{"id":3308,"date":"2011-10-27T22:24:06","date_gmt":"2011-10-28T02:24:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.spicesbites.com\/?p=3308"},"modified":"2011-10-27T22:29:22","modified_gmt":"2011-10-28T02:29:22","slug":"ginger-biscuits-an-interview-and-a-giveaway","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.spicesbites.com\/ginger-biscuits-an-interview-and-a-giveaway\/","title":{"rendered":"Ginger Biscuits, interview with Theresa Romain, and a giveaway!"},"content":{"rendered":"

From the moment I read a draft of my best friend Theresa Romain’s novel Season for Temptation<\/a><\/em>, I knew I was in for a treat.\u00a0 Aside from sharing a warped sense of humor, we also share a love for Regency romance novels.\u00a0\u00a0 That’s why I was so excited when she told me that it was getting published!\u00a0 It was released earlier this month and I’ve been making sure people know – I even scolded our local Barnes and Noble for not carrying it!<\/p>\n

\"Season<\/a><\/p>\n

One of my favorite scenes in the book is in the beginning, where the heroine devours an unbelievable amount of biscuits (that’s cookies, for us Americans!) — namely ginger biscuits.\u00a0 I thought it would be fun to try to make the biscuits in question, and luckily for me Theresa had posted a recipe<\/a> for them on her website.<\/p>\n

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I have to give props to a recipe that is not only delicious but incredibly forgiving — I had made gingerbread the day before, and was in quick-bread auto-pilot mode and totally ignored the part in the directions about creaming the sugar with the butter and eggs.\u00a0 Instead, I’d added the sugar to the flour\u00a0 and spices.\u00a0 Convinced I’d messed up the recipe, I considered starting over, but soon realized I’d used up the last of my butter.\u00a0 So I figured I’d forge on and if I’d messed it up that badly, I’d just make Mr. Spice go buy some butter.\u00a0 Instead of the soft dough referenced in the recipe, I ended up with a crumbly dough, but surprisingly I was able to form it into small dough balls and was rewarded by this:<\/p>\n

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We didn’t even bother waiting for them to cool down, and tried a couple hot out of the oven.\u00a0 I loved them — just enough of a gingery taste to keep you coming back for more.\u00a0 I could definitely understand how these could get devoured.<\/p>\n

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I also got the chance to interview Theresa to ask her all sorts of questions about food and the Regency period.\u00a0\u00a0 There’s even a giveaway afterwards!<\/p>\n

As we all know, in the first chapter of <\/strong>SEASON FOR TEMPTATION<\/strong><\/a>, there are an unbelievable number of biscuits consumed. Having made and tasted the ginger biscuits, I can understand why. How did you decide what biscuits were scarfed down? Did you research recipes first or did you just pick a biscuit that was known at the time?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Ok, first of all, I love that you actually made these ginger biscuits<\/a>. And I love that you became as addicted to them as I did!<\/p>\n

It\u2019s not exactly a Regency-correct recipe (1811-1820), but it\u2019s not too far off. I know that ginger biscuits in some form were around then, as were shortbreads. So I wrote the first scene to include foods I knew the characters could have eaten in 1817. When I happened upon a British ginger biscuit recipe in an old cookbook of Mr. R\u2019s (really, there are so many unlikely things in that sentence), I had to give them a try to see just what I\u2019d been feeling my characters. And then I understood why they\u2019d been such gluttons, because I became one too.<\/p>\n

**Mr. R is Theresa’s husband! \ud83d\ude42<\/p>\n

Has Mr. R ever explained how it was that he came to own an old British cookbook? <\/strong><\/p>\n

Ok, I should clarify: when I say \u201cold\u201d I mean \u201cold enough to have lots of gross-looking aspic-like recipes.\u201d\u00a0 But it\u2019s a modern cookbook in the sense that it assumes you have measuring cups and an oven and all that fancy stuff. The big problem was the measurements being in grams, which is a significant barrier to me (and actually wouldn\u2019t be a problem if the cookbook was older than the 1960s, because England was still using the Imperial system of cups, etc., then).<\/p>\n

As for HOW he came to own it: I am guessing thrift store or garage sale. Mr. R is big on cheap books that look interesting. We also own a cookbook that\u2019s entirely in French; I\u2019ve never dared cook anything out of it. What if I mistranslate something and wind up stewing up a tennis racket instead of a beef shoulder?<\/p>\n

Have you cooked anything else out of that cookbook?<\/strong><\/p>\n

I\u2019ve hit the cookie\u2014excuse me, biscuit\u2014section pretty hard. There\u2019s a really wonderful Christmas cookie recipe. Have you ever smelled a Christmas Cookie Yankee Candle? They smell exactly like that, and they taste as good as they smell.\u00a0 Julia and James would have gobbled them up if I\u2019d served them in SEASON FOR TEMPTATION.\u00a0 Unfortunately, their Christmas dinner involves beef tongue instead. (Which, ok, I\u2019ve heard is wonderful.)<\/p>\n

Have you come across any \u201cinteresting\u201d recipes from the Regency period? Would you be willing to make them or eat them?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Just about every Regency recipe is interesting in some way, because they\u2019re so imprecise. They use quantities like \u201ctwo handfuls\u201d or \u201ca good amount,\u201d or instructions like \u201cbake in a quick oven.\u201d Um, what?? Any historic recipe requires a little translation to work well for a modern cook in a modern kitchen.<\/p>\n

That being said, I\u2019d really like to try the iconic holiday dessert: a plum pudding. I don\u2019t think I could make one, since they require boiling in cheesecloth and soaking in brandy for weeks on end, and\u2026yeah, I\u2019m sure I\u2019d screw it up. I know you can buy plum puddings, but the store-bought ones seem so fruitcakey, and I\u2019m sure homemade pudding is nothing like that. I\u2019ve got a recipe on my blog here<\/a>, which I haven\u2019t tested. It involves suet, which is a little freaky to me, but heck, I\u2019ve eaten blood boudin. I shouldn\u2019t be afraid of a little hardened fat.<\/p>\n

I seem to see a lot of seed cake being served at tea in these types of novels \u2013 I always imagine something like lemon poppy-seed cake. Am I imagining wrong? Have you found any recipes for seed cake?<\/strong><\/p>\n

If you\u2019re imagining lemon poppy-seed cake, you\u2019re imagining something you\u2019d probably enjoy more than an actual seed cake.\u00a0 The Regency palate preferred heavier and less seasoned foods than we do, probably because of the limitations of cookery at the time: leavening agents were picky and not in wide use, garden produce had limited seasons (unless you were very wealthy and had a hothouse), and spices were on the pricey side.<\/p>\n

They did enjoy their desserts\u2014though I\u2019d say overall, we\u2019d find Regency pastries dry and under-sweetened (or to flip that around, they\u2019d find ours gooey and cloying). A seed cake is a dense, bready kind of dessert that\u2019s flavored with caraway seeds. They\u2019re actually stirred into the batter rather than sprinkled on top.<\/p>\n

Author Kalen Hughes has posted a few historic seed cake recipes<\/a> and even tried them out in her kitchen. The richness of the recipe just floors me: equal weights flour, sugar and butter!<\/p>\n

What\u2019s the difference between afternoon tea and high tea?<\/strong><\/p>\n

<\/strong><\/p>\n

There are two differences: the time of day, and the amount of food. At afternoon tea, served before around 5 pm, you might get little sandwiches and pastries. High tea is served later, until around 7 pm, and would include less of the pastries and more cold meats, meat pies, cheeses, and the kind of stuff a pescetarian would like (read: fish galore).<\/p>\n

A formalized teatime wasn\u2019t really part of the Regency, though they guzzled tea like none other. Any time visitors came to call, they\u2019d be offered tea and refreshments. By the Victorian era\u20141830s to about 1900\u2014the idea of afternoon tea was pretty well entrenched.<\/p>\n

***Thanks, Theresa for answering all my food-nerd questions!\u00a0 I’m so excited for you!<\/p>\n

Be sure to check out Theresa’s blog<\/a> and follow her on Facebook<\/a> and Twitter<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Have we whetted your appetite for ginger biscuits, tea, and Regency romance novels?\u00a0 I hope so, because now you can win a copy of Theresa Romain’s Season for Temptation<\/em>!<\/p>\n

All you have to do is answer one of the questions below:<\/p>\n