
The conversation left me pondering the many ways writers prepare--or cook--their stories.
Every writer is different, just as every cook is different. We each have our preferred methods, our secret ingredients, our own assessment of when it's cooked to perfection.
My stories must simmer, percolate and sit for a spell. In other words, my stories are cooked in a crock pot, not a microwave.
Oh, how I'd love to crack open a couple characters, drop them into a bowl, scramble up some plot and setting and cook in less than a minute by pressing "1" on the Microwave oven's keypad. I could crank out books like McDonald's cranks out fries.

Perhaps some stories need to be cooked differently? But where one measures every 1/8 teaspoon, another uses a pinch. Where one sets the timer, another watches the oven. Some folks disappear for hours in a steamy kitchen while others bask in nature's warmth.

We all want sizzling settings and satisfying stories. Broil them, broil them, serve them in a stew! Chill the plot like pudding until it thickens. Dazzle your readers with distinctive description like seasoning.
But I can't serve them raw! Stories aren't fruit. They need to be prepared.

You're the artist, the chef, the baker of the best books in town.
How do you cook your stories?