Thought Wheel

Ann Chiappetta

Summer Recipe

| Filed under Writing Life

Sweet and Savory Chicken Thighs with fresh garden herbs

 

Four to six boneless, skinless chicken thighs

¾ cup Italian bread crumbs

 

Marinade ingredients:

4 to 6 TBL spoons  of Extra V. Olive Oil EVOO

 

½ tsp Chili powder

Two cloves thinly sliced fresh garlic cloves

¼ tsp garlic or onion salt to taste

 

Here’s where I diverge from traditional cooks with exact measuring:

Use fresh herbs in season.

I used one  or two sprigs of rosemary leaves, and lemon Thyme  picked yesterday and left them to dry overnight.

I stripped the leaves from the stems and put them in a small Ziploc and crushed them up, what is equal to two pinches

One large pinch of fresh chopped parsley

1 TBLS brown sugar syrup

You can use corn syrup but use less.

Juice of one medium lemon

A sprinkle or smidge  of nutmeg and cinnamon stick, grated  fresh

Add all ingredients except the bread crumbs and mix well.

Use fork to poke holes in chicken for marinating.

Marinate chicken for two hours in refrigerator, making sure marinade is evenly distributed over and under chicken, cover with plastic wrap.

After an hour, slosh marinade around

the chicken and let marinate the final hour in fridge.

 

Remove chicken from marinade and place in large freezer bag, add 1 cup bread crumbs seal bag and toss until chicken is covered well. Let sit ten minutes.

 

prep a broiling tray   or use mesh tray with nonstick spray

set the convection oven setting at 350 for 30 minutes.

Air fry time may be less, refer to your oven’s settings.

 

For Regular oven time, which may be longer,   refer to your oven’s instructions.

 

 

Chicken should be sweetly flavored with a hint of savory  and garlic, bread crumbs holding in juice of chicken.

We roasted patty pan summer squash as a side dish. Yummy!

 

Don’t ask about calories or exacts,  my cooking is like my writing, I know the rules well enough so when needed, I can experiment with them.

 

 

 

 

by Ann Chiappetta | tags : | 0

A burst of Creativity 🌅

| Filed under blindness Fiction nonfiction

Media Release

 

Contact Ann Chiappetta 914.393.6605 anniecms64@gmail.com

 

Anthology Includes Local Author

 

July 17. 2024 Monroeville, PA —   The creative works of local poet and author, Ann Chiappetta,

will be in the newest literary anthology published by Behind Our Eyes, Inc.

 

Behind Our Eyes 3: A Literary Sunburst is the third literary anthology

by writers with disabilities, who don’t let their disability define

their life. The topics range from memoirs, fiction, and poetry sharing slices of life, speaking to universal themes and common experiences, involving loss and grief, adversity and fear, love and

passion. You’ll be thinking of these stories long after you’ve put the

book down.

 

Copies of “Behind Our Eyes 3: A Literary Sunburst” edited by Mary-Jo

Lord are available through Barnes&Noble and Amazon.Com. Contact the author, Ann Chiappetta  anniecms64@gmail.com or visit her website: https://www.annchiappetta.com

Visit  Behind Our Eyes to find out more about the organization and how to support their  enriching literary programs for writers with disabilities.

Text of cover image courtesy of Be My AI: The image is the cover of a book titled “Behind Our Eyes 3: A Literary Sunburst.” The subtitle reads, “The Third Literary Anthology of Stories, Poems and Essays by Writers with Disabilities.” The book is edited by Mary-Jo Lord. The background of the cover is gray, and the text is in yellow. Below the text, there is an image of a bright, fiery sunburst, showing intense solar activity with vivid orange and yellow colors.

Text of cover image courtesy of Be My AI: The image is the cover of a book titled “Behind Our Eyes 3: A Literary Sunburst.” The subtitle reads, “The Third Literary Anthology of Stories, Poems and Essays by Writers with Disabilities.” The book is edited by Mary-Jo Lord. The background of the cover is gray, and the text is in yellow. Below the text, there is an image of a bright, fiery sunburst, showing intense solar activity with vivid orange and yellow colors.

 

Annie Shares News Summer Sweat V3 Issue 7 😎

| Filed under blogging nonfiction writing

‘Annie Shares News Volume 3 Issue 7 July 2024

anniesharesnews@groups.io

Subscribe: anniesharesnews+subscribe@groups.io

www.annchiappetta.com

Hot and steamy summer greetings from East of Pittsburgh.

😎  🌻  🌄

My first announcement is all my books in eBook formats are on sale for the month of July from Smashwords/D2D. That’s right – all my titles will be available as part of a promotion on Smashwords for the month of July as part of their Annual Summer/Winter Sale! This is a chance to get one of my books, along with books from many other great authors, at a discount so you can get right to reading.

http://smashwords.com/shelves/promos

 

The GEMS Press accepted a second poem, How to Fall Asleep for their next anthology, the release is TBA.

 

The cover of my new novel, Imperfections (below) is competing for cover of the month for July on allauthor.com .

 

In other news, I’ve been writing blog posts, interviewing interesting people and writing poetry, essays and reading. I am taking a second  generative small group poetry  workshop in August with John Sibley Williams, who is a wonderful and talented instructor. His fees are reasonable and I’ve learned more about the craft of writing and the publishers who invite poets to submit their work.  I am working harder on the quality of my poetry and hope to publish a full-length collection in 2025 thanks to John and his insightful instruction.

🎆

Independence Day is being celebrated  on the fourth of July. Being the wife of a Navy veteran,  I want to thank the veterans and active-duty members with a heartfelt virtual hug and Hoo Rah!. Without our Nation’s military we would not be here today.

 

Speaking of the military, here’s a great book series I picked up from audible.com: Crash Dive: the complete series books 1-6 by   Craig DiLouie  It was fascinating, suspenseful and based on true stories of submariners who fought in WWII.

Until next time —

 

 

 

 

 

by Ann Chiappetta | tags : | 0