Simple, Sacred, Sweet
Simple Recipes & Crafts, Devotional Musings, & A Celebration of the Sweetness of Life
Monday, September 15, 2025
The Answer
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Eats and Empties (Week 37)
The Eats:
Asian chicken "stir fry" with ramen (Meal Prep in an Instant)-frozen for the future
Banana oatmeal bites (Meal Prep in an Instant)
Cozy white beans and greens soup (How Sweet Eats)
Easy buttermilk cornbread (Cafe Delites)
Easy gravy (Health My Lifestyle)
Healthy banana brownies (The Conscious Plant Kitchen)
Homemade ketchup without sugar (A Sweet Pea Chef)-Frozen for future use
Honey garlic chicken bowls (Meal Prep in an Instant)
Instant Pot apple cider (Real Food Deals)
Peach and strawberry cobbler (The Instant Pot Electric Pressure Cooker Cookbook)
Sourdough discard rosemary salt bagels (This Jess Cooks)
Southwest breakfast casserole (Meal Prep in an Instant)
The Empties:
Avocado
A whole cantaloupe
Five pound bag of carrots
Box of chicken broth
Fresh corn on the cob
Bag of frozen corn
Head of iceberg lettuce
Bunch of kale
The rest of that half gallon of milk that soured
Mushrooms
Can of onion powder
Quinoa
Fresh peaches
Jar of Costco peanut butter
Two pound bag of frozen peas
Orange bell pepper
Five pound bag of potatoes
Can of pumpkin
Red bell pepper
Box of ramen
Head of romaine lettuce
Frozen sourdough protein pancakes with whole wheat (For the Pleasure of Eating)
Bag of baby spinach
Can of tomato paste
Fifteen ounce can of tomato sauce
What went to waste:
A peach that rotted from the inside out--I wanted to try to salvage it, but could not bring myself to it.
A clove of garlic rotted?
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
Real Life Marriage: I Want You to Have Nice Things!
Saturday, September 6, 2025
Eats and Empties (Week 36)
The Eats:
Banana oatmeal bites (Meal Prep in an Instant)
Best gravy (Brand New Vegan)
High protein Mexican street corn pasta salad (Rachl Mansfield)
Low country boil (The Instant Pot Electric Pressure Cooker Cookbook)
Oat bagels (Oats Everyday)
Pumpkin protein muffins (The Clean Eating Couple)
Sourdough discard bagels (Farmhouse on Boone)
Sourdough discard strawberry bagels (This Jess Cooks)
Strawberry chia jam (My PCOS Kitchen)
Strawberry muffins (Hummusapien)
Tuna cakes (Just is a Four Letter Word)
The Empties:
Package of andouille sausage
Jar of applesauce
Bag of cheese sticks
Cilantro
A dozen eggs
Container of Greek yogurt
Green onions
Honeydew melon
Head of iceberg lettuce
Lemon
Old onions (some chopped and frozen for later use)
Plums
Can of pumpkin (yes, 'tis the season!)
Head of romaine lettuce
Bottle of lime juice
Half gallon of milk
Frozen onion
Orange bell pepper
Plums
Five pound bag of potatoes
Bottle of pumpkin pie spice
Red bell pepper
Two pounds of shrimp
Bag of split peas
Bottle of dried thyme
Pound of ground turkey
Two cans of tuna
Bottle of vegetable oil
Zatarain's crawfish, shrimp, & crab boil in a bag
What went to waste:
A few leaves of the iceberg lettuce that browned, but overall, no major loss!
The end of our second half gallon of milk soured, but I will try to use it up if I can!
Sunday, August 31, 2025
Everything I Read in August
Once again this month, I was a slower reader and more of an audiobook listener, but...I did fit in some good end of summer books. I am proud of myself and thankful for that. Here's what I listened to and read this month:
70) Street God by Dimas Salaberrios with Dr. Angela Hunt—Think of this book as a modern Run Baby, Run meets Cross and the Switchblade! Written in his own words, this is the story of Dimas Salaberrios, a middle class youth born to unmarried parents, who started dealing drugs at age 11, went on to be a big kingpin, and then came to Jesus. I listened to this as an audiobook while running, and honestly, I am not sure I could have read it, because it was intense. I am talking about very violent experiences, hard drugs, demon possession, and exorcism. Dimas talks about his "trial and error" sanctification, his overseas missions, his church planting under Tim Keller, and more. This is a true, "come to Jesus" book, charismatic and convicting, about a man who wanted to become a street God, and instead took God to the streets. I am unclear what Salaberrios is doing now, but his story is a testimony worth hearing or reading!
72) The Song by Chris Fabry—Think of this as Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers, but where the male character is the struggling one. Based off the movie by the same name (which I have not seen), this is the story of Jed King, son of musician David King, a man who vows to forgo his father's sins, but then falls right back into them. Parts of the story seem a little bit cheesy (like the names), and I would say the plot's crisis resolves a bit too quickly. Overall, though, the book was poignant and powerful. I especially appreciated the almost seamless integration of passages from Ecclesiastes, Proverbs, and Song of Solomon. Not exactly a biblical retelling, but a story that incorporates biblical truth, this is a story I enjoyed reading. It is edgy, but not inappropriate, and ultimately testifies to the power of God's love and redemption, songs all believers need sung over them again and again.
73) Let’s All Be Brave: Living Life with Everything You Have by Annie F. Downs—This is classic Annie F. Downs writing: personal, easy to read, entertaining and poignant. In this book, written from various coffee shops around the world, Downs shares moments when she had to be brave in her life. She was brave when she stayed to work at a college campus ministry, brave when she packed up and moved to Nashville, and then to Scotland, and back. She shares her reticence to take these brave steps and testifies to how God supported her all along the way. She challenges readers to take courage from God, be brave, and do the next right thing. Although I did not find anything in this book earth-shatteringly unique, I did find the book prompting of some introspective thought. With as quickly and easily as this book's pages passed, I would say it is worth a few days to read this book and get encouraged about living bravely from a woman who has done it herself, many times over.
74) Under Pressure: Confronting the Epidemic of Stress and Anxiety in Girls by Lisa Damour, Ph.D.—Stress is not bad, but too much of it is. In this book, psychologist Dr. Lisa Damour explores the rising sources of stress for girls, and the anxiety that can result. Not all anxiety is bad, she states, but it is bad when it become overwhelming and paralyzing. Covering issues like academics, gender, and stress, Damour uses composite stories to bring to life to the struggles of girls, along with her clinical expertise about how to handle these issues. Written for the every person (though I listened to this book via audio), and perhaps every parent, this book documents the role that adults have in helping normalize everyday stress and reduce pathological stress. The end goal is to help girls face stress well, bravely, because under pressure, carbon produces diamonds.
76) On a Summer Tide by Suzanne Woods Fisher—I had a hard time getting into this book. I dipped my toe in, but then it was just slow swimming. Paul Grayson spends his retirement income to buy Three Sisters Island and Camp Kicking Moose, the place where he met his wife. He hopes to enlist the help of his three daughters: Camden (Cam), Maddie, and Blaine, but they aren't having it, until they get to the island and sense some of its charm. There are some sub-characters and subplots that really deserve some mention: Captain Ed and his lobster, Peg Legg and her restaurant/store, schoolteacher Seth Walker, and Cam's son Cooper and his ball of string. When I step back and look at the book from that angle, it really is well crafted. It also has sweet lessons about family, forgiveness, and love. I would say that the tide had pulled me in by story's end, but then getting the next book required a hold. Will I read more in this series or will the waters ebb out before the next book comes in? We shall see....
Saturday, August 30, 2025
Strong(er) in August
Eats and Empties (Week 35)
Easy honey buns-adapted from an Instagram recipe I saw here with honey glaze (Simply TaraLynn)
Sourdough pizza (The Perfect Loaf)
The Empties:
Five pound bag of carrots
Costco container of cinnamon
Dijon mustard
Carton of a dozen eggs
Two containers of Greek yogurt
Jar of mayonnaise
Half gallon of milk
Jug of olive oil
Bag of Parmesan cheese
Old container of pea protein powder
Five pound bag of potatoes
Head of romaine lettuce
Homemade mozzarella cheese (Simmer and Sage)
Two cans of tomato paste
Twenty-eight ounce can of whole tomatoes
Pound of ground turkey
All that whey from last week
What went to waste: