Tag: Vegetarian

Mrs McGinty’s Dead – Bloodstained Beans

Hello, crime readers and food lovers! Today’s Dining with the Dame sees us partaking of some Blood Stained Beans alongside Hercule Poirot and Ariadne Oliver.  The Poirot / Ariadne Oliver novels are among my favourites.  I adore her grumblings about her Finnish detective, Sven Hjerson and the travails of being a mystery writer!   But also, it was this volume of stories that, back in 2020, gave me the idea to start these posts.  Like so many people I was a little bit bored during covid and decided to read an anthology of Agatha Christie novels I had bought from my local library 6 months previously.  Halfway through Cards In The Table, an idea that I later called Dining with The Dame was born!   The recipe for the Blood Stained Beans is my version of Sabrina Ghayour’s Spiced Green Bean and Tomato Stew which comes from her wonderful book Feasts.  

Blood Stained Beans 1

Mrs McGinty’s Dead – The Plot

James Bentley, a rather odd and unlikeable young man, has been found guilty of the murder of his landlady, Mrs. McGinty. Convicted based on the evidence that he was short of money and knew where Mrs. McGinty hid her meager savings of £30, Bentley’s fate seemed sealed.

However, Sergeant Spence, a detective who played a crucial role in Bentley’s conviction, harbors lingering doubts. Unsure of Bentley’s guilt, Spence turns to the renowned Hercule Poirot, hoping that his keen intellect can shed light on the mysterious case.

Poirot, intrigued by the challenge, travels to the quaint village of Broadhinny. Securing a room at the Summerhayes’ guest house, Poirot finds himself immersed in a world of chaos and inefficiency. Indeed, the comical chaos of the guest house provides one of the many humorous moments in “Mrs. McGinty’s Dead.”

“With great distaste, Hercule Poirot looked around the room in which he stood.  It was a room of gracious proportions but there its attraction ended.  Poirot made an eloquent grimace as he drew a suspicious finger along the top of a book case.  As he had suspected – dust! ….The latch did not hold, and with every gust of wind it burst open and whirling gusts of cold wind eddied round the room. 

“I suffer” said Hercule Poirot to himself in acute self pity.  “Yes, I suffer”.  

Agatha Christie – Mrs McGinty’s Dead

What Happened to Mrs McGinty?

During his investigations Poirot discovers that just before her death, Mrs McGinty had clipped a “where are they now” article from the Sunday paper about a number of females who had been involved in infamous crime cases in the past.  Turns out Mrs McGinty, who also operated as a charwoman for several families in Broadhinny had found a photo that resembled one of these women.  And, with that, her fate was sealed.

Blood Stained Beans 3

We have:

  • Several people who could be any of the women in the article
  • Anonymous letters
  • Another murder
  • Poirot pushed off a train platform
  • A mysterious blonde
  • Lipstick on a teacup and expensive scent in the air
  • A sugar hammer with a mysterious past and some tell tale stains on it
  • Lots of people with secrets they do not want revealed

It’s a good thing we have Poirot on hand to save the innocent and make the guilty pay for their misdeeds.  However, even Poirot is severely tested by the personality of James Bentley.

“There were  moments when Hercule Poirot found the personality of James Bentley so irritating that he heartily wished that he could believe Bentley guilty of Mrs McGinty’s  murder.  Unfortunately, the more Bentley annoyed him, the more he came round to Spence’s way of thinking”.

And, of course, we have Ariadne Oliver being utterly delightful!

“How do I know?” asid Mrs Oliver crossly.  “How do I know why I ever thought of the revolting man?  I must have been mad!  Why a Finn when I know nothing about Finland.  Why a vegetarian.  Why all the idiotic mannerisms he’s got?  These things just happen.  You try something – and people seem to like it – and then you go on – and before you know where you are, you’ve got someone like that maddening Sven Hjerson tied to you for life…fond of him?  If I met that bony gangling vegetable eating Finn in real life, I’d do a better murder than any I’ve ever invented”

Agatha Christie – Mrs McGinty’s Dead

Mrs McGinty’s Dead – The Covers

Mrs McGinty's Dead collage (3)

 

The Recipe: Blood Stained Beans

“Oo,” said Mrs Summerhayes, her attention diverted from Poirot to the basin in her lap.  “I’m bleeding over the beans.  Not too good as we have to have them for lunch.  Still, it won’t matter really because they’ll go into boiling water.  Things are always all right if you boil them, aren’t they?”…

“I think, ” said Hercule Poirot quietly, “that I shall not be in for lunch.”

Agatha Christie – Mrs McGinty’s Dead

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Blood Stained Beans

A recipe for a delicious side, inspired by both Sabrina Ghaylour’s Spiced Green Bean and Tomato Stew and the Agatha Christie novel, Mrs McGinty’s Dead.  

Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 punnet cherry tomatoes
  • 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • 1 onion, finely chopped
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp ground turmeric
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika    
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 400g chopped Italian tomatoes
  • 1 tbsp chipotles in adobo sauce
  • 1 heaped teaspoon caster sugar
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 400 grams green beans, topped and tailed

To Serve:

  • Greek Yoghurt or Labneh
  • 1 tbsp chipotles in adobo
  • Crispy fried shallots for sprinkling

Instructions

Roast the tomatoes:

  • Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C).
  • Toss cherry tomatoes with 1 tbsp olive oil, salt, and pepper on a baking sheet.
  • Roast for 20-25 minutes, or until slightly charred and softened.

Make The Sauce:

  • Heat 1 tbsp of olive oil in a pan over a medium heat.
  • Lower the heat and saute the onions until soft (about 10 minutes)
  • Add the garlic and cook for 1 minute. 
  • Add the cumin, coriander, turmeric, smoked paprika and chipotle in adobo and cook for 1-2 minutes until fragrant. 
  • Add the sugar, tinned tomatoes and salt and pepper.  
  • Cook for 20 minutes until thickened. 
  • Taste and add more chipotle, salt or pepper as required.  

The Beans:

  • Steam the beans for 3-4 minutes.  

Serving:

  • Place the beans on a serving platter.  
  • Pour over the spicy sauce and top with the cherry tomatoes.  
  • Add dollops of yoghurt and splatters of chipotle sauce.  
  • Sprinkle with crispy shallots
  • Enjoy!

“He walked slowly up the hill towards Long Meadows.  He hoped devoutly that the contents of the bulged tin and the bloodstained beans had been duly eaten for lunch and not been saved for a supper treat for him”

Agatha Christie – Mrs McGinty’s Dead

Blood Stained Beans 4

Links to the Christieverse

  • In one of her hilarious rants about her novels, Ariadne Oliver talks about using a blowpipe as a plot device in one of her novels.  An African blowpipe was featured in Death in The Clouds.  And of course wecan’t help but draw the parallel between Agatha Christie and her infuriating Belgian and Ariadne Oliver and her “bony gangling vegetable eating Finn”.
  • We last saw Superinendent Spence in Taken at The Flood.
  • Ariadne Oliver speaks of Mr Shaitana, the victim in Cards on The Table.

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in  Mrs McGinty’s Dead

It’s really interesting to see how much more food is mentioned now that we are well and truly in the post war period!

  • Escargot
  • Afternoon Tea
  • Coffee x2
  • Hot chocolate and croissants 
  • Grenadine, Creme de Menthe, Benedictine, Creme de Cacao
  • Whisky x2
  • Beer
  • Bread x2
  • Margarine
  • Kippers x2
  • Omelette / eggs x2
  • Spinach x2
  • Brandy
  • Stew
  • Vegetable Marrows
  • Jam
  • Sherry
  • Orange Juice
  • Box of Chocolates
  • Oxtail Stew ( under cooked)
  • Potatoes (watery x1) (hard x1)
  • Pancakes (peculiar)
  • Apples (it is an Ariadne Oliver novel after all)
  • White Lady
  • Gin x 2
  • Pudding (burnt)
  • Raspberries (mouldy)
  • Macaroni
  • Custard and plums
  • Egg nog x2
  • Rabbit stew
  • Pudding (peculiar)
  • Steak and Chips

December’s read will be After The Funeral. 

Have a great week!

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Summer Vegetarian – January 2003

Hello Friends and welcome to Twenty Years Ago Today for January 2003.  It’s summertime here in Australia and living is easy. We want some no-muss, no-fuss food – and if we can slap it on the BBQ – so much the better!  The magazine I am using for this month is Super Food Ideas from December 2002.  The theme is summer vegetarian…will the magazine meet the challenge?

Pineapple Rum Crush

Here’s the menu I devised from the recipes in the magazine.  I was able to meet my challenge of relaxed summer vegetarian food quite easily – there were a few options for the opening drink, the starter, side and dessert.  There were not so many vegetarian mains but I really liked the sound of the sweetcorn and zucchini burgers!  And the fussiest eater in the world loves peanut brittle so we appeared to be onto a winner, winner vegetarian dinner!

Summer Vegetarian Menu

Summer Vegetarian Burgers2

Pineapple and Rum Crush

This was summer in a glass!  Rum and pineapple is a classic tropical flavour combination.  I also liked the refreshing scent of the mint.  This is a perfect hot-weather drink!

Pimeapple and Rum Crush Recipe

ChunkyAvocado Dip

I did not make this as I could not find a ripe avocado for love or money the day I wanted to make it!  Here’s the recipe.  This came from an advertisement for Tupperware, hence the mention of the serving vessel.  Chunky Avocado Dip

Sweetcorn and Zucchini Burgers

I was excited to make these because I love a zucchini fritter and I love a corn fritter.  Also, I picked the zucchini and the parsley from my garden! What could be better than combining the two?  Unfortunately, these were not good.  Usually, when I make zucchini fritters, I squeeze the water out of the zucchini after grating them.  This recipe did not say to do so and, when I am cooking a recipe for the blog or for Tasty Reads, I follow the recipe exactly.  Maybe because I did not squeeze my zucchini (which sounds like a euphemism if ever I heard one) the mixture was a mess!  I had to add almost double the amount of flour suggested to get something that would even hold together.  The burgers tasted too much like flour and not enough like sweetcorn or zucchini.  I would not make these again.  If you want to try them, I would try squeezing the moisture out of the grated zucchini.  Or for a really good recipe for zucchini fritters, use this one from Epicurious which is one of my faves!

Sweetcorn and Zucchini Burgers2

Tomato Salad with Creamy Dressing

This was good, nothing special but a tasty tomato salad.  We are about to have a bumper crop of tomatoes from the backyard so  I might be making it again very soon!

Tomato Salad (1)

Peanut Brittle

This was a semi-fail but entirely due to user error! The recipe says to microwave for 6-8 minutes.  I do not cook with my microwave very often and got a bit panicky when at the six-minute mark the dish I was using to cook the brittle in felt very hot.   The mixture inside it looked like something normally seen in the crater of a volcano about to explode.  I lost my nerve and stopped the cooking process!  As a result, the candy creation was not brittle but had the consistency of fudge.  It was delicious though!  Next time I will hold my nerve and cook it for the full eight minutes!

Peanut Brittle (1)

My Nigella Moment

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In the context of these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking in because it was really good!  This  month, my Nigella  moment came from an article on Asian food which included one of my restaurant favourites, Thai Fish Cakes.  This is my go-to starter when eating Thai but I have never even contemplated making these at home!  I loved these!  They were deliciously tasty and were very close to the ones you eat in restaurants. I will definitely make these again! Also, happy Lunar New Year Everyone!

Thai Fish Cakes (1)

I hope you have enjoyed my trip back to the vegetarian food of 2003.  It certainly had some mixed results.  The absolute highlight for me were the fishcakes, they were sensational! The cocktail was pretty good too!

Future Twenty Years Ago Today Posts

I have been thinking about these 20 Years Ago Today posts and I decided that, whilst I love doing them, the risk is that the menu themes will get a bit predictable and will be limited to the food that I like.  To give me a challenge and to hopefully really highlight what is featured in my 20-year-old magazines, I have come up with a list of menu themes and each month I will randomly select a theme and see if I can build a menu from that theme out of the magazine in question.  Some of the themes are serious, some are based on actual food preferences of people I know (for example, the Fussiest Eater In The World once told me he did not eat white food. Except for potatoes, bread, rice, cauliflower, fish, milk, yoghurt….the list goes on!) and some I made up to challenge myself!   You can find the list of themes here:

If you would like to contribute a theme, please let me know,  I’m up for any challenge you can throw at me!

Have a great week.

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Detox Soup

Hello Friends, consider this post my public service announcement for the year.  Detox Soup is my New Year’s Day present to you.  For anyone who is planning to imbibe on 31st December, a large bowl of detox soup should set us on the path to recovery on 1 January!

Detox Soup1

I found the recipe for Detox Soup in 365 Good Reasons to Sit Down and Eat by Stephane Reynaud which is an excellent book on (mostly) French cooking.  It was my choice for our Tasty Reads Cookbook Club for November and this is both the first recipe in the book and the first recipe I made from it.

Since then, I have made this soup a number of times, it has become my go-to meal for when I want something quick, easy and life-affirming or when I want to feel virtuous.  When I am feeling not so virtuous, it goes very well with some grilled cheese on crusty bread!  I don’t really believe in “detoxing” but eating this soup does make me feel like I am doing something positive for myself.

Detox Soup 2

Whether or not you use the Detox Soup to ease your aching head and over worked liver or to add a moment of positive self care into the first day of the new year, can I suggest you make some early and keep it in the fridge for the first?  It will be there when you need it the most!

Or it can add  a moment of positive self-care into the first day of the new year.

I have already made my batch although we currently have a sick dog so I doubt I will be drinking on NYE in case I need to make (another) trip to the emergency vet.  🙁

Detox Soup 4

The Recipe – Detox Soup

Complete with a picture of someone looking very hungover made from the ingredients!

Detox Soup recipe

 

Those of you with an eagle eye may have noticed that there is some sliced fennel in my soup which is not in the recipe.  The second time I made this soup I had half a fennel in the fridge that needed using so I sliced it up and added it into the pot.  I really liked the flavour it brought so I add it in all the time now.  I also use vegetable stock instead of water in my soup.

This also explains why I have garnished my soup with a fennel frond and not the celery leaves in the original picture.  Speaking of which…I think I have done not too bad a  job of replicating that picture…

Detox Soup Collage

If the hair of the dog is more your bag, 1 January is Bloody Mary Day so you can get your vodka on with one of my favourite Bloody Mary recipes here.

I think for most of us, 2021 was not the remedy to 2020 that we were all hoping for.  Lord only knows what 2022 has in store for us!  Whatever it brings, I hope you and your loved ones stay safe, healthy and have a wonderful year!

Welsh Rarebit- Dining with The Dame 6

Hello crime readers and food lovers!  The Murder of Roger Ackroyd which is Christie number 6 has a special memory for me because this was one of the books we had oin the bookshelf when I was growing up. This was probably one of the first Christie books I ever read!.  It was also the book that made Christie’s name as a writer for the innovative twist at the end.  It has been recognised, many times, as one of the best and/or most influential crime novels ever written.  Never mind the accolades though, it also, beautifully and comically features one of my own favourite foods  – a Welsh Rarebit!

Welsh Ratebit1

One of the few good things working from home for the last… Good Lord five months now…. is that I can whip up a Welsh rarebit for lunch whenever I choose.  Turns out I choose to do so quite frequently!  It’s tasty, filling, perfect with a bowl of soup, a salad, or just on its own!  Of course, I ‘ am not alone in loving a bit o’ Welsh Rarebit!

The normally curmudgeonly Martin Lampen claims

Cheese on toast, its Welsh Rarebit to those in the know.  It’s the perfect British rainy day lunchtime snack – quick, cheap, easy to prepare….it’s a national icon”

– The Knickerbocker Glory Years

Albert Jack, however, draws attention to the rather  origin of its name by calling it

” the most insulting way to serve cheese on toast”

This is because the English thought it would be funny to mock the Welsh by insinuating that they were too poor to have proper meat and so had to have cheese instead!

Welsh Rarebit 2

 

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd- The Plot

James Sheppard is the local doctor in Kings Abbot.  He lives with his sister Caroline who knows all the gossip and scandal in the town and who is currently interested in finding out all about the “foreign” gentleman who has moved in next door.

A wealthy widow in the town has committed suicide by drinking veronal.  Her fiance, Roger Ackroyd, is in a state of agitation because the day before Mrs Ferrars (the widow) confessed to him that she murdered her first husband.  She also told him that someone knew she had done it and was blackmailing her.

That night, Roger Ackroyd is stabbed to death in his study by persons unknown…

Turns out the foreign gentleman next door is no other than  Hercule Poirot who has moved to Kings Abbot to grow marrows in his retirement.  (BTW,  Kings Abbott is a real place and it looks absolutely GORGEOUS!)

 

Anyhoo, no one is getting away with stabbing people to death in the neck on Poirot’s watch. What follows are:

  • Mysterious phonecalls
  • Strangers lurking in the bushes
  • Chairs suspiciously out of place
  • Stolen money
  • Secret Marriages
  • And of course, Poirot using his little grey cells to solve the crime and out the murderer!
  • There is also a bit of slapstick when Dr. Sheppard gets hit over the head with one of Poirot’s marrows.  I mean it’s not as good as this classic from the Amazing Race.  But in terms of people getting forcefully hit with produce, it’s up there!  Also, who knew I was keeping that list?

 

 

The Covers

Only three covers this time –  the one from my childhood, the one I read which was a graphic novel! And my favourite of them all – I mean is it just me or does Roger look hot in that third one?

Roger collage

The Recipe – Welsh Rarebit

I need to set the scene a bit on this one. Dr. Sheppard invites Poirot round for lunch.  However, there were only two chops available for the lunch table.  In order to save face, Caroline Sheppard pretends to be a vegetarian and lunches on a Welsh Rarebit.

‘With magnificent mendacity, [she] explained to Poirot that … she adhered strictly to a vegetarian diet. She descanted ecstatically on the delights of nut cutlets (which I am quite sure she has never tasted) and ate a Welsh rarebit with gusto and frequent cutting remarks as to the dangers of ‘flesh’ foods.’

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, Agatha Christie

The Recipe for Welsh Rarebit I used comes from Cookery The Australian Way which was my high school home economics cookbook!  As you can see from the state of the page, this has been used a LOT!   I have tried other recipes for Welsh Rarebit but this is the one I have returned to time and time again for the last…hmmm…lets  not count the years since I was in high school!

 

Welsh Rarebit Recipe

Other Food Mentioned in The Murder of Roger Ackroyd

Stay safe friends and have a great week!

 

The Case of the Exploding Egg – Vegetarian Scotch Eggs

No, this is not one of Agatha Christie’s little known cases but true-life kitchen drama. Do you think there is such a thing as Covid brain?  Because I feel I have become increasingly scatty over the last few…how long have we been in lockdown now?  Oh, that’s right, it doesn’t matter how long because we have just gone back into it for another SIX  weeks. 😕 For the love of God, people of Melbourne stay TF away from each other. Most of you aren’t even that attractive, why anyone in their right mind would want to get in your personal space is beyond me!

Ok. Rant over. Deep breaths and let’s talk about Vegetarian Scotch Eggs. And explosions.

Vegetarian Scotch Eggs1

Oh, these were so good!!  The idea from them came from me making Diana Henry’s Baby Pumpkins with mixed mushrooms, leeks, grains.  This was also totally delicious and I can heartily recommend making it!

But, after making this, I had a lot of the stuffing mix left.  This is no disrespect to Diana.  I’m sure had I wanted to stuff 8 eight baby pumpkins her quantities would have been just fine.  I was cooking for one.  There are usually only a certain amount of times you can divide a recipe before becoming nonsensical.  You can generally halve quantities. Sometimes quarter them to no ill effect.  Trying to cook to an eighth of a recipe makes no sense.  So I guesstimated what I would need for one pumpkin which left me with a lot of leftover filling. The filling was delicious so there was no way I was going to waste it but what to do with it?

Vegetarian Scotch Eggs3

My first thought was arancini. But why stop at arancini when you can also put an egg in it? And thus the ideal of my vegetarian scotch egg was born.  I popped an egg onto boil, intending to have the perfect four minute boiled egg in the centre of my scotchie.  Then went back to work.  So, about half an hour later I was drawn out of some intense concentration on a particularly fascinating spreadsheet by what sounded like a bomb going off in my kitchen.  First,  there was a massive bang, very closely followed by something hitting the window so hard I’m surprised the glass didn’t shatter.  The water had dried out in the pan so much that the egg had actually exploded!!!!  There was egg shrapnel all over my kitchen.  It was like eggmageddon in there!

Like this but on the stove:

Vegetarian Scotch Eggs Take Two

You know how when people who can’t cook say I can’t even boil an egg?  So, after the first egg EXPLODED, and I’d cleaned the kitchen and taken a few sedatives because the goddamn thing sounded like a bomb and my heart was pounding like a jackhammer it was time for egg number 2.

On the positive side…this one didn’t explode.

But I did kind of wander off mid-cook to take a call and lost track of egg time. I could tell while peeling it that it was hard-boiled and not the beautiful runny yolk I wanted.  But I wrapped it in the mushroom, leek and barley filling regardless.  This is the year of not wasting anything remember.

Sure we lost an egg in some explosive collateral damage but you know …I blame Covid for that.  I have no rationale for that blame.  It’s fucking everything else up so it can also take the blame for my exploding egg.  And you know if I hadn’t been working from home and been distracted from cooking it by…errmmmm…work…

Let’s swiftly move away from that one.

Egg 2  turned out pretty delish even though hard-boiled.

Vegetarian Scotch Eggs2

Vegetarian Scotch Eggs Take Three

I had a little of the mushroom filling leftover after wapping egg 2.  Third-time lucky right?  Right!  This time I did not take my eyes off that pan for the entire four minutes.  I barely blinked.  And voila the perfect 4-minute egg as per the pictures above and below

Because it was still so soft it was a little harder to wrap in the filling than the hard-boiled egg.  I was terrified I would press too hard and cause the yolk to ooze out before I could get it crumbed and fried.

It’s a bit hard to give you a recipe for this because it was based on the leftovers from the Diana Henry recipe which is here:

Diana Henry Pumpkin

You need to judge how many eggs your leftover filling wil cover.  To crumb and cook the Scotch Eggs, see my recipe for Pakistani Scotch Eggs.  To get your eggs the way you want them, see below:

In lieu of a proper recipe this week, here is a little list of what is currently floating my boat.

Watching

Crazy Delicious – an amazing cooking show on Netflix.  Think Heston done by home cooks, a magical ingredient garden, a delightful host in Jayde Adams, oh and Heston is one of the judges!

 

Dead Pixels – another British show, this time a comedy about the lives of three people obsessed with a video game.

Searching For Sugarman  – this was our most recent film club choice.  It’s so touching and warm-hearted and  as an added bonus, the sounds track is awesome!  There has not been a DAY since I watched it when I have not listened to Rodriguez’s Cold Fact at least once!

Reading

I just finished reading “One of Us is Next” which is Karen McManus’ follow up to “One of Us is Lying”. I didn’t love it as much as the first book but it was still a good fun read.

Podding

My current fave is Season 4 of Slow Burn by Slate.  I loved Season 1 & 2 of this which covered Watergate and The Clintons respectively. I have not listened to S3 which is about Biggie and Tupac yet but I am going to start it in the next few days.  Season 4 is about David Duke who is a total dick a white supremacist politician from Louisiana, and formerly a grand wizard poobah double dragon something from the KuKluxKlan.  AKA a total f**king dick..

Here’s Topher Grace brilliantly playing him in Black Klansman.

Please send me your recommendations for books, tv, pods, films, music something, anything to keep me entertained over the next few weeks!

Life Update

Just to make us all feel a little bit better about the state of the world, here is a picture of Holly being adorable.  This little dog has absolutely captured our hearts in the last 6 months. She has gone from a timid little thing who was scared of everything to a cheeky little girl who is confident and happy in her life.   Being able to give such a lovely girl, who has had such a terrible life, a loving home for the last chapters of her life is the best thing we have done for a long time!

If anyone is thinking about adopting an older dog or a dog rescued from medical research please reach out.  I am happy to share our experiences.

Holly

 

Have a great week everyone!  Have fun, stay safe, and please, send me your recommendations for books, films, podcasts, tv, etc!