Category Archives: feast day

Saint Hildegard of Bingen Doctor of the Church


Guest post By Megan Hoyt

Hello friends of Hildegard! Happy Feast Day! And when I say Feast Day, I don’t just mean a celebration of the life of St. Hildegard of Bingen. I also want to share some of my favorite Hildegard recipes so you can create your own feast at home today with your children.

Here is a hearty Hildegard breakfast you can start your Feast Day with – Spelt Porridge. Many thanks to the kind folks at Marx Foods for this delicious recipe!


Baked Spelt Porridge with Vanilla, Huckleberries & Maple Sugar
Though it looks like one, this isn’t sweet enough to be a dessert. Instead it’s an incredible breakfast that can be served hot or cold, with or without milk. Baking it in the oven rather than stirring it on the stove gives it a denser texture and frees you from the stove.
Drink Pairing: Strong Cup of French Press Coffee
Ingredients: Makes 6 Servings

1 cup 
Cracked Spelt Cereal
4 tbsp Unsalted Butter
2 ½ cups Whole Milk
1 cup Water
1 tsp 
Tahitian Vanilla Extract (could substitute Bourbon Vanilla Extract)
1/3 cup 
Maple Sugar
1 pinch of Salt
1 tsp Orange Zest, microplaned or very finely minced
Sauce:

1 cup Wild Huckleberries (Fresh or Frozen)
¼ cup Maple Sugar
1 tsp Orange Zest
Optional: Micro Marigold Florets for garnish
Directions:

1. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees & rub an 8×8 baking dish with butter.
2. Melt the butter in a saucepan. Add the cracked spelt and toast it, stirring frequently, until fragrant and lightly browned.
3. Move the toasted spelt to a bowl and stir in the milk, 1 teaspoon of orange zest, vanilla extract, 1/3 cup of maple sugar, salt and water.
4. Pour the spelt mixture into the baking dish. Put the dish on a baking sheet or cookie sheet (just in case it bubbles over). Move the dish to the oven.
5. Bake for 35 minutes, then check the porridge – it will set up almost like a brownie when done.
6. While the porridge is baking, combine the huckleberries, remaining teaspoon of orange zest and the remaining ¼ cup of maple sugar in a small pot. Simmer until a thick sauce forms.
7. Serve hot or cold, with or without milk.
Note: This porridge can be frozen in the baking dish for later use. When you want to eat it, just move it to your refrigerator until thawed, then serve cold or reheated in the microwave.
Here is a recipe for Spelt Bread, if you are not a fan of porridge:

Spelt Bread

Ingredients (Original recipe makes 2 big loaves)

  • 8 cups spelt flour
  • 1/2 cup sesame seeds
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt, or to taste
  • 1 tablespoon blackstrap molasses
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 4 1/4 cups milk
Directions
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Grease two 9×5 inch loaf pans.
  2. In a large bowl, mix together the spelt flour, sesame seeds, salt, molasses, baking soda and milk until well blended. Divide the batter evenly between the prepared pans.
  3. Bake for 1 hour and 10 minutes in the preheated oven, or until golden. Placing a tin of the same size over the top of the loaf while baking gives it a lovely crust.
Hildegard believed these cookies would bring joy to the heart and energy and vitality to the body. Here is her recipe:

1 ½ cups butter or shortening

3 cups brown sugar
2 eggs, well beaten
½ tsp salt
6 cups flour
2 ½ tsp cinnamon
2 ½ tsp nutmeg
½ tsp cloves
1 cup ground or chopped almonds
1. Cream shortening or butter and sugar together.
Mix dry ingredients in another bowl.
Add to creamed mixture.
Mix thoroughly, kneading as necessary to mix all the flour.
Make into rolls, then refrigerate until cold.
Slice rolls into thin cookies.
Bake at 375 degrees Fahrenheit
Enjoy!


Megan Hoyt is the author of Hildegard’s Gift, recently released by Paraclete Press. Check out her website for more fun ways to celebrate Hildegard’s life and Feast Day, including her special coded alphabet and coloring sheets from the book.
  

“Spelt porridge, spelt bread and spelt coffee constitute the ideal breakfast.”
                                                                                             –Hildegard of Bingen

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Saint Joseph – Happy Feast Day!

A gift for you my friends, one of my most favorite prayers and painting of St. Joseph!  Happy Feast day!

If you are struggling financially or without a job for you or your husband, please see my post A Simple Recipe for Spiritual Happiness and amazing Novena to St. Joseph, you can start it today!  🙂

If you want to download a better version, please do so on Facebook.

Here are all the fun things we did this morning to remember our beloved Saint Joseph!

  1. Read the St. Joseph Poem/Rhyme from our  Once Upon A Time Saints Series
  2. Saint Joseph Lapbook by ThankEvann
  3. Saint Joseph, the worker, coloring page by the Paper Doll Dali
  4. Saint Joseph Cards by Shower of Roses (I played several games with this one, matching in a variety of forms, etc.)
  5. Lastly, we watched a video that my friend Allison posted on her lovely blog, Totus Tuus on St. Joseph: The Man Closest to Christ
  6. Tonight, when Dada gets home, we will watched  Close to Jesus: Joseph of Nazareth on Netflix as a family!

Hope this helps you celebrate this wonderful feast day!

     
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Happy Feast of the Epiphany

“There came Magi from the East to Jerusalem, saying, 
‘Where is the newly born King of the Jews?  
We have seen His star in the East and have come to worship Him'” (Gospel)

Epiphany means “an apparition, or manifestation” of God becoming visible to the Gentile world. Today Jesus manifests a new “kingdom” (Introit), to which the starlight of “faith” guides all wise men (Prayer).

The Epistle is a revealing picture of the “darkness” of the Jewish Old Testament; a prophecy also of the “brightness” of Christ shining in a world where men may now “see.”

The Gospel tells of the faith of the “Magi” divinely guided by the ‘star”; how this faith manifested itself in action by their seeking instruction from God’s priests, by prostrating their very beings and offering their best treasures before the frail Babe in Mary’s arms: GOLD in homage to His new Kingship, symbol of their hearts offering love; INCENSE in home to His Divinity, symbol of their minds offering adoration; MYRRH in homage to His Humanity, symbol of their bodies offering to do penance.

A truly great Feast! “Arise, be enlightened”(Epistle).

Excerpted from My Sunday Missal, Confraternity of the Precious Blood

 


Thank you!
Erika
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Feast of St. Juan Diego!

She said: “Juanito, the most humble of my sons, where are you going?” 

He replied: “My Lady and Child, I have to reach your church in Mexico, Tlatilolco, to pursue things divine, taught and given to us by our priests, delegates of Our Lord.”
She then spoke to him: “Know and understand well, you the most humble of my son, that I am the ever virgin Holy Mary, Mother of the True God for whom we live, of the Creator of all things, Lord of heaven and the earth. I wish that a temple be erected here quickly, so I may therein exhibit and give all my love, compassion, help, and protection, because I am your merciful mother, to you, and to all the inhabitants on this land and all the rest who love me, invoke and confide in me; listen there to their lamentations, and remedy all their miseries, afflictions and sorrows. And to accomplish what my clemency pretends, go to the palace of the bishop of Mexico, and you will say to him that I manifest my great desire, that here on this plain a temple be built to me; you will accurately relate all you have seen and admired, and what you have heard. Be assured that I will be most grateful and will reward you, because I will make you happy and worthy of recompense for the effort and fatigue in what you will obtain of what I have entrusted. Behold, you have heard my mandate, my humble son; go and put forth all your effort.”


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Memorial of St. Ambrose, bishop and doctor

“To avoid dissensions we should be ever on our guard, more especially with those who drive us to argue with them, with those who vex and irritate us, and who say things likely to excite us to anger. When we find ourselves in company with quarrelsome, eccentric individuals, people who openly and unblushingly say the most shocking things, difficult to put up with, we should take refuge in silence, …and the wisest plan is not to reply to people whose behavior is so preposterous. Those who insult us and treat us contumeliously are anxious for a spiteful and sarcastic reply: the silence we then affect disheartens them, and they cannot avoid showing their vexation; they do all they can to provoke us and to elicit a reply, but the best way to baffle them is to say nothing, refuse to argue with them, and to leave them to chew the cud of their hasty anger. This method of bringing down their pride disarms them, and shows them plainly that we slight and despise them.”

~ Saint Ambrose, Bishop and Doctor of the Church

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