Guy Food
by Mimi Barbour, Rebecca York, Nina Bruhns, Dana Marton, Helen Scott Taylor
Helen Scott Taylor
June 2, 2015
Available in: e-Book
The way to a man's heart may be through his stomach, but cooking for guys can sometimes be frustrating. Most of them want simple, no fuss, stick-to-the-ribs meals, not gourmet fare. Here are some great examples of what they crave---the favorite foods of the heroes in Ten Brides for Ten Hot Guys. Some are the dishes their brides make especially for them. Some are favorites from their childhood. And still others are what they like to whip up when they take off their jackets, guns or cowboy hats and step into the kitchen. Each recipe comes with a note that will whet your appetite for one of the stories in Ten Brides for Ten Hot Guys.
Here you'll find tasty breakfast foods, hearty main dishes, great snacks, and desserts. Included are recipes for everything from Buffalo Wing Dip, Bourbon Baked Ham, and Loaded Potatoes to Cincinnati Chili and Peanut Butter Brownies.
Please enjoy these delicious dishes. They are each author's way of adding another facet to her story and characters. We hope you love these recipes as much as we do and that you'll want to cook them for your own guy for many years to come.
Recipes are by Rebecca York, Nina Bruhns, Dana Marton, Ammie Jones, Mona Risk, Alicia Street, Patrice Wilton, Mimi Barbour, Donna Fasano, and Helen Scott Taylor.
NYT & USA Today, best-selling, award-winning author, Mimi Barbour, lives on the beautiful east coast of Vancouver Island and writes her romances with tongue-in-cheek and a mad glint in her eye. Asked why she prefers paranormal or suspenseful romance, she answers, chuckling... "Because it's fun! Imagination can be a lot more interesting than what happens in real life to so-called normal people. I love my characters, and my goal is to make the readers love them also. To care about what happens to them while the tale unfolds. If I can steal my booklover's attention away from their everyday grind, absorb them in a fantasy world, and make them care about the ending, then I've done my job. "Thinking back, writing my first romantic suspense novel switched the hard work into fun, and I've not looked back. I love writing about men and women finding each other and falling in love. Along the way, it pleases me to fill their travels with gritty conflicts -- spiced up with lots of humor and seasoned with a few tears, but always with endings that are happy."