Frogs' Legs for Dinner?

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Authors: George Edward Stanley

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T
HE
K
ATIE
L
YNN
C
OOKIE
C
OMPANY

P
RESIDENT
: K
ATIE
L
YNN
V
ICE
P
RESIDENT
: T
INA
H
EAD
B
AKER
: G
RANDMA

A
GENDA
:

1. T
O KEEP MAKING SUPER-SCRUMPTIOUS-YUMMY-DELICIOUS COOKIES
!

2. T
O FIND A NEW COOKIE THAT EVERYONE WILL GO APE FOR
(
AND RAISE MONEY FOR THE
A
PE
H
OUSE AT THE ZOO
)!

3. T
O KEEP
T
INA
'
S LITTLE BROTHER OUT OF THE WAY LONG ENOUGH TO GET THE NEW COOKIES READY IN TIME FOR THE
Z
OO
B
ENEFIT
!

4. T
O KEEP
M
OM
'
S
F
RENCH COOKING OUT OF THE KITCHEN—AND HER FROGS
'
LEGS OUT OF THE COOKIE DOUGH
!

5. T
O HELP
J
ONATHAN NEXT DOOR LOOK FOR HIS MISSING PET FROG
 … I
T MUST BE AROUND SOMEWHERE
.

Text copyright © 2000 by G. E. Stanley.
Illustrations copyright © 2000 by Linda Dockey Graves.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States of America by Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

www.randomhouse.com/kids

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Stanley, George Edward.
Frogs' legs for dinner? / by G. E. Stanley;
illustrated by Linda Dockey Graves.
p. cm. — (The Katie Lynn Cookie Company; #2)
“A Stepping Stone Book.”
Summary: Mrs. Cooke's new enthusiasm for French cooking creates chaos in the kitchen and endangers Katie Lynn's cookie-baking business.
eISBN: 978-0-307-81705-1
[1. Cookery—Fiction]
I. Graves, Linda Dockey, ill. II. Title.
PZ7.S78694Fr 2000 [Fic]—dc21   98-47052

A STEPPING STONE BOOK
and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.
THE KATIE LYNN COOKIE COMPANY
is a trademark of Random House, Inc.
RANDOM HOUSE
and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

v3.1

To Shana, for taking over the reins so expertly—
and to
Gwen, Charles, James, and Tambye,
with all my love!

Flying Pies

“Sit down, everyone!” said Mrs. Cooke. “Dinner's ready!”

Katie Lynn and her best friend, Tina, joined Mr. Cooke and Grandma at the kitchen table.

Mrs. Cooke gave them all a big smile. “It's time to take my surprise out of the oven,” she said.

Katie Lynn gulped. She had eaten some of her mother's surprises before. She could
never figure out what they were.

“What is it, Mrs. Cooke?” asked Tina.

“Quiche Lorraine!” said Mrs. Cooke.

“Keesh lo rain?”
said Katie Lynn. “What's that?”

“It's a pie filled with eggs, bacon, cream, and cheese all mixed together,” replied Mrs. Cooke.

Tina leaned over to Katie Lynn. “I thought pies were supposed to have apples or blueberries in them,” she whispered.

“They are,” said Katie Lynn. “With ice cream on top!”

But Mrs. Cooke wasn't listening. “I've been watching the French Chef on television,” she said. “He says that anyone can be a great French cook.”

Katie Lynn wondered if the French Chef had ever tried her mother's cooking.

Mrs. Cooke put on a pair of huge oven mitts and took two round pie tins out of the oven. Something yellow was bubbling over their sides.

“Don't they look wonderful?” Mrs. Cooke said proudly.

“Oh, yes!” said Mr. Cooke and Grandma.

Katie Lynn didn't think they looked wonderful. She thought they looked awful.

“I need to go home,” Tina whispered.

“No way!” Katie Lynn whispered back.

Mrs. Cooke began walking slowly toward the table. She was trying to balance a pie tin in each hand.

All of a sudden, one of the tins started to wobble. Mrs. Cooke tried to balance it. She moved to the right, then to the left, then back to the right.

“Why is she dancing?” Tina whispered.

Katie Lynn shrugged. “Maybe you're supposed to dance when you cook French food,” she whispered back.

The pie tins continued to wobble, and Mrs. Cooke continued to dance from side to side. One tin started to fall. Mrs. Cooke flung up her arms, sending both tins soaring into the air.

Mrs. Cooke screamed.

Mr. Cooke dived under the table.

“I'm out of here!” cried Tina. She jumped up and ran out of the kitchen.

Katie Lynn was too stunned to move. She thought the pie tins looked like flying saucers.

One landed on the floor with a big
splat.
Then the other landed in the middle of the table with a huge
sploosh.

Mrs. Cooke looked as if she was going to cry.

But Grandma quickly grabbed a fork. She scraped up some of the quiche from the middle of the table and ate it. “Delicious!” she said.

Mr. Cooke climbed out from under the table. He ate some of the quiche, too. “It has an interesting flavor,” he added. Katie Lynn knew he always said that about her mother's cooking.

Now everyone was looking at her. It was her turn to say something, so she picked up her fork and tasted the quiche.

“Uh … that was really good, Mom,” she said. Then she gulped down her water.

“Why, thank you, Katie Lynn,” said Mrs. Cooke. She gave her a wink. “I guess you and Grandma aren't the only good cooks in this family.”

Grandma and Katie Lynn looked at each other. They didn't say anything.

Mr. Cooke just took another bite of quiche.

After dinner, Mrs. Cooke stood up and sighed contentedly. “I am so thrilled that everyone loved my quiche. I can hardly wait to see what the French Chef cooks tomorrow.”

The Goofy French Chef

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