The Recipe Blog

This blog is all about recipes...that's it! Food recipes, oil and incense recipes, skin care recipes or any other recipes that I find of interest. As you can probably tell, I like dessert. Please feel free to comment on any recipes that you try. Thanks...

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Single white jaded (for life) female who supports live music and more often than not rants/babbles/rambles about the idiots and morons of the universe. The world is full of them so I've got plenty to talk about...

Friday, January 19, 2007

Smudging – What It Is and How to Do It

By Annie B. Bond, executive producer of Healthy Living content on Care2.com
Simple Solution

Smudging is used and recommended by indigenous peoples, feng shui practitioners, healers, and more, for “space clearing” and purification.
A Native American healer I respect smudges his computer every night. I myself use it frequently when I feel "stuck" emotionally. What is smudging? Why do it? Why learn about it?
Here is what I think smudging is, and why it is often a very useful tool to use in the home.
Healers often recommend smudging to change the “energy” of a place after an event has happened, such a death, or even an argument. Smudging a computer would be done to remove the electromagnetic field energy; smudging one’s desk at the end of the day could be to remove the “work” mentality from the air; smudging after an argument would be done to clear the air, quite literally.
I think that smudging works to change the energetic of a space because of the science of entrainment. Our senses respond to vibrations, and there is a law of physics that makes vibrations want to start being harmonious, to be in synchrony. Entrainment is a word often used with music. In sound healing, the dissonant chord is gradually influenced by the harmonious cord and the disharmony changes to harmony over time.
Even air has a vibration, held I believe in the humidity. The water of the humidity would absorb the negative “vibe” of an argument, for example, and hold it. If you burn a healing plant, such as sage, in such an atmosphere, the humidity would then hold the energetic of the healing plant, and bit by bit the discordant energetic of the argument would be influenced by the harmonious vibration of the plant smoke.
The herbs burned are usually sage (white in particular), sweetgrass, or cedar, although any dried herb is fine, even lavender. If the herb has too woody a stem, the leaf part will burn very fast and die out.
White sage is a good choice because the leaf clusters are very long, and the leaves will smolder for quite a long time, emitting smoke into the air. Sage is also known as a purifying herb. Sweetgrass burns very quickly, and is a great choice for emanating sweet smell into the air (and healers believe sweet grass brings a high level of spirituality and burns away negativity). Cedar is very strong, and is considered powerful for removing negativity.
Buy your smudge sticks from those who honor the plants and bundle the herbs with sacred ceremony of appreciation. If you grow your own herbs, research making smudge sticks and honoring the plants.
To burn herbs, and create smoke, you have to be very careful not to start a fire. I use a big ashtray, with steep sides. Some light whole bundles of herbs, but I don’t because there is no need, usually, for that much smoke. Instead, I untie a smudge bundle and pull out just a few leaves, and light them. Once there is a flame, you blow out the flame (making sure you catch any sparks in the ashtray). The herbs will smolder, and the smoke will waft into the home. Walk around with the ashtray (smoking herbs included), and make sure the smoke reaches into all the areas of a room you want.
When you are done, let the herbs extinguish on their own (if they are safely in the ashtray and away from wind), or extinguish them fully with water.
As I think about smudging, sitting here on the cusp of spring and winter, I can see how smudging out the winter mood’s to let in the renewal of spring is a great use of smudging.

Personalize Flower Healing Baths

Adapted from Plant Spirit Shamanism, by Ross Heaven and Howard G. Charing (Destiny Books, 2006).
Simple Solution

Create your own bath according to your own needs based on the American Floral Vocabulary, or "language of flowers," which was popular in the late 1800s and recorded the symbolic meanings and attractive powers of many common American flowers.
Add the flower to your bath that represents the attributes (or attribute) you want to draw into your life and bathe in the normal way. Find out each flower’s language, here:
Almond: Hope
Bay: Glory
Buttercup: Wealth
Cowslip: Grace
Dahlia: Elegance
Fennel: Strength
Heliotrope: Loyalty
Lily (white): Purity
Magnolia: Blessings of nature
Olive: Peace
Poppy: The power of dreams
Rose (red): Love
Star of Bethlehem: Reconciliation
Strawflower: Spirituality
Tulip: Influence over others
Violet: Faithfulness
Witch hazel: Magical powers

Early Flu Intervention Tips

Adapted from Beating the Flu, by J.E. Williams, O.M.D. (Hampton Roads, 2006).
Simple Solution

At the first hint of a flu this winter intervene immediately with some tried and true, natural immune-boosting techniques. Flu symptoms include chills, cough, fever of 102F or more, headache, muscle aches and pains, pain with inhalation, scratchy and sore throat, and water red eyes. Is it a cold or the flu? One distinction is that it is rare to have a fever, headache, and exhaustion with a cold.
Keep these early flu intervention tips handy this winter:
Tips for Early Treatment
* Vitamin C: 1,500 mg every 2-3 hours.
* Zinc: 30 mg daily or zinc lozenges.
* Drink 8-10 glasses of water daily.
* Humidify your room or inhale steam.
* Rinse your mouth and gargle with warm saltwater.
* Inhale Olbas to relieve a stuffy nose.
* Get extra rest and enough sleep.
Sore Throat Solutions
* Onion and Honey: Slice one whole white or yellow onion and spread the slices on a thin baking dish; cover with honey. Warm in the oven at 150F for 1 hour. Remove the onions and mix 1 tablespoon of the honey in 1 cup of hot water.
* Myrrh and/or Propolis: Mix 1/3 to 1 teaspoon of myrrh or propolis tincture, or combine them, in 1/2 cup of warm water. Gargle twice a day.
* Raspberry leaves and lemon: Steep 1 tablespoon of dry raspberry leaves with a little fresh lemon juice in 2 cups of hot water; mix with 1 teaspoon of honey. Let the mixture cool to room temperature before gargling.
* Warm saltwater: Mix 1/3 teaspoon of table or sea salt into 1 cup of warm water. It should not be too salty but taste about the salinity of tears. Use as a mouth rinse and gargle as needed to control symptoms.
* Zinc Lozenges: Suck on zinc lozenges as need to control symptoms. Don’t exceed 30 mg per day.

Detox Vegetable Broth

Adapted from The Tao of Detox, by Daniel Reid (Inner Traditions, 2006).
Simple Solution

Help clear away the ill effects of holiday over-indulgence with this nourishing and effective detoxifying broth! It is filled with vitalizing seasonal ingredients like pumpkin and carrots.
INGREDIENTS
1 3/4 quarts pure water

1 teaspoon Celtic Sea Salt
5 slices ginger root
2 finely chopped carrots
3 stalks finely chopped celery
1 cup finely chopped cabbage
1 cup finely chopped spinach
1 cup finely diced pumpkin
1 finely chopped squash
5 finely sliced shiitake mushrooms (fresh or dried)
1 cup chopped parsley
1. Place all ingredients in a non-reactive cooking pot. Bring to a full boil, then reduce heat to a simmer, cover partially, and let cook until liquid is reduced to about half.
2. Line a colander with a piece of cloth and strain the broth into a bowl. Discard the vegetable pulp and drink the broth with meals or as a snack between meals.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Twice-Baked SweetPotatoes

By Cait Johnson, author of Witch in the Kitchen (Inner Traditions, 2001).
Simple Solution\My mother always makes twice-baked potatoes for the holidays because they’re so festive, but this version uses better-for-us sweet potatoes, higher in beta-carotene and vitamin C than white ones. Sweetened with a zesty secret ingredient, these potatoes, mashed and prettily mounded in their skins, are the perfect accompaniment to a special meal.
INGREDIENTS
4 sweet potatoes, well scrubbed

4 tablespoons good-quality orange marmalade
1/2 cup milk
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons unsalted butter, melted
1. Preheat oven to 400°F.
2. Place potatoes on a baking sheet and bake until tender, about 1 hour.
3. Cool until you can handle them, then cut off the top third of each potato. Scoop out the flesh, leaving a 1/4-inch shell.
4. Combine potato flesh with remaining ingredients in a blender or food processor and puree until smooth.
5. Fill potato shells with puree. At this point, potatoes may be covered with plastic wrap and refrigerated for a day or so.
6. To serve, remove plastic wrap and bake potatoes in a preheated 400F oven 20 minutes until hot.
Serves 4.