Can you find it in your heart?
As your day advances into fun-filled activities with family and friends, please take one moment to remember the men and women who served.
Sloane
from Stella May
This is my hubby’s favorite cookie. I must admit it is mine, too. I hope you like them as well. My recipe makes 10 - 12 medium cookies or 7 - 8 large ones.
Pre-heat oven to 250° F.
Cover cookie sheet with parchment paper.
Pour egg whites into a glass bowl. Set your mixer on high speed. Whip until whites are very firm.
Gradually add sugar, almond extract, and flour. Drop dough onto cookie sheet using a tablespoon or a scooper. Add an almond on top of each cookie, then set pan into oven.
Bake for 20-25 min, then turn off the oven, but leave cookies inside for another 40-45 min.
Remove and enjoy.
*Store the yolks in the fridge to scramble for breakfast the next morning.Here is a peek at Stella’s time travel romance novel for your reading pleasure.
One key unlocks the love of a lifetime…but could also break her heart.
Nika Morris’s sixth sense has helped build a successful business, lovingly restoring and reselling historic homes on Florida’s Amelia Island. But there’s one forlorn, neglected relic that’s pulled at her from the moment she saw it. The century-old Coleman house.
Quite unexpectedly, the house is handed to her on a silver platter—along with a mysterious letter, postmarked 1909, yet addressed personally to Nika. Its cryptic message: Find the key. You know where it is. Hurry, for goodness sake!
The message triggers an irresistible drive to find that key. When she does, one twist in an old grandfather clock throws her back in time, straight into the arms of deliciously, devilishly handsome Elijah Coleman.
Swept up in a journey of a lifetime, Nika finds herself falling in love with Eli—and with the family and friends that inhabit a time not even her vivid imagination could have conjured. But in one desperate moment of homesickness, she makes a decision that will not only alter the course of more than one life, but break her heart.
’Til Time Do Us Part is available in Kindle and Paperback at AMAZON.
from Emma Lane aka Janis Lane
Supplies are precious. We may not have enough pots to present our plants this season. We are scrambling and repainting and reusing old ones we can find. Other perennials are presenting in one too big or too small. We must use ingenuity, creativity, and sheer determination to have a successful season. Big supply boats are stuck in canals and such. Nothing we can do except encourage US businesses to pay attention and invent a new factory or two. I shudder to think we must go back to the ‘dig your own.’
My bad news on a personal level was the fall I took tripping over my easel. (Another fun hobby during the pandemic.) No, my nose isn’t broken, but you aren’t allowed to laugh when you see me.
The good news? Oh, it’s the very best. I have a Cozy Mystery release that debuted in the latter part of April. Ta Da! Check out the pretty greenhouse on the front cover of Murder by Proxy, the fifth of the Detective Kevin Fowler Cozy Mysteries. That’s a clue, by the way. An attitude of thankfulness goes a long way to reconciling the not so good.
Happy reading and happy gardening as we flex with the good and bend with the bad taken in perspective. If you're looking for me, you know where to find me. I’ll be repotting succulents in Greenhouse 3.
Romance swirls, tumbles, and produces surprising
changes among the group of friends at Buddy and Rita’s diner. Beverly hires a
young, ambitious reporter to work at the growing newspaper and starts a new
adventure of her own, while Kevin watches over the townspeople of Hubbard. The
mystery of a toxic skunk is finally routed by troublesome out-of-towners. An
unexpected wedding shocks everyone but the Young Family. Spring has arrived and
May is in full bloom in the Western New York small-town Americana, as another
beautiful bride walks toward the flower-laded bower under the approving eyes of
a group of fond friends.
Look for information about writing and plants on Emma's new website. Leave a comment or a gardening question and put a smile on Emma's face.
Stay connected to Emma on Facebook and Twitter. Be sure to check out the things that make Emma smile on Pinterest.from Sloane Taylor
Spring is an amazing time of year and my favorite because that’s when the Earth comes alive. All sorts of beautiful things happen. Trees are budding, tender plants push through the ground, and romance is in the air and warm weather is just a few weeks away.
I am a romantic through and through. Always have been and with any luck I always will be. Romance is much more than a quick trip to tangle the sheets. It is about being with someone you love and doing little things to show them how much they mean to you. In my case I cook because I love it.
When summer arrives and the gardens are ablaze in color, I want to move the romance outside. So why not share a summer night with your someone special? What better way than with a sizzling romantic dinner, candles, wine, and music. You don’t need much to set the mood and turn your patio, balcony, or kitchen into a lover’s nook. Make your night special with great food because is the doorway to infinite possibilities.
Now that you have the perfect location and setting for you and that right person, may I suggest you spoil yourself with an intimate dinner meant for lovers. It is easy to prepare, and leftovers make marvelous sandwiches. This recipe also works great in the oven.
Ask your butcher to dress the tenderloin. If he won’t, then you need to remove the excess fat and sliver out the silver strip along the side. Easy to do. Slide a sharp knife under the strip close to one end. Use a back and forward motion like sawing to ease your knife between the meat and the strip as you lift it away from the beef.
MENU
Marinated
& Grilled Beef Tenderloin
Potatoes
Baked on the Grill
Grilled
Asparagus
Sautéed
Mushrooms
Dry Red Wine – Valpolicella
Combine all ingredients in a long bowl or plastic bag
and a shallow pan. Marinade in fridge 2 – 20 hours. Seems like a strange time
span, but the longer the marinade the tastier the beef.
Remove meat from refrigerator 1 hour before grilling
or roasting in oven. Meat needs to be almost room temperature.
Grill Instructions
Preheat grill to medium-high.
Pat tenderloin dry. Discard
marinade. Add beef, close lid, and grill 15 – 20 minutes or until meat is done
to your preference. Be sure to turn meat several times to avoid burning.
Oven Instructions
Preheat oven to 400° F (200°C).
Line a roasting pan with aluminum
foil. Pat tenderloin dry. Discard marinade. Add beef to pan. Roast 30 – 40
minutes or until meat is done to your preference. Save the juice to moisten he
meat when you serve.
Baked Potatoes on the Grill
1 russet potato per person
Olive oil
Aluminum foil
Butter
Sour cream
Chives
Freshly ground pepper to taste
Preheat gas grill to medium-high.
Wash potatoes under cool water. Pat dry. Poke several sets of holes in each potato with a fork. This stops the potato from bursting as it bakes. Rub potatoes with a small amount of olive oil to keep the skin soft. Wrap each potato in a section of aluminum foil.
Place potatoes on upper shelf of grill. If you don’t have an upper shelf, then lay them at the outer edges of your grill.
Grill 45 minutes to 1 hour, turning every 15 – 20 minutes. Test if done by inserting a toothpick into the potato. It should glide in easily.
To serve, remove foil and then cut an X across the top of each potato. Using potholders squeeze the ends toward the center until the potato mounds.
Serve
with butter, sour cream, chives, and pepper.
Trim, then discard, the tough bottoms off asparagus with a sharp knife.
Combine oil, lemon juice, garlic powder, basil, and pepper in a glass or ceramic dish. Stir well. Add asparagus. Stir gently to coat the spears.
Set gas grill to medium-high heat. Poke a few holes in a piece of aluminum foil then set it onto the grate. Lay spears on top. Turn frequently to avoid burning.
Asparagus are done when they color to medium brown, about 5 – 7 minutes.
Arrange
spears on a dish and serve immediately.
Clean mushrooms
with a dry paper towel to remove bedding soil. Slice them in half lengthwise if
medium or into thirds if large.
Over medium heat, drizzle a small amount of olive oil into a medium-sized frying pan and add butter. Stir in onions and mushrooms. Sauté until almost tender, 3 – 6 minutes.
Pour vermouth or white wine over the mushrooms and continue to heat.
To serve, grind pepper across the top and spoon into a warm serving dish.
This dish is best cooked and served on the same day. Leftovers are soggy.
Sloane
Taylor's cookbooks, Date Night Dinners, Date Night Dinners Italian Style, Sizzling Summer, and Recipes to Create Holidays Extraordinaire are released by Toque & Dagger Publishing and available at all book vendors.
from Sharon Ledwith
Apply the 80-20 rule to everything you do. Especially when it comes to your writing. What’s the 80-20 rule? It’s a simple formula. The basic idea is that 20 percent of the things you do will account for 80 percent of the value of your work. For optimum performance in any job, it’s essential that you work on the top 20 percent of the activities that account for most of your results. This rule is also known as the Pareto Principal or Power Law.
How does this law apply to Writers? Read
on…
·
Time
Sucks:
You know what I’m talking about. Facebook. Twitter. YouTube. TV. Email
checking. Web surfing. These activities
can be gigantic time sucks. Get a timer or set an amount of time for yourself
for these simple pleasures. If you do this, you'll free yourself up to dedicate
time for your writing. Do it. Be ruthless.
·
Great Writing Sessions: Some writing
sessions are more productive than others. Know when is the best time for you to
write, and when is not. Are you a night owl or an early bird? Know yourself
well with regards to this advice. You will generate roughly 80% of your writing
in the best 20% of your writing sessions. When you have a great day of writing,
take notice on the factors that make it productive, and try to repeat those
factors in all of your writing sessions.
·
Not-so-great Writing Sessions: A small number of
your writing sessions will be far more wasteful than the rest. What happened in
these sessions? Distractions? Your special someone knocking on your office
door? Pets demanding attention? Do the math and figure out the factors that
prevented great writing sessions. What can you do to fix these sessions in the
future?
·
Writing Quality: Pretty much 20%
of your writing will be of a high quality. That's the good stuff you should
publish. The other 80% will be crap. Buck up. It happens to the best of us.
·
Know Your Audience: What’s selling
for you? Your audience will vastly prefer some 20% of your writing. Know this.
Embrace this, especially the enthusiastic reviews. Then create more stories
like it. It should drive more success your way.
·
Creating Ideas: You'll think up
80% of your best ideas in 20% of the time you dedicate to creative activities.
Figure out what puts you in these highly creative states and try to recreate
those conditions every time. Was it the music you were listening to? The tea or
coffee you sipped? Perhaps it was incense you were burning. On the flipside,
you'll trash 80% of your time spent generating new ideas. Maybe that time would
be better spent on editing, reading or other activities.
·
Productivity: Some days will be
more productive than others. Period. Exploit those days by pushing yourself to
write as many hours as you can. Make the most of it and you may complete more
work in one day than in several average days.
·
Book Sales: A cold, hard
fact: 80% of book sales will come from 20% of authors. This explains why the
publishing industry tosses huge amounts of money at a small number of authors
while it ignores great work from everyone else. Life’s not fair for those in
that 80% range.
·
Success and Failure: Some 80% of your
written work will likely fail to gain an audience. However, all it takes is one
major success to turn that percentage around and claim your stake in the publishing
world. Grow a thick skin and keep trying.
Here’s a glimpse of the premises of both my young
adult series:
The Last Timekeepers Time Travel Adventures…
Chosen
by an Atlantean Magus to be Timekeepers—legendary time travelers sworn to keep history
safe from the evil Belial—five classmates are sent into the past to restore
balance, and bring order back into the world, one mission at a time.
Children are the keys to our future. And now, children are the
only hope for our past.
Mysterious Tales from Fairy Falls Teen Psychic Mysteries…
Imagine a teenager
possessing a psychic ability and struggling to cope with its freakish power.
There’s no hope for a normal life, and no one who understands. Now, imagine
being uprooted and forced to live in a small tourist town where nothing much
ever happens. It’s bores-ville from the get-go. Until mysterious things start
to happen.
Welcome to Fairy Falls.
Expect the unexpected.
The Last Timekeepers Time Travel Adventure Series:
MIRROR WORLD
PUBLISHING
׀ AMAZON ׀ BARNES & NOBLE ׀
The Last Timekeepers
and the Dark Secret, Book #2 Buy Links:
MIRROR WORLD
PUBLISHING
׀ AMAZON ׀ BARNES & NOBLE ׀
The Last
Timekeepers and the Arch of Atlantis, Book #1 Buy Links:
MIRROR WORLD PUBLISHING ׀ AMAZON ׀ BARNES & NOBLE ׀
Legend
of the Timekeepers, prequel Buy
Links:
MIRROR
WORLD PUBLISHING ׀ AMAZON ׀ BARNES
& NOBLE
׀
Mysterious Tales from Fairy Falls Teen
Psychic Mystery Series:
MIRROR
WORLD PUBLISHING ׀ AMAZON ׀ BARNES
& NOBLE
׀
Blackflies
and Blueberries, Book Two Buy
Links:
MIRROR
WORLD PUBLISHING ׀ AMAZON ׀ BARNES
& NOBLE
׀
Sharon Ledwith is the author of the middle-grade/YA time travel series, THE LAST TIMEKEEPERS, and the teen psychic mystery series, MYSTERIOUS TALES FROM FAIRY FALLS. When not writing, researching, or revising, she enjoys reading, exercising, anything arcane, and an occasional dram of scotch. Sharon lives a serene, yet busy life in a southern tourist region of Ontario, Canada, with her hubby, one spoiled yellow Labrador and a moody calico cat. Learn more about Sharon Ledwith on her website and blog. Stay connected on Facebook and Twitter, Goodreads, and Smashwords. Look up her Amazon Author page for a list of current books. Be sure to check out THE LAST TIMEKEEPERS TIME TRAVEL SERIES Facebook page.
BONUS: Download the free PDF short story The
Terrible, Mighty Crystal HERE
Preheat oven to 375° F (190°C).
Place pie shell on cookie sheet. Use a fork to poke several sets of holes in the bottom and around the sides of the shell. Bake for 10 minutes. Remove from oven and set aside.
Melt butter in a heavy skillet. Add bacon, and ham if you’re including it, and onion when foam subsides. Cook until meat is lightly browned. Remove from skillet with a slotted spoon to paper towels.
Beat or whisk eggs, yolks, cream, and seasonings in a large bowl. Stir in cheese.
Scatter meat, into pie shell. Gently ladle in egg mixture. Sprinkle the top with butter bits.
Bake for 25 minutes or until a sharp knife inserted in the middle of the quiche comes out clean.
The dish may be served hot, warm, or room temperature. It also makes a wonderful appetizer. Leftovers reheat in the microwave beautifully.
*Diced ham, ¼ lb. (125g), is also good in this recipe in place of the bacon or along with. All other ingredients and process remains the same.
**No need to buy white pepper if you don’t have it. Use black pepper only a little more as it is not as strong as white pepper.
Peel and slice banana into bitesize
pieces. Scoop into a medium-sized bowl. Core and dice pear then add to bowl.
Sprinkle lemon juice over fruit to stop it from turning brown and mix well.
Remove rind and core from pineapple
then dice the fruit. Add ¼ to banana mixture. Store the extra pineapple in a
glass bowl or plastic bag. Refrigerate for future use.
Peel kiwi and slice then stir into
salad. Gently fold in remaining fruit.
Spoon into a glass bowl, cover with cling wrap, and chill until time to serve. Leftovers are still good the next day.
Zucchini
Bread for Dessert
Make this bread a day or two in advance to free up your Mother’s Day morning.
Preheat oven to 350° F (180°C).
Grease 2 loaf pans with butter. Cut and fit a piece of parchment paper to the bottom of each pan. I do this because my pans are old and food sticks to the bottom. Nothing attractive about serving zucchini bread with a big hunk missing.
Combine all dry ingredients in a medium-sized bowl. This includes the zucchini. Adding fruit or veggies to a flour blend helps them to not sink to the bottom of the bread while baking.
Beat wet ingredients together in a large bowl.
Slowly stir dry mixture into wet mixture. Be sure to blend well.
Pour batter into pans. Bake 55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
Cool on a rack before slicing. This bread freezes great.
Fill glasses half full with wine. Tip the glass slightly as you pour to retain the fizz. Top off with orange juice. Don’t stir. That will destroy the bubbles.
Sloane