Welcome back to Sunday School! This is our weekly time for bloggers to come to link up their posts and teach us about real food and healthy living. I learn something new every week!
Show & Tell — It’s Blog Hop Time!
Classroom Rules:
- Please only link to posts covering real rood, nutrition, or healthy lifestyle-related topics. In my eyes, this includes nourishing recipes, articles about (real!) nutrition, tutorials, discussions of food politics, homesteading, tips and tricks for keeping a green, healthy home, and other healthy, holistic living topics!
- If you do post a recipe, don’t include any fake or weird, chemical-filled ingredients! And if anyone busts out a recipe with MARGARINE or something unforgivably terrible like that, I just might have to instigate some corporal punishment up in this class!! For serious though. Lay off the fake stuff. Lest your link be deleted.
- Important: Please update your post with a link back to this Sunday School post, so your readers can get in on all the learnin’ going on here! A simple, “This post is linked to Sunday School at Butter Believer!” is perfect. Just blog carnival courtesy, is all!
- It would be super, extra awesome if you would tweet, pin, “like,” stumble, or otherwise share this post with your peeps. It helps all of us get extra exposure and helps to spread the word about real food and natural health!
By the way, I am now pinning to my Pinterest boards all the submissions to Sunday School that a.) follow the rules and b.) I think are awesomely pin-able. (Hint: it helps to have big, pretty pictures in your post!) So, come follow me on Pinterest and share the love. 🙂
Amen? Amen! Let’s get started.
Marisa @ Ware It's Made From Scratch says
This week I have posted an easy, delicious, and nutritious recipe for chocolate bites made with just three ingredients. Enjoy! wareitsmadefromscratch.com
This Woman Writes -- Carolyn Henderson says
Many people who homestead or choose to live a simpler life find themselves gravitating toward homeschooling — it’s sort of a natural fit to the lifestyle. Unfortunately, many of these people — confident to grow tomatoes or dry apples or whip together a pair of pajamas for themselves on the sewing machine, feel inadequate when it comes to educating their kids, and they are easily convinced that they are not “qualified” to do so, and need to purchase materials from people who are so qualified. My article this week is number 23 — Homeschooling? Yes, You Can Teach Your Child to Write — the same way you do a lot of other homesteading and DIY projects — through reading, learning, and practicing. You, as a parent, can open the wonderful world of writing to your child with nothing more than a paper and pen/keyboard, and the time it takes to read what your child has written.
Sangeetha says
Please read my comment on the post about soap nuts. Of course, things won’t work when used in a way that nature didn’t intend. You know, kind of like eating margarine and expecting to maintain squeaky clean arteries. Margarine has its place but not in food. An industrial lubricant, maybe? Eh, Emily?
She performed an admirable experiment but sadly these days, we hear so much about a miracle this or a miracle that and we jump on the bandwagon without quite understanding the use of the miracle. Ask me how I know. Better yet, do read my comment! You’ll know why I write thus.
Tiffany @ DontWastetheCrumbs says
Did you know it was possible to give food new life? And that new life skyrockets the nutritional value? I shared a post today explaining how it works. I also shared a post discussing the practicality of grains in the kitchen… soaking vs. sprouting vs. sourdough – are we really expected to do it all? Thanks for hosting! ~Tiffany