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Happy Vegan Ghosts Take Over My Blog

Move over Martha Stewart, Wing-It Vegan makes the cutest little Halloween ghosts, perfect little peanut butter snacks for kids, grandparents, neighbors, the mailman, heck - ourselves! They're as fun as all get-out and easy to make with pantry ingredients, too. Just click this post's title for a picture and the recipe.

The Recipe for Summer Cocktails: Long, Light & Cool

by Alanna Kellogg at 8:28am Tue, 13 May 2008 under Food & Drink, Holiday Parties
To quote Megnut: "Summer drinks should be like summer evenings: long, light and cool." May I add? Summer drinks should be like summer evenings: easy, relaxed and refreshing. In two days, my home will be descended upon by a mother-daughter group from Michigan, Minnesota, Maryland, Colorado and Saskatchewan. Half are staying at my house (what we're calling the "restaurant") and half across the street at a neighbor's, whose shaded patio has "happy hour" written all over it. So I went looking for recipes for easy summer cocktails, concoctions that can be served on a moment's notice, ones that will titillate the eyes and the nose and the throat. So belly up, bloggers, summer's nearly here.

Flourless Desserts for Passover

by Kalyn Denny at 7:44pm Thu, 17 Apr 2008 under Food & Drink, Recipes, Cooking, Holiday Food, Passover Food
Passover starts this weekend, and Mata has already shared her Passover memories and observations. After some coaching on Passover food restrictions, I realized last year that there was a natural connection between gluten-free cooking and Passover food restrictions, and found a great collection of Gluten Free Passover Recipes for BlogHer readers. This year I'm noticing that flourless desserts for Passover are showing up on a lot of my favorite food blogs.

Passover is coming and joy abounds-- or, It takes a village to get anyone through an exodus

Just over 25 years ago I began attending Passover seders at my friends J and E's home. Their sons were just young teens then, and now they are both PhDs with smart and capable wives. One couple has had two children. I have moved away from NYC, but I will drive down to the city so that I can help with the preparations for seder starting Thursday and into Friday. I will be peeling veggies and laughing and basking in the immense joy of my extended family. With the exception of one 85 year old (Catholic) cousin, my entire blood family is dead. So my extended family is my family in every way.

A Giant convergence of religious holidays

This is a weekend for Holy Days in more than one tradition. The calendars of a variety of religious traditions mark special days on this weekend. As I researched this weekend I discovered that it is a once-in-a-millennium convergence of holidays across all major religious traditions. Not once-in-a-lifetime, but once-in-a-millennium.

Around the World: Traditional Easter Recipes

by Alanna Kellogg at 2:55pm Tue, 18 Mar 2008 under Food & Drink, World, Holiday Food, Easter, traditional food
For traditional family feasts, consider the cooking trinity: Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter. This year, Easter falls on March 23, unusually early. How early? Well, Easter hasn't been this early since 1913 and it won't be again until the year 2228. (What? How do we even say that year?) March 22 is the very earliest day on which Easter can fall, the last time in 1818 and not again until 2285. So many dates got your head spinning? Mine too. Just know this: this is the year -- and more to the point, the week -- to treat ourselves and our families to traditional Easter dishes, breads, desserts, and more. We've got between now and Easter Sunday, so there's plenty of time to experiment with recipes from all across the globe.

What Do Jews Do: Purim 2008

On Writes Like She Talks, I have a series called What Do Jews Do. Each entry with that title has a subtitle about a particular Jewish tradition or holiday, or, in the case of Christmas or New Years or Ramadan or whatever, I will write about how Jews may or may not observe the same - you know, Chinese and a movie on Christmas and so on. :) Like me, the posts often combine seriousness, humor, food and pictures.

Kwanzaa Celebrations and Reflections

by Kim Pearson at 7:43pm Sat, 29 Dec 2007 under BlogHer Holiday Guide, CELEBRATIONS, Kwanzaa
Habari gani! (That's Swahili for What's happening?) If you are celebrating Kwanzaa, the word for today is Ujamaa, which means "Cooperative Economics." It's a day for thinking about ways in which people of African descent can pool their resources to strengthen their families and communities. It's also the fourth day of the week-long celebration, and I've been asked to do a roundup of photos and reports from the festivities so far.

Traditions, resolutions, and the quest for stabilizing family influences

I spent a little time today searching the Net for New Year's traditions, both old and new. My little family needs the aura of stability created by tradition. If I had had more time, I would've celebrated Kwanzaa this year, a celebration with family-grounding traditions, but my life was a little too chaotic this December, which was par for the course in 2007 and previous years.

Eat Some Lucky Foods for a Prosperous New Year

People all over the world have special traditions for celebrating the arrival of the new year, and often celebrations include the idea of eating lucky foods, thought to bring happiness and prosperity in the year to come. Just which foods are lucky depends on where you are, but there are some traditions that are pretty widespread. Here are suggestions for lucky foods from around the world, but if you have a New Year's Food tradition that brings you luck, please share your link or recipe in the comments.

How Feminists Celebrate Birthdays

Today is my 32nd birthday. If all goes according to plan, I'll be spending some time at the Mamiya Medical Heritage Center in Honolulu, because spending a birthday at a medical history museum is probably the best way to appreciate getting older and how far medical technology has come in such a short time. If there was a feminist history museum nearby, I'd go there too. I think birthdays and aging are easier for women today thanks to feminism.

Curious About Kwanzaa?

Today is the first day of Kwanzaa, the celebration that honors African-American heritage. From December 26 to January 1, each day features a special principle symbolized by a candle placed in a kinara. While Kwanzaa has both fans and critics, here we'll stick to Kwanzaa food, around which there can be just one dispute: sweet potatoes or collard greens?