Source: ediblecrafts.craftgossip.com |
Excerpt from The Blond
Leading the Blond:
The pantry held a treasure trove of snacks. My gaze flitted from cereal shelf to canned
vegetables shelf to crunchy snacks shelf and then, lo and behold, a dessert
shelf. Lined up in alphabetical order
was the entire line of Pepperidge Farm Milano cookies: Double Chocolate, Milk Chocolate, Mint, Orange and
Raspberry. I gasped with the realization
that Aunt Izzy was alive. Not “alive” in
the physical sense, in that she’d been pirated away in the witness protection
program somewhere, and another woman’s face had been beaten beyond recognition,
or even the paranormal sense in that her spirit would be dragging chains down
the stairs or moaning at all hours of the night. I meant alive in that she was not a glossy photograph
but a real flesh-and-blood woman who had lived and breathed and loved and
shared her DNA. With me.
We had the same cookie-loving
gene.
If you’ve
read my cozy mystery, The Blond Leading
the Blond, then you are aware of the strong “food” element of the
book. The main character, Ellery, is
always hungry and yet is often deprived of her daily nutritional requirements. The most common question I get from readers
is, “Why so much food in the book?” I
can only say that the majority of the book was written while my husband was
deployed for six months and I was living alone so not cooking much and doing
more snacking than regular meal eating, so I was probably always hungry. Besides, writers are told to appeal to all
five senses when writing, and I was appealing to the most-often overlooked one,
the sense of taste. (As an aside, Janet
Evanovich in her Stephanie Plum series appeals to the sense of taste very well
in her books. Anyone not get a hankerin’
for fried chicken after Stephanie and Lula swing by Cluck in a Bucket? She also hits the sense of touch too, because
you can practically feel the grease running down your chin. But I digress.)
So
today I thought a quick post about Ellery’s favorite snack, the Pepperidge Farm
Milano cookie. As described on their own
web page: “Ah, the classic Milano cookie. Simple.
Elegant. The perfect balance of
exquisite cookies and luxuriously rich dark chocolate—in irresistible varieties
to match any mood.”
As described
in my own (and hence, Ellery’s) words:
YUM!
No surprise
this upscale cookie is marketed towards an adult audience and not children,
where the market is crowded with Oreos and Nutter Butters.
I figured
they were named the Milano cookie because they were a favorite treat in the city
of Milan . But I figured wrong.
A little
research found that the Milano Cookie was invented by Pepperidge Farm. It started out as a Naples cookie, which was a vanilla wafer cookie
topped with a layer of chocolate.
But when these cookies were stacked into those little white cupcake-type
holders and shipped to warmer climates, the chocolate melted and the cookies
stuck together. This is not a problem in
my opinion, but some people really do prefer to eat one cookie at a time. So the top cookie inventors put their toques (tall white puffy chef's hats) together and came up with the brilliant idea to top the Naples
with another vanilla wafer and the Milano (a town not too far from Naples ) cookie was
born! The only thing I can’t find in my
research was when! They seem to have
been around for most of my adult life so I’m thinking maybe 25 years? Or maybe that's just when I graduated from Chips Ahoy! predilections. I don’t know for sure, but they have been
around long enough to work their way into popular culture. A Google research turns up plenty of articles
with plenty of pup-culture references.
My favorite is:
In an episode
("The Trip") of Seinfeld, George and Jerry comment about Los Angeles Police officers eating Milanos instead of donuts.
Also found in
my search are plenty of recipes on how to make your own Milano cookies. Only once you see the decadent ingredients
you may not feel quite so friendly towards these delicious little things. The recipe that looks the easiest can be
found here: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/gale-gand/milan-cookies-recipe/index.html
But perhaps
the most interesting thing discovered during my research was the craft projects
inspired by Milano cookies, as in Milano Sheep (pictured at the top of this
post.) Are they cute or what? I’m not sure if I would want to keep them on
a shelf or eat them. Someday when I have
absolutely nothing else to do, I might try making some Milano sheep and I'll
be sure and update you on their fate. I'm sure I'll eat at least one...all in the name of research, of course.
And do look for Milano Sheep to show up in a future Blonds at the Beach
novel!
<< Not ever has
one research project made me so hungry, so I’m off to the grocery store
now. If you see me pushing the shopping
cart down the cookie aisle, you might want to get out of my way 'cuz I'm a woman on a Milano Cookie mission.>>
No comments:
Post a Comment