
“I really enjoyed the simplicity of the quest and I love (love, love, love) fantasy that focuses on food.”
Review by Rayleigh Setser
A Recipe for Fun
Chef Muffin is no adventurer, but she’s going to have to figure out how to become one. She’s got to prepare a fantastic dish for a royal wedding, using ingredients she’s never heard of, that she’ll have to travel the breadth of the world to find. If she fails, she loses her livelihood, but if she succeeds…like every true fantasy adventurer…fame and fortune await. And, if she’s lucky, she might even find true love into the bargain.
Release Date: 02/27/2024
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 383

Humorous and light-hearted, this is a fantasy you want to read around a campfire.
I really enjoyed the simplicity of the quest and I love (love, love, love) fantasy that focuses on food. The adventures of Chef Muffin reminded me a lot of the series "Delicious in Dungeon" and often had me laughing out loud. This mix-matched band of characters is charming and their misadventures are anything but predictable.
That being said, as is usually the case with humor-based fantasy, there was a decent amount of cursing and the humor tended to lean more into the vulgar side of things (almost branching into satire) which I skipped over because it wasn't quite my cup of tea. But overall, the story kept my interest and the characters were loveable and easy to root for.
Content Ratings:
Action & Gore:
3-Mild action (common injuries with some details).
Romance & Spice:
5-Romance with strong content (a singular on page sex scene & tame descriptions).
Cursing & Vulgarity:
7-Intense cursing (all words used frequently).
Other Trigger/Content Notices:
Content disclaimers: Cursing – high. Spice: None on page, but *very* often a topic of conversation (or thought) and there were many out-of-pocket remarks. Gore: I would say none, but if you’re squeamish about the details of hunting for food, then you might consider some scenes uncomfortable.
Other content: There’s a character who would smoke literally anything to get h*gh. So, the dr*g and alcohol references are extremely present.
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