Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Sarah Addison Allen

Quote by Sarah Addison Allen

“I make a great fried egg sandwich. Want to try it?" Chloe stared at her with an encouraging smile until Josey finally laughed and nodded. "Okay." "Great!" Chloe put on a pair of disposable gloves, then she took butter and two eggs from the under-the-counter fridge. "Go ahead and take a business card. You can call me here if you want. And the bottom number is my cell." She plopped a pat of butter onto the grill. When the butter melted, she cracked the eggs into it, close enough for their whites to merge. While they sizzled, she buttered two slices of sourdough bread and put them on the grill. "I didn't know this place was called Red's," Josey said, reading the card. Chloe smiled when she thought of her great-grandfather. "Another family tradition. My great-grandfather had red hair. So did my mother." Chloe sprinkled the eggs with salt and pepper and a pinch of dill, then turned them over with her spatula. She flipped the quickly toasting bread too. She'd spent her childhood watching her great-grandfather do this, and here at the shop was the only time she felt him near anymore. "Do you want this for here or to go?" "To go." Chloe sprinkled a little more salt and pepper on the eggs, made sure the yolks had firmed ever so slightly, then topped them with cheese. She let the cheese melt before scooping the eggs up and putting them on the buttered sourdough.”

Quote by Sarah Addison Allen

Work

The Sugar Queen

In this engaging story, readers are taken on a journey through the lives of the residents of a small town, where the annual Sugar Queen contest serves as a backdrop for a series of interconnected narratives. The contest, which celebrates the town's sugar beet industry, brings together a diverse group of characters, each with their own dreams, desires, and secrets. As the contest unfolds, the characters' lives intertwine, revealing the undercurrents of ambition, love, and the human condition. more

Author

Sarah Addison Allen
Sarah Addison Allen

Sarah Addison Allen is an American author born in 1971. Her works are known for their fantasy and romance elements, which have won the hearts of readers. more

You May Also Like

“As she spread mayonnaise on the slices of bread and slid them into the sizzling rosemary butter, something tight eased up a little in Feyi's chest. She was alone, just with herself, remembering the creeping peace of putting something together on a flame, the sounds of bread turning gold, the rhythm of grating Gruyere cheese and layering it, then watching it soften and melt.”

“Gina finished up the sandwiches, handed them off to people who'd been waiting, and immediately started three of her Classic grilled cheeses, a combination of Colby-Jack, American, and provolone on fresh Italian bread with a lot of butter, crisp and golden. She'd learned long ago to grill both slices of bread for each sandwich at the same time, topping them with shredded cheese, and bringing them together at the end to complete it. It took half the time and was just as delicious.”

“Luke paused before asking hopefully, "Did you say something about sandwiches?" Merritt smiled. "I'll bring a tray to the front parlor." She went to the kitchen, fetched various items from the larder and pantry, and set the teakettle to boil. Although most ladies of her position rarely, if ever, set foot in the kitchen, Merritt had fallen into the habit of making small meals for herself on Cook's days off. It was faster and more convenient than waiting for things to be brought to her, and there was something soothing about puttering in her own kitchen. She made sandwiches with brown bread, ham, and mustard, and added hard-boiled eggs and pickles on the side.”

“In den nächsten Tagen hat es morgens mit den Gebetsriemen wunderbar geklappt. Netanel stand früh auf und versprach, sie nach der U-Boot-Fahrt anzulegen. Aus dem Unterseeboot drangen Lieder, die Befehle des englischen Kapitäns hallten durch den Hof. Wenn er sich die Nase zuhielt, drang seine Stimme wie aus den Tiefen des Meeres. Und, du glaubst es nicht, jetzt war es Salim, der wie eine Möwe über dem Meer schrie. Danach, am offenen Fenster mit Blick auf das Unterseeboot, legte Netanel die Gebetsriemen an. Ich hörte sein "Schma Jisrael, Höre Israel", während ich Öl auf den Salat zum Frühstück träufelte. Ich kann nicht sagen, dass er große Mengen verdrückte, aber jetzt probierte er wenigstens alles. Abends hörten wir die Kassette, und wenn ich nicht zu müde war, war ich Lucy im Himmel, winkte zwischen den Zweigen, schwebte über den Knospen des Mandarinenbaums und zwinkerte. Ich gab mir solche Mühe, wie Diamanten zu funkeln. Ich leuchtete aus den Wolken, die im Marmeladenhimmel trieben, und die ganze Welt strahlte aus meinen Kaleidoskopaugen.”