LOUISE PENNY’S

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Postcards from Three Pines: Kingdom of the Blind

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Hi there! Am writing from my book festival tour of Australia. Doing events in the day and writing Kingdom of the Blind early in the morning, and on flights. Met this little rescue Roo. I now donate to the cause. Stops in Perth. Adelaide. Fabulous, dynamic places. Love Australia! Then home to sweet boy Bishop.heart image

AN EXCERPT FROM KINGDOM OF THE BLIND

Myrna sat back in her chair, trying to remember.
She’d been in her bookstore the morning before when the mail arrived.
She’d poured a mug of strong tea and sat in the comfortable armchair with the indentation that fit her body like a mold.
The woodstove was on, and beyond her window was a brilliant winter day. The sky was a deep perfect blue, and the sun bounced off the snow-covered lawns, the road, the ice rink, and the snowmen on the village green. The whole village gleamed.
It was the sort of day that drew you outside. Even though you knew better. And once you were outside, the cold gripped you, burning your lungs, soldering your nostrils together with every breath. It brought tears to your eyes. Freezing the lashes so that you had to pry your lids apart.
And yet, gasping for breath, you still stood there. Just a little longer. To be part of such a day. Before retreating back inside to the hearth and hot chocolate, or tea, or strong, rich café au lait.
And the mail.

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The Madness of Crowds: Langoustines with Carrot Juice

“The langoustines are excellent,” said Vincent Gilbert, as they took their seats by the window.
On a clear day there was a splendid view of the village below and the hills beyond, rolling into Vermont. But the falling snow both obscured and softened it, giving the landscape a dreamlike quality.
To Dr. Gilbert, looking at the vista behind his companion, it was like something out of a storybook. Peaceful, calm.

Madness of crowds Nature of feast

Langoustines with carrot juice

Serves 4
Preparation time: 30 minutes
Cooking time: 5 minutes

INGREDIENTS:

  • 24 langoustines
  • 300 mL (1 ¼ cups) carrot juice
  • 4 mini green onions
  • One small carrot, julienned
  • One leek white, julienned
  • Juice of half a lemon
  • 240 mL (1 cup) 35% cream
  • Salt and pepper

DIRECTIONS:

  1.  Shell the langoustines. Set aside.
  2.  Cook the green onions in boiling salted water. Keep warm.
  3.  Combine the carrot juice, lemon juice, julienne of carrots and leeks in a saucepan. Bring to a boil. Season with salt and pepper.
  4.  Add the langoustines and let simmer for 4 to 5 minutes.
  5.  Divide the vegetables and langoustines evenly among the plates. Keep warm.
  6.  Add the cream to the pan and reduce by half until you have a smooth sauce.
  7.  Check the seasoning.
  8.  Pour the sauce over the langoustines.
  9. Decorate with green onions and a basil leaf. Serve immediately.
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All the Devils Are Here: Tartelettes au Citron

“They opened the brown paper bag and ate their tartelettes au citron in front of The Gates of Hell. Stephen talked about the remarkable work while brushing powdery icing sugar off Armand’s sweater.”

all the devils are here tartelettes au citron

Tartelettes au Citron

Makes one 26 cm (10 ½ in.) tart or 4 8 cm (3 in.) diameter tarts
Prep Time: 45 minutes
Baking time: 30 minutes

INGREDIENTS:

Crust

  • 250 mL (1 cup) all-purpose flour
  • 30 mL (2 tbsp.) sugar
  • Pinch of salt
  • 90 mL (6 tbsp.) salted butter, cut into cubes
  • 1 egg
  • 30 to 45 mL (2 to 3 tablespoons) water

Lemon filling

  • 4 egg yolks
  • 160 mL (2/3 cup) sugar
  • 30ml (2 tablespoons) cornstarch
  • 240ml (1 cup) milk
  • 180ml (3/4 cup) freshly squeezed lemon juice (about 4 lemons)
  • Grated zest of two lemons

DIRECTIONS:

Preparation of the dough

  1. 1) Combine the flour, sugar, salt, butter and egg in the bowl of a food processor.
  2.  Pulse until the texture is powdery
  3.  Add water until a ball of dough forms, neither grainy nor sticky.
  4.  Remove dough from bowl and wrap in plastic wrap.
  5.  Refrigerate for about 30 minutes.
  6.  Preheat oven to 180°C (350°F)
  7.  Butter and flour a pie pan
  8.  Roll out the dough and place it in the pan. Remove excess dough.
  9.  Cover the dough with aluminum foil and cover with peas to prevent the dough from puffing up during baking.
  10.  Bake for 20 minutes until almost done.
  11. Remove peas and aluminum foil. Set aside.

To prepare the lemon filling

  1.  Gather all lemon filling ingredients in a bowl.
  2.  Using a whisk, blend for one minute.
  3. Then over a saucepan of simmering water (double boiler), cook, whisking constantly, until the cream begins to thicken.
  4. Pour this mixture into the bottom of the pre-baked pie and bake at 180°C (350°F) for 10 to 12 minutes, until the cream is set.
  5.  Remove to a rack to cool.
  6.  Serve at room temperature


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A Better Man: Ginger Garlic Chicken Soup

“The incident room in Three Pines was filled with the aroma of wet socks, sweat, cilantro, and lime. Olivier and Gabri moved aside the firefighting equipment and set out the ginger-garlic chicken soup, sandwiches, and drinks…”

Ginger garlic soup

Ginger Garlic Chicken Soup

Serves 4
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 30 minutes

INGREDIENTS:

  • 30 mL (2 tbsp.) olive oil
  • One medium leek, sliced
  • 240 mL (1 cup) diced carrot
  • One red bell pepper, diced
  • One raw chicken breast, diced
  • 1ml (1/4 tsp.) cumin
  • 15ml (1 tbsp.) grated ginger
  • 4 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1.5 l (6 cups) chicken broth
  • 240ml (1 cup) fresh or frozen peas
  • 50g (2 cups) chopped arugula
  • Salt and pepper

DIRECTIONS:

  1. Heat oil in a saucepan, add leek, carrot, bell pepper and let cook over low heat for 5 minutes.
  2. Add the chicken, cumin, ginger, garlic and cook for another 5 minutes.
  3. Add the broth, salt and pepper. Bring to a boil and simmer for 15 minutes.
  4. Add the peas.
  5. Just before serving, pour the soup into the bowls and place the arugula on top.
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Kingdom of the Blind: Beef Stew and Warm Apple Crisp with Thick Cream

“They’d taken Benedict home then. To the Gamache home.
Now, all showered and in warm clothes, they’d joined the others in a meal of beef stew and warm apple crisp with thick cream. Comfort foods that rarely failed in their one great task.”

kingdom of the blind beef stew

Beef Stew

Serves 6
Preparation Time: 20 minutes
Cooking Time: Approximately 1 1/2 hours

INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 kg (2 lb 3 oz) beef stew, cut into 2.5 cm (1 in) cubes
  • 1 onion, cut into thin rings
  • 15 g (1 tbsp.) butter
  • 15 mL (1 tbsp.) olive oil
  • 30 g (4 tbsp.) flour
  • 250 mL (1 cup) red wine
  • 125 mL (1/2 cup) veal stock or meat broth
  • 2 stalks celery, chopped
  • 3 large carrots, sliced
  • ½ kale, core removed, thinly sliced
  • 10 medium potatoes, cut into cubes
  • salt and pepper

DIRECTIONS:

  • In a casserole dish, over medium heat, brown the meat and onion in the butter and oil for 5 minutes.
  • Sprinkle with flour and mix. Pour in the red wine and veal stock.
  • Season with salt and pepper. Cover and simmer over low heat for 1 hour.

  • Then add celery, carrot and cabbage on top. Cover again and cook until vegetables are tender, about 30 minutes.

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Apple Crisp with Thick Cream

Serves 4
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cooking Time: 35 minutes

INGREDIENTS:

  • 675 g (1 1/2 lbs) Cortland or McIntosh apples, peeled, seeded and diced
  • 150g (3/4 cup) brown sugar
  • 90g (1/3 cup) unsalted butter, tempered
  • 55g (1/3 cup) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 250 g (1 cup) rolled oats
  • A pinch of salt
  • 250ml (1 cup) heavy cream

DIRECTIONS:

  • Preheat oven to 180°C (350°F). Butter a square pan of about 17 cm (7″).
  • In a bowl, mix the apples with half the brown sugar. Place in pan.
  • In the same bowl, mix remaining brown sugar with butter, flour, oats and salt. Cover the apples with the crisp.
  • Bake for 35 minutes or until crisp is golden and apples are cooked.
  • Serve warm, pouring heavy cream over the crisp.
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Glass Houses: Shepherd’s Pie

“Getting up to prepare the shepherd’s pie, comfort food for their dinner, Gabri suspected his guests would find very little peace in whatever Gamache discovered. And probably no comfort in the food. As the kitchen filled with the aromas of sautéing garlic and onions and gravy and ground meat browning, he thought about the four friends and the close bond they shared. It had been obvious from that first visit, years earlier…”

glass houses shepherds pie

Shepherd’s Pie

Serves 6 to 8 Prep Time: 20 minutes Cooking Time: 1 hour

INGREDIENTS:

  • 125ml (1/2 cup) olive oil, for cooking
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 1kg (2lb1/4) ground lamb
  • 2 cloves of garlic, chopped
  • 1 leek, chopped
  • 15ml (1 tbsp.) tomato purée
  • 15ml (1 tbsp.) Worcestershire sauce
  • 125ml (1/2 cup) red wine
  • 250ml (1 cup) chicken broth
  • 2 sprigs thyme, chopped
  • 2 sprigs rosemary, chopped
  • 175g (1 cup) frozen corn
  • Salt and pepper

Mashed potato filling

  • 750g (11/2 lb) potatoes, peeled and cut into pieces
  • 60g (2oz) butter
  • 60ml (1/4 cup) milk
  • 120g (4oz) cheddar cheese, grated

DIRECTIONS:

  1. Preheat oven to 375°F (180°C)
  2. In a frying pan, heat olive oil to brown the chopped onion. Add ground meat until golden brown. Add garlic and cook for 3 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Set aside on a plate.
  3. Add a little oil to the same pan and fry the leek for 5 minutes over low heat. Add the tomato purée and Worcestershire sauce.
  4. Return the meat to the pan and stir. Pour in the wine and simmer for a few minutes until the wine reduces. Add the chicken broth, thyme, rosemary and corn and simmer for 15 minutes to concentrate the sauce. Adjust the seasoning and let cool.
  5. Prepare the garnish. Cook the potatoes in salted water. Drain and mashed potato.
  6. Add butter, milk, salt, pepper and half the cheese. Mix and cook for 2 to 3 minutes.
  7. Place the lamb mixture in a baking dish measuring approximately 20 cm x 30 cm (8″ x 12″). Spread mashed potatoes on top. Sprinkle with remaining cheese.
  8. Bake for 20 minutes or until shepherd’s pie is gratinated. Serve hot.

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Cultural Inspirations From Three Pines: All The Devils Are Here

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“Eventually, Armand led them back there, and stood transfixed in front of the statue. “The Burghers of Calais,” Stephen had said, his voice hushed, soothing. “In the Hundred Years’ War, the English King, Edward, laid siege to the French port of Calais.”
He looked at Armand to see if he was listening, but there was no indication either way. (All the Devils Are Here, page 5)

Auguste Rodin’s Burghers is made of bronze, measures over six feet in height, length, and width, and was constructed between 1884 and 1889. In Louise’s novel, a young Armand and Stephen Horowitz stand in front of the 1926 cast of the statue that stands in the gardens of the Musée Rodin in Paris. The original cast sits in Calais.

All the devils are here

Rodin’s work depicts the imminent destruction of Calais by the English forces during the 100 Year War. As Stephen describes to Gamache, “Just as complete catastrophe threatened, King Edward did something no one expected. He decided to have mercy on the people of Calais. But he asked one thing. He’d spare the town if the six most prominent citizens would surrender. He didn’t say it exactly, but everyone knew they’d be executed. As a warning to anyone else who might oppose him. They’d die so that the rest could live.”

But, in a complete twist of fate, the English spared the Burghers in the end!

What actually happened that fateful day in 1346 is up for conjecture but clearly it’s the selflessness of the act that Louise is illustrating here and putting forth not one, but two questions to all of us:

Would you give up your life for your family?

Would you give up your life for total strangers?

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Cultural Inspirations From Three Pines: A Better Man

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“Clearly the Sûreté doesn’t think you’re much use, or you wouldn’t be back here.
And don’t get me started on what they’re saying on Twitter, the dumb-asses. Not that I disagree.”
“Ruth!” said Reine-Marie.
“What? It’s the truth.”
“All truth with malice in it,” said Armand.
“But still the truth,” said Ruth.
Reine-Marie walked Armand to the door. “That was from Moby-Dick, wasn’t it?”
(A Better Man, page 115)

The quote does indeed come from Moby-Dick. It appears in Chapter 42 of the novel that Carl Van Doren called the “pinnacle of American Romanticism” and Louise levels its importance by citing it no less than eight times throughout the novel.

A Better Man

Near the end of A Better Man, Gamache pontificates on Melville’s meaning, saying that the quote is “About human nature… About obsession. About allowing rancor to cloud judgment. About what happens when we see the malice but fail to see the truth.” As the novel centers on social media and the truths, half-truths, and lies that pervade its platforms, Gamache’s interpretation of the quote is quite apt.

A Better Mans 2

While Melville uses the quote in describing the madness of Ahab, it’s interesting to note Ahab’s polar opposite, Ishmael – think Louise’s running theme of good verse bad, light verse dark – and how his own characteristics parallel that of Gamache; both, at the heart of it, are part philosopher, part mystic.

Call me Ishmael.
Call me Armand.

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Cultural Inspirations From Three Pines: Kingdom of the Blind

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“After sliding back into the booth and ordering coffee and a sandwich, Armand put on his reading glasses and opened the book he’d bought that morning at Myrna’s bookshop. Erasmus’s Adagia. His collection of proverbs and sayings.” (Kingdom of the Blind, page 179)

From the Adagia, we get perhaps Erasmus’ most famous line, and the basis for the title of Louise Penny’s 14th novel: “in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.” Although Erasmus almost certainly cribbed the quote from Genesis Rabbah, a Judaic text that dates to around 300 CE, it is he who is credited with the proverb.

Kingdom of the Blind

Desiderius Erasmus was born in Rotterdam in 1466 and is considered one of the greatest scholars of the northern Renaissance. Erasmus’ parents both fell victim to the Plague, so it’s curious to note that Louise uses the “plague” to describe the opioid epidemic that haunts Gamache throughout the novel.

Erasmus, like our beloved Gamache, was a true Renaissance man. He was a theologian, a philosopher, and a prodigious writer who, while alive, was responsible for roughly 20 percent of all books sales in Europe.

Kingdom of the Blind 2

And, it was Erasmus who said, “When I get a little money I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food and clothes.”

A phrase all of us can certainly identify with!

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Cultural Inspirations From Three Pines: Glass Houses

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“So,” said Gamache, looking at Matheo. “Are you considering bringing the cobrador del frac to Québec? Are you asking me if it would be legal?”

Matheo and Lea stared at Gamache, then Matheo laughed.

“Good God, no. I’m showing you this because Lea and I think that that”—he pointed out the window—“is a cobrador del frac.”

“A debt collector?” asked Gamache, and felt a slight frisson. Like the warning before a quake. (Glass Houses, page 54)

From its original Spanish, cobrador del frac translates as “The Dress-Coat Collector.” And as Mateo says in the novel, they’re not what they appear.

Beauvoir goes on to explain that the cobrador has its roots in the 1300s during the Spanish Inquisition when “lepers, the insane, babies who were born with deformities….those suspected of being witches” were exiled to La Isla del Cobrador. Those strong enough to survive their banishment returned – now cloaked – to torment the people who had expelled them.

And this is what the denizens of Three Pines are dealing with in Glass Houses, the indigeneuos cobrador. “The del frac was added much later by some clever marketer. But this is the real thing. The original,” says Jean-Guy.

Founded by that clever marketer in the 1980’s, a Cobrador del Frac’s sole focus is to humiliate debtors into paying their bills. They accomplish this mission – dressed in topcoats and tails – by literally stalking the insolvent around Spain until they’re so utterly humiliated that they pay up.

Glass Houses

El Cobrador del Frac has over 500 employees across Spain and Portugal and the tuxedo-clad collectors are all men, as women are “not deemed imposing enough”.

Clearly the Cobrador del Frac has never met Ruth!

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