Pollish Santa |
Oplatki |
https://www.amazon.com/Judy-Ann-Davis/e/B006GXN502/
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
The things I think and write today in blog posts, I will keep. And when I'm old and read them. . .will I laugh or will I weep?
Pollish Santa |
Oplatki |
1. I'm thankful for warm, toasty home and a cupboard full of food. In this ongoing pandemic, it's nice to know I have a safe place to live with a peaceful place to lay my head each night.
2. I thankful for my family, friends, fellow writers, and many others who are part of my life. Luckily, during these devastating times, we have the ability to communicate using the telephone, Skype, Zoom, and other on-line media venues. Can you imagine what it was like to quarantine during the Spanish Flu in 1918 to the spring of 1920?
3. I'm thankful for the beautiful earth that we have, and especially, our rural community with its lush, scenic mountains, clean streams and lakes, and our exquisite sunsets and striking sunrises. The four seasons of Pennsylvania gives us a variety of flora and fauna to enjoy year 'round.
4. Lastly, I'm thankful for far too many people to list: our medical professionals, our first responders, our police, our military, and all those who help keep us well and safe.
Of course, there are other people and things I haven't mentioned, but now it's your turn. What are you most thankful for this year?
NOTE: If you leave a comment, I'll
gift the winner, through Amazon, a digital copy of his/her choice of one of
the three books below. Please leave an email so I can contact you.
I'm happy to announce that ADELENE ~ THE VIOLINIST, which is Book 2 of my Musical Christmas series, has won first place in the Contemporary Short Category of the International Digital Awards, sponsored by the Oklahoma Romance Writers of America. For some fun holiday reading, check out all three romantic mysteries below!
Happy Thanksgiving!
BUY LINKS for ADELENE ~ The Violinist Amazon Barnes and Noble
BUY LINKS for LUCY ~ The Clarinetist Amazon Barnes and Noble
Rafflecopter Link for a Chance to Win
I have to admit that November is not my favorite month with its dark dreary, sometimes rainy, and many times chilly days. Thanksgiving allows us to look forward to good food and time with families. This year, because of the pandemic, my husband and I are staying home, cooking a turkey dinner together, complete with stuffing, pumpkin pie, sweet potatoes, and cranberries. We’ll Skype with the children and grandsons via electronic devices. And, we’ll manage. We know “this too shall pass.”
On a brighter side, November is the time of the year to enjoy decorating for autumn with its brilliant reds, sunny yellows, and warm orange shades. It’s pumpkins, leaves, and colorful mums of all shades. It’s time to enjoy finding a favorite spot, soft cozy afghan, and a good book. And there’s always apple cider, flavored teas in spice, berry, and lemon or maybe a cup of hot chocolate, topped with marshmallows.Since I’m a fan of Robert Frost. Here is one of his poems to enjoy.
My November
Guest - by Robert
Frost
Her
pleasure will not let me stay.
She talks and I am fain to list:
She’s glad the birds are gone away,
She’s glad her simple worsted grey
Is silver now with clinging mist.
The
desolate, deserted trees,
The faded earth, the heavy sky,
The beauties she so truly sees,
She thinks I have no eye for these,
And vexes me for reason why.
Not
yesterday I learned to know
The love of bare November days
Before the coming of the snow,
But it were vain to tell her so,
And they are better for her praise.
Be sure to check out my Musical Christmas Series.
Three romantic mystery novellas for the holidays.
October reminds us of cool, crisp days, a rainbow of colored leaves, and Halloween. October is also National Dessert Month. With seasonal ingredients like spicy cinnamon, rich caramel, and decadent pecans, autumn is one of the best seasons for baking. Who doesn’t enjoy pumpkin pie heaped with Kool Whip? Or apple pie or crisp? How about pecan pie and the many cobblers?
This
month, on October 26th, I’m releasing my last novella in the Musical
Christmas Series. It’s Lucy –The Clarinetist, and like the preceding
novellas, it includes a recipe that one of the main characters enjoys.
This time it’s Andre Almanza who likes apple pie with a cinnamon crumb
crust.
APPLE PIE WITH CINNAMON CRUMB
CRUST TOPPING
INGREDIENTS:
¾ cup sugar
¼ cup all-purpose flour
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. nutmeg (optional)
Dash of salt
6 cups thinly sliced pared apples (McIntosh work well)
2 TBSP. butter or margarine
Deep Dish Pastry for a 9-inch pie (You need only the bottom crust)Heat oven to 425 degrees. Prepare pastry or use one purchased from the store. (Frozen deep dish varieties work best.)
Stir together sugar, flour,
nutmeg, cinnamon, and salt and mix with apples. Turn into pastry-lined pan and dot with butter.
CINNAMON CRUMB CRUST:
Mix 1 cup flour, ½ cup cold butter, 2 tsp. cinnamon, and ½ cup (packed) brown sugar. Cut dry ingredients into butter with pastry cutter until crumbly.
Carefully spread the mixture on the top of the
apples, packing it down around the edges.
Bake 40 to 50 minutes.
NOTE: You many need to cover topping with aluminum foil for the last ten minutes to prevent excess browning. Serve warm with ice cream or whipped cream.
BLURB:
A merry novella for the holiday season!
Lucy Ciaffonni wants nothing
more than to start her own public relations firm, but she’s stuck at the local
bank performing boring communications and advertising duties. When her best
friend and computer guru, Andre Almanza, buys an area farm to create a barn
theater, Lucy is pulled into the mystery of discovering where a rare, German, H.F.
Kayser clarinet was hidden on the property during Prohibition.
Andre Almanza has always adored
Lucy from afar. He hopes she’ll take the position of barn theater manager. When
she agrees to help him renovate the barn and update and furnish his huge
Victorian house, he is delighted—that is, until the entire town becomes involved
in locating the missing antique instrument. To complicate matters, there are ruthless
people who want to recover the expensive clarinet and cash in on its legend and
value.
Will Lucy and Andre locate the clarinet and finally acknowledge the sparks of romance that have been smoldering between them for the longest time? Will it be the perfect Christmas?
GET YOUR PRE-ORDER AND COPY OF "LUCY ~ THE CLARINETIST HERE!
Welome
August! Along the roadways of Pennsylvania, goldenrod and salvia have begun to
bloom in yellows and purples.
For many people, the month of August signals the arrival of the end of summer in
the Northern Hemisphere that includes the Dog Days of Summer. The eighth month
of the modern calendar, August has thirty-one days.
In the original ten-month Roman calendar, August was the sixth month (with 30 days) and was originally named Sextilis. In 8 BC, the Roman Senate rewarded Octavian Augustus a month in his honor. The founder and first emperor of the Roman Empire, Octavian Augustus, selected Sextilis, which under the Julian calendar was the eighth month with the addition of January and February. An additional day was tacked on to August to balance the total days in the year.
Best
known for its hot and humid days, August lures people to pools and beaches to
cool off before schools begins at the end of the month—or the beginning of
September.
August’s birthstones are the peridot and spinel. Peridot is a semi-precious olive or lime-green stone found in lava flows and veins from the United States to Finland and Pakistan, among others. In shades of pink, red, blue, violet and lavender, spinel is a more recent addition to the August birthstones.
Flowers for August are the gladiolus and poppy. The gladiolus is sometimes referred to as the sword lily because of its long, skinny shape. Both flowers are said to reflect strength of character and imagination.
And during these trying times, as we enter the sixth month of the Coronavirus pandemic, strength of character and imagination may be what we need the most.