Kefir, An Immortal Ally

  I have bought and tried out many different milk cultures over the years – piima, viili, fil mjolk, heirloom buttermilk culture, Flora danica….there were more, but those were the ones I remember clearly.  While all of these cultures made different and  interesting forms of sour milk, there was one problem – they were incredibly…

Imbolc/Candlemas

Imbolc or Candlemas, the ancient celebration of mid-winter, approaches on February 2nd. It marks the middle of the time between the solstice and the equinox, between the time of long darkness and time of the day outlasting the night.  Imbolc meant “in the belly,” as the sheep were about to begin their lambing season, and…

A Guide For Powerfully Envisioning Your New Year

It’s wonderful to have a fresh starting place every year where you can pause and reflect before taking the next step forward.  Sometimes the new year begins with everything neatly and predictably laid out, but sometimes it’s the kind of beginning that feels like stepping off into the unknown.  However it presents itself, this new,…

10 Ways To Celebrate A Destitute Christmas: #10. Caroling

Years ago when we were reading Dylan Thomas’s lovely book A Child’s Christmas in Wales one December, it occurred to me that I had read about caroling in stories, and occasionally saw it in movies and on TV, but I had never actually met with a band of real, live carolers.  I thought it was…

Grain-Free Gingerbread Christmas Cookies

This recipe is a perfect grain-free, naturally sweetened and Paleo-legal alternative to the traditional wheat-based gingerbread cookies.  Made with almond flour and sweetened with honey and coconut sugar, these cookies turned out deliciously crunchy, chewy, and fragrant with holiday spices. 3 cups almond flour (and extra for rolling out dough) 3/4 cup coconut sugar 1/2…

10 Ways To Celebrate A Destitute Christmas: #8. A Christmas Play

The tradition of plays at Christmas time is ancient, and goes far beyond the old Medieval custom of mummering and janneying.  Shakespeare himself drew inspiration from these old dramatic customs.  Until quite recently, family Christmas plays were common holiday fun – replaced, I believe, by television.  I have found Christmas plays featured in some of…

10 Ways To Celebrate A Destitute Christmas: #7. Family Game Night

It’s cozy to curl up with a book on dark winter evenings, but for more lively entertainment, a family game night is the perfect way to spend time together. If you don’t have to have a full game shelf!  there are many games that require only a deck of cards.  Speed, Rummy, Crazy Eights, Spoons,…

10 Ways To Celebrate A Destitute Christmas: #6. Making A Festive Wreath

A real, home-made wreath is a rarity in these days of plastic, store-bought wreaths.  Technology has tried its best to replace them with garishly plastic, perfumed ones, but it simply can’t replicate the real thing –  fresh, heavy with holly, and smelling of the fragrant forest. Making a Christmas wreath is not at all difficult…

10 Ways To Celebrate A Destitute Christmas: #4. Elving

(Shhh….because of course we won’t really have absolutely no presents this year!) Despite what anyone who is selling something says, you don’t have to buy something to make a present for someone.  Thrift, a virtue I have come to appreciate more and more, is the near-magical talent of seeing what you already have, adding a…