Sunday, July 9, 2017

Herbed Biscuits

I love to cook. And some of my favorites are the Southern foods my great-grandma made. She's also the one who taught me one of my favorite Southern phrases about belonging and being who you are - if your cat had kittens in the oven, you wouldn't call them biscuits, now would you?

I may be obsessed with biscuits. It started when I was five and my great gram would let me help her make biscuits in the mornings when we visited her. And I'd eat them fresh out of the oven with butter and honey. Her biscuit were not sweet. They were a touch savory and equally suited to cheese or jam or honey.

Now, I make biscuits (from scratch) about every other Sunday. My favorite recipe from childhood, drop biscuits. You can find a lot of recipes on-line. I'm a fan of this drop biscuit recipe, and I use it often.  I love a savory biscuit - a touch of cheese and chili as you make these up is a fantastic option. 

However, I have a ton of herbs coming ripe in the garden. And I'm trying to cut my butter intake. (Go healthy eating!) So I did the Google search thing and came up with a fantastic olive oil biscuit recipe from a website called OliveTomato  - which also taught me how to make biscuits that rise in layers. (Bonus!)

Like every other recipe I find, I tinkered with the original. Usually the first time I make it as written then tinker. But this time I went ahead and made a few adjustments to the first batch -  I added 1/4 cup of herbs and cheese. The next time I made it, I swapped out the herbs and changed the ratio of yogurt and milk  - which I have noticed makes a firmer outside and flakier inside. I've tried this basic recipe with different herbs.

  • 1/4 cup EVOO
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt (lessen the salt if using a salty cheese)
  • 5/8  cup Greek yogurt
  • 1/4 cup milk + 1 tbsp, as needed
  • 1/4 cup fresh herbs (I used basil*)
  • 1/4 cup of cheese (I used Parmesan when I used the basil), optional
Yield: about 12 biscuits (usually 11 + a tester for me)

Mix up the dry ingredients (including herbs and cheese if desired) first. (Heat oven to 450 degrees). Make a well in the middle. Add the Greek yogurt and olive oil to the well. Use a pastry cutter to mix, adding milk as needed to achieve dough consistency. Roll dough into a ball. 

Lay down wax paper. Flour it. Place dough on it. Flour top of dough.  Add another layer of wax paper. You can use a rolling pin (I use a french rolling pin), and roll the dough flat. Once flat, layer it back until it forms it is several layers thick but patted down to no more than 1/2 inch thick. Cut with a biscuit cutter (or a glass - that's what I use) into "biscuits". Bake for about 15 minutes. They will be beautifully risen and lightly browned.

We tried the left-over biscuits the next day as sandwich holders. Delicious! We added a pesto and mayo. My sandwich featured a fresh heirloom tomato. Guy's featured heated ham - he may have made 6 open-faced "slider" style sandwiches. Maybe. And eaten them with a delighted face.

The next time I made biscuits, we had  crazy amount of fresh lemon thyme in the garden. So I did not use cheese but used lemon thyme blossoms + leaves and served the biscuits with blueberry/lemon jam. All kidlets were delighted with that "experiment". (They have come to enjoy when I tell them I'm making something new.)

Take-away - There are ways to make memories sweeter. Bring them into your present day and share them. 

---As usual, all pictures by me and you can tell!---

Side note - I found a new gluten-free biscuit mix from King Arthur. While I'm not an overall fan of mixes, given my new gluten sensitive status, I'm willing to try it!

*Extra bonus garden recipe for if your basil is going crazy. this is all to taste so, no exact quantities.

Watermelon Salad
- Ball part of a watermelon (I used 1/2)
- Add sliced basil (I used purple Thai)
- Sprinkle lightly with feta cheese
- Sparsely dress with a good balsamic vinegar

Remember to tell the kids it's "watermelon salad" and not dessert watermelon!

Fruit is great with basil. You may want to also check out this Peach + Basil recipe. (Scroll down in the post.)

If you would like to see more of my recipes, check out In the Kitchen for a complete list - and a few bonus cookbook reviews.


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Sunday, July 2, 2017

Musings - June 2017



Books:  I've been sliding my way through a number of books. 
- The Job (Janet Evanovich)
- Broken Open (Elizabeth Lesser)
- The Ice Queen (Alice Hoffman)
- Silence Falls, digital edition(Patricia Briggs)

I've been making time to recharge. For me, books fit that criteria. And I discovered my local Little Free Library. Such a fun concept! I love leaving books there. Plus with Quotle (new fav app), I've been sharing quotes from what I'm reading. So fun!

Gratitude: That I live in a first world country (no joke - we have so many blessings we don't even realize). For the internet's ability to let us find so much info - including awesome recipes. The garden; I'm loving how it grows. And fitting the garden herbs into the crazy amount of cooking I've been doing has been fun.  (Basil olive oil biscuits to the right.) Biggest gratitude this month, is all the many patient people in my life who help me be a better person. 

Listening:  Halsey. Forever. (Lyrics of Castle)

Perfume: Tulip brand. Peony and Mandarin. Finished it out. It's very light and subtle. And I've been wearing it long enough that I'm tired of it. I'm so impatient, I should never buy large bottles of anything! I've been fitting in different trial vials for Marble & Milkweed. So far, those have not been "keepers" for me....



Random: So much baking. Drop biscuits for breakfast. Various cake and cookie experiments. Dinner biscuits. And pies. 

Stress: Still not fully unpacked and recently a volunteering activity has taken over my life. (Really. It's got to more even keel. I'm not up for this.) Also, part of being in a new space is finding new everything - pedicure place, Chinese place, dry cleaning, so many small changes....


Watching: So much Criminal Minds. I'm probably on some kind of watch list at this point. (And, like most of America, I caught Wonder Woman in theaters. While I loved the action sequences, after watching 2 seasons of Marco Polo - I was a bit less awed than most.)

Take-away - Adaptability is the key to surviving nearly anything, including unexpected stresses. (Also, sometimes, having an adaptable mindset helps with recipes!)

 --Pictures by moi - Top image, from left to right: I've been rocking a kind of simple vibe with up-dos/ponytails and  simple eyes/lips. It's carried over into the perfume (Tulip brand), night cream (Lavido, it's Israeli - weirdly I got samples as a thank you gift from Amex - I like the eye cream but not so much the face cream), my favorite DHC soap in sample form, book du jour, lipstick (an Ulta lip crayon with a swipe of my dwindling Covergirl NaturalLux lip gloss), pedicure polish (Blushingham Place), my trial of Benefits' Roller Lash (it smears, a lot. Nope). 



Original musings posts you may enjoy:

Sunday, June 4, 2017

The Peacock Cries at Dusk

The last few months have been a blur. The move - pack, move, unpack, re-arrange, find space, unpack, create new. Several work trips. Getting accustomed to a new life (avec kidlets at intermittent intervals). Additional cats. Missing La Gram Russe. Spring. Getting used to a new space. Creating a new garden. 

I spent a little time reading. The Danger Box - an unexpectedly good read with rich details for a 10 year old reader. (Yes, I read it at the request of a certain 10 year old to allow us to discuss it.) The setting is "local", Three Oaks Michigan and has echoes of real-life Michigan. (The author doesn't know when blueberries actually ripen in Michigan, but that's the book's only flaw.) Finished My Kind of Place. Finished a book (the Decision to Join) for a board I'm on.



The lilacs bloomed. And I missed La Gram Russe. She knew my love of lilacs, and even when I lived where I did not have any, she made sure I had some fresh blooms for a vase. Where I am now, I have plenty of lilacs and I brought blooms in the house and  thought of her.


Unpacking was initially easy. Unfurl. Bookcases in place. Books put away. Clothes hung. Dressers in place. But making space for everything else means moving other people's things and creating a new shared space. It's a balance. The old. The new. Changes.



In this new space, every night at dusk a peacock cries. It's rural here. There are farms in abundance. The field behind us is family land and will be soybeans, I hear. The house next to us has a vineyard behind.The peacock belongs to a neighbor several farms away. A touch of the exotic in America's fruit basket - a bit like me.


Take - away: Wherever you go, you bring you. Make sure you like who you bring.


Photos by moi! (As usual, and you can tell.)


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Other posts from me you might enjoy:

- The Herd
- Message in a Bottle
- Bleeding Hearts and Time
- Lilacs and other Fairytales


Saturday, May 27, 2017

Three Lipsticks

On her dressertop, La Gram Russe had a filigreed golden holder for 3 lipsticks. The usual combo was a flattering pink for every day, a brown-pink alternative, and a reddish shade for special. I have a similar holder on my bathroom counter but it's a little more stuffed.


- Cabernet (Juice Beauty)
- Game Day (Pur Minerals)
- Toxic Cherry (Buxom)
- Cherry (Burts's Bees)
- Wild (Tarte)
- Glamour (Ulta)
- Daredevil (Pur Minerals)
- Crushed Coral (Kismet)
- Rhubarb (Burt's Bees)
- Wildflower (Kismet)
- Stardust (Lancome)
- Hawaiian Smolder (Burt's Bees)
- Hibiscus (Covergirl's Nature Lux line - which may now be defunct)
- Naked Gypsy (Kismet)



The funny part is I don't wear several of the colors; they just take up space on my counter. Naked Gypsy is too pale for my taste. Cabernet is weirdly dark and has a strange, thick, gritty texture. (My first clue I wouldn't like it should have been Gwyneth Paltrow as the Juice covergirl. Major disconnect for me. Not a Goop girl. I find Gwyneth quite out-of-touch with the real world.) The Stardust is a brand I don't buy and was a hand-me-down from my mother (she often receives freebies that are much too light for her Asiatic skin tones but work for the Russian/Irish paleness of my skin tone.) While Wildflower and Crushed Coral are brighter than my usual - they are American made and lovely. In truth, most days I grab one of the Pur Minerals or Burt's Bees and just do a quick swipe of color. I like that they are made with natural ingredients, easy to wear, and great colors.


But some days, I wonder if we aren't  - if I'm not - over complicating life. One of the beautiful things about La Gram Russe's 3 holder system is that it limited the number of morning decisions she had to make. (Much recent research has focused on our ability to make a limited number of decisions and that our best decision making happens in the morning.)  She didn't spend money frivolously on  extra options she wouldn't wear. And each of the choices was always "right" because she only kept 3 flattering shades. 


Take-away - It's your life and your choice. How simple or how complicated you make the choices are up to you. 


Photos by moi! (As usual, and you can tell.)

PS - I threw out the Cabernet and Naked Gypsy after taking this photo, despite the blow to my frugal soul. Down with clutter!

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PSS - for those of you who follow the comments in blogs, the awesome founder of Juice Beauty (Karen Behnke - who has a fantastic Michigan vibe)  reached out to me about trying a different Juice Beauty lip product. I'm currently loving the Photo-Pigments Luminous Lip Crayon in Zuma - texture is smooth and light while the color is present but subtle. (I see a purchase of Pebble in my future....) Because women ingest a scary amount of what they put ON their lips, you should always be as organic as possible with lip color. Juice Beauty fits that bill.

Other posts from me on self-care you might enjoy:




Sunday, April 2, 2017

Where did March go?

Books: And nothing for finished. I took another run at My Kind of Place but didn't finish. All books got packed and moved. That was an accomplishment! And 10 year old kidlet told me she approves of the addition of books to the space.

Gratitude: Patience, of others - I'm not at my most graceful during a change. Moving men who remove the unexpected bat. (Yep. Bat. The hazard of having a chimney apparently.)



Listening: The Fan-Dam-Tastic Marketing Show (so sad, no new episodes; apparently it ended in 2015. I also miss the Mystery Show),  Side Hustle School. And so much Pandora - I've got a channel called "Torch" that's all Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Nina Simone, etc.




Perfume:  A bit of everything.  Nothing. Vanilla Chai lotion from the Body Shop. Tunisian Jasmine Lime from Pacifica. (It's a fall-back standard - Guy likes it.) Mandarin Peony by Tulip. (Not overly fond of it. Wading through it. It's got no sillage at all. It lasts less than an hour.)  Modern Muse. (Finished it out.) Lucy B's Apothecary - Royal Green Fig + Vanilla Woods. A bit of Les Perfumes de Rosine Majalis on a few cold and rainy days. Pretty much just a total mix of whatever took my mood. 





Random: There is now a peacock within earshot of my new space, Bunny Haven Manor (Far North or On The Farm, undecided yet as which we shall call it.) 

Stress: Moving. Forever. I'm now on the "unpack one box every day" program to keep progress going and keep the stress down.



Watching: Fresh Off the Boat. Criminal Minds. And a lot of over-the-air TV as it was 3 weeks before the internet could be installed. (By provider number 2 after Frontier's Department of Delays called with a months long delay. I so wish I were kidding.) 




Take-away - Sometimes the best thing you can do is roll with it.




Original musings posts you may enjoy:

---As usual, pictures by me (unless cited otherwise) and you can tell!---


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Thursday, February 23, 2017

Musings - February 2017

Books: Traveled this month! And so, on the plane I finished Not in Kansas Any More by Christine Wicker and started Broken Open by Elizabeth Lesser. (Oddly both were from 2005. Apparently I'm living in a time warp.) Also discovered a new Social Media app for me "Quotle" which lets you capture and share great quotes from books. 


Gratitude: Walks with kidlets and puppy. (He's a fan of being first to make sure there are no "dinosaurs" and that we are all very safe. It involves a lot of barking.) Quiet nights of planning the next move. Fun with friends. The gorgeous amenities of a luxury hotel for business. 

Listening: Radical Condor podcast, The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show podcast, Clients from Hell podcast and lots of The Pretty Reckless and Elle King. 


Perfume: I forgot my Library of Flowers  Kirimashi Air for travel! So I went without. But while I was actually at the event, I started using a small sample my mother gave me from La Gram Russe's collection, Modern Muse. 



Random: Fun! Went with Roxanne to a painting class one Sunday. There was wine and snacks. And using the same materials, we created completely different pieces. (Mine is the one on the pale background; hers is the one with the dark background.)  

Stress: Work stress - trip to Orlando for a few days. Fantastic room. Good trip. But out of town for days with the Herd in others' care. I missed them!


Watching: Emerald City. (Newest binge). Shadowhunters. (Apparently reading about magic makes me watch it.

Take-away - Enjoy where you are, even if it's not Kansas, because you may not ever be there again.



Original musings posts you may enjoy:
Message in a Bottle (2016)
Currently, July 2016
Currently, June 2016
Currently, May 2016
Currently, April 2016
Currently, March 2016
Currently, February 2016
Currently, January 2016

---As usual, pictures by me (unless cited otherwise) and you can tell!---



If you need some journaling prompters, you may like my book - 52 quotes with 3 journal questions paired to beautiful imagery. Seasonally grouped but you can start anywhere, anytime.











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Sunday, February 19, 2017

Scrubbed up


Clean up on Aisle 5! I love soap. Seriously. Soapy Gnome. Old Forte Soap. Zum Bar. (The pound bag is my favorite indulgence but I'm never quite sure which scents I get!) If there were a reason for me to scrub up 6x a day, without completely drying out my skin - I'd do it. 

Washing my face is a close second. And I do like to try new skin stuff! Unfortunately, my skin is a little sensitive and a bit dry - so I need to be careful which things I try. Over the last 18 months, I've been trying lots of new skin cleansing combinations. (And we all know that although this is not a beauty blog, I'm a serial sharer!) I experiment most with my evening cleansing routine. For me, they can be split into two groups - cleansers and exfoliants. 

When cleansing, prep/make-up removal is important. For years my evening standard has been DHC Skincare's Deep Cleansing Oil. It's a highly purified olive oil. Cleansing and skin friendly. (Tip: if you decide to try supermarket olive oil - it works although it doesn't rinse as clean. But use the yellowest one. Green is too acidic and will sting the eyes.)  It lifts the make-up right off and rinses away. About 18 months ago, I tried Thesis Beauty's Rosemary Citrus Make-up Remover, which is jojoba oil-based. I enjoyed the scent and how it cleared off tough to remove mascara and lipstick. You do need a cleanser after to lift away the oily residue. 

After prep, next up is cleansing. The Thesis line includes a nice cleanser, the Tender as Petals cleanser. I tried. I love the gentleness of it - but somehow, my skin doesn't feel clean to me after using it. A toner helps. DHC Skincare's Face Wash Powder is my go-to standard. Papaya extract helps with gentle exfoliation. It is the slightest touch drying on my skin - a tightness around the eyes - so good moisturizer is required.

My skin enjoys being scuffed, as I like to call exfoliants. I use them most often as a supplement with quick cleansing options. For quick cleansing, I've been trying Alba's Hawaiian 3-in Clean Towelettes and Garnier's Micellar Cleansing Water. The Alba towelettes are a great quick clean. I do find my skin is happier if I use an exfoliant the next morning; BareMinerals has a new one which is lovely - gentle and very effective. I like to use a combo of the micellar cleansing water followed by Thesis Beauty's Poppyseed Face Scrub, a toner, and then moisturizer. After which, my skin feels completely fresh and clean. The Poppyseed Face Scrub ingredients include clove which helps keep the skin clear. But I do find the micellar cleansing water a bit drying. I can't use it more than 2 days in a row. And, yes, I've tried it without the exfoliant - still drying.

(Mornings are much simpler. The Body Shop's Tea Tree Skin Clearing Facial Wash in the shower.)

In all truth, I think face cleansing is a self-care ritual. It's a good way to slow down the mind and set up the quiet of the evening. After washing my face, I tend to not engage with electronics. Washing my face is like a signal to my brain that it's time to rest.  

Take-away - Take care of yourself in the small ways. It matters.


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Photos by moi! (As usual and you can tell.) 

Other posts on self-care you might enjoy:

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Musings - January 2017

These musings used to be called "Currently, Month Year" - they've been re-named. But they are still just musings from the month. I hope you enjoy!

Books: I read things - light, easy reading -  over the holidays. It was lovely. Fiction paperbacks - Patricia Briggs' Alpha and Omega series - Hunting Ground, Fair Game, Dead Heat; Fire Touched from her Mercy Thompson series. Started Christine Wicker's non-fiction book on magic, Not in Kansas Anymore.



Gratitude: The year started with friends and wine. And an offer to go snowshoeing! (I'll report back in February). Small, thoughtful gifts from friends.  The roof over my head. Sweet pets. The curiosity of children. 

Listening: Good Life Project (podcast); Side Hustle School (podcast); The CoQuora Podcast and 5th Harmony's "Worth It" has been running through my head on repeat for days.....



IG from fav perfume house
Perfume: Sadly, Sencha Bleu No. 57 by TokyoMilk is gone. It was a huge hit with both me and the guy. Since I'm a perpetual tryer, it will be a while before it re-appears, perhaps during a spring. (I loved the scent. For me, the downside was the lack of sillage. Perhaps layering will help next time.) So, I've moved back to samples of a few things (Marble & Milkweed's line) as well as the mainstay of Les Perfumes de Rosine Majalis as I find it a perfect winter perfume. (Read more about my first encounter with  the warm, savory rose that is Majalis here.)



Random: This year brought a lot of changes and challenges. One was family.  There is one person in my family with a completely self-centered life outlook. It's my choice on how much I let that bother me and how much I choose to interact. I'm willing to accept the consequences of my choice to set boundaries, even if that means other people will choose not to be part of my life.


Stress: Don't the holidays just bring out the stress? (Or in my case, family) December is never my best month. Gifts that arrive late. Fending off the ridiculous expectations of others. More "things to do" than time. I hope you had time to take time for you - space and time to think and reflect to start your new year. 

Watching: The Blacklist (binged ALL of it on Netflix); The Magicians; and Bull.

Take-away - Sometimes change is the only constant and sometimes the constant won't change. How do you handle that which won't change?




Original musings posts you may enjoy:
Currently, October 2016
Message in a Bottle (2016)
Currently, July 2016
Currently, June 2016
Currently, May 2016
Currently, April 2016
Currently, March 2016
Currently, February 2016
Currently, January 2016

---As usual, pictures by me (unless cited otherwise) and you can tell!---



If you like journaling, you may like my book - 52 weekly journal prompts with beautiful imagery. Seasonally grouped but you can start anywhere, anytime.












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Friday, January 13, 2017

A Garden in Winter


Winter is the time to plan for the next year. It's a space for dreaming.  I moved last year. And the new space was welcoming, but didn't readily lend itself to large scale gardening. Certainly not on the scale I like. It was adequate for a small space; having even a small garden enhanced my life and recipes. Given the mild weather, I was even able to harvest peppers until November! (Image left of the last of the garden.)



The garden - as noted -  was small but adequate. (Nothing like the years I had squash for days.) Oregano. Basil, two kinds. Peppers. Tomatoes, 4 or 5 kinds. (I had bigger pots on either side with garden tomatoes  - beefsteaks and romas - from a friend.) The herbs were what I used the most. But I enjoyed the peppers and cherry tomatoes on a pretty consistent basis.  (Picture below of the first harvest of the year.)




At the new Bunny Haven North, in addition to the garden, there were a very few flowers: daffodils to greet me, wild pink geraniums by the recycling bin, and potted pink geraniums by the door step. Other garden visitors came. The neighbor's cat - Bumblebee. Bunnies. A lone (unwelcome) opossum. Cottage white butterflies.


A garden is a bit of a sad, unwelcoming thing in winter. A small garden, somehow even more so. But, there is space enough  in winter to plan. I'm not planning for this space. I've decided it's time for a change and am looking at a new space. There are lilacs and irises at the new space. I've been told I can have a proper veggie garden and plant some flowers. I'm excited but a little nervous about yet another shift for me, for the herd - so far they have been very adaptable, so I hope this will be okay. I don't know, but I hope. Because that's what gardeners do. I'll be in the new space before the lilacs bloom.

Take - away -  Adaptability is an asset. Remember to use all your assets.


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***All photos by moi! And you can tell.

Friday, January 6, 2017

2017 Non-Resolutions

I do not make resolutions. They seem flimsy and easily circumvented.  Also boring. Instead,  for 2017, I'm making a list of 7 questions to ask myself about my choices today:

I don't know by who said it or made
this image. I do like it.
  1. Did you eat more fresh food than processed?
  2. Did you move with intention?
  3. Did you sleep 7 hours or more?
  4. Did you say thank you to someone?
  5. Did you learn something new?
  6. Did you try something that frightened you?
  7. Did you do your best?
The hope, of course, is to say YES to all of them, every day. But most days, saying yes to 4 of them a day would be a victory that I'd be happy with.

Take-away - You can not control everything, but your choices shape your life. Make intentional choices.




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Monday, January 2, 2017

Lessons - 2016

Life is a continuing lesson. I'm reminded of that pretty often. I've taken, a few years ago, to jotting down lessons of specific importance or note as they happen in my life. I keep them in the Random section until the end of the year, and then share them.  Here are the lessons I learned in 2016.

  1. All things are temporary.
  2. Say more by speaking less. 
  3. When you want more for you, it doesn't mean you want less for anyone else. And PS - there really is enough for everyone. (Side note: This is a refinement of item 2 for 2015.)
  4. The past is just the past (Mary Chapin Carpenter); and it has nothing new to teach you, but why you left. Because people don't change. However, your changes are your choice.
  5. Make your bed and clear the sink. It makes everything else in the day easier to tackle.
  6. Get on the scale every other day. Accountability is critical in all endeavors.
  7. Don't bite off more than you can chew. (Yes, that is a Mississauga Rattler trying to swallow a fat toad.) 


Take-away - You make choices everyday. Most of them small, insignificant things. But they add up. Be mindful of your choices.

Other posts you might enjoy:
Photos by moi - and as usual, you can tell. (It's a bouquet of store bought enhanced by home grown. The home grown came from La Gram Russe's yard this summer. We tried to have fresh flowers for her every week. She is why we all love flowers.)

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PS. In 2016 I spent some time created a book of journaling prompts for 52 weeks - each paired with inspired quotes and gorgeous images.  Then I created a small, free 7 day sample book. 

1) My Gift to You - Follow the image below to download the free book I created - a 7 day journey of 2 journal prompts per day with a thought provoking quote and black and white imagery - the whole book offering a guided journaling experience.




2) The image below is another digital book I created - a year-long, start-anywhere, journaling prompts journey that pairs 52 inspiring quotes with gorgeous full-color images, each with 3 journaling prompts. 










(Please note, this blog is free. Please - please - please - read and enjoy. Purchases of my digital books via Gumroad are both secure and final. Select wisely. If you aren't ready to purchase, please enjoy my free book or keep reading this blog.)