Tuesday, November 5, 2024

BETTER THAN PIE FOR THANKSGIVING by Marisa Masterson

 

Don’t be fooled this Thanksgiving by an image of a Pilgrim holding a pumpkin pie. It never happened.

Pumpkin but not pumpkin pie—that is likely what colonists new to the United States ate. Why no pie? I will explain, but first let me share about the pumpkin’s history in the Americas.

Squash and pumpkins originated south of the United States. The oldest seeds have been found in Mexico, so it was a plant that was brought into North America,

Many indigenous people groups relied on it in their diet. They ate the seeds, flesh, flowers, and even the leaves. Little wonder those people who landed at Plymouth Rock discovered how useful the humble pumpkin would be for them.


Colonist in my country’s history came to rely on the pumpkin as a staple in their diet. The seeds were dried from those first pumpkins shared by native tribes and planted. It was easy to grow, and the vines produced a great deal of fruit.

Europeans enjoyed spiced pies. The immigrants brought those recipes with them. Only, wheat was not readily available. They could not make pie crust. Instead, they substituted a spiced custard baked inside a pumpkin shell nestled in the coals of a fire for the desserts they remembered from their home country.

The heroine in my new release, Custard Pumpkin by Claire, makes this very thing:

Mrs. Zehnder had shared a recipe with her yesterday. She told her to create a custard and add nutmeg and cinnamon to it. Poured into a hollow pumpkin, it would bake in the ashes.

Claire watched her husband inhale the aroma. The pumpkin nestled in the fireplace. She had heaped the hot coals around it, careful not to let any get into the open top where the custard browned.

Making the custard had required every egg she had in her small bowl. Hans had bought her four hens and a cow while they were still in Saginaw. She was blessed to have them. Many people in the community did not have the money to buy animals.

The recipe had used up her small store of sugar. She hoped the men might travel to Saginaw soon for supplies. Last evening, she had heard the three men discuss a trip upriver to do that.

When she serves her custard, my heroine will also scoop out part of the baked orange flesh of the large fruit. It is the beginning of our traditional pumpkin pie.  

By the way, I include a recipe for the custard baked in the shell in my new release. It is modernized and ready for you to enjoy this Thanksgiving.


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His guilt separates them. Can a mystery create a bond of love between this couple forced into an unwanted marriage?

For Claire's small German village, it is a black summer. Typhoid hits the townspeople and surrounding farms. With Claire's parents dead, she struggles to know how she will survive.

When a call for volunteers goes through her part of Germany—a chance to settle in Michigan and Christianize the local tribe—she seizes the opportunity. She hopes to forge a new future--one filled with possibility rather than starvation.

As a single woman, she must travel as the unpaid servant to a couple, the young carpenter Hans Mueller and his wife. Unfortunately, Claire's prospects change radically when the man's wife dies during the voyage. The minister of their group pushes Hans and her into marriage. Reluctant but determined, she agrees.

She and her husband arrive in a new land carrying their old grief. Hans ignores Claire. She is sure he hugs his grief for his wife. He throws himself into the work of building the settlement for their community. She is at a loss on how to be a wife to a man who does not want one. Instead, she spends her time befriending women from the Chippewa tribe.

Mischief and outright vandalism threaten the settlement. Are the Chippewa—the people Claire views as friends—responsible? What can stop the sudden surge of hate that springs up in the missionary community they founded to reach out to the indigenous people?

Claire and Hans are determined to discover who wants to drive away the German immigrants. But at what cost? And why does a certain fur trapper target the women in their settlement?

Discover how custard pumpkin plays a role in allowing this couple to reveal their hidden passion for one another. If you enjoy well-researched historical romance with a cozy mystery, grab your copy of the book now.

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