This guest post, by Pamela Henkelman, examines how to invite your grown children into the kitchen during the holiday season so that you can enjoy cooking, eating, and gathering together.
Part of the Special Holiday Series: Repeat the Sounding Joy
Find a recipe, pick up a meal plan, learn a kitchen hack, be inspired to celebrate seasonal flavors, or all of the above. Love people (and yourself) by cooking delicious food. But whatever you do, ditch the stress and have some fun in your kitchen.
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All in Hosting
This guest post, by Pamela Henkelman, examines how to invite your grown children into the kitchen during the holiday season so that you can enjoy cooking, eating, and gathering together.
Part of the Special Holiday Series: Repeat the Sounding Joy
In this guest post by long time cook and food blogger, Julie Halfmann will guide us all through hosting Thanksgiving without going insane. She shares three practical tips and a detailed 9-step plan for tackling the actual day. Learn from her experience of hosting and then check out her delicious corn bread recipe, perfect for your stuffing or dressing!
Friendsgiving provides an opportunity to love your friends and neighbors well, especially during this challenging year. Certainly with masks on, social distancing in place, Friendsgiving can offer another way to fellowship together and celebrate what you are grateful for. If nothing else, it’s a great excuse for a small driveway party before the winter chill sets in. This week I’m thrilled to share a piece by Rachel Schelb on hosting Friendsgiving during an already busy holiday season, and why it matters so much.
So you want to see your friends but it feels like a lot of work. Do it anyways. Hosting doesn’t have to be a big production. Rather, a simple gathering can be beautiful as the ladies at The Gingham Apron share in this excerpt from their book The Gathering Table.