Titles in the Americas Haunted Road Trip Series:
Ghosthunting Florida
Ghosthunting Kentucky
Ghosthunting Illinois
Ghosthunting Maryland
Ghosthunting New Jersey
Ghosthunting New York City
Ghosthunting North Carolina
Ghosthunting Ohio
Ghosthunting Ohio: On the Road Again
Ghosthunting Pennsylvania
Ghosthunting Southern New England
Ghosthunting Texas
Ghosthunting Virginia
Also of interest:
Cincinnati Haunted Handbook
Haunted Hoosier Trails
More Haunted Hoosier Trails
Nashville Haunted Handbook
Spooked in Seattle
Beyond Delicious: The Ghost Whisperers Cookbook
Copyright 2011 by Mary Ann Winkowski and David Powers
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED . No portion of this book may be reproduced in any fashionprint, facsimile, or electronicor by any method yet to be developed without express permission of the copyright holder.
For further information, contact the publisher:
Clerisy Press
P.O. Box 8874
Cincinnati, OH 45208-0874
clerisypress.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Winkowski, Mary Ann.
Beyond delicious: the ghost whisperers cookbook: more than 100 recipes from the dearly departed/Mary Ann Winkowski, David Powers.
p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-1-57860-499-9 (pbk.)
ISBN-10: 1-57860-499-0 (pbk.)
1. Cooking, American. 2. Ghost stories. 3. Cookbooks. I. Powers, David. II. Title.
TX715.W773 2011
641.5973--dc23
2011019132
Distributed by Publishers Group West
Edited by Ritchey Halphen
Cover designed by Scott McGrew
Interior designed by Annie Long
Mary Ann Winkowski photograph by Louis McClung/McClung Photography
David Powers photograph by Ken Powers
DEDICATION
To my husband, Ted; my daughters, Amber and Tara; and all the foodie spirits with the great recipes.
M. A. W.
For Abby, who managed to do as I asked, despite everything.
D. P.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
M Y THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING PEOPLE:
| Richard Hunt and his wife, Linder Hunt, for her expertise with the recipes. |
| Jack Heffron, for the short time that I worked with you. |
| Scott Schwimmer, my attorney, who loves me even when I do not listen. |
| Jen Gates, my literary agent, whose great advice is only a phone call away. |
| Jill Parsons Stearns for having great friends in the right places. |
| David PowersI could not have done it without you. Amazing you could make sense of my rambling; your talent makes a great story. Thanks also to your wife, Elizabeth, and your children for letting me have your extra time for our project. |
| My family and friends, always in my thoughts. |
| Most important, my clients who encountered chatty earthbound spirits with fond memories of foodwe can all enjoy the fruits of those reminiscences! |
Mary Ann Winkowski
O NE OF THE FIRST THINGS I REMEMBER is how proud I was when I wrote a story about a truck when I was about six years old, and how excited my parents were to read all ten words of it. My parents, Kay and Ken, were supportive of my efforts then and have never stopped being supportive of meeven when I switched my major from journalism to creative writing, and later when I took a job as a coffee-shop barista after leaving college, so Id have enough spare time to write. Thanks for everything, Mom and Dad.
My wife, Elizabeth, has always been just as supportive, never batting an eye when we made the five-year plan after getting married, where she would work full-time and I would write, before we both settled down and got real jobs. Without her and without those five years, I know I would never have been able to keep writing at the forefront of my life, and without her now, fifteen years later, I know I would never find the time and peace of mind to keep writing. Thanks, Elizabethyou always make it mean something, even when it doesnt.
I must also thank my young children, Gabe (age 10), Evie (age 7), and Phina (age 4), who somehow managed to play quietly while I sat at the computer in a corner of the living room and wrote up the stories for this book. I know it was hard for them to understand why they had to be so quiet, especially in the dead of winter when they couldnt go outside to play, but they managed to pull it off with only a few disasters. Thanks for reminding me what its like to be a kid, my little turkeys.
Of course, it goes without saying that I owe Mary Ann more thanks than Ill ever be able to muster. Her level-headed, no-nonsense, and honest approach to everythingincluding her own amazing abilityis a trait that sets her far apart from the crowd. Without it, I dont think I could have got through this book, and without her confidence in me, even when I lacked confidence in myself, I wouldnt have had a book to get through in the first place. Thank you, Mary AnnI will never be able to repay you for everything youve done for me and everything youve taught me over the last decade.
Id also like thank my college roommate and ever-present friend since then, Erich Burnett, who not only gave me my first paid writing assignment, he helped me hone my journalistic skills to the point that I was later able to join him on the editorial staff at Scene in Cleveland. He was also the person who introduced me to Mary Ann when she told him she needed to find a ghostwriterfor that, Erich, I can never thank you enough.
Finally, Id like to thank my brother, who never did anything more with his stories than entertain me. Dont think Ive forgotten those nights, Andrew, when wed sit up after we were supposed to be in bed and youd make up stories on-the-fly, right as you told them to me. Without your tales of The Veil of Black A and Starship One, I dont think storytelling would ever have occurred to me as a career choice.
David Powers
INTRODUCTION
W HEN I FIRST STARTED HELPING PEOPLE communicate with earthbound spirits and helping those spirits cross over, I had very little to go on. At first, my grandmother was always with me because I was just a child, but because Grandma didnt have the same ability as me, she wasnt really able to give me much insight into how I should go about things. Along the way, I picked some things up myself, was told some things directly by the spirits, and had my abilities extended by whatever Power gave me this gift in the first place.
One of the things I picked up from my own experiences was to always take a notepad and pen with me into every job. It seems so obvious now, but back when I first started doing this in earnest, it didnt occur to me. Usually the spirits were family members and I could just pass their messages on directly, or they were completely unrelated, and, to be frank, no one really cared what they had to say as long as they said goodbye and left them alone.
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