Monday 31 July 2023

Summer & Get Outdoors Degustabox

 Degustabox is a monthly food and drink subscription box. It's an excellent way of discovering new products which have only just appeared in the shops, or those which have been around for a while, but you haven't had a chance to try them yet.

Thanks to Degustabox, I have found new favourites to add to our shopping list, including some products which I otherwise wouldn't have tried.

Each time a monthly box arrives, its contents are a total surprise. You get a good selection of foods and drinks.

If you haven't tried Degustabox subscription box yet, and would like to have a go, I have a £3off discount from your first box (and you can unsubscribe any time), just use code DKRLN when placing an order. 

What did we get in the Summer & Get Outdoors Degustabox box?


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Muscle Moose The Dinky Protein Bar Salted Caramel Pretzel (35g/£1.50) is a Product of the Month. This is a caramel flavour protein bar, with a low sugar caramel layer, with soya nuggets, and topped with pretzel pieces.

Handy to carry with you for the times when you are feeling peckish, or craving a bit of a sweet treat.

Nutritional values: 130kcal and 1.6g of sugar per bar (written in tiny fonts, it's hard to read).

Available at ASDA.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Plantastic Millionaire Flapjacks Choc & Caramel (£2.25) are flapjacks with a vegan caramel and chocolate flavour topping.

While I enjoyed Plantastic Sweet Apricot and Ginger flapjacks from the New Year Degustabox selection very much, I'm less enthusiastic about the new flavour. It has an exceedingly sweet chocolate caramel topping over a dry base of oat flakes. In fact, I couldn't even finish one. Saying that, my older son polished off the whole box later.

This product is 100% plant-based, contains no artificial colours or flavours.

Typical values: 138kcal and 13.5g of sugar per flapjack.

Available at Tesco & ASDA.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Mentos Gum Pure Cherry Chewing Gum (£2.50) is a well-known chewing gum, in a new recyclable paper-based container. 

We took it with us on a long car trip to Cornwall (and back), and enjoyed its fruity refreshing taste. The chewing gum has a crispy shell with a delicious liquid filled centre, and provides a long lasting fruity taste. This is a sugar-free treat.

Available in all major supermarket chains.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


KIND Snacks Thins Dark Chocolate Nuts and Sea Salt Multipack/ Thins Dark Caramel Nuts and Sea Salt Multipack (£2.50) are thin and chewy bars which are both tasty and nutritious.

You should receive 1 item in your box. We got the Dark Chocolate flavour (ingredients include almond pieces, dark chocolate, peanut pieces, glucose syrup, chicory root fibre, brown rice crisps, honey, sugar etc.

KIND THINS are a source of high fibre, gluten free and have no artiificial colours, flavours or preservatives.

Under 95kcal per bar, these are lovely snacks.

Available at ASDA.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Jordan's Country Crisp Limited Edition Red Velvet (£3.80) is the latest granola from Jordan's, a combination of light and crispy golden oat clusters with chocolate brownie pieces and cream cheese frosting flavoured red oat clusters.

Source of fibre, wholegrain oats. Suitable for vegetarians. It doesn't say vegan on the box, but I don't see any dairy or honey among the ingredients.

Nutritional values: 192kcal and 9.7g of sugar per 45g portion.

Available at Waitrose and on Ocado.



Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box

Sauce Shop Honey Chipotle BBQ Sauce (£2.75) is a sweet smoky sauce, perfect for chicken, or corn.

Sauce Shop sauces and seasonings are made in the UK, using natural ingredients. If it's been raining non-stop, and the BBQ is not possible, this sauce will make a lovely pizza dip for a movie night.

Ingredients include tomato puree, sugar, white grape vinegar, honey, onion, garlic, salt, smoked paprika, chipotle pepper.

Typical values: 153kcal and 33.7g of sugar per 100g. 

Available at Sainsbury's, Morrisons, ASDA and Booths.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


Very Lazy Cajun Paste (£2, see above) will bring an authentic taste of Louisiana to your kitchen. It tastes delicious, marinated over chicken. For a vegetarian feast, mix a selection of vegetables (courgettes, sweet peppers, sweet tomatoes etc) with a tablespoon of Cajun paste and roast them in the oven.

Ingredients include: red pepper, rapeseed oil, onion puree, tomato paste, muscovado sugar, garlic puree, smoked paprika, green pepper, lime juice, coriander leaf, salt, ground cumin, thyme, basil, oregano, onion powder, chipotle chilli powder etc.

Typical values: 39kcal and 2.6g of sugar per 20g serving.

Very Lazy's motto is "Maximum flavour, minimum fuss!"

Available at Tesco, ASDA and Morrisons.


We love Kettle Chips, and are always excited to try new flavours. KETTLE Chips Sriracha Mayo (£1.50) take inspiration from street food markets around the world. If you like your savoury snacks with a bit of spice, you will enjoy the flavoursome Sriracha Mayo flavour.

These crunchy chips are vegetarian and gluten free.

Typical values: 501kcal and 1.04g of salt per 100g.

Available at Waitrose and Tesco.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box

SXOLLIE xider Cripps Pink xider (£1.80 for 330ml bottle) is a delicious cider that bursts with flavour. It's a refreshing fusion of chilled floral sweetness and light bubbles. Very enjoyable.

Made purely with "Cripps Pink apples and sunshine". No added sugar, no concentrate. Vegan friendly, B Corp certified.

Available at Sainsbury's, Morrisons, on Amazon Prime and www.sxollie.com.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box

Dalston's Soda: Peach Soda and Rhubarb Soda (£2 each) is a full flavour fizz crafted with real fruit and no nasties. No added sugar, no sweeteners and no artificial ingredients.

Lovely refreshing drinks - perfect for a picnic or BBQ.

You should receive two items in your box.

Available at Waitrose, Sainsbury's, ASDA and on Ocado.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


And the final product in the latest box: Boost Iced Coffee: Cafe Latte or Caramel Latte (£1.19).

You should receive one item. We got a Caramel Latte, smooth and mellow. A tad too sweet for me, but someone who has a sweet tooth, will love it.

Typical values: 125kcal and 23g of sugar per 250ml can.

Available in convenience stores and on Amazon.


Chez Maximka, Degustabox food box


What is your favourite product from the latest Degustabox box?

Saturday 29 July 2023

A Secret Cornish Summer by Phillipa Ashley




 
Chez Maximka, books set in Cornwall

Summer for me always means a batch of new books, set in Cornwall. And if you're looking for a delightful summery read, A Secret Cornish Summer by Phillipa Ashley will bring the Cornish seaside to wherever you are.


Blurb:

This beautiful Cornish summer, there'll be sun, sea, sand - and secrets...

When Eden steps out of her idyllic coastal cottage to find a Speedo-wearing, suntanned stranger doing yoga in next door's garden, she is immediately on her guard. Since her ex-husband betrayed her in the worst possible way, she has kept her distance from all men, taking refuge in her start-up coffee business.

But as she gets to know Levan, Eden begins to wonder if he might be different - until she discovers he's not quite what he seems. And when a long-buried family secret surfaces, her faith in those she loves most is shaken to the core.

As the secrets spill out, relationships old and new ill be tested like never before.

Can Eden learn to trust again, and move past all the secrets of this Cornish summer?


Eden lives in one of the old lighthouse cottages, which enjoy a dramatic vista over the Cornish coast. One day she is busy roasting coffee beans for her cafe, the Lighthouse Coffee Container, when her grandma Iris demands her attention. 

She's been "discreetly" spying on the strange young man doing yoga in the garden next door. "Eden had never, ever seen one of its occupants standing on his head, wearing only a pair of orange Speedos".

As it happens, Levan is not a guest at the rented cottage but a new owner of the Longships. This is a big surprise for Eden and Iris, as the sale has been done very hush-hush.

Eden's cottage has been in the family for several generations. Both her grandafther and father worked on the Hartstone Lighthouse.

"At the age of thirty-three, she'd never meant to return to Lighthouse Cottages - not permanently. Anyway. She'd never thought she'd have to return, in order to have a roof over her head and be able to feed herself.

But that was where Simon had left her: homeless, broke and heartbroken".

Her con-man of a husband has left her high and dry, having drained her account. Simon is a narcissist who goes through life, unconcerned about anyone he hurts. Emotionally abusive, he is a serial liar and a fraudster.

When after a two-years-long absence, Eden receives a letter from her obnoxious ex, it upsets and infuriates her in equal measure. She doesn't know whether she can trust a word of what he says.

In the meantime, Levan has charmed both Iris and Sally (Eden's Mum). He is quite reluctant to talk about himself though. All they learn about Levan is that he is involved in the "boring IT stuff", being economical with the truth that he is working for the security services.

There is another, bigger secret in his life, that could change everything. His "other secret was different. It was one he felt compelled to keep, just to try and rebuild his life after a moment of madness that had brought it crashing down".

Eden and Levan are drawn to each other, but for both of them their past is holding them back. For Eden, her experience with Simon has left her suspicious about everyone, paranoid even.

When Eden discovers the truth about Levan, she is shaken. And then further revelations from people she holds dearest unsettles her even more. 

Will Eden be able to re-assess her trust issues, accept the past secrets and learn to love again?


Levan is a compelling character, albeit with a penchant for taking his clothes off whenever he's working outdoors, going all Poldark-esque. His backstory is gripping, but also poignant (relationships with his stiff-upper-lip parents, his big secret etc).

I am totally "Camp Levan" and think he had a full right to keep his past to himself, as you don't just open your soul to people whom you hardly know. Eden has totally over-reacted. She has being badly hurt by her ex, but that doesn't make everyone around an untrustworthy person unless they bare their soul at the first meeting. We all have our secrets that we don't want to share even with those that we love, and sometimes never share with anyone. For a variety of reasons. 


A Secret Cornish Summer is an uplifting romantic novel, full of secrets, passion, humour and warmth.

I loved the light-hearted humour, not of the LOL variety, but more subtle, and with astute observations of human nature. Take Eden's grandma. "When necessary, her Granny Iris had a voice that could penetrate a nuclear bunker". Just one sentence to introduce the character, and she immediately comes to life on page 1. In fact, Iris doesn't ever disappoint, throughout the book she shines like a lighhouse beacon.

Cornwall provides a beautiful setting for the developing romance story. I loved seeing the familiar geographical names, recognising so many of them, as we tend to stay every summer in a small village outside Penzance. 

There is a mention of Le CarrĂ©'s house too, which brings back some wonderful memories of visiting David and Jane in their beautiful home, with its sprawling tiered garden, and the most amazing sea views. Years ago we stayed in their guest cottage, and for years have been visiting them when we had holidays in Cornwall. Both my boys loved running in their garden. So many memories! 


Chez Maximka, Cornwall

P.S. This book is currently on 3 for £6 offer at The Works. If you plan to take a stash of books on holidays with you, that's a pretty good offer.

We just came back from a week in Cornwall. I left my copy of A Secret Cornish Summer on the book shelf for someone else to enjoy. That's my own little tradition, to leave books read on holidays for someone else to discover them.


I'll end this review with a description of Penzance that makes me all nostalgic about Cornwall.

"Iris and Levan had bagged a table with a parasol on the front of the terrace, from where they could admire the great sweep of Mount's Bay. The panorama from Lizard, almost to Land's End, was spectacular enough; add in the fairy tale castle of St Michael's Mount and there could be few better views in England".

Amen to that!


Chez Maximka, Cornish coastline


Chez Maximka, romance books set in Cornwall


Tuesday 18 July 2023

Turning the World to Stone: The Life of Caterina Sforza Part One 1472-1488 by Kelly Evans

 

Chez Maximka

"I'm no man's pawn. And anyone who cares to challenge my position from now on will find themselves dealing with a Sforza".


Blurb:

Vilified by history, Caterina Sforza learned early that her life was not her own. Married at age ten, she was a pawn in the ever-changing political environment of Renaissance Italy.

Resigned to her life as a fifteenth-century wife, Caterina adapted to the role she was expected to play: raising and educating her children, helping the poor in her new home, and turning a blind eye to her husband's increasingly shameful behaviour. But Fate had other plans for her, and soon Caterina's path would be plagued by murder, betrayal, and heartbreak.

"Could I write all, the world would turn to stone"


Caterina Sforza is credited with having confided to a monk during the later years of her life, "Se io potessi scrivere tutto, farie stupire il mondo", which translates as "If I could write everything that happened, I would shock the world".

Her life story still has the power to appal and repel in equal measure.

Turning the World to Stone: The Life of Caterina Sforza Part One 1472-1488 by Kelly Evans is an enthralling historical novel set in the Renaissance Italy. It paints a rich picture of the Italian Renaissance Courts of Milan, Rome, Imola and Forli, as well as multifarious deeds of the higher echelons of power.

The political, social and economic machinations of the Italian Renaissance courts are brought vividly to light.


When we first meet Caterina, she is but a child of ten, playing with a ball. She hides under the table, and inadvertently listens to the conversation between her father, Galeazzo Sforza, and her stepmother, Bona of Savoy. The Pope's nephew Girolamo Riario is visiting Milan, hoping to wed Caterina's 11-year-old cousin, but her parents don't want the marriage to take place. Caterina is offered by her father as a substitute. He knows well, what awaits his innocent child. The future husband-to-be insists on consummating marriage there and then. This legitimised rape is blessed by the church and her family, so as to gain new political influence and money thanks to strenghtened relations with the Pope.

Caterina stays in Milan until she is fourteen, being instructed by Bona how to be a perfect wife. Bona teaches her stepdaughter the lore of herbal medicine. This is the passion two women share.

Caterina also enjoys learning sword fighting. "Descended from a long line of condottieri, elite mercenary captains who served Popes and kings alike, Caterina was as encouraged as her male siblings to learn to protect herself with both sword and dagger".

When it's time to leave Milan, Caterina is sad. "Her new life was a blank page waiting to be filled, and her stomach lurched at the thought of entering that unknown without the support of her family".

Being married to the Pope's nephiew, she is plunged straight into the centre of politics. 

"Money. All the world's woes seemed to come down to money. Who had it, who didn't, and who wanted more and more... When she had dreamed of adult life as a child, never had Caterina imagined the confusing and ever-changing tangle of families and loyalties she had encountered so far in this city. And here she was at the centre of it".

Riario is extremely greedy, unscrupulous and merciless towards anyone standing in his path. He has no redeeming qualities, yet Caterina is loyal to him. She has to, in order to survive. When children come, one after another, she acquires a new purpose in life.

"But what choice did any woman have? She could decide to disobey and fight with him and risk repudiation, or act the part of a supportive wife for the sake of her children and herself."

Caterina has to fight for her family, since her husband has acquired too many enemies. She knows that Girolamo is not a man who would defend his family and wants to ensure her children and their future is protected. 

"Caterina had realised that she thought more strategically than most men. She was learning from their mistakes, so many to choose from, and she was an eager student".

From a passive spouse, accepting her husband's shameful behaviour, Caterina grows into a woman who builds her own destiny. As the saying goes, it you live among the wolves, you have to act like a wolf.

Under the meek god-fearing exterior, there is an interior of steel. The world will be shocked indeed.


This is a sympathetic portrait of young Caterina Sforza, before she would become a figure of hate. It's difficult to sympathise with someone who is known to be an unhinged psycopath in her later life (one of her crimes: killing not just the male conspirators who assassinated her husbands, but their pregnant wives and little children). 

Coming from a family of sadistic rulers and fratricides, she is married at a tender age of ten to a repugnant, totally immoral man, and becomes part of another horrid family. It's impossible to survive unless you become one of them.

This account provides some understanding of how she would become so detestable, from being a child bride and living through the assassination of her father, constant conspiracies surrounding the courts of Milan and Rome, further murders in her family, persistent fear for her children and herself, eternal wars for power and land.

Turning the World to Stone is a thought-provoking, thoroughly engrossing read, a sweeping tale of fate, obsession and ambitions, and one woman's resolve to rule her own destiny.


Potential triggers: rape, murder, torture.

P.S. Though it does not interfere with the story, the portrait attribution on the cover design is not correct. This is not a portrait of Caterina Sforza, but of Simonetta Vespucci (by Botticelli). The portrait below is a presumed portrait of Caterina by Lorenzo di Credi.


Italian art


Purchase Link - https://mybook.to/Caterina

Author Bio –

Born in Canada of Scottish extraction, Kelly Evans graduated in History and English then moved to England where she worked in the financial sector. While in London Kelly continued her studies in history, concentrating on Medieval History, and travelled extensively through Eastern and Western Europe.

 

Kelly is now back in Canada with her husband Max and a rescue cat. She writes full-time, focussing on illuminating little-known women in history with fascinating stories. When not working on her novels, Kelly writes Described Video scripts for visually impaired individuals, plays oboe, and enjoys old sci-fi movies.

 

Social Media Links –

Website: https://www.kellyaevans.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChaucerBabe

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kellyevansauthor
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kellyevansauthor/

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Kelly-Evans/author/B0187JGTOQ

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/14335541.Kelly_Evans

 

Chez Maximka, Italian Renaissance


Saturday 15 July 2023

The Piper's Children by Iain Henn

 

Chez Maximka

"And then he remembered. Fragmented images resurfacing, coming together. Something his mind had been blocking. He gasped at the memory, icy shivers radiating up his spine. 

Der Rattenfänger."


"Someone out there is playing mind games. Testing us."

"Okay. But who?"

"Someone who is far more dangerous than we thought".


The Piper's Children by Iain Henn is a riveting, suspensful mystery. This standalone thriller is the first book in an exciting new series about a special FBI unit, focused on seemingly unsolvable crimes.


Blurb:

A baffling mystery sets an FBI agent on a dangerous path...

Park rangers are puzzled when a child is found wandering alone in the middle of a forest near Seattle.

Stranger still, he speaks a peculiar language that sounds a little like German, and is dressed in clothes people wore in the Middle Ages.

With no one having reported him missing, FBI Special Agent Will McCord assembles a dedicated unit to investigate the case, placing Detective Ilona Farris at its head.

Their relationship is edgy. They used to be an item. But McCord knows Farris is the best person for the job. Especially when more children turn up in similar circumstances.

Farris isn't convinced that she is in fact the right person. Memories of a traumatic incident in her own childhood begin to emerge, and threaten to cloud her judgement.

Can she bury her demons and solve the mystery of these children, seemingly lost in time?


Ilona Ferris is an FBI agent, following in the footsteps of her late father. One morning she is jolted awake by the shrill ring of her phone. She is needed as early as possible in an unusual case, where her expertise could be used. The chopper is taking her from Seattle to Poulsbo.

The person calling her is her ex, FBI Special Agent Will McCord "Ambitious and impatient. Pushy. A special agent when we'd been together and now an SSA". They parted two years earlier, and not on good terms. Ilona is apprehensive, the sound of Will's voice brings back some unpleasant memories.

When Ilona arrives to Poulsbo, she finds out that the "agency received a call from the local sheriff. Park rangers found a kid lost in the forest yesterday, dressed like something out of the Middle Ages and speaking German. The local chief contacted head office for assistance, requesting linguists and child handlers".

The analyst and translator from the Linguist Division Marcia Kendall believes the boy is speaking Middle High German, a variant spoken for two hundred years during the Middle Ages, around 1050 to 1350.

Marcia learned that the boy is named Dietmar, he is ten years old, and was with other children, in a cave. According to the interpreter, Dietmar comes from Hameln in North Germany, where the story of the Pied Piper originates from. He says the other children and he were following an evil man playing a pipe.

Dietmar wants to go home. Who is this child, and where is his home? Nobody has reported him missing.

McCord assembles a new unit to tackle this case, and any other seemingly baffling cases.

Ilona wonders why she's been invited to the new unit. Will explains that she has a track record that fits the profile. Apparently, the big boys have had their eyes on her for a while

"The concept is to identify, early on, those cases likely to fit the long-term, difficult to solve, risk-of-becoming-high-profile cases. We'd assign the special unit to act before any of that develops".

The unusual case has made it into the media almost immediately. There's the danger of it being sensationalized by the media, and the community is most likely going to panic. The answers to the mystery are needed to be obtained fast.

Ilona appreciates that part of the reason she was brought in is that she understood childhood trauma, being kidnapped at the age of 14 and held hostage, and emerging from her ordeal a different girl from the one she'd been before. Yet she is wondering if she is in fact the right person for the job, as her past might in fact leave her unable to process the facts.

As the investigation progresses, the case acquires a more sinister aspect. Ilona and Will have to move fast to solve the mystery of the evil Piper.



The Piper's Children is an atmosperic, gripping tale. A genuine page-turner, with a propulsive plot and complex characters.

The twists and turns are deftly plotted. The premises for the intriguing mystery, using the legend of the Pied Piper, was absolutely fantastic, yet the solution didn't quite work for me, and I have more questions which I cannot discuss here as not to give any spoilers.

The elements of the folk story, and the historical research, are skilfully interwoven with the modern day investigation. 

Iain Henn has launched an intriguing mystery series. Can't wait for the next book in the series!


This post is part of the blog tour for The Piper's Children. Many thanks to Iain Henn and Polly from The Book Folks for my e-copy of the book!


Chez Maximka


Purchasing links:

https://geni.us/ppBS

UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0C5XNK6W8

US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/ B0C5XNK6W8

CA: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0C5XNK6W8

AU: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0C5XNK6W8




Author bio:

Born in Sydney, Australia, Iain worked for many years in print media production

for newspapers, magazines, and direct marketing agencies, and as a writer for

small business websites.

He has written fiction from a young age. Somewhere in his house, there is still a

framed copy of his first published story, a ‘5-minute fiction’ tale in Woman’s Day.

Since then, he has never looked back, having short stories published in various

magazines worldwide, and now his suspenseful thrillers and mysteries.

Commenting on what influenced his writing journey, he describes a moment that

has stayed with him. On his first day in his first job, as a teenage messenger

boy, he left the office via a back exit into a narrow alleyway where he saw the


body of a man crumpled on the ground. He had just jumped out of a window

from the neighbouring building. The paramedics were already approaching.

When Iain returned an hour or so later, the body and the surrounding activity

were gone, there was just a chalk outline on the ground where the body had

been. Ever since he has wondered who that man was, what led him to suicide,

and what his future might have been had he lived. Decades later, that chalk

outline is often on the writer’s mind when telling the stories of his characters’

lives.

Authors who have inspired Iain include Daphne Du Maurier, Ken Follett, Michael

Crichton, Tess Gerritsen, Michael Robotham, and Harlen Coben. He lives on the

New South Wales coast with his wife.


Social Media links

Website: https://thebookfolks.com

Insta: @the_book_folks

Twitter: @thebookfolks

Facebook: http://facebook.com/thebookfolks

Blog: https://thebookfolks.com/blog/

Iain Henn Twitter: @IainHenn

Iain Henn Insta: @iainhennauthor


psychological thriller