Old-Fashioned Hot Cross Buns
I don’t remember when Nana Ruth started making hot cross buns for Easter, or if she always had. What I remember is the smell — cinnamon and warm bread filling up the whole house on… Old-Fashioned Hot Cross Buns
I don’t remember when Nana Ruth started making hot cross buns for Easter, or if she always had. What I remember is the smell — cinnamon and warm bread filling up the whole house on… Old-Fashioned Hot Cross Buns
There’s a version of scalloped potatoes that comes from a can of cream-of-something soup, and I won’t pretend I haven’t made it on a Wednesday when the day got away from me. But that’s not… Nana Ruth’s Scalloped Potatoes
There’s a window on Easter morning — somewhere between the kids finding their baskets and when we need to leave for church — where breakfast has to just happen. No standing at the stove flipping… Cream Cheese Stuffed French Toast Casserole (Easter Brunch Made the Night Before)
There’s a cake that shows up on Nana Ruth’s table every Easter, and it’s this one. Not some towering, bakery-window showpiece with fondant flowers and gold leaf. Just a two-layer carrot cake with real cream… Nana Ruth’s Carrot Cake (The Only Easter Dessert You Really Need)
Every Easter morning, before the baskets and the egg hunt and the ham in the oven, I gather my three in the kitchen and we make Resurrection Rolls together. It’s the quietest twenty minutes of… Resurrection Rolls (The Easter Morning Tradition Our Family Won’t Skip)
If you’ve been anywhere near a recipe feed this year, you’ve probably seen some version of pickle dip floating around. Dill pickle this, pickle that — pickles are everywhere right now, and I’m not complaining.… Church Potluck Dill Pickle Dip
Easter From our table to yours, with love 27 Recipes Easter morning in our farmhouse feels different from any other day. The house is still dark and cold—the furnace takes its time—but I’m already in… Easter Recipes
A beautiful table says something without words: You matter. This moment matters. I’m glad you’re here. You don’t have to be fancy for that message to land.
The difference between Easter feeling like a gift and feeling like a deadline is planning. Real planning. Here’s how to break it into pieces small enough that none feel impossible.
I cook with my kids on Easter not because it makes things easier. It does none of those things. I do it because there’s something that happens when your hands work next to theirs.
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