Tea Time!

As we are nearing the end of our time in Grenada, I have not been too creative with our dinner meals. However, we have recently been on a tea-kick. So, I decided to share with you our favorite types of tea! You may automatically think that because we live in the Caribbean that this would always be iced tea. Yes, it is hot outside all the time; however, inside our home, we are usually very cold. At least the inside temperature makes for a great environment for a warm mug of tea. We have some core favorite teas in the Bani Bungalow. But, being “newer” to tea drinking, I sought the help of the other Weisser Women for their tea recommendations, as well.

Our Favorite Hot Teas:

Trader Joe’s Organic Spiced Rooibos Ruby Red Chai Tea (My absolute favorite — Great for anytime)

Trader Joe’s Candy Cane Green Tea (New Holiday Favorite)

Honey Vanilla Camomille (Camomille teas are soothing and have a balanced flavor)

Green Tea (Good comfort tea)

Chai Tea (Spicy, love the cinnamon taste of chai)

Vanilla Rooibos (Sweet flavor)

Ginger Tea (Ginger has become more of a favorite since finding the great benefits of ginger while being in Grenada — Ginger is useful for digestive problems, arthritis, soothing a sore throat and it has anti-inflammatory properties)

Lipton Power Berry (This is one of my favorites! I like having a more fruity flavor for afternoon tea times.)

Melaleuca Tea (Ginseng flavor is for energy, Evening flavor is similar to Camomille, Lemon flavor refreshes and relaxes and is great iced, and Apple berry is refreshing and soothing)

Sleepy Time (Really does help if you have trouble falling asleep at night)

ICED TEA:

Green Tea is an all time favorite — The Weisser Women LOVE their green tea!

Tazo Green …

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Jesus is my Everything

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When I was growing up, Easter season began with a Passover Seder meal at my grandparents home where we retold the Exodus story and said beautiful Hebrew prayers. This tradition became more meaningful to me as I learned that Christ became the Passover Lamb and He was the perfect sacrifice for all men for all time. He was nailed to the cross on that Friday (what we call “good Friday”) and was raised from the dead on what we call Easter-Resurrection Sunday. Resurrection Sunday, Good Friday and Passover celebrations are a time to reflect on all that Christ has done for me.

As we raised our family, we incorporated the celebration of Passover with our Easter festivities for a rich tradition of Old and New Testament blending to tell the entire story of God reaching out to man to initiate and open the door for an intimate relationship with His children.

This year I had the awesome privilege of attending a Good Friday worship night with Bekah and Ashkon at their Christian Student Association at SGU in Grenada. It was a multicultural event including liturgical dance and worship for all with the worship team including special presentations from three groups of students singing in their native tongues-Indian, African and Spanish and two Asian students who shared a piano and violin worship song on prayer. The most moving part of the evening for me was the dramatic presentation of a skit done to a beautiful song called Everything-you can look it up on Youtube. If you have never seen this skit before, one version can be found here: Lifehouse’s Everything Skit Or you can watch the beautiful rendition we saw at the SGU worship service on Friday night..

After the skit the leader of the worship night spoke a bit about …

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Books are Better When You Share Them

Recently, my friend started a book club and invited me to join her. We have similar interest in books and I was excited to have someone motivate me to start reading. We picked a book, set a date, and started reading. Needless to say, we loved our book so much that not only did we finish it in record time before our meeting, we finished the whole series!

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We decided to meet for pedicures to get pampered on our “date” to discuss our book. It was an amazing afternoon. We just talked about our opinions and realized at the end of our time we hadn’t mentioned our kids once. Of course we love our kids, but sometimes mommies need a break.

I would encourage everyone to start or join a book club. There are online book clubs, but I think the benefits of sharing time with someone better manifest if you are face to face.

Our book club is very informal. We are just choosing a book and a time to get together to discuss it. Your club can be whatever you want it to be. Here are a few resources about starting a book club that I found online. (Of course I had to include Oprah)

Lit Lovers

Oprah

Happy Reading!

Are you in a book club? Do you have any recommendations for making our little book club successful?

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Risking It All

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Does the title of this post make you squirm a little bit? It does for me. Not necessarily in a disagreeable way, but in a way that it gets me thinking. A few questions keep coming up. Am I willing to risk it all, or am I willing to risk just enough to still be comfortable? What am I willing to risk today, and what am I trying to hold on to? What is the difference between a big risk and a small risk? And what does it look like for me to risk everything?

Risk… it is the exposure to the chance of injury or loss; a hazard or dangerous chance, being in jepoardy, the unknown, a threat, uncertainty, and just pure possibility. People do not like the unknown. We like being in control and knowing what is going on and what will happen. Uncertainty can bring fear, instability, anticipation, and speculation. We would rather stay secure and safe in our own little world than take a step beyond our comfort zone. Risk doesn’t mean safe. It doesn’t always mean bad, but it doesn’t mean safe.

But that is exactly where we are supposed to be as followers of Christ.  Risking it all. Laying our life down so we can live for our Savior. Risk makes me think of a quote from the Chronicles of Narnia.
“Safe?” said Mr. Beaver; “don’t you hear what Mrs. Beaver tells you? Who said anything about safe? ‘Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good. He’s the King, I tell you.” So just like Aslan, our lives as believers is not safe, but it is good. Risking a life for Christ is not safe, but it is great, it is abundant, and it is worth it. So yes, it is unknown but it

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Easter Table Runner & Napkins in Less than One Hour!

A simple table runner and napkins can really make your Easter table look great this year. This craft is so simple, taking less than an hour to complete, and will cost you about $5!! Go to JoAnn’s and choose a fun Spring-colored fabric, a bright floral-patterned fabric, or find a fabric that matches your Easter printables! You haven’t purchased your Easter printables yet?!? You still can right here!

https://www.etsy.com/listing/184808430/easter-printable-party-pack?ref=shop_home_active_1

Once you choose your fabric, you are an hour away from having a new table runner with matching napkins!

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Here is what you need:

1 yd. cotton fabric (45″ width)

Thread

Iron

Scissors

Instructions:

1. Fold fabric in half lengthwise (matching selvages) and cut on fold from top to bottom. You will have 2 pieces 36″ x 22.5″DSC_5204

2. Lay one piece (36×22.5) aside. This will be your Table Runner.

DSC_52053. Fold other piece in half (width wise) and cut so you have 2 pieces 18″ x 22.5″.

4. Fold those two in half again (lengthwise this time) and cut so you now have 4 pieces each 11.25″ x 18″. These will be your 4 napkins.

5. Fold and iron 1/4 inch on all 4 unfinished edges of each of the napkins and table runner. Fold over 1/4 inch again to make finished hem and iron in place.

DSC_5207DSC_52066. Put contrasting color thread in your machine and stitch with a zigzag setting on all 4 sides of table runner and all 4 napkins.

7. Press and place on your dining room table.

8. Set table with all your Easter decorations and treats!

DSC_5213DSC_5217DSC_5216DSC_5220What is your favorite way to decorate your Easter table?

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Homemade LARABAR

Our family absolutely loves Larabars and we eat them all the time. I found a few different recipes on Pinterest to get some ideas about how to make them myself and after a few experiments, I made four different flavors-all extremely delicious. I tried to keep an accurate account of the price of the ingredients I used for each batch and it worked out to be about 25-40 cents a bar. That is an incredible savings since Larabars are usually about $1 a piece. So if you love healthy snacks and you have a bit if time to experiment with delicious healthy ingredients, you will have fun creating your own flavors of Lara Bars. Here is the basic recipe I created…….

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INGREDIENTSIMG_1494
½ cups pitted dates
½ cups dried fruit (figs, apricots)
⅔ cups almonds
1 tsp cinnamon (with fig)
1 small piece of fresh ginger (with apricot)IMG_1492IMG_1490

In Cuisinart, blend dates and dried fruit of your choice. When a ball forms stop the cuisinart and remove chopped dried fruit ball to a medium bowl. Add almonds to cuisinart and chop until coarse ( few small pieces of almonds remaining in the nut mixture works fine). Knead nuts and dried fruit together and form into bars or balls. Refrigerate for 20 minutes and eat or wrap in saran to enjoy later. Homemade Larabars can be frozen. Each batch makes 6-8 bars or 20-25 balls.IMG_1491

Here are a few of the variations on the original recipe above that we tried. These were delicious…

Peanut Butter and Jelly
1 cup peanuts
½ cup dried cranberries
½ cup dates
3 tablespoons natural peanut butter
Follow direction above for chopping dates and cranberries in Cuisinart. Remove to a bowl. Chop peanuts. Add to date mixture along with peanut butter. Mix …

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Yummy Bunnies – A Bunny Treat You Can Eat

Many Easter treats and snacks are very sweet. I’m not complaining – I love Easter candy. However, I thought it would be fun to make a healthy Easter treat for Ellie and Hanna to eat with their friends. With the help of my creative team (my crafty mom and mother-in-law) we designed these “Yummy Bunnies.”

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Ingredients:

Cuties

Large Strawberries

Raisins

Banana

Mini Marshmallows

Shredded coconut

Toothpicks

Butter and powdered sugar (paste for the raisins and coconut)

These treats were easy to make and would be lots of fun for your toddler (or older child) to make with you!

How To:

Peel the cutie. Place one toothpick lengthwise through the top middle of the cutie. Slice a large strawberry. Make a small cut at the top so that the strawberry piece resembles bunny ears. Slide the strawberry onto the toothpick. Place a second toothpick horizontally through the center of the cutie. Cut a small piece of banana for the nose and attach to the front of the toothpick. Attach a mini marshmallow on the back of the cutie for a fluffy bunny tail. Make a paste from a bit of butter and powdered sugar. Spoon a small amount on the back of two raisins for the eyes. Spoon a small amount of the paste next to the nose and attach the shredded coconut for whiskers. Admire your adorable Yummy Bunny and eat!

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Here is how I displayed the Yummy Bunnies for an Easter party:

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Influence of being together

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This is a simple picture, but I love it. A family, holding hands, TOGETHER. There is a reason storks don’t just drop babies off in the middle of nowhere to fend for themselves. (Disclaimer: there is a bigger reason that storks don’t drop off babies at all, but for purpose of this paragraph, we will use that picture… and for those of you who think that is actually where babies come from, you may want to do a little research on your own… :)) But getting back to my point. When babies are born, they were created to be taken care of. Hopefully, they are born into a family. And if not, we hope they are placed in a family or having a loving father or mother that will care for them. We were created to be in relationship, in community, TOGETHER. The structure of a family is a picture of togetherness. (Now not all families act in this way, but there is a reason family is a unit. It is supposed to act together). Parents have a role in caring for children, and bringing them up into a world as a unique individual, but still as a part of the family. We were not meant to figure it all out on our own. We were not meant to be alone. When a baby is born, he or she needs to be fed, changed, nurtured, taught, disciplined, and loved.  There is a process of growing and developing that parents have the privilege of walking with their child and cultivating the person they are becoming. There are many many lessons learned along the way from both sides, as parents, and children. But through it all, we learn TOGETHER.

But here’s the problem: We live in this individualistic culture that preaches that …

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Baby Shower on a Budget

A few friends and I just recently threw a baby (Ba-BEE) Shower for one of our closest friends, who is pregnant with their first child! It was BEE themed and so much fun to plan! As we are all wives of med/vet students, we are all on quite tight budgets, requiring us to be creative which ended up making the shower unique and a lot of fun!

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Here are a few steps to have a great party on a tight budget:

1. Use printable decorations. This will save you money and will also serve as the fun, colorful decor, allowing you to use solid color paper products which is another money saver.

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I found these great bee-themed decorations online. I printed and created the signs with card stock and twine, and I used more card stock to make DIY paper flowers on small dowels. We used TING bottles (a popular Grenadian soda) and wrapped twine around them to look like bee hives.

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2. Have a DIY photo booth!

Our Mommy-to-BEE does not know what she is having, so we created a photo booth to let our guests guess the gender of Baby S with some fun props!

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3. Ask friends to help with food. And/or find a friend who can make and decorate a cake to go with your theme!

We planned the party to be in the early afternoon which allowed us to have light snacks and desserts. As soon as we sent out the invitation, we were already getting asked how our guests could help with the party! We decided that we could use the most help with food! We had friends bring peanut butter & honey sandwiches (The Sweet & Salty), Homemade pretzels with chocolate (Stinger Stix), “The garden” of veggies and dip, as well as …

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Dignity

I had the wonderful opportunity to go on a women’s retreat last weekend. The main speaker, Dr. Rosalie de Rosset, a literature professor at Moody was incredibly intriguing and her messages were both challenging and enlightening. She wrote a book called “Unseduced and Unshaken” and her messages to us were a few of the foundational principles from her book. I was extremely challenged by her first talk on “Dignity”. She started by asking us some serious questions….

What kind of woman and I?
What am I becoming?
What do I want to be?
How does dignity fit in?

Dignity is defined as nobility or elevation of character, conduct or speech indicative of self-respect, a sign or token of respect. Our speaker described dignity by using a well known character found in the classic novel Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte. Jane Eyre is a perfect picture of dignity. “A formidable self-possessed young woman with a fully realized, detailed moral sensibility.” Formidable means forceful, powerful, causing great respect, even fear. Self-possessed means having or showing control of one’s feelings and behavior especially when under pressure.

A dignified woman is a woman of great convictions, humble, spirited and honest. She stands up for what she believes in and is willing to stand when everyone else is bending and compromising to the whims of a changing culture. A woman of dignity thinks rationally and exhibits self-respect and chooses righteous behavior in the midst of temptation. A dignified woman lives above her emotions and uses objective truth, a conviction of faith and critical thinking with her sound mind when making decisions. She has a deep commitment to a solid foundation of faith and finds her value from her relationship with God.

A dignified woman knows that ALL of her choices MATTER! There is NO NEUTRAL. …

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