Heavenly Homemakers

Encouraging women in homemaking, healthy eating and parenting

  • Home
    • About
    • FAQs
  • Recipes
    • Bread and Breakfast
    • Condiments
    • Dairy
    • Main Dishes
    • Side Dishes and Snacks
    • Desserts
    • Gluten Free
    • Instant Pot
    • Crock Pot
    • Heavenly Homemaker’s Weekly Menus
  • Homemaking
    • Real Food Sources
  • Store
  • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Disclosure
    • Privacy Policy
  • Simple Meals
  • Club Members!

Menu Plan for the Week

March 20, 2011 by Laura 5 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

“Mom is Great” Breakfast Cake

Happy first day of spring!!!! I actually thought it smelled like spring when I walked outside this morning. And I saw four or five blades of green grass, yes I did. Seeing any green in your lawn yet? :)

Here’s our menu for this week:

Sunday, March 20
Zucchini muffins, applesauce
Chicken and noodles, carrots
Grilled cheese sandwiches, tomato soup, apples

Monday, March 21
Scrambled egg sandwiches, oranges
Taco potatoes, smoothies
Barbecue brisket, cream scalloped potatoes, green beans, homemade rolls, death by chocolate (we’re having company for dinner!)

Tuesday, March 22
Whole wheat waffles, strawberry syrup, whipped cream
Cheeseburger macaroni, green beans
Lamb chops, baked potatoes, steamed broccoli and cauliflower

Wednesday, March 23
“Mom is Great” breakfast cake, pears
Alfredo sauce with pasta, tossed salad
Chicken fried steak strips, mashed potatoes, gravy, peas

Thursday, March 24
Creamy orange cooler, toast
Black bean taco salad
BBQ meatballs, ranch potato wedges, peas

Friday, March 25
Easy breakfast casserole, clementines
Cheddar ranch burgers on whole wheat hamburger buns, green beans
Homemade pizza pockets, fruit

Saturday, March 26
Oatmeal, peaches
Leftovers
Cheesy salsa enchiladas, fruit salad

I’m hoping to do a little bit of freezer cooking this week too. Here’s what’s on my list:

  • Pizza Pockets
  • Corn Dog Muffins
  • Cheesy Beef and Rice
  • Whole Wheat Graham Crackers, not for the freezer but just to have for snacks

————————————————————-

Free menu planning help at Say Mmm!

————————————————————-

Have you checked out Shelf Reliance? We LOVE their mushrooms!

————————————————————-

If you haven’t spent time at Paula’s Bread, you’re missing out!

————————————————————-

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Homemade Chocolate Chips

March 17, 2011 by Laura 30 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

After talking about the Enjoy Life Dairy, Soy, and Gluten Free Chocolate Chips on sale at Amazon the other day…I decided to make a batch of my own Homemade SF, DF, GF Chocolate Chips to have on hand while I wait for the others to come in the mail.

Homemade Chocolate Chips

I made these chips with coconut oil this time. (You can use butter instead, but coconut oil is a great option if you can’t have dairy. Read more about coconut oil here.)

Can I just say…these chunks of chocolate taste incredible sprinkled into a bowl full of peanuts. Or all by themselves if you need a quick chocolate fix. Or mixed into these easy and healthier Fudge Brownies. Or in these Chocolate Chocolate Chip Muffins. Or with a glass of milk. 

Or on a Friday afternoon at 2:47 just because.

These homemade chocolate chips make yummy Chocolate Chip Cookies too…but they don’t hold together when baked as well as commercial chocolate chips. They’re just too “pure” I guess, and tend to melt into the cookie. This isn’t a problem with taste…but can be a problem with appearance. 

Just send the ugly cookies to my house. They’ll get eaten. :)

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Menu Plan for the Week

March 13, 2011 by Laura 15 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

My crew loves it when I make a huge breakfast of biscuits and gravy with the works! I don’t make this big meal very often…but this week I figured I could make it happen. So, here’s what our Saturday morning might look like…

Come on over if you want. :)

Here’s our menu for this week!

Sunday, March 13
Applesauce bread, bananas
Roast, carrots, potatoes, gravy
Grilled cheese sandwiches, tomato soup, carrot sticks

Monday, March 14
Whole wheat waffles, blueberries
Salmon patties, mashed potato pancakes, peas
Chicken tortilla soup, fruit salad

Tuesday, March 15
Scrambled egg sandwiches, clementines
Baked potatoes with cheese and kreme’ fresh, peaches
Beefy vegetable soup, soft pretzels

Wednesday, March 16
Cinnamon swirl bread, applesauce
Chicken veggie quesadillas, oranges
Barbecue brisket, cream scalloped potatoes, green beans

Thursday, March 17
Honey whole wheat bagels, apple slices
Meat and cheese burritos, pears
Beef stroganoff, roasted asparagus

Friday, March 18
Peanut butter honey toast, fruit and yogurt
Cheesy salsa enchiladas, tossed salad
Homemade pizza

Saturday, March 19
Turkey sausage gravy, sourdough biscuits, hashbrowns, scrambled eggs
Leftovers
Fried chicken, mashed potatoes, gravy, peas

——————————————————————-

Let Say Mmm help you out with your menu planning…it’s free!

——————————————————————-

Got Bricks? Lori can help you learn to make beautiful batches of homemade bread!

——————————————————————-

Keeping the Kingdom First Mom…Balancing Faith, Family and Frugality

——————————————————————-

 

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Menu Plan for the Week

March 6, 2011 by Laura 10 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

Here’s what we’ll be eating this week!

Sunday, March 6
Cinnamon apple toast
Italian pasta bake, tossed salad, creamy corn casserole
Spicy avocado dip, organic corn chips, fruit, coconut macaroons

Monday, March 7
Pancake and sausage muffins, applesauce
Alfredo sauce with pasta, steamed broccoli
Roasted chicken, potatoes, carrots, gravy

Tuesday, March 8
Chocolate chocolate chip muffins, apple slices
Popcorn chicken, ranch potato wedges, peas
Shepherds pie, tossed salad

Wednesday, March 9
Honey whole wheat bagels, oranges
Pizza casserole, strawberry-peach slushies, carrot sticks
Italian stew, tossed salad

Thursday, March 10
Veggie egg scramble, clementines
Chicken noodle soup, raw veggies
Beef stroganoff, green beans

Friday, March 11
Warm chocolate soother, toast
Pizza, apples
Cheeseburgers, onion rings

Saturday, March 12
Monkey bread, chocolate milk
Leftovers
Swiss steak with rice and veggies

Say Mmm is a great resource to help make menu planning simpler!! As always, if you just want to steal my menu plan, feel free! :)  Visit Organizing Junkie for many more menu planning ideas!

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

What it Means to “Soak Grains”

March 1, 2011 by Laura 70 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

It’s a funny term isn’t it? “Soak your grains.” It sounds like you need to dump a bunch of water into your bucket of hard white wheat kernels and give ’em a good soaking. But don’t do that.  You don’t want soggy wheat berries.

For those of you who are new to “soaking grains” and have emailed me with questions of confusion as to what this means exactly…I thought I would take the time to explain it a little bit better, and to show some pictures of what a bowl of “soaking grains” looks like!

First, let’s talk a tiny bit about why soaking grains is important. Because I’m not good at remembering big words and how to use them, here is a quote from the Nourishing Traditions cookbook about soaking grains:

Phosphorus in the bran of whole grains is tied up in a substance called phytic acid. Phytic acid combines with iron, calcium, magnesium, copper and zinc in the intestinal tract, blocking their absorption. Whole grains also contain enzyme inhibitors that can interfere with digestion. Traditional societies usually soak or ferment their grains before eating them, processes that neutralize phytates and enzyme inhibitors and, in effect, predigest grains so that all their nutrients are more available.

In Laura’s terms:  When you soak your grain, your tummy will feel better and the nutrients in the grain will be better used by your body.

If you’ve been reading here long, you know that I’m a little bit on the fence when it comes to soaking grains. Sometimes I’m a soaker…sometimes I’m not. It depends on the day and what recipe I’m using, but I do try to soak my grains if I can. There are different schools of thought behind soaking grains and you can read my thoughts about it (and other people’s ideas and comments) here. Matt and I have come to the conclusion that we don’t need to go into panic mode if I don’t get around to soaking our grains. Right or wrong…that’s where we’ve landed. I really like the pressure this has taken off of my brain.

Now, having said all of that…I would like to share what “soaking grains” really means. Ultimately, it means that you are soaking the whole grain that has already been ground into flour . (You can/should also soak oats or cornmeal. Oats are soaked the same as flour. Cornmeal requires a different variety of soaking, which I’ll discuss in a separate post.)

The soaking of said flour or oats needs to be done in an “acid medium liquid” for 12-24 hours, or at least overnight. This means, you can soak your flour or oats in:

  • Any cultured dairy product such as buttermilk, yogurt or kefir. You can read about how I easily and inexpensively make these products here. Or…
  • If you are not able to use dairy products in your family, you can instead use water with 2 Tablespoons of lemon juice or vinegar in place of the buttermilk, yogurt or kefir.

The flour doesn’t need to “go swimming” in the liquid. It simply needs to be wet. In any of my recipes that give soaking instructions, I will share the exact measurements of flour and/or oats and liquids needed for soaking. On my site, I have instructions for soaking:  Whole Wheat Waffles, Simple Soaked Pancakes, Breakfast Cookies, Breakfast Cake, Poptarts, Pizza Pocket dough, and others that I’m likely forgetting at the moment. :)  I also describe how to soak my Whole Wheat Tortillas in my Totally Tortillas ebook.

Here is what my Simple Soaked Pancakes look like in the morning after I’ve stirred together the flour and buttermilk the night before. See the little bubbles that formed? That means we’ve accomplished kind of a “sourdough” effect. Perfect! Next, I mix in the remaining ingredients and make the pancakes. (And then the fam will eat the entire triple batch before I have a chance to grab one if I’m not on top of my game.) 

This is what my Whole Wheat Tortillas look like once I’ve mixed them up and left them to “soak”. This recipe with soaking instructions is so simple because I put them all together, they soak, then they are ready right away for me to roll them out and cook them!

Soaking grains isn’t difficult at all…it just requires a little bit of planning ahead!

Some other frequently asked questions about soaking grains include:

Do I need to soak my flour even if it isn’t freshly ground in a grain mill?

Yes, even if it is store bought whole wheat flour, it is best to soak it if you can.

Do I need to soak my white flour?

Nope. The reason it’s white flour is because the bran and the germ have been taken out. The bran is what needs to be soaked in the first place. Since that’s not there…no reason to soak!

What other questions do you have about soaking grains? Are you a soaker?

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Homemade (Healthier) Chocolate Milk

February 27, 2011 by Laura 75 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

I have not one, but two recipes to share with you today in regard to making a healthier variety of chocolate milk. If at all possible, I encourage you to stay away from commercial chocolate syrup, as it is full of high fructose corn syrup and corn syrup. (You can’t tell, but I’m making a “blechy” face right now and it isn’t pretty.)

This first recipe for Chocolate Syrup is from a friend of mine right here in town. {hi, Nancy!}  It’s the easiest recipe ever, making it a perfect solution for those of you who really want your chocolate syrup but want to avoid HFCS.

Homemade Chocolate SyrupYum

1 cup sucanat
1/2 cup cocoa
dash of sea salt
1 cup water
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Mix sucanat, cocoa, sea salt and water in a medium sauce pan. Whisk ingredients together and cook on medium-high heat until the mixture begins to boil. Boil for one minute. Remove from heat. Allow mixture to cool for just a few minutes. Stir in vanilla extract.

Add Homemade Chocolate Syrup to your glass of milk to taste. Store syrup in the refrigerator.

If you look real close, you can see a reflection of me with my camera
in the round part of this cute little pour bottle.
Try to focus on the chocolate syrup. I wasn’t having a good hair day.

Homemade Chocolate Syrup

The boys have declared this Chocolate Syrup to be quite delicious.
It will be a special treat every once in a while at our house!

Now for recipe number two.  This is how I’ve been making chocolate milk for the past several years. (Makes you wonder why it took me so long to share this, huh? I have lots of excuses.)

Now don’t freak out or anything, but I often add a few raw, farm fresh eggs into the blender when I’m mixing these up. I don’t worry one bit about getting sick from raw eggs that come straight from my friend’s farm. Their chickens are allowed to roam free all day long and eat all the healthiest chicken feed and you know…bugs. Healthy chickens means healthy eggs, and we eat them free of fear. Raw eggs are great brain food.

Okay, this post is not about the safety of raw eggs. But I did just want to let you know that if you want to add farm fresh, free ranged eggs to this Quick Blender Chocolate Milk recipe, you’ll find that the nutrition level goes WAY up, as does the creamy-richness of this chocolate milk! (I really don’t recommend putting raw eggs into this – or into anything – if the eggs are not organic, free range, farm fresh eggs. Please do your own research about this to determine what you feel is safe.)

Quick Blender Chocolate Milk

6 cups of milk
3 Tablespoons cocoa
4 Tablespoons real grade b maple syrup (give or take, depending on your taste)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

Put all ingredients into your blender and mix well.

Chocolate Milkshakes

Malachi LOVES the job of serving the Chocolate Milk out of our fun blender.

So there you go. Many of you were screaming for a healthier chocolate milk recipe, so now you have not one, but two to choose from!

And now, the Heavenly Homemakers Recipe Challenge continues. I’m in the process of figuring out a healthier Onion Soup Mix recipe and have played a little bit with Angel Food Cake. The Angel Food Cake I tried first completely sank and went from four inches tall to 2 inches tall. I’m still working on it. I guess that’s why this is called a “challenge”, huh? :)

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Menu Plan for the Week

February 27, 2011 by Laura 13 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

I know I might sound like a broken record…but I’d really love to encourage you to make a menu plan. Menu planning helps save money, time and sanity!! Feel free to steal mine if you want (my menu plan…not my sanity). If you need some extra help organizing and planning your meals, I recommend that you take advantage of Say Mmm’s free services! 

Here’s what we’re planning to eat this week:

Sunday, February 27
Easy breakfast casserole, oranges
Hearty bean casserole, peaches
Corndog muffins, green beans, carrot sticks

Monday, February 28
Mini breakfast pizza, creamy orange cooler
Tuna salad on toast, cottage cheese and peaches
Potato soup, raw veggies with ranch dip

Tuesday, March 1
Simple soaked pancakes, blueberries
Cheeseburger macaroni, steamed carrots
Chicken ‘n biscuits, tossed salad

Wednesday, March 2
Breakfast burritos, applesauce
Sloppy cornbread muffins, peas
Roasted chicken, potatoes, carrots, gravy

Thursday, March 3
Vanilla muffins with cinnamon crumb topping
Chicken and rice soup, banana muffins
Lasagna, tossed salad, corn

Friday, March 4
Whole wheat sourdough biscuits, fried eggs, hashbrowns
Bean dip with organic corn chips, fruit
Chicken fried steak strips, mashed potatoes, gravy, peas

Saturday, March 5
Homemade poptarts
Leftovers
Sub sandwiches, carrot sticks, apples

————————————————-

Just a quick reminder that the 10% off Heavenly Homemakers coupon code (HHFEB) for MadeOn Dry Skin Care Products  ends tomorrow, February 28! If you want to read more about how my dry, cracked and bleeding hands are a thing of the past…read all the good things I have say about MadeOn Procucts here!

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Two Simple Ways to Get Ahead in the Kitchen

February 25, 2011 by Laura 41 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

It may be apparent after you read this post that somebody got a little bit wheat grinder happy this week, thoroughly enjoying a small portion of the 300 pounds of hard white wheat that had been delivered. (You can read all my posts involving grain and grinding grain here, in case you’re interested in reading about my grainy obsession.)

I couldn’t help myself. After being sick myself and taking care of a family of sickies for the past four weeks (that influenza stuff is a BEAR), to have energy again and healthy children with appetites is truly delightful. I’ve been spending extra time in the kitchen, trying to make up for lost time it would seem. I loved every minute of it.

Okay, maybe not the dirty dishes part.

Dirty dishes aside (and really – I shouldn’t complain about the blessing of having so many people to dirty up dishes at my house), I loved being able to bake and cook a little extra this week in order to have healthy convenience foods in my freezer. Two things occurred to me as I was participating in this mad flour grinding, recipe mixing up, dough kneading, cooking ahead extravaganza this week, and I would like to share them with you.

Here are two of the simplest ways I’ve found to get ahead in the kitchen:

1. Cook or bake just one extra thing each day, if at all possible.  This might mean that you brown up several pounds of hamburger to have on hand for an easy casserole, tacos, sloppy joes, etc. Or it might be that you whip up some snacks to have on hand for the kids. Or maybe you could cook up some brown rice to have for simple meal prep the next day. It doesn’t have to be complicated or time consuming. But if you happen to be home and have a few extra moments during the day, utilize it for cooking up a little something extra to make for convenience on those days you barely have time to cook at all because you’re running around crazy-like. 

2.  If you’re mixing up one batch, you might as well mix up two (or three) batches.  You’re already making a mess. You’re already getting out the needed ingredients. Why not double or triple up the recipe and make plenty of extra of whatever it is you’re making, then put the leftovers in the freezer for a busy day. I love doing this with Whole Wheat Waffles, Easy Lasagnas, Muffins…whatever freezes well and reheats easily.

Here are just a few pictures of the food items I made this week in my efforts to get ahead. Let me clarify something though:  Not every week is this productive for me in the kitchen. I happened to be home most of the week without many outside engagements, allowing me to really focus on teaching my kids and working in the kitchen. Now I  have several quick foods in the freezer to easily warm up on those days where we’re running to ball games and practices, or dentist appointments or any other event that makes it difficult to spend time cooking.


Chocolate Chip Cookies and Easy Lasagnas

Honey Whole Wheat Bread (x2)

Whole Wheat Waffles (x2)

Homemade Whole Wheat Rolls (recipe found in Heavenly Homemaker’s Guide to Holiday Hospitality)

Whole Wheat Tortillas (x4)

Meat and Cheese Burritos

Sloppy Cornbread Muffins

Banana Muffins (x2)

Whole Wheat Vanilla Wafers (x2)

What did my kids do while I was doing this extra cooking? Most of the time, they were sitting in the kitchen with me, doing their school work. They also spent a fair amount of time playing with a huge box, shooting things, and eating the food I was making. 

What did my dust and clutter do while I was doing all this extra cooking? Let’s not talk about it.

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Make Your Own Cultured Buttermilk, Yogurt and Kefir (a Giveaway!)

February 24, 2011 by Laura 61 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

I love how much money it saves and how easy it is to make your own cultured dairy products! It really is as simple as putting the live culture into the milk and walking away. (Well, you do want to put the lid on first.)  Here are my posts which explain how to make buttermilk, how to make yogurt and how to make kefir. You can do this!!

Once you’ve made a batch of any or all of the above, all you have to do to make subsequent batches is to pour the tail end of the previous batch into your fresh milk and start the process all over again. It’s easy, it saves money and it is oh so healthy! These cultured dairy products are so good for your digestion. Mmm, and yummy too!

To give you a little motivation, in case you’ve been wanting to start making your own cultured dairy products…Cultures for Health is offering to give one of you a nice package of a Traditional Yogurt Starter, a package of Milk Kefir Grains and a Buttermilk Starter.  Remember, once you have the starter, as long as you keep your kefir grains alive and save the tail end of your batches of buttermilk and yogurt, you can keep making more and more batches of these delicious dairy products! 

Cultures for Health is a site I fully trust for purchasing culture starters. They know what they’re doing, they are very reasonably priced and their shipping is a flat $3.99!! This is an excellent company to work with and I love their products. By the way, they’ve got more than just dairy cultures at Cultures for Health…be sure to check out all of their products!

Okay…interested in winning this prize package of  from Cultures for Health? This giveaway is just a little bit different than our usual giveaways.  This time, to enter you need to head over to this page on the Cultures for Health site. You can sign up right there, plus receive their free ebook full of Kefir Recipes by signing up!!

I’ll draw a random winner from all entries over at Cultures for Health on Monday, February 28.

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

The Chocolate Fix

February 22, 2011 by Laura 13 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

Matt and I were right in the middle of writing love letters to each other. We were at The Art of Marriage conference last weekend, sitting quietly in a room by ourselves, doing our assigned project. I was writing my heart-felt thoughts to him, reliving on paper about the time we met and about the qualities he had that attracted me to him. It was beautiful. I was teary eyed and feeling nostalgic.

And that’s when it hit me.

I’d forgotten to put the sucanat in the Chocolate Chocolate Chip Muffins I had baked for the kids to wake up to that morning. 

Why? Why does my brain work this way? We will probably never know. But somewhere in between writing “I love what a great daddy you are to our boys” and “Thank you for showing your love to me in so many ways” my brain shifted all the way back home and I began thinking about what the boys might be doing and if they were okay and if they’d found the muffins I’d made for them for breakfast. 

And somewhere within those few seconds of thinking about muffins, I thought through the steps I’d taken and recognized that I had not gotten out the jar of sucanat (sugar), opened it or measured it out. The muffins were made of flour, cocoa, baking powder, salt, milk, eggs and coconut oil…no sucanat. I’d thrown in a few chocolate chips, which may have added a little bit of sweetness, but probably not enough.

I didn’t mean to gasp, right there while we were writing our love letters. I didn’t mean to take Matt away from his “You’re so beautiful, I’m so glad God put you in my life” phrases. But I couldn’t help it. 

Our sweet silence was shattered as I blurted, “I forgot to put sucanat in the muffins for the boys!”

There was obviously nothing we could do about the muffins during that moment, so we had a little chuckle together about how quickly the boys might have realized that the muffins weren’t at all sweet and what else they’d found to eat. Then we carried on with our letter writing.

At home later we found exactly what we had expected:  Four muffins with one bite taken out of each of them and all of the rest of the muffins still on the tray.

So the next question of course was, “What should we do with all of these muffins?” We just didn’t have the heart to throw them away. Surely they could be salvaged somehow.

Matt was the one who had the brilliant idea. He’s always the brilliant one (and I may or may not have told him that in his love letter). He suggested that we make my yummy hot fudge sauce recipe to drizzle over the top of the muffins to add some sweetness.

Perfect.  I made some hot fudge, whipped some cream, and we had one of the most delicious breakfast treats ever.

It was a perfect chocolate fix, making us all hope that I will forget the sucanat in these muffins again sometime. :)

Oh, and by the way…all that love letter stuff I put in this post for you to read? All those phrases were cheesy ones that I just made up off the top of my head. What? You really think I’d tell you what we wrote in our love letters to each other? Yeah, I don’t think so. :)

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!
« Previous Page
Next Page »

Join Our Community!

 Facebook Twitter E-mail Instagram Pinterest

Popular Posts

~ Will All of the Real Moms Please Stand Up?
~ Easy! Stir-and-Pour Whole Wheat Bread
~ How to Make Gatorade
~ 31 Real Food Breakfast Ideas
~ Dear Teenage Girls...
~ When Mom Takes a Step Back
~ The Inexpensive Health Insurance We Love!
~ Let's Talk Real Food Grocery Budgets

Check out our latest posts!

  • Big Family Food and Fun: May 3-9, 2026
  • Help Your Kids Become Independent in the Kitchen!
  • Big Family Food and Fun: April 26-May 2, 2026
  • Big Family Food and Fun: April 19-25, 2026
  • Big Family Food and Fun: April 12-18, 2026
Home  ~  Simple Meals  ~  Club Membership  ~  Shop  ~  Privacy Policy  ~  Disclosure  ~ Contact

Copyright © 2026 · Beautiful Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in