Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2022 Challenge - Regular
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23 - A Book With a Recipe In It
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Roberta
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Dec 26, 2021 04:39AM

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This was one of my favorite reads from this year. I highly recommend it!

I feel that Honeybee by Craig Silvey would meet this prompt (as well as a few others). there's often talk of food and details descriptions of ingredients and even narrative sourounding the booking/baking process. That said, you'd not be able to recreate what they're making based on what's in the book.


It just says recipe. Doesn't matter if it's a recipe for food, poison, cosmetics, cleaning supplies, or disaster. ;-)

This can also work for A book by a Latinx author, so if you want to hit two birds with one stone this is an excelent option!

Thumbed through my copy and don't see any recipes. Unless they are just embedded in the text, there aren't any in a traditional format.

Julie and Julia: 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen by Julie Powell
The Little Book of Hygge: The Danish Way to Live Well by Meik Wiking
Brandon wrote: "I just read A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking for my book club. It's a decent enough story, but it has absolutely zero recipes in it."
Awww that's disappointing.
Awww that's disappointing.

It is listed 3rd in the series but can be read as a stand alone. I remember hearing it years back and finding it fascinating cause it focused on recipes from medieval times.



I must admit that I read the entire book in her voice.
This is one that could probably be read on one seating.


It also has little tips and tricks on what to do with certain ingredients or how to clean this or that.
Really enjoyed it and recommend 100%, regardless of the prompt!





* On What Grounds by Cleo Coyle
* Kernel of Truth by Kristi Abbott





* Letters to Juliet: Celebrating Shakespeare's Greatest Heroine, the Magical City of Verona, and the Power of Love (Nonfiction)
* Murder, She Knit by Peggy Ehrhart (first in series)
* Buffalo West Wing by Julie Hyzy (fourth in series)

That sounds great, Denise! And it's got a knitting giant in it? I've GOT to read it now!

Also Nora Ephron’s Heartburn has a recipe (can’t remember for what but I used it for a challenge in 2020).
The other book that came to mind (embarrassingly) is “It’s Called a Breakup Because It’s Broken”.” I think it had a few, but it has an easy and good soufflé recipe (I just looked it up on Google - it’s called the “Really Great” Egg Soufflé). I read this probably 15 years ago, and haven’t made the soufflé in a long time, but it was a go-to and came to mind.

I was raised in West Texas, Monahans, and still love anything about Texas. Finished Texas Born by Diana Palmer. I bought the book because it had Texas in the title, and it was by Diana Palmer


Perfect, this has been on my list for a while!





Side note: I need to make some chocolate stuff. I'm craving it. It's very easy to adapt to gluten free, if you use an all-purpose gluten free flour blend.
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