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Royal Recipes Collection: Onion Soup Provençal – Perfect For a Chilly Winter Evening!

From the upcoming sequel to Amberly – a perfect treat for a chilly winter night’s supper – or anytime you have extra onions around!

Onion Soup Provençal:

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Ingredients 

5 – 6 onions, peeled and sliced into thin strips.

  1/4 tsp. sugar

 2 – 3 cloves garlic, minced

 8 cups broth – either beef or chicken, or both

 1/2 cup wine – either rich red or dry white

Olive oil

 1/4 tsp. dried thyme

 1 bay leaf

 Salt

Pepper

 Toasted bread – crusty French is best

Sliced Provolone or Gruyere cheese

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Method:

Step 1 – In a mid-sized crock or stock pot, sauté the onions in olive oil  until well browned and soft, about 30 minutes. Add the sugar now to help the onions carmelize.

Sugar, while not required, helps onions carmelize into a rich, golden-brown hue. 

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Step 2 – Add the minced garlic and sauté for 1 more minute. Add the broth, wine, thyme, and bay leaf. Cover, stirring occasionally, and simmer for 20 – 30 minutes. Sprinkle as desired with salt and pepper. Remove the bay leaf.

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Step 3 – Ladle the soup into oven-proof soup bowls  bowls. Cover each with a slice of toasted bread and then top with a slice of cheese. Broil for 5 – 10 minutes at 400 degrees F (watch with care), until the cheese turns golden and bubbly.

Serve with a rich red wine and some warm conversation.

Bon Appétit!

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New Giveaway – Enter to win a signed copy of Amberly on Goodreads!

Tell all your friends! Enter to win a signed copy of Amberly on Goodreads before March 23. Five copies will be given to lucky winners!

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Royal Recipes Collection: “Green Slurry” from Chapter 36 of Amberly

This is a modernized (i.e., made with a blender 🙂 ) version of the Green Slurry from Amberly, Chapter 36. Very healthy. Enjoy!

Drink Your Salad – Delicious!

Fill a blender pitcher in this order:

– 2 to 3 handfuls of greens – kale, spinach, romaine, etc..
– 1 handful of fruit – fresh or frozen
– 1/2 banana
– 1/2 cup orange juice
– 1/2 cup apple juice
– Stevia or sweetener
– Water to fill to 4/5 full

Blend up and serve! Add a Tbsp of almond butter for a meal replacement. Make several pitchers worth and store in a Mason jar for 24 hrs!

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A Chuckle for Your Day – If Shakespeare Had Written the Three Little Pigs…

Here’s a chuckle for your day:

John Branyan on If Shakespeare Had Written the Three Little Pigs

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Advent Meditation # 2

From John Piper’s Good News of Great Joy Daily Advent Readings

For God’s Little People

“In those days a decree went out from Caesar Augustus

that all the world should be registered. This was the first

registration when Quirinius was governor of Syria. And

all went to be registered, each to his own town. And Joseph

also went up from Galilee, from the town of Nazareth, to

Judea, to the city of David, which is called Bethlehem,

because he was of the house and lineage of David, to be

registered with Mary, his betrothed, who was with child.”

—Luke 2:1–5

Have you ever thought what an amazing thing it is that God

ordained beforehand that the Messiah be born in Bethlehem

(as the prophecy in Micah 5 shows); and that he so ordained

things that when the time came, the Messiah’s mother and

legal father were living in Nazareth; and that in order to fulfill

his word and bring two little people to Bethlehem that first

Christmas, God put it in the heart of Caesar Augustus that all

the Roman world should be enrolled each in his own town?

Have you ever felt, like me, little and insignificant in a

world of seven billion people, where all the news is of big political

and economic and social movements and of outstanding

people with lots of power and prestige?

If you have, don’t let that make you disheartened or unhappy.

“For it is implicit in Scripture that all the mammoth political

forces and all the giant industrial complexes, without their

even knowing it, are being guided by God, not for their own

sake but for the sake of God’s little people—the little Mary and

the little Joseph who have to be got from Nazareth to Bethlehem.”

God wields an empire to bless his children.

Do not think, because you experience adversity, that the

hand of the Lord is shortened.

“It is not our prosperity but our

holiness that he seeks with all his heart.”

And to that end, he

rules the whole world. As Proverbs 21:1 says, “The king’s heart

is a stream of water in the hand of the Lord; he turns it wherever

he will.”

He is a big God for little people, and

“we have great cause to

rejoice that, unbeknownst to them, all the kings and presidents

and premiers and chancellors of the world follow the sovereign

decrees of our Father in heaven, that we, the children, might be

conformed to the image of his Son, Jesus Christ.”

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Grand Prize Giveaway Winners!

Our Grand Prize Giveaway winners are (drumroll please…) Sally Bissada and Brennan Specia!  I ran a random number generator on the names from my blog comments and facebook likes, and they win free signed copies of Amberly! Congratulations, ladies!

I’m starting a new giveaway on Goodreads – details will be announced soon!

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Advent Meditation #1

From John Piper’s Good News of Great Joy (a free e-book download):

“Mary and Elizabeth are wonderful heroines in Luke’s

account. He loves the faith of these women. The thing that

impresses him most, it appears, and the thing he wants to

impress on Theophilus, his noble reader, is the lowliness and

cheerful humility of Elizabeth and Mary.

Elizabeth says,“Why is this granted to me that the mother of

my Lord would come to me?” (Luke 1:43). And Mary says, “He

has looked on the humble estate of his servant” (Luke 1:48).

The only people whose soul can truly magnify the Lord are

people like Elizabeth and Mary—people who acknowledge

their lowly estate and are overwhelmed by the condescension

of the magnificent God.”

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The blog tour continues!

See my interview with Lynn Squire at FaithJourneybooks! Grand Prize Giveaway! Leave a comment either on this website, or my Facebook Author Page, or one of my Articles, or one or more of my Blog Tour Posts by December 15 for a chance to win an autographed copy of Amberly!

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Romantic Remembrances! JoAnn Durgin’s Love Story

I met JoAnn Durgin at the 2011 ACFW Writers’ Conference in St. Louis and adored her warm, enthusiastic spirit! JoAnn is the author of  “Meet Me Under the Mistletoe” available here.

Here’s JoAnn’s Romantic Remembrance:

I met my husband, Jim, on a blind date back in the mid-1980s in Dallas, Texas. Then a student at Dallas Theological Seminary, he’d sworn off blind dates when he’d been set up with a runner-up to Miss Texas (gorgeous, tall, blonde…you get the picture) a couple of weeks before. Mutual friends had invited them both to dinner in their home after which Miss Runner-Up pushed away from the table, thanked them politely and bounced off, saying she had another date. I was dating someone else at the time (an urban cowboy whom I suspected—rightly so—of two-stepping out on me). So, I wasn’t particularly in the mood to date (and specifically told my friends not to fix me up) when we all decided to go to dinner. Of course, I didn’t know at the time that my friend Susan’s boyfriend (now husband), Marshall, went to seminary with Jim. In a sweet revelation, we found out later that both our friends prayed independently for someone to introduce each of us to, and lo and behold, came up with…well, you can guess the rest. We’ve been married 25 years this past September (on Jim’s birthday, no less—you marry a man on his birthday and he won’t forget his anniversary).

Let me backtrack just a moment. How I even met Susan was one of those “God” things. I worked for a large, downtown Dallas law firm. Mind you, this was back in the stone ages before fax machines were in common use (and I don’t believe e-mail was yet a figment in anyone’s imagination), and we used a courier service to ferry things across town. When I’d call Wingtip Couriers, I always adored the lilting voice on the other end of the phone. “This is Susan at Wingtip Couriers. How can I help you?” I’d joined a Bible study group with a friend from my apartment complex. One Saturday morning, I was having breakfast with this friend and a pretty blonde came over to our table and we were introduced. As soon as I heard her lovely voice, I said, “You’re Susan from Wingtip Couriers, aren’t you?” Indeed it was.

My first date with Jim was the Dallas Seminary Spring Banquet, quite an auspicious event. Jim was in the men’s chorus. When he showed up on my doorstep in his midnight blue tux—all 6’2” of tall, dark and handsome—I seriously almost swooned. He was endearing when he tucked me inside his old bomb of a station wagon. I’ll never forget him telling me how he couldn’t find a replacement window for that little triangular piece of glass on the passenger side. “You can scoot closer, if you want,” he said, giving me this shy, sheepish look, “or else the fumes might get to you.” I was in love.

We became fast friends and went out together quite often, but honestly? I wasn’t exactly the type of Christian girl my husband-to-be thought he was seeking. Jim called it the “Seminary mentality,” meaning he wanted a girl like his own dear mother, raised in the faith from the time she was knee-high to a grasshopper. But Jim and I shared a mutual fascination (for lack of a better description) with one another, and continued to go out as “friends” even though there was always something simmering below the surface. We even went out together when we were both dating others. But he told me later that no other girl held the same challenge and appeal, even though they more closely matched his image of that elusive, “perfect” Christian girl.

It all came to a “head” in what I now refer to as our infamous Red Lobster date. It got to the point where Jim decided he needed to know where I stood spiritually (he’d been debating whether to take the step of faith—more like a leap—to date me). That dinner at Red Lobster was truly awful; he challenged my spiritual condition and I stormed away, feeling personally attacked and defensive. I emotionallydistanced myself from him for months. He called and left messages, stopped by the law office, even had flowers delivered, but I didn’twant to see him. Quite simply, I was hurt andembarrassed. But here’s the thing: I knew Jim was right; he saw straight through me. I was living a good, moral life, but I wasn’t living for the Savior. But he could tell I loved the Lord and wanted to learn and grow, and that encouraged him. When Jim went on a musical tour of Europe with the Seminary, he wrote novels on postcards to me (which I literally burned but, in hindsight, wish I’d kept). But the Lord was continuing to work in my heart.

There’s so much more to our story, but suffice it to say, he was soon graduating and leaving Dallas, and I had no plans to leave. So, about three weeks before he was to depart and move back home (Rhode Island) and seek a full-time ministry position, we sat in another restaurant, and decided to try and make a long-distance relationship work. It seemed impossible, but we had optimism and were full of big hopes and dreams. Perhaps more importantly, we had faith that God could work it all out.

Those last weeks were glorious, and I fell hard for my handsome, tall, faithful man. Jim felt the same, but how would this all work? Only a few days before he was to graduate and leave, he told me something I found incredibly hard to believe…but also so precious for my heart. As handsome as he was, as much as he’d dated, Jim had never kissed a girl on the lips. And this is what still stops my heart: Jim told me he always knew the first girl he kissed on the lips would be the girl he married. And so, my friends, on the night before his graduation – with the world at our feet, but with no idea how we’d be together or what would happen (but knew the gracious Lord would orchestrate it all if it was meant to be)—Jim kissed me. On the lips. And it was, as they say…the moment I knew. And so did Jim.

What happened next is yet another story, in yet another string of “God” things that were truly amazing. It’s almost as though you could “see” the hand of God working in our lives, bringing two of his own together as one. In this week of thankfulness—and three children later—I’m so grateful for the many blessings from above which have enriched my life above and beyond what I could ever have imagined.

JoAnn Durgin is the author of the popular Lewis Legacy Series, and her Christmas novella, Meet Me under the Mistletoe (where hero Jake shares Jim’s philosophy on kissing a woman for the first time), from Pelican Group Ventures/White Rose Publishing. She and Jim live in her native southern Indiana after living in California, Texas, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts, and JoAnn is an estate administration paralegal in a Louisville, Kentucky law firm. She’d love to hear from you via her website (www.joanndurgin.com) or drop her a line on Facebook.

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Guest Blog Post – StoryWriting Studio

I was invited to guest host StoryWritingStudio’s blog yesterday! Leave a comment there to enter my Grand Prize Drawing!

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