
If you don't have a blog or don't write reviews, please mark your progress in the comments.
If Mr. Linky ever disappears, just leave a comment or come back and link up later. Or email me (see contact icons in the sidebar) and I'll add your link when Mr. Linky is fixed.
I posted a link to my review of The 4 Hour Chef. The title sounds like fiction but it isn't. I tried one of the recipes last night and made a delicious soffritto in exactly 20 minutes.
ReplyDeleteI just posted my second review: At Home in the Kitchen, by Judy Walter. Hope it was OK to do a cook book.
ReplyDeletePosted my review :)
ReplyDeleteposted my first review for this reading challenge. on to find the next "name" book!
ReplyDeleteMy first book for the challenge! Life on the Refrigerator Door, by Alice Kuipers.
ReplyDeleteI just finished my first book for this challenge- Life on the Refrigerator Door, by Alice Kuipers.
ReplyDeleteJust posted my second review for Jam by Yahtzee Croshaw...
ReplyDeleteI have chosen Life of Pi by Yann Martel for this category, can I count this? I wasn't sure given that it is Pi not Pie.
ReplyDelete"Pi" for "pie" is perfect -- that's what I mean by "creativity is encouraged." Love it.
ReplyDeleteFirst book read for this challenge, and a great one too!
ReplyDeleteI've posted my review for this challenge, the second book to complete in this overall challenge. :)
ReplyDeleteI posted a link to my review of The Leftovers by Tom Perrotta.
ReplyDeleteThis is my first book towards the challenge :) Turns out the next book I'm reading, Chocolate Chip Cookie Murder could go towards the same one!
Buttons and Bones is not about anything happening in a kitchen but you certainly would find bones in a kitchen though probably not human ones unless a murder took place there.
ReplyDeleteBones are found in a kitchen though usually not human bones so I am using Buttons and Bones for this. Please feel free to remove the duplicate posting.
ReplyDeleteI'm wrapping up The Shape of Water (by Andrea Camillieri; narrated by Grover Gardner) today. I haven't decided whether or not to write a review of this individual title or the series as a whole yet; but the first-in-series definitely qualifies for the "kitchen" category! The Inspector Montalbano series also has the added bonus off featuring descriptions of Sicilian cuisine. In fact, because of this series, I got DH the massive cookbook, La Cuncina which is a collection of authentic regional Italian recipes. LOL, When he isn't using it to cook from, he uses into prop up his microphone while recording, aomndt other things, Camillieri's books! #ubermeta :-)
ReplyDeletedogearedcopy/Tanya
Excited to have finished my first book for this challenge.
ReplyDeleteFor the Kitchen category, I read Devil's Food by Kerry Greenwood (book #3 in the Corinna Chapman mystery series).
ReplyDeleteI read "The School of Essential Ingredients" by Erica Bauermeister for the Kitchen category. Finally, I have completed one section!
ReplyDeleteI read A Pocketful of Rye by Agatha Christie. :)
ReplyDeleteYes I "Mr.Linky"'d twice - I forgot the book title darn it!
ReplyDeleteHope that 's ok.
Serving Crazy with Curry is about someone who finds solace in cooking. Such a heartwarming read.
ReplyDeleteI listened to The Shape of Water (by Andrea Camilleri; narrated by Grover Gardner) and read Lamb (by Bonnie Nazdam,) both of which qualify for this category; but I only wrote a review (and a "quick and dirty" one at that!) for Lamb.
ReplyDeleteSo far, four categories down, two to go :-)
dog eared copy/Tanya
I linked up the book French Toast because you always find toast in my kitchen. Huge toast fan!
ReplyDeleteFor some reason, I got a giggle out of seeing Grapes of Wrath appear in this category. Mine was Saleema Nawaz's oh-so-satisfying novel, Bone and Bread.
ReplyDeleteJust added my review of "Tin Foil" by Jerusha Jones, a cozy mystery by a relatively new author.
ReplyDeleteI read "Tin Foil" by Jerusha Jones. I posted the link, but can't remember if I posted a comment yet or not. So, just in case, here it is.
ReplyDeleteI read
ReplyDeleteStolen Honey by Nancy Means Wright 4/5;
Recipe for Trouble by Jackie Griffey 4/5; and
Coroner's Lunch by Cotterill 5/5.
I read Holidays on Ice by David Sedaris but I guess I could have counted The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath too. Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteThe books that matched this category were:
ReplyDeleteLies, Knives, and Girls in Red Dresses
Dark Currents (x2 -- two books with the same title)
Cold Cereal
An Apple for the Creature
Bread and Roses Too
Fleas, Flies, and Friars
Although I think I've defeated the fruit fly problem so with luck that last one doesn't apply anymore. :-)