Simple, Sacred, Sweet
Simple Recipes & Crafts, Devotional Musings, & A Celebration of the Sweetness of Life
Friday, May 22, 2026
A Forced Break
Monday, May 18, 2026
San Francisco, a Deux
(I did not think the chocolate was that great, but I am a dark chocolate girl and not the biggest fan of pistachios, so no big surprise. My husband likes to take a treat from travels back to his office, so he plans to share the rest of the treats with them.)
Saturday, May 16, 2026
What We Cooked and Ate (Week 19)
This Week's Eats:
Barn raising casserole (365 Days of Slow + Pressure Cooking) (Left over from last week)
Big-batch Instant Pot white beans (Epicurious)
Cottage cheese egg bake (The Real Food Dietitians)
Chickpea "tuna" salad (Drugstore Divas)
Shredded chicken (365 Days of Crockpot)
No knead pan pizza (Budget Bytes)
Savory sourdough discard vegan zucchini bread (Adapted from Atlyyt on Reddit)
Seeded PB oat energy balls (The Dietitian Runner)
Thin and crispy pizza (Budget Bytes)
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Real Life Marriage: Telling My Husband What to Do
Mi Madre
I didn't grow up speaking Spanish, but somewhere along the way, I did start calling Mom, "Mi Madre." I meant it as a term of endearment, but the more I called her that, the more I came to attach meaning to the words: "Mi," mine, and "Madre," mother. That last word is so limiting. My mother became my mother by birthing me, but past that, she has done/is so much more.
Growing up, my mother fed me. She helped clothe me. She cooked for me, tended to me when I was sick, encouraged me, prayed for me, schooled me. She taught me about Jesus. She taught me about life. She read to us the classics (think Les Miserables by Victor Hugo), as well classics to her (C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and the like). She chauffeured us. When the time came (and I frustrated my dad nearly to death), she taught me to drive.
When I was away from home, she wrote me letters. She master-minded a lot of my birthday, Christmas, and other celebration gifts (and still does). When I visited, even as a married person, she let me rest.
My mom is strong, resilient, sturdy. She's endured a lot. She endures a lot. She still prays. She still encourages. She's a role model, and a mentor.
Words, English or otherwise, cannot really contain the wonder that is my mother. So on Mother's Day, I guess the best I can do is just give thanks that she is "mi madre," a gift from God to me to show me just a little more of God and His infinite, immeasurable love. If her love is any indication, the love of God has got to be pretty great!
Saturday, May 9, 2026
What We Cooked and Ate (Week 18)
This Week's Eats:
Crispy potato taco bowls (How Sweet Eats)
Lentils in the Instant Pot (Rainbow Plant Life)
Quick pickled onions (How Sweet Eats)
Pumpkin spice sourdough discard oatmeal bake (Acts of Sourdough)
Big-batch Instant Pot white beans (Epicurious)
Cottage cheese egg bake (The Real Food Dietitians)
Chickpea "tuna" salad (Drugstore Divas)
Grilled corn on the cob (Love and Lemons)
Instant Pot baked potatoes (Platings + Pairings)
Freezer Pull-Outs:
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
38.
I have much to reflect on this year. First of all, there is my tradition of making a goal for the year on my birthday. Honestly, with choosing a word of the year, I neither remember nor prioritize my birthday goal, so this will be the year I drop that practice. For reference, though, my goal last year was to reclaim my life. I took more risks, traveled, ran in a lot of races (some last minute). I decided it was okay to prioritize life over work (trying to do my best at work, but not spending time outside of work on work, if that makes sense). I quit counseling, in part because I felt ready, and in part because I wanted more time to live life. I am not sure I practiced contentment or at least practiced it well. I think I ten get on the "hedonic treadmill" of always doing and wanting more. It's good to have goals, but not too many....
As I get older, I don't want to "just live." I want to enjoy life, savor it. I only get one life on this earth! Far too often, though, I am cranky, tired, worn out. That's not the way I want to live, but it unfortunately seems to be my default. After the "have-to's" are done, I just don't have much energy left. I could blame this on my personality, or work, or what have you, but my attitude is really my own problem on which to work.
So maybe in this year of less, I should focus on having less grumpiness and more joy; less discontent, and more gratitude; less scraping by, and more presence. I really don't have it bad. God has given me a good life (albeit with the pains and hardships of living in a sin-stained world.) I want to live this life. I want to enjoy this life, because really, nothing is guaranteed.
I do have some bigger goals for life as a whole. We'll see if they happen. I'm trying to work towards them little by little, but then there's...life. So for now, I'll try to enjoy what I can, hold a lose grip, and surrender my dreams to the Lord because He'll either empower me to achieve them, or He won't, and in the end, He will be the greatest reward and the greatest prize.
%20runner5.jpeg)






%20and%20grilled%20corn%20on%20the%20cob%20(Love%20and%20Lemons.jpeg)
.png)

.jpeg)


.png)