Doll Can Create

100 Mile Life/Grandma Core

The Light Left On in the Larder or is it called the pantry? — January 9, 2026

The Light Left On in the Larder or is it called the pantry?

A January Reflection on Slow Suppers, Simple Living, and Beginning Again

Do we call it the larder or the pantry?
The fridge or cold storage?

Scroll down for the video.

It hardly matters, really — not when the deeper truth is this:

As long as it isn’t empty, it feels like home.

The year has turned. The lights are coming down. The ornaments are tucked away. The echo of holiday feasts still lingers in our kitchens. It also lingers in our wallets. The calendar has flipped, the house has grown quiet again, and suddenly a very old, very honest question rises up once more:

What’s for supper?

Not the Pinterest kind of supper.
Not the “company is coming” kind.
But the everyday kind.
The kind that keeps us fed, warm, and grounded.

January always seems to call us back to basics.
Back to soup pots that simmer slowly on the stove.
Back to bread heels tucked in the freezer.
Back to simple casseroles that don’t need fancy ingredients — only care.

It is the quiet work of making do.
Making warm.
Making grateful.

And in this quieter season, our cupboards begin to teach us something. They invite us to look again at what we already have. They remind us that nourishment is not only about what we buy. It is about what we remember to use. It is about what we are willing to stretch. It is also about what we are thankful to receive.

This is larder living.
This is slow food.
This is where thrift becomes a blessing and simplicity becomes a kind of prayer.

It is choosing the humble supper.
It is warming the same soup for the third night and finding that it somehow tastes better.
It is slicing the last onion with care.
It is setting the table even when no one is coming — because you are still worth a warm plate and a quiet moment.

There is holiness in this rhythm.
There is gentleness here.
There is a quiet kind of abundance that does not shout, but whispers,
You have enough. You are cared for. Begin again.

This winter, I am leaning into that whisper. I call it The 100 Mile Life. It is a gentle practice. We source our food, fibre, and daily needs from within roughly one hundred miles of home. Not as a rule. Not as pressure. But as a way of returning to what is nearby, what is seasonal, and what is enough.

It is about knowing where your carrots were grown.
Knowing who raised your eggs.
Knowing the hands that spun your wool.
And letting gratitude grow in the same soil as your supper.

In the quiet rhythm of winter evenings, we begin again. We do this with one humble meal. Then, with one open cupboard. Finally, with one warm pot at a time.


If your kitchen feels a little quieter this January, I invite you to step into this slower rhythm with me.

This week, choose one simple supper.
One meal made mostly from what you already have.
One local ingredient.
One candle lit on the table.

And as you stir the pot, whisper a simple prayer of thanks —
for what is enough,
for what is nearby,
and for the grace of beginning again.

You’re always welcome here in the warm light of the larder.
Let’s walk this slow, simple winter together.

The Grannie Doll January Blessing

May your soup pot be steady,
your bread be warm,
and your cupboards gently remind you:
you are cared for.

May your meals be simple,
your table be kind,
and your heart remember
that enough is holy.

May you find grace in leftovers,
joy in small portions,
and peace in the quiet work of beginning again.

And may your home —
whether larder or pantry,
fridge or cold storage —
always feel like a place of warmth, welcome, and rest.

Until we meet again at the table or by the rocking chair,
Grannie Doll

Baked Oatmeal Drop Cookies — December 23, 2025

Baked Oatmeal Drop Cookies

A cozy, old-fashioned treat for slow afternoons

There’s something grounding about oatmeal cookies. Maybe it’s the way oats soften as they bake. Or it could be how the kitchen fills with that warm cinnamon-butter scent. It feels like home before the cookies even leave the oven.

These baked oatmeal drop cookies are the kind you make on an ordinary afternoon. There is no mixer drama, and no fancy steps involved. Just a bowl, a spoon, and a little pause in the day. They have a soft center. The edges are lightly crisp. They are just right with a mug of tea or coffee beside you.

This is the recipe I reach for when I want something gentle and familiar. It is the kind of baking that feels like a deep breath.


Why I Love These Cookies

  • They’re simple and forgiving
  • Made with pantry staples
  • Soft and comforting, not overly sweet
  • Easy to adapt with what you have on hand

These aren’t bakery cookies. They’re home cookies. And that’s exactly the point.


Baked Oatmeal Drop Cookies

Ingredients

  • 1 cup rolled oats (old-fashioned)
  • ¾ cup all-purpose flour (whole wheat works beautifully too)
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon cinnamon
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • ½ cup butter, softened
  • ½ cup brown sugar, packed
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 2–3 tablespoons milk (only if the dough feels dry)

Optional add-ins (choose what feels right):

  • ½ cup raisins
  • ½ cup chopped walnuts or pecans
  • ½ cup chocolate chips
  • ¼ cup shredded coconut

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C) and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  2. In a medium bowl, whisk together oats, flour, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt.
  3. In another bowl, cream butter and brown sugar until soft and blended.
  4. Beat in the egg and vanilla.
  5. Stir the dry ingredients into the wet just until combined. Add milk if needed for a soft, scoopable dough.
  6. Drop spoonfuls (about 1½ tablespoons) onto the prepared baking sheet.
  7. Freeze for 10 minutes (optional)
  8. Bake for 10–12 minutes, until edges are lightly golden and centers are just set.
  9. Let cool on the pan for 5 minutes before moving to a wire rack.

A Few Gentle Baking Notes

  • For softer cookies: lean closer to 10 minutes. (I like them soft so yes, 10 minutes)
  • For a heartier cookie: use whole wheat flour and an extra spoonful of oats.
  • For crisp edges: lightly flatten the dough before baking.

Cozy Variations to Try

  • Maple Oatmeal Cookies: swap half the brown sugar for maple syrup.
  • Apple Cinnamon: add ½ cup finely diced apple and a pinch more cinnamon.
  • Breakfast-style Cookies: reduce sugar to ⅓ cup and use nuts + dried fruit.

A Small Kitchen Blessing

May your oven warm the room,
may your cookies cool just enough,
and may you remember —
even ordinary days can be sweet.

If you bake these, I’d love to hear how you made them your own. Share a cup of tea, a quiet moment, and a cookie or two. 💛

GrannieCore Quick Bread Cinnamon Buns — November 24, 2025

GrannieCore Quick Bread Cinnamon Buns

A cozy morning treat made with love, butter, and a little nostalgia

A Grannie Core Recipe


There are mornings when the kitchen feels like a refuge. The light comes softly through the curtains. The kettle hums. The world slows down just long enough to smell like cinnamon and butter.
That’s the heart of GrannieCore. It involves simple comforts, humble ingredients, and the joy of making something warm with your own two hands.

These quick bread cinnamon buns don’t ask for much — no yeast, no waiting, no fuss. Just a bowl, a spoon, and a quiet moment before the day begins.

They come together in less than an hour. However, the memory they create will linger far longer. Imagine the smell of cinnamon filling the house. Feel the buttery sweetness on your fingertips. Hear the sound of a loved one saying, “These taste like home.”


✨ Ingredients

For the dough

  • 2 cups locally milled flour (all-purpose or a blend with stone-ground whole wheat)
  • 2 tbsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ¾ cup local milk or buttermilk
  • ¼ cup melted farm butter (plus extra for brushing)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

For the filling

  • ¼ cup melted butter
  • ½ cup brown sugar + 1 tbsp local honey or maple syrup
  • 1½ tsp cinnamon
  • Optional: ¼ cup finely chopped apples, walnuts, or raisins

For the glaze

  • 2 tbsp melted butter
  • 1 tbsp honey or maple syrup
  • ¼ tsp cinnamon

🕰️ Directions

  1. Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Grease an 8-inch round or square baking dish with butter.
  2. Make the dough: In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Stir in milk, melted butter, and vanilla until a soft dough forms.
  3. Knead gently 4–5 times on a floured surface until smooth.
  4. Roll out the dough into a rectangle (about 12×8 inches).
  5. Spread the filling: Brush with melted butter, then sprinkle the brown sugar mixture evenly over top. Add apples or nuts if using.
  6. Roll up tightly from the long side and slice into 1-inch pieces.
  7. Arrange the rolls in your buttered pan, leaving a little space between each one. Brush the tops with a bit more butter.
  8. Bake for 25–30 minutes, until golden brown and fragrant.
  9. Glaze: While warm, drizzle with the honey-butter glaze or a simple icing made from powdered sugar and milk whisked in a teacup.

🌸 GrannieCore Serving Ideas

  • Serve on a vintage plate or enamel pan, lined with a crocheted doily.
  • Pair with a pot of tea or freshly brewed coffee in your favorite mug.
  • Wrap a few buns in parchment, tie with twine, and tuck in a sprig of rosemary for gifting.
  • Keep one on the counter for yourself. GrannieCore is as much about nurturing you as it is about others.

💭 A Note from the Kitchen

This morning, I used flour from a 100 mile mill and honey from our local apiary. The dough came together quickly, and the house filled with that familiar scent that seems to whisper, “All is well.”

That’s the heart of GrannieCore — not perfection, but presence. Not fancy, but faithful. The gentle rhythm of stirring, rolling, and baking your love right into the day.


🪶 Closing Thought

If you make these buns, take a photo before they disappear. Tag it #GrannieCoreBaking or #DollCanCreate. I’d love to see your cozy kitchens and cinnamon-swirled smiles.

Let’s keep these simple, handmade moments alive — one bun, one morning, one act of love at a time.

💗
— Grannie Doll

Sweet Pepper & Brown Sugar Baked Chicken on Red Cabbage — October 27, 2025

Sweet Pepper & Brown Sugar Baked Chicken on Red Cabbage

A 100 Mile Life Recipe

There’s something so grounding about opening the fridge and letting what’s already there inspire supper. In a 100 Mile Life, that’s part of the joy. You create something local, simple, and deeply satisfying from what’s on hand. This week’s recipe began with a package of local chicken thighs. It also included a bright head of red cabbage. A handful of pantry staples were also used. The result? A cozy baked dish that caramelizes as it cooks, bringing together sweet, savory, and homegrown flavor in every bite.

As the weather cools, I find myself turning to the oven more often. The warmth fills the kitchen. The smell of roasted vegetables is delightful. There is a quiet comfort in knowing dinner is made with care. It’s all part of living slowly, locally, and thankfully.


🐔 Sweet Pepper & Brown Sugar Baked Chicken on Red Cabbage

Ingredients

  • 6 bone-in chicken thighs
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • ½ cup crushed crackers (Ritz or butter crackers work beautifully) I used saltines
  • 2 tbsp dried onion flakes
  • 1 tsp salt (local sea salt if available)
  • ½ tsp black pepper
  • 1 cup sliced sweet peppers (mixed colours brighten the dish)
  • 2 green onions, chopped
  • 3 cups shredded red cabbage
  • 1 tbsp oil or butter (optional, for the cabbage layer)

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C).
  2. Make the coating: combine crushed crackers, brown sugar, dried onion, salt, and pepper in a small bowl.
  3. Coat the chicken: pat the thighs dry and roll them in the dry mixture until well covered.
  4. Prepare the base: spread shredded red cabbage in a lightly oiled baking dish. Scatter sweet peppers and green onions over top.
  5. Arrange the chicken on the bed of cabbage. Sprinkle any leftover coating over everything.
  6. Bake uncovered for 40–45 minutes, until the chicken is golden and reaches an internal temperature of 165°F (74°C).
  7. Rest for 5 minutes before serving. The cabbage underneath will soften and caramelize, catching the drippings from the chicken for an incredible, naturally sweet flavor.

🌾 Serving Suggestions

🥣 Local Grain Pilaf

Cook local barley, wheat berries, or brown rice in broth and finish with herbs or a drizzle of local honey.

🥕 Roasted Root Medley

Dice carrots, parsnips, and potatoes. Toss with oil and roast until crisp. Season with rosemary for a cozy, hearty side.

🍏 Apple Slaw

Mix grated local apples with cider vinegar, a bit of yogurt or mayo, and a pinch of salt. Bright, crunchy, and refreshing next to the roasted cabbage. (this is a new favourite of mine)

🌿 Buttered Peas or Green Beans

Add a squeeze of lemon and a crack of pepper to keep the plate lively.

🍞 Fresh Bread or Tea Biscuits

This is a perfect way to soak up the sweet and savory pan juices. It is especially delicious if baked with local flour and butter.


💭 100 Mile Life Reflection

This meal reminds me that simplicity is its own feast. When we choose ingredients grown or raised close to home, we’re feeding our bodies. We are also nourishing community, stewardship, and gratitude. A cabbage from a nearby farm, eggs or chicken from someone we know, even flour from a regional mill. Each ingredient tells a story of connection.

Cooking becomes an act of prayer, of care, of belonging.


🌱 Now it’s your turn.

What’s growing or waiting in your kitchen this week?
Try this 100 Mile Life recipe. Tag your post with #100MileLife. Share where your ingredients come from. Show how you’re living local in your own way.

Let’s keep celebrating the beauty of eating close to home, one meal at a time.

With gratitude and grace,
💗 Grannie Doll
Living slow, cooking local, crafting life one mile at a time.

Low-Fat Potato Leek Soup: Comfort in a Bowl — October 20, 2025

Low-Fat Potato Leek Soup: Comfort in a Bowl

From Grannie Doll – 100 Mile Kitchen

There’s something so deeply comforting about a bowl of homemade soup simmering on the stove. The scent of leeks softening fills the kitchen. Potatoes gently bubbling create a soothing sound. A touch of salt in the air brings me back to simpler days. Supper was warm, nourishing, and made with love.

This low-fat potato leek soup keeps all that old-fashioned coziness but lightens the load a bit. It’s smooth, creamy, and delicious — yet easy on the waistline and kind to the heart. Perfect for anyone wanting comfort food that still fits into a mindful eating plan.

As part of my 100 Mile Life, I’ve been leaning into local ingredients more than ever. Leeks from the farmers’ market combine with potatoes from a nearby farm stand. Even local milk or oat milk from our region adds to create something wholesome and rooted in place.


🌿 Why I Love This Soup

Soup season, for me, isn’t just about food — it’s about slowing down.
There’s something spiritual in stirring a pot, tasting, adjusting, and waiting. Cooking becomes a quiet rhythm of prayer. It is full of gratitude for the earth that grew the food. It includes appreciation for the hands that harvested it, and for the home that receives it.

And truly, when you can make a soup that’s rich and velvety, it feels like a small miracle. You don’t even need cream or butter.


🥣 The Recipe: Low-Fat Potato Leek Soup

Serves: 4–6
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 large leeks (white and light green parts only), cleaned and sliced
  • 1 small onion, diced
  • 3 medium potatoes, peeled and cubed
  • 4 cups low-sodium vegetable or chicken broth
  • 1 cup skim milk or unsweetened oat milk
  • 1 tbsp olive oil or cooking spray
  • 1 bay leaf
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Optional garnish: chopped fresh chives or parsley

Directions

  1. In a large pot, heat olive oil and sauté leeks and onion for 5–7 minutes, until soft.
  2. Add potatoes, bay leaf, and broth. Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer for 20–25 minutes.
  3. Remove bay leaf. Blend until smooth (immersion or blender).
  4. Stir in milk and heat gently — don’t boil. Season to taste.
  5. Garnish with herbs and enjoy warm.

💡 Add a handful of cooked cauliflower before blending for extra creaminess without fat.
🍞 Pair with a slice of homemade tea biscuit or local bread for a full 100-Mile meal.


💭 A Final Reflection

It’s easy to think of soup as “just food.” However, it’s also a form of grace. It’s a way of tending to body and soul.
Each spoonful reminds me that comfort doesn’t have to be complicated. Sometimes, the best things are local, humble, and made with heart.


If you try this recipe, I’d love to hear from you!
Leave a comment below or tag your post #100MileLife or #GrannieCoreKitchen so we can share our stories of slow, local, loving food together.

Until next time,
💗 Grannie Doll
Living Local. Creating with Love. Finding Grace in the Everyday.

Harvest Apple Salad: A Simple Taste of Autumn — October 14, 2025

Harvest Apple Salad: A Simple Taste of Autumn

A 100 Mile Life Recipe – see below

There’s something beautiful about the way apples signal the turning of the seasons. The air turns crisp, sweaters return to the chair by the door, and the scent of cinnamon fills the kitchen. That’s when this simple Harvest Apple Salad shines — a bowl of gratitude, sweetness, and crunch.

I love recipes that remind us how enough can be found in what’s near. Local apples, a drizzle of honey, and a handful of nuts from last fall’s pantry are enough. Nothing fancy, just real food grown close to home. That’s what the 100-Mile Life is all about: savoring the beauty of what’s already around us.

This salad comes together in minutes, but somehow feels like a celebration. Each bite carries a little story. It tells of the orchard down the road. It speaks of the bees that made the honey, and the hands that harvested the grain. It’s a taste of home, of community, and of the Creator’s goodness.

“Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in Him.” — Psalm 34:8

Take a pause, make a bowl, and enjoy a moment of stillness. Autumn is here — full of color, flavor, and the quiet promise of gratitude.

Harvest Apple Salad

Serves: 4
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 15 minutes

🧺 Ingredients

  • 3 crisp local apples (Honeycrisp, MacIntosh, or Gala), diced
  • 2 celery stalks, thinly sliced
  • ½ cup chopped walnuts or pecans (toasted if you like)
  • ½ cup seedless grapes, halved (optional)
  • ¼ cup dried cranberries
  • ¼ cup shredded carrots (optional for color and crunch)
  • ½ cup plain Greek yogurt or sour cream
  • 1 tbsp local honey or maple syrup
  • 1 tsp lemon juice or apple cider vinegar
  • A pinch of cinnamon and salt

How many of these ingredients are 100 Mile for you?


🥣 Instructions

  1. Prepare the dressing:
    In a small bowl, whisk together yogurt, honey, lemon juice, cinnamon, and salt until smooth.
  2. Assemble the salad:
    In a large bowl, combine the apples, celery, nuts, grapes, cranberries, and carrots.
  3. Mix it up:
    Pour the dressing over the salad and toss gently until everything is coated.
  4. Chill and serve:
    Refrigerate for 15–30 minutes to allow flavors to blend. Serve as a light lunch or a side with pork, chicken, or soup.

🌿 Variations

  • Add protein: Stir in diced cooked chicken for a hearty meal.
  • Make it vegan: Swap yogurt for coconut yogurt and honey for maple syrup.
  • Add greens: Serve on a bed of spinach or kale for extra freshness.

💛 Faith Reflection

“Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in Him.” — Psalm 34:8

A simple salad can remind us how God’s abundance shows up in small, local ways. It is the orchard down the road, the honey from a neighbor’s hive, or the walnuts gathered last fall. Each bite carries a story of care and connection.

Enjoy!

For more information on the 100 Mile Life click here:

©Created in Doll’s Kitchen

Support Local Producers: A 100-Mile Journey — September 16, 2025

Support Local Producers: A 100-Mile Journey

Day 16

Theme: Let’s connect a little deeper with the people who make your local food and goods.


Daily Task (active + simple)

  1. Take 20–45 minutes to map local producers within your 100-mile radius. Include farmers, mills, and bakers. Add yarn shops, honey producers, and maple syrup makers. Don’t forget cheesemakers, co-ops, and thrift stores.
  2. Pick one maker you don’t already buy from and plan a visit (or order one small item). If you can’t visit today, send an email or message. Ask them their story — who they are. Inquire about what they raise or make. Request one tip for shoppers.

Quick 100-mile recipe — Maple Pork Chop with Roasted Root Veggies

(Uses local pork, apples, maple syrup, root veg)

Ingredients (serves 2)

  • 2 local pork chops (about 150–200 g each)
  • 1 tbsp local maple syrup
  • 1 tsp mustard (local or pantry)
  • 1 apple, sliced thin (local)
  • 2 medium potatoes, cut into wedges (local)
  • 2 carrots, cut on the diagonal (local)
  • 1 small onion, quartered (local)
  • 1 tbsp olive oil (or local butter)
  • Salt & pepper, dried herbs (rosemary/thyme)

Method (30–40 min)

  1. Preheat oven to 425°F (220°C). Toss potatoes, carrots, onion with oil, salt, pepper, and herbs; roast on a tray for 25–30 min until golden.
  2. Meanwhile, heat a skillet. Sear pork chops 3–4 min per side until golden. Reduce heat; add apple slices to pan, pour on maple + mustard, spoon over chops and let glaze finish for 2–3 min.
  3. Rest chops 3 minutes. Serve with roasted veg and apples. Portion control: 1 chop + generous veg + 1 apple half per person.

Storage tip: If you bought extra local apples or veg, slice the apples thin. Dry them in the oven at a low temperature. Alternatively, simmer them in a little syrup to make a small jar of apple compote. It freezes or jars well.


Mini Craft / Maker-Love Activity (10–20 min)

  • Make a small thank-you/label card to include with your purchase from that maker. Add a hand-drawn logo or floral border. Include a short note: Example : “Bought with gratitude — Doll Creelman / 100-Mile Life.” Snap a photo for your socials.

Journal / Reflection Prompts

  • Who made the food in my kitchen today? Name them.
  • What surprised me about that maker’s story?
  • How does knowing who made my food change the way I eat or store it?
  • One small step I can take to support a local maker this week is…

Short devotional

“Small hands and steady work make the table possible. Today, by meeting a maker, we practice gratitude and stewardship — small choices that stitch us into our local community.”



Day-16 Checklist

  • Map 5 nearby makers (farm, mill, baker, yarn shop, co-op)
  • Visit or message one maker today
  • Buy one small local item (support local!)
  • Make a thank-you/label card to include with purchase
  • Cook the Maple Pork Chop recipe or try a local ingredient in a new way
  • Journal one reflection (line space)

“Little steps make a big difference. May peace and gratitude carry you through today.”

— Grannie Doll


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A Week of 100 Mile Meals: What I Ate, What I Learned — April 26, 2025

A Week of 100 Mile Meals: What I Ate, What I Learned


By Doll | dollcancreate.com

I challenged myself to spend an entire week eating meals. These meals were made from ingredients sourced within a 100-mile radius of my home. The idea was simple but profound. I wanted to deepen my connection to the land. It was also about supporting local producers and exploring what it means to truly eat “close to home.”

Here’s a glimpse into what I ate—and what I discovered along the way.


🍳 Day 1: A Breakfast Grounded in Home

  • Meal: Scrambled eggs with local cheddar, served on English muffins from Oakrun Farm Bakery (Brantford)
  • Local sources: Eggs from the farmers’ market, cheese from a regional dairy
  • Reflection: Starting the day with food grown and made nearby felt grounding. No fancy ingredients—just simple, satisfying nourishment.

🥣 Day 2: Soup for the Soul

  • Meal: Carrot, potato, and onion soup with homemade stock
  • Local sources: All vegetables from a local farm store; stock made from leftover bones from a locally raised chicken
  • Surprise: The flavour was richer than expected—fresh produce really does make a difference.
  • Reflection: I felt connected to the rhythm of seasons and soil.

🧀 Day 3: Plough-man’s Lunch

  • Meal: A rustic plate of local cheese, apples, sourdough bread, and pickled veggies
  • Local sources: Apple orchard just 15 minutes away; pickles canned last summer
  • Reflection: This felt like a picnic from another era—slow, thoughtful, rooted in tradition.

🥘 Day 4: Comfort in a Casserole

  • Meal: Ground beef and rice casserole with herbs from the garden
  • Local sources: Grass-fed beef from a farm visit last fall; rice sourced regionally
  • Reflection: Planning ahead (and freezing local meat) makes this lifestyle more doable than I thought.

🥕 Day 5: Veggie Skillet Supper

  • Meal: Cabbage, carrots, onion, and sausage all tossed together in a skillet
  • Local sources: Veg from the local stand; sausage from a family-run butcher
  • Surprise: How much I didn’t miss anything “exotic.” This was deeply satisfying.
  • Reflection: Eating locally doesn’t mean boring. It means seasonal, vibrant, and flavorful.

🥚 Day 6: Brunch for Dinner

  • Meal: Local eggs, fried potatoes, toast, and rhubarb preserves
  • Local sources: Everything within 50 miles—truly a feast from close to home
  • Reflection: There’s something joyful in keeping it simple and making it special.

🍎 Day 7: Sweet Ending

  • Meal: Baked apples with oats and a splash of cream
  • Local sources: Apples from the orchard, oats from a nearby mill, cream from a local dairy
  • Reflection: A week of eating local ended on a sweet note—and I wasn’t craving anything else.

💭 What I Learned

  • Planning is essential. Local eating takes more intention but less complication than you’d expect.
  • The taste is better. Fresher food, fewer miles, and a story behind every bite.
  • It’s about connection. To farmers, seasons, neighbours, and your own values.

This week reminded me that food isn’t just fuel—it’s a relationship. And when that relationship is rooted in care, proximity, and community, every meal becomes a moment of grace.