy in one volume and they were nominated for the Pushcart Prize.

Looking back, it still boggles my mind to see what a leap occurred in that one year.

Niteblade Magazine was an important step for me, and one I'm still proud of. That initial acceptance from Rhonda--one of the very first I received--made me feel like I might have a chance at this writing thing.

Some forty publications later, I'm represented by an agent, a full member of the SFWA, and still getting rejected on a regular basis but no longer crying for days (usually).

This whole writing journey began with reading Niteblade and thinking, "I wish..."
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Published on August 12, 2012 06:00

August 10, 2012

Sunday Quote Detours to Friday

I'm taking part in the Niteblade Blog Train on Sunday, so I'm posting the weekly writing quote early--and it's a two-fer! Consider this the Road to Hell edition.

“The road to hell is paved with works-in-progress.” ~Philip Roth

“The road to hell is paved with adverbs.” ~Stephen King


As a writer, what is your road to hell paved with? Purple prose? Facebook? Chocolate therapy? Tell me in the comments!
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Published on August 10, 2012 06:00

August 8, 2012

Bready or Not: White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies

People think of Hawaii as paradise on Earth because of its pristine beauty and sparkling seas. I'm thankful for Hawaii because of its nuts.

Get your mind out of the gutter. Pfft. You people.



Macadamia nuts are lovely, fatty nuts. Did you know that because of their high fat content, they can spoil and should be refrigerated for storage? These nuts are amazing in little lumps with milk chocolate and caramel--oh so dangerous when Cost Plus puts the Mauna Load brand on sale at Christmas--but they are also great with white chocolate in these cookies.

Now, I've tried a few white chocolate macadamia nut recipes, but I always come back to this one. The melted white chocolate in the dough makes all the different--slight sweetness and a smooth texture. Be cautious when you melt the chips, though. It can burn so, so fast in the microwave. Zap it on low power for short stints of time, and stay close.

Recipe from Betty Crocker Magazine #172 April 2001, page 8.




White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies

Ingredients
1 bag (10 ounces) white chocolate chips
2/3 cup sugar
2/3 cup (11 tablespoons) butter, room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 eggs, room temperature
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 cup coarsely chopped macadamia nuts

Steps
Preheat oven to 325-degrees. Place 1 cup of white chocolate chips in a microwave safe bowl. Microwave on 50% power in short increments, 20-30 seconds, and stop to stir between passes until the chips blend smoothly. Set aside to cool.

In a large mixing bowl, beat together the sugar, butter, vanilla, and eggs until they're creamy. Mix in the melted chips. Stir in flour, baking soda, and cream of tartar. Add the remaining chips and the nuts.

Use a cookie scoop or tablespoon to place dough in rounded lumps on cookie sheet. Bake 10 to 12 minutes, until the edges begin to turn very light golden brown. Cool on the sheet for several minutes, then move to a rack to cool.

ON NOM NOM.

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Published on August 08, 2012 06:00

August 7, 2012

Skewed Priorities

Sunday night, I felt like I was part of something great. Despite battling a migraine earlier in the day, when I realized that Curiosity's landing on Mars was at only 10:30 Arizona time, I knew I had to stay up to see it. And once I was sucked into the glorious geek-fest on Twitter, I was wide awake and grinning. When the NASA Jet Propulsion Lab scientists hugged and cried and rejoiced, I felt like dancing along with them--which I didn't do, because that wouldn't have been healthy for my iPad.

I was eager to look at the Arizona Republic Monday morning. Maybe there were new photographs from the rover! I scanned the first page. The feature photograph and article were about the Cardinals football team--the Sikh temple shooting was in a side column. I saw no mention of the Mars landing at all. Maybe it had already gone to print when Curiosity came down? I read on, and on page A7 I found a tiny little article on the subject.

Way to go, Republic. Football, huh? Higher priority than the deaths of multiple people? Higher priority than NASA landing a rover on Mars and nailing it down to the minute?

Today's paper wasn't much better. A picture of the rejoicing scientists at NASA rated a thumbnail-sized picture at the bottom of the first page, leading into an article deeper in the A-section.

Is it any wonder why Arizona is almost last place in the nation with its students? The main bastion of daily literature in the state can't even prioritize one of the greatest scientific achievements of this century. It makes me sad.
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Published on August 07, 2012 10:21

August 5, 2012

Sunday Quote has steampunk on the brain

"What a writer has to do is write what hasn't been written before or beat dead men at what they have done." ~ Ernest Hemingway
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Published on August 05, 2012 07:43