Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On PinterestVisit Us On InstagramVisit Us On Linkedin
  • Homeschool
    • Book Lists
    • How Do We Do That?
    • Notebooking
    • Subjects and Styles
    • Unit Studies
  • Travel
    • Europe
      • Benelux
      • France
      • Germany
      • Greece
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • London
      • Porto
      • Prague
    • USA
      • Chicago
      • Georgia
      • Hawaii
      • Ohio
      • Utah
      • Yellowstone and Teton
  • Family
    • Celebrations
    • Frugal
  • Military Life
    • Deployment
    • PCS
  • Health
    • Recipes
    • Essential Oils
    • Fitness
    • Mental Health
    • Natural Living
    • Natural Beauty
  • Faith
  • About Me
    • Favorite Resources
    • Advertising and Sponsorship
    • Policies
  • Reviews

© 2025Jennifer Lambert · Copyright · Disclosure · Privacy · Ad

5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials {Day 2: Know Yourself}

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

January 21, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 7 Comments

Sure, we need to plan.

We also need to know our strengths and weaknesses.

All the mamas and the papas and the babies have different personalities and that makes for fun-filled days with all those dynamics at work. How do you cope?

We need to know ourselves.

We need to constantly reevaluate ourselves and our purpose and homeschool.

We need to know what our recipe for success is. For ourselves personally, and for each of our children. We need to know what sets us on edge and do our best to eliminate those triggers.

Pray. Always. Unceasingly.

Run a smooth(er) homeschool.

Consider learning styles for each child and how that works with your teaching style, mamas. I have to force myself out of my comfort zone to teach my children the way they best learn and that’s often difficult for me. Is it more important that I check off that box or that my child has a great learning experience?

Check out my post on learning styles.

Create a learning space for each child and a sanctuary for mama. Small spaces make this tough, but you can make or buy a privacy shield to allow children to work independently behind a barrier and that helps many focus. I often work alongside my kids and this is comforting for all.

Consider the flow and dynamics of a typical school day. How could it go more smoothly? Do the kids need an outdoor recess or vigorous indoor activity to get the wiggles out midmorning? Do you need to reinforce a rest or quiet time in the afternoons for the evenings to play out more calmly? Does the schedule need to be revamped to be more successful? I alternate days with history and science since it’s a lot of reading and notebooking.

Homemaking Helps.

What can you do to improve the ebb and flow of your home? Be proactive.

I recently subscribed to eMeals to help me with meal planning because I.am.terrible.about.meal.planning. Too many afternoons have passed me by and nothing made its way out of the freezer to thaw for dinner and we had to scramble or grab takeout or rush to the store. We like to eat and we often have a freezer and fridge full of lovely food, but I’ve been lazy lately about getting it prepared and on the table on time.

Set up a cleaning schedule or chore chart for the kids – and for you. Lots of moms use Fly Lady or zone cleaning. Find something that works for your family. Tori is my cleaner. I can just let her go and she does whatever it is above and beyond my standards. Alex and Kate are pretty cheerful about helping but Liz really doesn’t care to help. It’s not optional. Teach the kids to help early on. Servant leadership and great life skills!

Have only littles? Find a family with an older child in training to be a mama helper. This can be for pay or on a barter. This older child can help with laundry or cleaning up or watching the kids to give you a little breather.

Ask your husband what can be let go. My husband is pretty laid back but it drives him nuts to have toys all over the floor. The laundry piling up? He’d pick his clothes out of a basket forever with no complaint. He helps with cooking. He cares for the lawn and snow shoveling. He’ll vacuum or steam clean if I ask. Most everything else he overlooks. Awesome.

We need to maintain our health as best we can.

Sleep is important.

We make sure the little kids are in bed by 8 PM. Our eldest typically goes to bed by 9. Generally, they all wake up naturally between 6:30-8 in the morning. If we have a rare appointment in the morning and have to get up early, it’s grumpiness all around. Sleep and rest are important and I am happy to allow for their growing bodies to regenerate and grow and heal.

Eat well.

I get up every morning and make a hot breakfast. It took me too many years to get that this is important. I never used to eat breakfast. Even still, I often don’t get anything after the kids have swooped down. I either have a smoothie or hardboiled egg (I keep a supply of HB eggs in the fridge and I make twice as much smoothie as I need so there are leftovers of that as well). I have noticed since feeding my kids a good breakfast, their behavior is much improved and our days run more smoothly.

Exercise.

We need to stay fit to be healthy. The kids and I play the Wii, shovel snow, take hikes or walks, do Family Time Fitness or Fit2Be  or yoga together. My husband frequents the gym almost every day. Liz has to take a physical training test monthly for Civil Air Patrol. I get to the gym when I can. Fresh air and exercise are great mood elevators and keep our bodies working properly.

Natural care.

We use essential oils and cod liver oil and drink lots of water to keep our immune systems healthy. We don’t use OTC or prescription meds. We also diffuse focusing oils to help our brains function at their best. We’ve limited microwave use and I would get rid of the thing altogether, but we’re not quite there yet. We use less plastic and Thieves® Household Cleaner to clean, well, everything.

The point is, we all have strengths and weaknesses. We’re all different. We have different personality traits and it’s not worth trying to overhaul that and be someone we’re not. Find something that works to help streamline your life so everyone is at peace with it.

The whole series:

Day 1: Planning

Day 2: Know Yourself

Day 3: Know Your Enemy

Day 4: Supplies

Day 5: Let Go

Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: back to school, homemaking, personality, schedule

5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials {Day 1: Planning}

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

January 20, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials.

Sure, we need to plan.

We need to know ourselves, our strengths and weaknesses.

We need to know our enemy.

We need supplies. But more than paper and pencils, books and crayons.

And sometimes we need to know when to let go.

Planning. I am SO great at planning. Not so much at implementing.

In a way, I’m an unschooler at heart. I love the idea of schedules, but I really like to just gather lots of papers and books and resources along a theme – weekly, monthly, semesterly (Is that a word? Well, it is now!).

But for all homeschoolers – beginners and veterans and everyone in between – we need planning and evaluation at the start, midpoint, and end of each year.

In addition to all the homeschool planning we do (and that’s the easy part, I think), we need to plan out our spiritual goals for our children. It’s much simpler to plan out curriculum, complete with projects and field trips, than it is to plan out heart training.

Do you know when there will be a snow day or sick day or day-where-the-hot-water-heater-bursts-and-leaks-all-over-the-cellar? Do you know when you will have to stray from the lesson plan to teach about bullies because a child at church made fun of her or begin preliminaries for The Talk because your child heard something disturbing on Christian radio news?

Of course we can’t plan for those events. But we can be prepared.

Mamas, we need to be proactive and plan ahead for surprises and the inevitable. Our babies are growing up, underneath our very noses, despite our efforts to shelter.

They are not our own. We cannot control them. Give them to God and pray.

What is the purpose for your homeschool? What do you purpose to accomplish in your children before they reach adulthood?

Set goals with your endpoint in mind. Math and reading and this science experiment and that art project are all secondary to heart training.

What good is it for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? ~Mark 8:36

Almost all curriculum comes with a schedule and a plan and now common-core alignment. God has a plan for each of His children. Does your homeschool align with Him?

Plan for their character development. In which direction do you want your children guided? What regrets do you want your kids not to have?

I recently conversed with some moms about how our parents taught (or didn’t teach) about sex and the lack of biblical education in this area was saddening to me.

I know I want my kids to be the ones who step up proudly to say that they were taught well from Scripture and biblical principles. I want to protect their worldview and show them Jesus in all we learn in our homeschool.

It’s all about planning. What’s your scope and sequence?

Tweetables:

  • Forget common-core. God has a plan for His children. Does your homeschool align with Him? 
  • What regrets do you want your kids not to have? Which direction do you want your children guided? 
Share
Pin100
Share
100 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: back to school, character, planning

Gingerbread Unit Study

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

December 20, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Gingerbread is yummy.

We made scented gingerbread paper crafts, read books, made scented playdough.

Gingerbread activities:

  • Make gingerbread or cookies
  • Gingerbread playdough
  • Gingerbread crafts
  • Gingerbread books
  • Gingerbread printables

We love all the holiday Jan Brett books.

Bubba really got into the Gingerbread stories and these fun printables.

Make gingerbread playdough with spices!
gingerbread playdough

We did a fun gingerbread sensory craft.

I printed gingerbread boy outlines on brown paper. (I Googled for the outlines.)

I had the kids paint white glue on the gingerbread kids.

gingerbread craft gluing
glue gingerbread craft
gingerbread craft

And then decorate the gingerbread men with beads, sequins, etc.

And then sprinkle on spices.

Lots of spices.

and that wasn’t enough!

He who controls the spice controls the universe.

The finished “cookie”

scented gingerbread paper craft

We had fun with this sensory craft!

Gingerbread resources: 

  • Prekinders
  • Stay at Home Educator
  • Kidzone
  • DLTK
  • Kids Activities
  • Living Montessori Now
  • The Educators Spin on It
  • PreK Pages
  • Homeschool Creations
  • A Little Pinch of Perfect
  • Life Over C’s
  • Teaching Hearts
  • Every Star is Different
  • Play to Learn Preschool
  • Royal Baloo
  • 123 Homeschool 4Me
  • Natural Beach Living
  • Homeschool Share
  • Jan Brett

Books:

  • Richard Scarry’s The Gingerbread Man
  • The Gingerbread Boy
  • The Gingerbread Girl
  • Gingerbread Friends
  • Gingerbread Christmas
  • Gingerbread Baby
  • The Gingerbread Cowboy
  • The Gingerbread Pirates
ProSchool Membership - Productive Homeschooling
Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Christmas, crafts, unit study

Elementary Chemistry and Physics Demonstrations

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

December 13, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

The kids have been loving Apologia Exploring Creation with Chemistry and Physics for science this year.

Tori especially loves the coloring pages and copywork in the Junior Notebooking Journal.

coloring

Kate just wants to do experiments all the time.

We worked on water displacement with pinto beans. I think the winner was over 500 beans!

displacement

Most experiments and projects are simple enough that Alex joins in.

displacement with beans

I love his expression. The surface tension fascinated him.

water displacement

Review time! I wrote the definitions on the board for the girls to add to their notebooking journals.

science vocabulary

It combines all the greatness of notebooking with very little effort. The girls love the colorful foldables and lapbooking components.

science notebooking

I usually set up the items for the girls to complete so there are no mishaps with cutting or gluing.

notebooking in science

The girls loved making water molecules with candy (gobstoppers and nerds).

water molecule activity

What are you learning in science?

NotebookingPages.com LIFETIME Membership
Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: elementary, notebooking, Science

Christmas Preschool

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

December 11, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

My youngest is enjoying our Christmas themed work this month.

W drew our gingerbread family. Big sister cut them out for him.

drawing a gingerbread family

Then he took a “reading break” on the sofa. He loves looking at the pictures. He has lots of his favorite books memorized.

reading a book

It’s fun strewing themed activities to encourage exposure and learning each month.

Preschool Printables:

  • Meet Penny Free Nativity Pack – Lifetime Premium Membership for $15
  • 1+1+1=1
  • Confessions of a Homeschooler
  • Homeschool Creations
  • Candy Canes pack from 2 Teaching Mommies (and lots more Christmas printable packs in the sidebar!
  • All Our Days
  • The Moffat Girls ($ with some freebies)
Christmas Notebooking Pages (FREE)
Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Christmas, preschool

Preschool Math

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

December 11, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We focused on math this week.

I got organized and had him match up some base ten blocks with printable counting cards I found here. He really enjoyed it and did so well!

base ten.jpg

Of course a cube found its way into his sleeve. Silly!

sleeve

He is really, really into counting lately.

He likes these base ten blocks and we have Cuisenaire rods too. I am looking for cards and lessons to go along with those. I think some may find their way under the Christmas tree.

preschool base ten

He really loved these counting cards I found online. They are colored to go along with a Chicka Chicka Boom Boom unit. He jumped out of the way and didn’t want to be in this picture.

number matching

Upside down counting? Whatever works. He used these cards over and over this month!

matching numbers

He loves this Montessori wooden counting box. He didn’t want his picture taken. But then he wanted to see the picture and then he laughed.

Montessori counting

What are your favorite preschool math tools?

Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: math, preschool

Fox Unit Study

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

November 25, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Welcome to November Poppins Book Nook!

This month, the theme is Animals and Pets.

My son, Alex, is pretty obsessed with foxes. Apparently, Ylvis is too.

Win/Win.

I made a Fox unit for my son.

Fox-Collage.jpg

      

Check out these sites for foxy fun:

  • Fox printable craft by LearnCreateLove.com
  • Fox Christmas Card by Positively Splendid
  • Fox Activity Pack by Mudpies and Make-up
  • Fox Printable Masks by Kitschy Digitals ($1.50) or get FREE here: Jan Brett
  • X if for Fox Bible Verse Printable (coincides with MFW K) by Mama Jenn
  • Origami Fox face
  • Fox in Sock unit study by MPM Ideas
  • Fox in Socks unit by Homeschool Share (scroll down)
  • More Fox in Socks by Mom to 2 Posh Lil Divas
  • Fox hot chocolate party printables by Hostess with the Mostess
  • DLTK fox craft
  • Fox maze from Education.com (and other pages too! Get More Fun Kindergarten Worksheets from Education.com!)

Library books Alex begged for and read with Dad:

photo-2-2.jpg

Media to go along with our Fox unit:

  • Fox in Socks
  • Fantastic Mr. Fox and movie
  • The Fox and the Hound movies
  • The Tomten and the Fox
  • Hattie and the Fox
  • Chanticleer and the Fox
  • Adventures of Reddy Fox (FREE!)
  • DK Animal Encyclopedia
  • Kingfisher Animal Encyclopedia
  • Foxy Lady by Jimi Hendrix (just because)
  • What Does the Fox Say by Ylvis

Coloring a paper fox:

foxy

Counting foxes clip cards:

fox clip cards

How many foxes in the box?

how many foxes in the box

Learning fox facts

foxes-2-2.jpg

A fox maze. It was a little hard.

photo-1-2.jpg

Singing and acting out “What Does a Fox Say?” with puppets

fox puppet

We love foxes!

Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Poppins Book Nook Tagged With: fox, PoppinsBookNook, preschool, unit study

Gifts for the Homeschool Family

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

November 4, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Our family and friends think it’s very difficult to choose gifts for us. And it is. We have high standards for quality and are kinda particular about the toys we allow. We don’t want clutter or something that’s not educational or useful.

And we don’t have a lot of storage space since we’re military and move every few years.

Books and experiences are the best!

Great Gifts for the Homeschool Family

BOOKS are always welcome.

Not sure? Gift cards to bookstores or Amazon are perfect.

Ask which curricula we’re needing.

There’s always something needed next and often: gift certificates are usually available. Or just use my blog affiliate links on your own purchases to help us out! {Thanks}

Often the extras get pushed aside.

Experiences: Music lessons or art classes or gymnastics are great gifts for homeschoolers.

My kids would LOVE that. We just can’t manage it for four kids year-round right now.

Also, memberships to museums or subscriptions to educational magazines are great!

We love Zoobooks and Nat Geo and Discover.

What are great gifts for a homeschool family?

Whole Family:

We love gifts that the whole family can enjoy together! Game night is fun. We also love classic card games and chess and checkers.

  • Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza
  • Exploding Kittens
  • Pictopia
  • Yahtzee
  • Risk
  • Catan
  • Ticket to Ride
  • Parcheesi
  • Spontuneous 

Littles:

Alex loves his light box we made. I need to collect some supplies to really use it to its potential. These are some items I’m eyeing. I love them for unstructured open-ended playtime.

  • Guidecraft Interlox Squares
  • Guidecraft Magnification Blocks
  • Guidecraft Rainbow Blocks
  • Guidecraft Mirror Blocks
  • PicassoTiles 
  • MAGNA-TILES
  • Learning Resources Translucent Geometric Shapes
  • Agate Slices

Big Kids:

They need something to release all their energy.

  • Just Dance video games
  • Twister Hopscotch!
  • Sports Scoop Ball Game
  • Razor Scooter
  • RipStik 
  • Razor PowerWing Caster Scooter
  • Roller Blades

Teens:

Liz loves art and science. I’m not real crafty, so I need to help her out.

  • Basher Science
  • Wreck This Journal
  • The Bob Ross Three-Hour Workshop DVD
  • The Laws Guide to Drawing Birds
  • Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain
  • Prismacolor Colored Pencils
  • Water Colors Travel Pocket Set

Dads:

Ours likes to grill and do woodworking!

  • Cordless Reciprocating Saw
  • Dremel 
  • Laser Distance Measure
  • Charcoal Storage Container
  • Charcoal Chimney Starter
  • ThermoPro 
  • Wireless Smart Meat Thermometer
  • Grill Grates 

Mamas:

We got a Nespresso as soon as we married. For a little sumpin sumpin other than coffee on a brisk and rainy afternoon, I often choose a fine tea. And I love reading!

  • Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong by James W. Loewen
  • Heated Vibrating Massage Cushion
  • Taylors of Harrogate Assorted Specialty Teas Box
  • Glass Electric Kettle
  • Bialetti – Moka Espress
  • Electric Milk Frother
  • Mom Mug

Chefs:

They need the best, right?

  • Nordic Ware Baking Sheets and Silpats and Nonstick Grid
  • Silicone Spatula Set
  • Rösle Stainless Steel & Silicone Flat Whisk
  • Wüsthof Ikon
  • Peugeot Pepper Mill
  • Cuisinart Immersion Hand Blender
  • KitchenAid Mixer and Attachments

What are your favorite presents as a homeschool family?

Share
Pin10
Share
10 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Christmas, giftguide, homeschool

Fall Unit Study

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

October 29, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

We celebrated a windy fall day with leaf art.

They collected fallen leaves and the last of the flowers and we brought out some black paper. They formed buildings and animals and people with leaves. They loved it. At least it didn’t involve glitter.

I love fall.

I love the smell of the leaves and an autumn drizzle dampening the browning grass.

I love all things pumpkin.

He who controls the {pumpkin} spice rules the universe.

Here are some random pics of my kids doing printable fall activities:

pumpkin seed counting
pumpkin Educubes
monster mash sight words
leaf art play
leaf creations
leaf art
nature art

We’ve lived in some places where it was mild year-round, so the leaves are special. And the crisp air and boots and hot cocoa or PSL. I love the cycle of dying so there can be rebirth.

Not so much looking forward to the winter and snow and shoveling and slushy muddy mess, but there’s a season for everything.

There’s a season for everything.

There is a time for everything,
and a season for every activity under the heavens:

a time to be born and a time to die,
a time to plant and a time to uproot,
a time to kill and a time to heal,
a time to tear down and a time to build,
a time to weep and a time to laugh,
a time to mourn and a time to dance,
a time to scatter stones and a time to gather them,
a time to embrace and a time to refrain from embracing,
a time to search and a time to give up,
a time to keep and a time to throw away,
a time to tear and a time to mend,
a time to be silent and a time to speak,
a time to love and a time to hate,
a time for war and a time for peace.

For us mamas in the trenches of motherhood, we often long for a different season.

We think: when this morning sickness passes, when the baby sleeps through the night, when the toddler potty trains, when the preschooler learns to read, when the grade schooler masters long division, when we pay off this debt, when we get a better minivan, when the tween finally gets through algebra, when we move to a nicer house, when the teen learns to drive, when the house is empty…then what? You pray for weddings? grandkids? freedom? travel?

Don’t wait on a someday. Some Days are death to faith. Some Days may never come. Some Days are the lies we tell ourselves because we are slaves to fear. Live now. Experience life. Do life with your families. You’ll never get those seasons back.

What season are you in? Relish it. Sure, you’ve probably heard that before and it’s hard, Mama, when you’re down in it. But we’ve all been there. We’re all mamas together.

Reach out to another mama in a season you’ve already conquered. Help her. Pray with her. Pray for her and her babies. Don’t wait to be asked for something. Be proactive and offer help: a meal, take her kids to the park for an hour, pick up a few necessities at the grocery store, have your son or husband cut her grass or shovel the snow off her driveway and sidewalk.

Be the nudge.

Shine your light into her dark places. Nudge her to realize that she’s loved.

Don’t listen to the devil’s lies that you’re all alone and no other mama feels like you do, has those scary thoughts you do, wonders if you’re good enough. You are enough, Mama. You are more than enough. Look into the glistening eyes of your babes and realize they see Jesus shine out, even when you just don’t feel it.

And if you wanted crafty fall activities like this post “should” be:

  • Links to some Fall Tot Packs.
  • Here’s our fall sensory bin.
  • Here’s my autumn Pinterest board with lots of activities pinned.
  • Learn about Johnny Appleseed
  • Visit an apple orchard and pick apples!
  • Apple Tasting with graphs
  • Leaf crafts
  • Leaf nature study and art
  • Favorite Fall Book List
  • Leaf Unit Study from The Homeschool Scientist
  • Toddler Fall Unit Study from Untrained Housewife
  • Fall Unit Study from 123Homeschool4Me
  • Fall Unit from Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Fall is a fun time of year!

ProSchool Membership - Productive Homeschooling
Share
Pin10
Share
10 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Poppins Book Nook Tagged With: art, fall, leaves, PoppinsBookNook, unit study

My Last Baby is in Kindergarten

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

October 23, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Alex is movin’ on up! He’s pretty officially doing Kindergarten work now. He was getting so bored! I’m accommodating. No holding back!

So I printed out the Raising Rock Stars Kindergarten letter A pages and he went to town.

He knew the pictures that started with A just fine and colored them.

phonics fun

He practiced the sign for A and chose the correct picture at the bottom. So proud of my boy!

LOTW ASL

I love that it has Bible verses for each letter!

He cut out his verse and glued it in order with very little help. He recited it to me!

cutting Bible verse

He still loves cutting and gluing. It’s his favorite activity!

Do A Dot markers with his letter A maze. He loves dot markers!

letter maze

He’s so careful with tracing!

tracing letter a lines

He loves his apps. His new favorites are Gappy’s First Words and Mystery Letters.

tracing A iPad

Kindergarten is bittersweet since this is my last child!

Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: kindergarten, LOTW

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • …
  • 43
  • Next Page »
Suggested ResourcesFind Weird Books at AbeBooks.com

Archives

Popular Posts

10 DIY Gifts with Essential Oils10 DIY Gifts with Essential Oils
Natural Remedies for HeadacheNatural Remedies for Headache
10 Natural Remedies to Keep on Hand10 Natural Remedies to Keep on Hand
Henna Hands CraftHenna Hands Craft
Homemade Turkey Divan CasseroleHomemade Turkey Divan Casserole
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Reject Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT