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Cottage cheese pancakes with strawberry butter

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Yes, I am the consignment guru, the resale expert, whatever… but I’m also a murder mystery author. The Picker Who Perished  is set in Sarasota and features a handsome detective, flakey BFFs and a suave (or criminal?) antique dealer.

My heroine, Wendy Sam Miller, owns Too Good to be Threw, an imaginary consignment shop, and is way too busy to actually cook. So her recipes are simple enough for even the most distracted shopkeeper [slash] employer [slash] amateur detective. Here’s one (there’s more here and here):

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Polter’s Cottage Cheese Pancakes with Strawberry Butter

Wendy Sam’s friend Polter (short for Poltergeist) has spent the night watching her house after someone threw a conch shell into her living-room window. In the morning, he invites himself for breakfast. Fortunately, he can cook better than she can, and does.

    I opened the door and almost tripped over Polter, sitting on the stoop reading the sports section.
“Pancakes,” he said.
“And a good morning to you, too.”
“I’ve been dreaming of pancakes for the last two hours.”
   “I think I can manage that.” I retrieved the rest of the paper while Polter followed the scent of coffee into my kitchen. He’d poured us both big mugs, and I sipped mine while I rummaged for the Bisquick in the pantry. Pancakes involve Bisquick, right? I was peering at the side panel, hoping I had whatever other ingredients might be needed, when I noticed Polter’s frown.
    “Sit,” he said, and aligned the newspaper neatly in front of one of my breakfast bar stools. So I did. He was assembling bowls, measuring cups, other arcane kitchen utensils I didn’t remember owning. I don’t cook a lot, I believe I’ve mentioned.
    “Got any cottage cheese?” he said, as he opened the refrigerator.
“Any self-respecting woman always does,” I said. “It makes us think we’re on a diet.”
    He retrieved it from the back left corner of the bottom shelf and congratulated me on the fact that it was mold-free. I was enjoying the compliment, backhanded as it was, when he came up with another request I could easily fulfill. Sour cream. That’s something that I always have.
     Within a few minutes, he had a pancake batter mixed up, and was looking for the griddle. All I had was a frying pan. There’s nothing to be ashamed of in that; many women don’t have griddles in their kitchens. Do they?
     Then Polter was aghast that I did not have maple syrup in the house. I redeemed myself by whipping up a little gourmet treat of strawberry butter, and we settled down companionably to breakfast.

Polter’s Cottage Cheese Pancakes with Strawberry Butter

1 cup each sour cream and cottage cheese
3/4 cup flour
1-1/2 teaspoons sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
4 eggs, separated

Combine everything except the egg whites and beat thoroughly to blend.

Beat the egg whites until stiff and fold them in.

Using a lightly-buttered griddle (or frying pan if you’re Wendy Sam), ladle about 1/3 cup batter for each pancake. As you continue to make pancakes, be sure to stir the batter gently so it maintains consistency.

Strawberry Butter

Cream together ½ cup room-temperature unsalted butter and 2-3 tablespoons sugar (superfine if you have it). In another bowl, mash 3/4 cup very ripe strawberries with a sprinkle of lemon juice. Mix a small amount of the strawberries into the butter, adding strawberries as you go to mix it easily. Keeps a few days; great on biscuits too!

(The easier way: use unsalted butter and a good-quality strawberry jam. Put the mixture into a cunning little crock to serve so it looks French and fancy. Adding a mint sprig to the top of the crock takes your breakfast over the top, so to speak!)

If you haven’t read The Picker Who Perished, a Too Good to be Threw Consignment Shop Mystery by Kate Holmes yet, you simply don’t know what living is! You need, I mean REALLY NEED it.

ReSell RePlace ReJoice is the motto of HowToConsign.comOnline consignment sites are a boon to bricks-&-mortar consignment, resale, and thrifts… as a pricing resource! I found one today which is really Continue Reading »

You might recognize one of my email addresses on your consignment, resale or thrift shop’s e-mailing list. I love to hear about what’s going on in your businesses and how you’re “talking” with your followers/fans/friends, and I love getting your consumer news in my email in-box. Especially because many times, my “correspondents” have won an honor…

not just “Best Consignment Shop” but more & more, “Best Fashion Boutique” or “Best Furniture Store”

or the like. As in, best even when compared to the “real” stores, those new-merchandise retailers with massive advertising and marketing budgets. Isn’t that incredible… that a local, small (miniscule, often) business gains the loyalty of a marketplace and beats out the Big Boys. Kudos to all of us!

This is all wonderful. But Continue Reading »

Professional Resalers help each other with info from Too Good to be Threw

Click to see TGtbT on FB!

Many resale shopkeepers enjoy industry discussion groups on Facebook. They love to have a place where their ideas, comments and opinions are not the stuff of general knowledge.  It’s a place to discuss ideas, develop strategies, and even to learn something new.

[V]ery few businesses are doing something special with their presence on Facebook – I am sure you find the same thing with the pages you follow. Everyone seems to be doing the same thing, or saying the same thing. Over and over.

And oh how true! Over and over again, a shop’s page will have “Great stuff coming in” posts or “New markdowns taken!” While such commercial appeals are welcome, they don’t often build loyalty to your consignment, thrift or resale shop… the kind of loyalty that will have people thinking of your shop first, before they wander over to the mall.

Well, here’s a strategy that WILL build loyalty, one that works better than monthly Girls’ Night Out events and is easier, cheaper, and more consistent. A group page created by your business will

make your shop stand out from the Sea of Sameness

that consumers grow weary of in consignment and resale shopping today.

Starting a group page for your shop’s clientele is a great strategy to improve your business. This author’s #2 point, to add value to being a “regular” in your shop, is of course near and dear to my heart, but

I suspect #3 will be the real reason

you opt to put some time and effort into a shop FB group!

Read the article.

Another resource for your consignment, resale or thrift shop from TGtbT.com

Feel like a dummy because you can’t decipher eBay acronyms? Bookmark this page.

Got some industry resources to share? Add your best links for other info consignment, resale, and thrift shopkeepers could use in the comments. If you can, that would be wonderful.