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Have Fun * Do Good12 Prompts for Generous Living & Blogging
Inspired by my post, 20 Ways to be a Generous Blogger, I shared 12 Prompts for Generous Living and Blogging in this month's Juicy Blogging e-News.
You don't need to be a blogger, to try the Generous Living prompts, so I thought I'd share them here too. If you'd like to receive the Juicy Blogging eNews in your in-box once a month, you can subscribe by clicking here. Have fun doing good! ************************** Wednesday, February 1 Live it: What are your generous living goals for the month? How do you want to give to yourself, your friends, your family, your local community, and the world at large? Blog it: Share your reflections on your blog. Thursday, February 2 Live it: Jot down ideas for gifts or cards for friends, family and colleagues who have February and March birthdays. Blog it: Share a home made, or do-good gift idea on your blog. Friday, February 3 Live it: Go for a walk and take a photo of something fun, funny, hopeful, or inspiring. Blog it: Share the photo on your blog. If you can’t take a photo, find a photo on Flickr with an Attribution License. Be sure to credit and link back to the photographer, and let them know that you used their photograph. Saturday and Sunday, February 4 and 5 Live it: Make a big batch of soup, or a large casserole. Freeze and share extra servings with someone who could use a break from cooking. Blog it: Post photos of your dish, and the recipe on your blog. Monday, February 6 Live it: Buy or borrow a book about a person who inspires you, or a cause you’re passionate about. Blog it: Share your 5 favorite do-good, or inspiring books on your blog. Tuesday, February 7 Live it: Valentine’s Day is in a week. Make a list of people to send Valentines. Is there someone who will feel extra lonely on Valentine’s Day? Be sure to send them a card. Blog it: Share a home made, or do-good Valentine’s Day idea on your blog. Wednesday, February 8 Live it: What are you really good at? Give it away to someone today. Blog it: Write about your experience giving it away, or give something away on your blog. Thursday, February 9 Live it: Post a quote that inspires you in a prominent place at work, or in your home. Blog it: Share the quote on your blog. If you want, share a photo of where you posted it. Friday, February 10 Live it: Find or make a video about something fun, funny, hopeful, or inspiring. Blog it: Share the video on your blog. Saturday and Sunday, February 11 and 12 Live it: Bake a batch of cookies, or cupcakes to share at a party, with your neighbors, or at work. Blog it: Post photos of your treats, and the recipe on your blog. Monday, February 13 Live it: Make a donation to your favorite nonprofit, or do-good project Blog it: Shine a spotlight on the organization, or project on your blog. Share why it is close to your heart. Tuesday, February 14 Live it: Write an email, or send a card to someone who inspires you. Blog it: Post a "link love" list of bloggers who inspire you, and whose posts make your heart sing. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Cook from The Vegan Table with VegCookbook Club in FebruaryAs some of you know, this year I started a new blog, VegCookbookClub.com, where each month myself and readers cook through one vegetarian, or vegan cookbook. We share tips, opinions and advice about recipes in the comments, on Twitter, on Instagram, and on our own blogs. We just finished cooking from Appetite for Reduction. In February, we're going to cook from The Vegan Table. To join in the fun, all you have to do is pick up a copy of The Vegan Table, cook from it, and share your experience on VegCookbookClub.com, on Twitter and Instagram using the hashtag #vegcookbookclub, or on your own blog. Come on over and VegCook with us! Tweet Full disclosure: The links to Appetite for Reduction and The Vegan Table are linked to my Amazon Associates account. If you make a purchase, after clicking on the link, I get a small percentage of the sale.
Categories: Blogs
Martha Beck Interview: Finding Your Way in a Wild New World
We’ve proliferated and thrived because we never stop playing, and the way to cope with the increasing complexity of the wild new world is to play more.
--Martha Beck, Finding Your Way in a Wild New World
Like many of you, I know Martha Beck from her O Magazine column (it's the first thing I read), and her many self-help books (e.g. Finding Your Own North Star, The Joy Diet). She always delivers good advice with a healthy dose of humor. When I signed up for her mailing list in the fall of 2010, I received a PDF of the first chapter of her book-in-progress with the working title, The Team: How to Live an Abundant Life by Healing Yourself and the World. In the 24-page PDF, Martha describes "The Team" as people who are, "seekers with Big Dreams and a huge sense of mission about healing the earth and its people." As I read, I found myself nodding yes, yes, yes. I'm on the Team. I bet you are too. As soon as I saw that the book was coming out (it's now called Finding Your Way in a Wild New World: Reclaim Your True Nature to Create the Life You Want) I requested a review copy and an e-interview. I was *beyond* thrilled to receive both! So, without further ado, enjoy this 8-question e-interview with Martha Beck about Finding Your Way in a Wild New World! 1. What metaphor would you use to describe the "Wild New World" we're living in now? My favorite metaphor for this time in human history is a stormy sea, or possibly a very fat white-water rapid. Everything is changing very rapidly: industries are disappearing, methods of production and transferring wealth are being upended. And the change is accelerating so quickly that futurists now say they can’t imagine what will happen by 2050. Ray Kurzweil calls that year “the singularity,” because, like the physics of singularity in a black hole, change will become so rapid that it can’t be meaningfully measured. Whoo-ee! 2. You wrote about the importance of living within an infinity loop of play and rest. Why is that important? We can’t stop the waves of change, so we’d better all learn to surf them. And surfing is fun—not easy fun that gets boring quickly, like tic-tac-to, but the kind of “deep play” that requires total attention in the present moment, and makes every moment feel incredibly full and rich. That’s the ONLY way to be successful in the world that is emerging now. And people who play in this way require plenty of rest. Without the rest period, neither the physical nor the mental energy to stay responsive and flexible can continue to develop. We should rest and play as if our happiness depended on it, because it does. 3. What tips do you have for people who have trouble resting and/or playing? Stop thinking in words. That’s the first step to entering the zone of creative and rewarding “magic” in all traditional wisdom cultures. Without that nagging voice telling us we have to work and work and work (hello, Calvinist ethic), we’d play and rest as naturally as animals do. I recently tried to take a nap, and was absolutely tormented by the thought that I should get up and work, though I was extremely tired. I was just giving up on the nap idea when a very successful friend called and told me, “I just took a nap. To keep producing well, I have to listen to my body.” It’s truly bizarre how quickly the holomovement (that’s what some physicists call everything that exists) sends its messages to us. We should listen. But first, get some sleep! 4. How does having fun and doing good fit into our Wild New World? It’s a time of increasingly drastic opposites, so if we’re not having fun and doing good, we’re absolutely wretched and creating misery. It is our duty to find a way of living joyfully. Somebody’s gotta do it. 5. You also wrote about how one way we can each find our purpose in this Wild New World is to look at how our greatest suffering connects with our greatest joy. What is your favorite example of someone who is healing themselves, and others, by connecting their greatest suffering with their greatest joy? I’d say my entire squadron of coaches—so many magical and devoted people! But if you want me to select one individual, I’d probably do the trendy thing and pick Oprah. It just blows my mind that someone born into such an unfairly disadvantageous life set about creating such wild abundance for herself and others. All of us, at some level, can say that our life is our message. Her message is one of infinite possibility. Love it! 6. The foundation for your book seems to be dropping into "Wordlessness." Meditation and things like that are easy to do when our lives are going well, but can be easily pushed aside when we are stressed, or busy. What is the easiest way to drop into Worlessness in a hectic, public situation (e.g. waiting in line at the DMV)? Actually, Wordlessness is no more important than the other three “technologies of magic,” Oneness, Imagination, and Forming. But Wordlessness is ALWAYS the first step to using the other three well, and it’s the one our culture has almost entirely lost. Just the idea that we have to meditate to drop into Wordlessness shows our cultural bias. Dropping into the nonverbal part of the brain happens whenever we’re very focused on a physical skill, from playing the piano to skiing, when we get lost in enjoying music, and often when we laugh. In fact, humor is one linguistic function that calls on the right hemisphere, so along with poetry and paradox, it’s a way to achieve Wordlessness by using words. The key is to get out of the narrow, merely verbal part of the brain and into the much bigger, broader, more sophisticated hardware that is the nonverbal brain. 7. Is there anything else you'd like to share with Have Fun, Do Good readers about Finding Your Way in a Wild New World, or about anything else? Just that since I wrote the book, things keep getting wilder and more magical. In some strange way, I only expected to experience miracles while I was actually writing—when I finished this odd book, I thought, I’d go back to “normal” life. Turns out there really is a new normal! I keep meeting more and more people who feel themselves to be part of a transformation; wild animals keep treating me like a friend; information and circumstances keep aligning to help all of us create positive change. Buckminster Fuller wrote that “there are two kinds of resignation; one rooted in despair, the other in unconquerable hope.” The first half of my life, I felt the first way. Now I feel the second. Against all odds, there is abundant hope that the damage to nature—and humans—can heal. 8. How can folks connect with you and your work (online and offline)? My website is staffed by incredible people who try to respond to email and make sure I get messages that need my personal response. Book groups and reading circles are forming to actually work through the processes I describe in the book. And I’m making a video workshop that will have downloadable video, so people can actually see and hear many of the things I describe in Finding Your Way. We’ll keep the public posted, via marthabeck.com, each time we think of a new way to connect. Let’s use those magical technologies AND the technologies of magic to keep creating a more cohesive, joyful, inspiring gathering of world-healers! ******************************* Full disclosure: The links to Martha's books are linked to my Amazon Associates account. If you buy things on Amazon after clicking on the link, I get a small portion of the sale. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Tea, Cupcakes and Creative Bloggers in Your Town
A couple weekends ago I facilitated a 3-hour Tea, Cupcakes and Creative Bloggers workshop at Teahouse Studio. It was so much fun, I want to teach it again soon. I'm planning on offering it at Teahouse again in the fall, but am also looking for other venues for this spring and summer.
If you know of a place that might like to host a TCCB gathering/workshop in the Bay Area and beyond, let me know in the comments, or email me at britt AT brittbravo DOT com. Maybe I can combine visiting your town with a vacation! Cupcakes by Batter and Dough Here are some of the nice things that the ladies who came for tea, cupcakes and creative blogging said about the afternoon: "Thanks so much for the wonderful workshop - it was a real delight." "Britt is a superbalicious teacher." "Britt was an amazing teacher, and one of the greatest things about the class was all the incredible women that were there!" "The class was great! . . Looking forward to getting the blog up soon!" "The range of topics and activities was great, the professional content with the informal approach made it easy for people to ask Qs, and the way you kept it all to time was terrific!" "Thanks again for the class yesterday. It was really invigorating!" You can see more photos and reflections from the workshop on the blog Not Merely Living and on Room of Her Own. P.S. The Juicy Blogging E-Course starts Wednesday, Jan. 25th. There are still a few spaces open if you'd like to join. You have to provide your own tea and cupcakes, but its still fun! Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Your Free Winter 2012 Big Vision Worksheet (Jan/Feb)Happy Chinese New Year, Have Fun * Do Gooders! To celebrate the New Year and new moon, here's a bee-you-tea-full Big Vision Worksheet (illustrated by the hubs) for you to record some of your goals for the year, season, and lunar month. You can download the PDF for free from Dropbox by clicking here. Instead of listing numbers beneath each category (like we've done in the past), we left the space open so that you can write a little, a lot, a list, or a paragraph. Enjoy! Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Juicy Blogging E-Course Starts January 25Just a quick reminder for folks interested in taking the Juicy Blogging e-Course that the early registration discount ends January 18th. The class begins January 25th. You can join the e-course on brittbravo.com (gift certificates are available!), and find out about upcoming classes by subscribing to the Juicy Blogging eNews. We'll do three kinds of fun-work during the 4-week class:
Past students have said about the class . . . “So sad the class is over! . . . THANK YOU. I loved it.” “The best part of it all is that it is just so much fun!” “Loving this course. Blogging is addictive.” “There is both an ‘art and science’ of blogging. You’ve presented resources for the science, and great tips for the art.” “Britt’s e-course was great. It helped me find my blogging voice. It provided me with solid ideas and steps to improve my blogging practice. It also helped me plan for how to build my readership via blogging as well as other social media outlets. Wonderful course!” “Britt Bravo’s Juicy Blogging class is giving me a lot to think about, in the best possible way!" “The class is great. I am learning a lot, and the pace and format are working for me.” “I have a much, much better idea what I’m doing with my blog now.” “As a ‘non-blogger’ I found the Juicy Blogging E-Course to be of great value to me." I hope you can join us. It's going to be fun! Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Have You Called Your Grandma Lately?
My Gram
I called my grandma today just 'cause she's awesome, and because I was moved by Kimberly Wilson's post i heart my gramma about her 99-year-old grandma's transition into hospice care.
If you have a special older person in your life, why not give them a call, or send them a card today? I'm sure they'll appreciate it, and you can tell them how much you love them. Feel free to share a little about the awesome older person in your life in the comments. You can read a little about my grandma in my 2006 post, How to Look Fabu at Any Age: A Little Tribute to My Grandma. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Win a Copy of Global Girlfriends by Stacey EdgarAs I mentioned in my post, What Have Fun, Do Good Books Are You Excited to Read in 2012?, I'll be interviewing Stacey Edgar, Founder of Global Girlfriend, for the January 2012 Big Vision Podcast. I'm almost done reading her book, Global Girlfriends: How one mom made it her business to help women in poverty worldwide, and think you would enjoy it, sooooo . . . I'm doing a little giveaway. Here's how to join in the fun:
Full disclosure: The link to Global Girlfriends is attached to my Amazon Associates account. If you click on the link and make a purchase on Amazon, I get a small percentage of the sale. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
3 Videos to Inspire You to Dance, Dance, Dance in 2012
"I was a dancer all along"
- Lykke Li, Dance, Dance, Dance Ever since I was a little girl I've loved to dance, which is why I keep watching this video that my friend, Gabriela, posted on her Facebook page last month: "Two year old doing what she loves. Dancing." Don't you think the world would be a better, saner place if we all danced more? I'm going to say it here: In 2012 I would like to be a part of a dance flash mob, like the one that happened in the Beirut Rafic Hariri International Airport: Have you ever been a part of a dance flash mob? Was it fun? How did you find it? In the meantime, I'll be dancing in my friend Heather's ShimmyPop! class at Hipline, a belly dance fitness studio in Berkeley and Oakland. If you live, or visit the Bay Area, you *must* take a class here. It's super fun! Will you be dance, dance, dancing in 2012? Why not start by trying this Hipline January Move of the Month! Tweet
Categories: Blogs
What Have Fun, Do Good Books Are You Excited to Read in 2012?
Is the book pile by your bed ready to topple over like mine is? I've got a big juicy stack to start off the New Year:
Global Girlfriends: How One Mom Made it Her Business to Help Women in Poverty Worldwide by Stacey Edgar. I'll be interviewing Stacey, the Founder of Global Girlfriend, for Have Fun, Do Good in early 2012. With Liberty and Justice for Some by Glenn Greenwald. My virtual social changey book club is reading this for our January call. Food Rebels, Guerrilla Gardeners, and Smart Cookin' Mamas by Mark Winne. There was one week where 2 or 3 people all recommended that I read this book, so I added it to my Amazon wish list and got it for Christmas. Wahoo! Looking forward to diving in. Desire to Inspire: Using Creative Passion to Transform the World by Christine Mason Miller. I want to interview Christine about her book for the Arts and Healing Podcast. If you know her, I'd love an e-intro (: Real Happiness: The Power of Meditation by Sharon Salzberg. I've been holding off finishing Lovingkindness, also by Salzberg,because I didn't want it to end, but now I will so that I can start Real Happiness. The Artist's Way at Work: Riding the Dragon by Mark Bryan with Julie Cameron and Catherine Allen. A friend and I are reading one of the 12 chapters each month, and then getting together to discuss it. Seems like a good year to read this book since according to the Chinese zodiac, 2012 is the Year of the Dragon! What have fun, do good books are you excited to read in 2012? Full disclosure: I received a review copy of Global Girlfriends, and all of the books I linked to are attached to my Amazon Associates account. If you click on a link and buy something from Amazon, I get a wee percentage of the sale. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
New Year, New Blog: VegCookbookClubSo many people responded via email, comments, Facebook and Twitter to my post, VegCookbook Club 2012: Wanna Join? that I've created a new blog for our "club" activities: VegCookbookClub.com. Yay! I'm super excited to start cooking and connecting with all of you who said you'd like to cook together from the same vegetarian, or vegan cookbook each month. Based on everyone's response, our January cookbook will be Appetite for Reduction: 125 Fast and Filling Low-Fat Vegan Recipes by Isa Chandra Moskowitz. Longtime Have Fun, Do Good readers, don't worry! I'll still be writing here regularly, but my Meatless Monday posts will move over to VegCookbookClub.com. Happy New Year! Tweet
Categories: Blogs
VegCookbook Club 2012: Wanna Join ?
I'm thinking about setting up an online VegCookbook Club in 2012. Would you like to be a part of it?
You don't have to be a vegetarian, or vegan (I'm not) to join, you just have to want to eat less meat. You could join for a variety of reasons: environmental, animal rights, health, or because you want a creative cooking challenge. Here's how I'm thinking it would work (I'm open to suggestions):
Which of these VegCookbooks are you the most excited to cook from in January?
I'm looking forward to cooking with you! Full disclosure: I have an Amazon Associates account. If you buy something on Amazon after clicking one of the cookbook links, I get a percentage of the sale. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Gift Certificates for the Juicy Blogging E-Course Are Here!A few weeks ago a Facebook pal asked if they could give the Juicy Blogging E-Course as a gift. I asked the hubs if he would create a gift certificate for me, and here it is! Isn't it cute? The next Juicy Blogging E-Course runs from January 25-February 15, 2012. The class consists of three kinds of fun-work:
You'll find more info, and can purchase the class on brittbravo.com. If you'd like to give the e-course as a gift, just purchase the class for yourself, and then email me at britt AT brittbravo DOT com with:
I'll email the gift certificate to you as a PDF so you can give it to them yourself (: Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Love List: A Have Fun, Do Good Holiday Gift by Sherry Richert Belul
Today's post is a guest piece by my pal Sherry Richert Belul, founder of Simply Celebrate, and author of the e-book, Present Perfect: 127 creative, one-of-a-kind, no-to-low cost, wow-‘em gifts they’ll never forget. You can connect with Sherry on SimplyCelebrate.net, her blog (Cherry Blossom Soup), Facebook and Twitter (@simplycelebrate).
Love List: A Have Fun, Do Good Holiday Gift Want a great do-good, feel-good holiday gift that doesn’t cost a dime? A Love List is one of the best gifts you can give someone. It's simple and fun to create. Here’s what you do: 1. Set aside an hour to make your Love List. 2. Play some music and maybe dig up a photo of the gift recipient. (That’s for inspiration, but you might decide to include it as part of the presentation!) 3. Get out a pen and paper and start thinking about things you love about this person. Let yourself be open to all the thoughts that drop in.
4. Once you have your list, you can present it as-is, or get creative. I've posted a video on Simply Celebrate that will give some ideas on creative ways to present your Love List. You can also request a free Love List download that will give you even more ideas for how to present your Love List, as well as a ready-made list to complete. People are always thinking of original and fun ways to turn their lists into a unique gift. I’d LOVE to hear yours! The Love List feels good to make and is great to receive. I hope you’ll try one for someone you dearly love! Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Empowering Low-Income Families to Create Prosperity: Interview with Ben Mangan
"It's important to never lose track of leveraging the strengths of the people that we serve. I think that when you take a strengths-based approach to working with folks who are struggling in some way, it's part of the way that you build optimism. It's one of the most important ways that you position the people that you're serving to be successful over time.
~ Ben Mangan, EARN Ben Mangan is the President, CEO, and Co-Founder of the nonprofit, EARN. Since 2001, EARN has helped tens of thousands of low-income people enter the financial mainstream, and move toward prosperity with savings accounts for the unbanked, and matched accounts for low wage workers to invest in education, first homes, and microenterprise. Ben has more than 15 years of experience in policy leadership, innovation and strategic management. Ben was the Midwest Practice Leader for Ernst and Young's Public Private Development Group in Chicago, and served as Director of Organizational Strategy for the international micro-payments company, beenz.com. He is a regular blogger for the Huffington Post and SFGate, and serves as a lecturer on the faculty of the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley. He holds a Bachelor of Arts from Vassar College (which is how I know him), and a Master of Public Policy from Harvard University's Kennedy School. You can listen and subscribe to the Big Vision Podcast via iTunes, or on the player above. If you have suggestions for people I should interview, please email me at britt AT brittbravo DOT com. *Show notes* Learn more about Ben and EARN:
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Categories: Blogs
Connect with an Old Friend This Week
"Friendship is the only cement that will ever hold the world together." -Woodrow Wilson
No Meatless Monday post today 'cause instead of trying new recipes, I spent the week getting reading for a reunion with three old friends. Spending time with them was like having an endless bowl of delicious and nourishing soup. Connect with an old friend this week. Call, Skype, write, have coffee. Whatever feels right. It will fill you up. Promise. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
25 Gifts to Make with Your 2011 PhotosWho'd like to make more holiday gifts this year? Me! But I'm often stumped for ideas. One raw material I have more than enough to work with is photos, so today I'm brainstorming holiday gifts to make with them. I've listed 25 ideas below, along with 7 websites that can help you with your creations: Book Bookmark Calendar Coasters Cookbook Deck of cards DVD slideshow (with or without narration) Family history book Framed photo (you could decorate the frame too) Greeting cards iPhone case Magnet Mouse pad Mug Notepad Ornaments Photo album Postage stamps Postcards Poster Puzzle Stickers Scrapbook Tote bag T-shirt 7 websites to help you create your gifts: Blurb Flickr Kodak Gallery Moo Shutterfly Snapfish Zazzle What are some other ideas for gifts you can make with photos? All photos are by me (: Tweet
Categories: Blogs
6 Healing Artists
"Art is a wound turned into light."
- Georges Braque
As I mentioned in my Fun-Do list last week, one of my favorite things to do is collage. The process of combining words and images helps me to work things out in a different way than writing in my journal does. I truly believe that art can heal, which is why I love producing the Arts and Healing Podcast for the Arts and Healing Network. This year I interviewed six healing artists: Quinn McDonald Author of Raw Art Journaling: Making Meaning, Making Art Jenny Doh Author of Art Saves: Stories, Inspiration and Prompts Sharing the Power of Art Susannah Conway Creator of the Unravelling e-courses, and author of This I Know: Notes on Unraveling the Heart Kim Rosen Author of Saved by a Poem: The Transformative Power of Words Liz Lamoreux Author of Inner Excavations: Explore Your Self Through Photography, Poetry and Mixed Media Jamie Ridler Creative living coach at Jamie Ridler Studios, and creator of one of my favorite podcasts, Creative Living with Jamie You can listen to these interviews, and many more, on the Arts and Healing Network's website, or on iTunes. If you have ideas for people we should interview, email the Arts and Healing Network team at ahn AT artheals DOT org. Full disclosure: The books I linked to are attached to my Amazon Associates account, which means that if you buy anything after clicking on the link, I receive a percentage of the sale. Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Meatless Monday: 2 Soups, 1 Salad, 2 Casseroles + Cosmos Apple Pie
Meatless Monday is a nonprofit initiative of The Monday Campaigns.
Their goal is to help reduce meat consumption by 15% to improve
personal and planetary health. Each week I share meatless recipes
I've tried from cookbooks and online. You can see past Meatless Monday posts by clicking here.
If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe. ― Carl Sagan One of the items on my Fun-Do List for Thanksgiving was to try some new recipes, and boy, did I! I made a soup, a salad, and two casseroles from Vegan Holiday Kitchen by Nava Atlas, baked the most amazing Cosmos Apple Pie with Olive Oil Double Crust from Vegan Pie in the Sky by Isa Chandra Moskowitz and Terry Hope Romero, and made a soup from Vegan Soups and Hearty Stews for All Seasons, also by Nava Atlas. I hope these photos will inspire your winter holiday menus! Butternut squash on its way to becoming soup Coconut Butternut Squash Soup from Vegan Holiday Kitchen. Unbelievably delicious. You're in luck 'cause the New York Times published the recipe! Autumn Harvest Stew from Vegan Soups and Hearty Stews for All Seasons. Yum, yum. This recipe is available through Google Books. Pistachios ready to roast and toss in salad . . . Mixed Greens with Green Apples, Beets and Pistachios from Vegan Holiday Kitchen. I liked this salad. It has *a lot* of fruits and veggies in it, a few too many for some of my diners! Ravioli with Sweet Potatoes and Sage from Vegan Holiday Kitchen. Delish. How can you go wrong with ravioli and sweet potatoes! The hardest part was finding vegan ravioli. I ended up buying fresh Roasted Butternut and Chestnut Ravioli in Pumpkin Pasta from Market Hall in Oakland. I'd like to make it again with Rising Moon's vegan ravioli. Hearty Lentil and Mushroom Shepherd's Pie from Vegan Holiday Kitchen. Also yummy, and you're in luck again 'cause Fat Free Vegan Kitchen posted the recipe. Pretty veggies ready to roast Veggies roasted. Don't they look like jewels? Cosmos Apple Pie with Olive Oil Double Crust from Vegan Pie in the Sky ready to bake. This is only the 4th pie I've ever made (see my Old Fashioned Chocolate Pudding Pie with a Graham Cracker Crust), so I'm proud of how it turned out: pretty and delicious! It's not burned, that's cinnamon and sugar baked into the top! Slice for day after Thanksgiving breakfast! ************* What yummy meatless dishes did you make last week? Full disclosure: The cookbooks I linked to are attached to my Amazon Associates account, which means that if you buy anything after clicking on the link, I get a percentage of the sale. I received review copies of Vegan Holiday Kitchen and Vegan Pie in the Sky. Share Tweet
Categories: Blogs
Your Fun-Do List for Thanksgiving WeekendI'm a huge to-do list maker, which is a blessing, and a compulsion. My lists keep me on track, but they can also be overwhelming. I'm definitely ready to relax and have fun during the long weekend, so instead I've made a fun-do list:
What's on your fun-do list? Photo: Our super fun Thanksgiving in Maine. Share Tweet
Categories: Blogs
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