Ring In 'Lemony Snicket' On Netflix With A Series Of Unfortunate Recipes (2024)

Pasta puttanesca is perhaps the most well-known dish among Lemony Snicket fans, although Count Olaf would have preferred roast beef. Kristen Hartke hide caption

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Kristen Hartke

Ring In 'Lemony Snicket' On Netflix With A Series Of Unfortunate Recipes (2)

Pasta puttanesca is perhaps the most well-known dish among Lemony Snicket fans, although Count Olaf would have preferred roast beef.

Kristen Hartke

If you are interested in food stories accompanied by overhead videos showcasing recipes involving just three ingredients, you would be better off reading something else. This is because when preparing dishes to accompany the new Netflix adaptation of A Series of Unfortunate Events, which premieres Jan. 13, the more complex the recipe, the more you'll identify with the many trials and tribulations of the orphaned Baudelaire children as they try to unravel the mysteries surrounding them.

Food is often a supporting character throughout the 13 books written by Lemony Snicket, the nom de plume — a fancy word that means "pen name" — of Daniel Handler, starting with the bland boiled chicken, boiled potatoes and blanched string beans the children are fed at the home of Mr. Poe after the tragic demise of their parents in the first book, The Bad Beginning. No one really wants to eat boiled chicken, but luckily there are many other culinary inspirations to be found sprinkled across the series, including pesto lo mein, chocolate pudding and salmon puffs.

Pasta puttanesca is perhaps the most well-known dish among Lemony Snicket fans — inspiring my own daughter when she was 8 years old to join me in the kitchen to discover capers and Kalamata olives; this time around, she'll be making the dish with friends while binge-watching the show at college. It's the dish that Violet, Klaus and Sunny Baudelaire choose to make for the evil Count Olaf when he demands that they provide dinner for his theatrical troupe, allowing the children a cozy afternoon of cooking together before Olaf complains that they should've made roast beef.

When cooking instructor Lynley Jones' son began reading the series, she discovered an unexpected springboard, leading her to create "A Series of Unfortunate Cooking Lessons" for children that she taught in 2015 in Montclair, N.J. "I noticed that a lot of the stories he would share with me included some interesting food," says Jones. "In some books, the food was a front-and-center part of the narrative, like when the Baudelaires make pasta puttanesca; in some cases, the food in the book is horrible, and adds to the Baudelaires' misery."

Aunt Josephine's chilled cucumber soup should be avoided at all costs — but not chilled cucumber soup in general. Kristen Hartke hide caption

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Kristen Hartke

Ring In 'Lemony Snicket' On Netflix With A Series Of Unfortunate Recipes (4)

Aunt Josephine's chilled cucumber soup should be avoided at all costs — but not chilled cucumber soup in general.

Kristen Hartke

The chilled cucumber soup found in the third book in the series, The Wide Window, exemplifies a truly bad meal, served by the children's Aunt Josephine, who makes only cold food because she's afraid of turning on the stove. As Snicket writes, "On a cold day, in a drafty room, chilled cucumber soup is about as welcome as a swarm of wasps at a bat mitzvah."

Jones' goal with her version of the cooking lesson, which was geared toward kids, was to show how not to make bad cucumber soup, no matter what time of year, calling her version "Not Aunt Josephine's Chilled Cucumber Soup."

"I always want kids in my classes to learn to appreciate the difference between badly prepared food and bad food," she says. "The chilled cucumber soup in the book was horrible because it was badly made, not because chilled cucumber soup is inherently horrible."

Because the first season of A Series Of Unfortunate Events on Netflix encompasses books one through four, you could choose to focus on food that's featured only in those books. But there are many dishes that you may want to throw in to foreshadow what's ahead in Season 2 — a favorite literary device of Lemony Snicket that's well worth emulating.

If you're planning on hosting an "ASOUE" watch party, channel your inner steampunk for appropriately pseudo-Victorian/post-industrial clothing and decor, being sure to sprinkle the dining table with teething rings, ribbons for tying up your hair and magnifying glasses. And, as for food, the inspirations are multitudinous — which, as you know, is a very long word that means "endless."

Here are some not-so-unfortunate recipes to provide you with sustenance for the adventures ahead:

Pasta Puttanesca

In The Bad Beginning, the Baudelaire children roast garlic, wash and chop anchovies, and pit olives to make a tangy, salty puttanesca sauce. Because they are fascinated by the many shapes of pasta that they find at the grocery store, you may want to cook up a variety of different pastas to create visual interest. Jones' recipe is based on the one in the book; if you can't abide anchovies, try substituting chopped dried seaweed to impart a slightly fishy flavor.

Unfortunately, the creamy goodness of Uncle Monty's coconut cake doesn't last long for the Beaudelaire children. Kristen Hartke hide caption

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Kristen Hartke

Ring In 'Lemony Snicket' On Netflix With A Series Of Unfortunate Recipes (6)

Unfortunately, the creamy goodness of Uncle Monty's coconut cake doesn't last long for the Beaudelaire children.

Kristen Hartke

Coconut Cream Cake

Things seem to be looking up in the second installment, The Reptile Room, when the children land on the doorstep of the utterly charming Uncle Monty, a herpetologist who welcomes them with a freshly baked coconut cake. Of course, this creamy bliss doesn't last long, but the memory of the cake lingers. This coconut cake recipe from Ina Garten, host of the Food Network's Barefoot Contessa, does the trick here, but I like to use a pillowy lemon-scented Italian meringue frosting instead of the cream cheese frosting to lighten up a dreary world — just add a tablespoon of lemon juice to the sugar syrup while cooking.

Chilled Cucumber Soup

Poor Aunt Josephine. She's so afraid of, well, everything, that she never seems to enjoy anything and is forever mourning her dear departed husband, Ike, in book three, The Wide Window. Sadly, Josephine's cucumber soup is both watery and tasteless, which only adds insult to injury. Even in the depths of winter, a chilled cucumber soup can remind us of summer warmth, like this recipe from chef Andrew Zimmern of the Travel Channel's Bizarre Foods — even though cucumbers are fairly tame.

Aqueous Martini

The Aqueous Martini would make for a pretty miserable happy hour, which is exactly why it belongs in a Lemony Snicket book. Kristen Hartke hide caption

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Kristen Hartke

Ring In 'Lemony Snicket' On Netflix With A Series Of Unfortunate Recipes (8)

The Aqueous Martini would make for a pretty miserable happy hour, which is exactly why it belongs in a Lemony Snicket book.

Kristen Hartke

Skipping ahead to book six, The Ersatz Elevator, the children are sent to live with the uber-fashionable Esmé Squalor and her downtrodden husband, Jerome. Always concerned, as so many fashionistas are, with what's in and what's out, Esmé favors the Aqueous Martini — water served in a fancy glass and garnished with an olive — until Parsley Soda becomes all the rage. Your guests may appreciate the former more than the latter.

Enchiladas with Red Tomato Sauce

Now deemed criminals and on the run, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny land in The Vile Village, also the name of book seven, where they dodge a murder of crows and try to escape in a hot-air mobile home operated by the kindly handyman Hector — who also introduces them to his homemade enchiladas. I've turned to Mexican chef Pati Jinich, of the PBS series Pati's Mexican Table, for authentic inspiration here, with an enchilada recipe that has just enough bite to even please the toothy infant Sunny.

I would tell you to enjoy this delicious repast while Count Olaf wreaks havoc on the charming Baudelaire children — but what would be the point? Prepare to be miserable, no matter how tasty the food.

Ring In 'Lemony Snicket' On Netflix With A Series Of Unfortunate Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What is Count Olaf's favorite food? ›

Pasta puttanesca is perhaps the most well-known dish among Lemony Snicket fans, although Count Olaf would have preferred roast beef. If you are interested in food stories accompanied by overhead videos showcasing recipes involving just three ingredients, you would be better off reading something else.

What is the spin off of Lemony Snicket? ›

The Puzzling Puzzles: Bothersome Games Which Will Bother Some People is a spin-off first published in 2004 as a promotion for the movie Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events. The original paperback book is 96 pages long.

Who is the scary guy in the series of unfortunate events? ›

Count Olaf

What are the Baudelaires allergic to? ›

It is known that the Baudelaire children are allergic to peppermints.

Why is Count Olaf so bad? ›

He may covet power, immortality, or wealth. But, more often, a villain is on a mission to retaliate pain. Count Olaf is misunderstood as being greed-driven, but his obsession with the Baudelaires' inheritance has more behind it than the ambition to become rich. He blames their parents for his father's death.

What kills Count Olaf? ›

Ishmael harpoons Olaf in the stomach, inadvertently shattering the helmet containing the Medusoid Mycelium, a deadly fungus, infecting the island's entire population. The Baudelaires run back to the arboretum to find horseradish, a cure for the fungus.

Why is Mr Poe always coughing? ›

It's Actually a Metaphor Related to the Baudelaires

The fact that Mr. Poe can't take care of his own body is a troubling sign that he's not fit to manage the Baudelaire children or their massive fortune. The cough becomes, in this case, a constant reminder of his negligence.

Who killed the Baudelaires parents? ›

[Lemony Snicket - The End, Chapter Thirteenth]

Olaf did burn down the mansion but the Baudelaire parents' death had nothing to do with the fire, as at least one of them escaped the fire. Olaf was coerced into killing the Baudelaire parents and was only an accomplice to the murder.

Is Lemony Snicket the Baudelaires dad? ›

So while Lemony isn't related to the Baudelaires by blood, they raised his sister's daughter and his own story will be intertwined with theirs forever.

Why is Snicket called Lemony? ›

He had to contact right-wing political organizations and religious groups to have material mailed to him, but didn't want to be on their mailing lists. So, when asked his name on the phone, he blurted out Lemony Snicket.

Who set the Baudelaire fire? ›

Spoilers for Season 1 and the book series ahead. Although it's never confirmed or shown onscreen, it's heavily implied that Count Olaf set the fire in order to execute his sinister plan of getting his hands on the family fortune.

Is Sunny Baudelaire a boy or a girl? ›

As Sunny is a baby, she is at an age where one mostly speaks in a series of unintelligible shrieks. She cannot say many English words at the start of the series other than "bottle," "mommy," "bite," and the names of her siblings. "Bite" is mentioned to be the first full word she spoke.

Why did Beatrice not marry Lemony? ›

We can assume that Beatrice at one time believed that Snicket was dead. When Lemony was revealed to be alive, she had already married Bertrand and she could not marry him.

Is Count Olaf really related to the Baudelaires? ›

Count Olaf is either a fourth cousin three times removed or a third cousin four times removed of the Baudelaire children; it is unknown which parent he was related to. Violet, Klaus and Sunny Baudelaire adopted the daughter of Kit Snicket, whom they named after their mother.

Why are the Baudelaires so rich? ›

One popular fan theory is that the Baudelaire fortune is the remains of Count Olaf's fortune, stolen by the Baudelaire parents and Kit Snicket after murdering his parents, which would explain Olaf's personal vendetta against the Baudelaire family, why he seems to live in poverty despite being royalty, and the motive ...

What are Olaf's favorite things? ›

Olaf's favorite items change daily, but here is a list of some of the gifts he loves:
  • Purple Hydrangea.
  • Shiny Tourmaline.
  • Snowball.

What is Olaf's favorite? ›

Olaf is a major character in Disney's 2013 animated feature film Frozen and its 2019 sequel. He is a benevolent enchanted snowman created by Elsa. Along with the ability to reassemble his body, Olaf's most prominent quirk is his love for summer and all things hot.

What was Count Olaf's fake name? ›

Olaf was an actor and had an entire group of similarly evil associates who he refers to as his "theatre troupe". He wrote his plays, under the pseudonym "Al Funcoot" (an anagram of "Count Olaf"). His house was covered with weird paintings of eyes that made the Baudelaires feel they were always being watched.

Who is Olaf's best friend? ›

Their friendship is easily explained by their common traits, being their whimsically childish natures. In spin-off material of the film, Olaf and Sven are featured as a duo, appearing, more often than not, side by side as best friends, sometimes finding themselves in comical mishaps.

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