Showing posts with label Connie Vines. Books We Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Connie Vines. Books We Love. Show all posts

Friday, November 28, 2025

It's a Southern Thing---Christmas Traditions Of the American South By Connie Vines

 My blog topic may be premature...But I love Christmas and don't want to miss out on the festivities!


I've touched on my nomadic childhood before. While many people have family gatherings, shared traditions, and family stories to tell, my holidays were unstructured and included only immediate family members (minus one if my father was deployed).

While my father was a 5th-generation Texan, my mother's lineage was Czech, and my formative years were spent in the deep south.

🎄Fencing with wrapping tubes. After the gifts were wrapped and safely under the tree, we (the children) tried out our fencing moves (no smack downs allowed).

Neighbors sharing sweet tea or eggnog while swaying on a porch swing.

Charleston, South Carolina, is magical during the holiday season. The streets are lit up, shop windows are decorated, and there's a buzz of holiday cheer that blends into the historical past. A past filled with pirates, colonial history, the Civil War, delicious food...and hurricanes.  

My most vivid memory: the hurricane. Charleston, like many coastal cities, is below sea level. Winds were 150 mph, and we were required to evacuate. My parakeet died (due to a change in air pressure). Later, someone fed me a slice of pecan pie. 

Skiff's Creek, Virginia. I recall snow. Lots of snow. No natural disasters, just new additions to the household (younger brother and a cat). I was allergic to the cat (he was given a new home).
I was pleased that my brother was allowed to stay. 

I recall consuming too many peanuts (Boiled), vendors pushed a cart along the sidewalk like ice cream vendors do today. I consumed too many and was taken to the doctor.

Recipe: 
1.5 cups kosher salt divided, plus more to taste
 2 lbs. raw peanuts in the shell 

Place 2 gallons of water in a 10 - 12-quart stockpot. Add 1/2 cup of salt to the water and stir until dissolved. Add raw peanuts.

Use a large dinner plate to help submerge the floating peanuts. Soak peanuts 8 hours or overnight. (This step saves a little time boiling, but if you don't have the luxury of soaking time, you can skip it.)

Step 2
Drain peanuts, then add water and salt and bring to a boil. Then reduce to low. Simmer, covered, until the peanuts are soft (5 - 8 hours). Add additional water if needed. 
Test: Peanuts should NOT be crunchy. 
Allow to set in water for 1 hour.
Drain and allow to cool before eating. 

Store in the shell, in a sealed container. Refrigerate for 7 to 10 days, or freeze for several months. 

Orlando, Florida,  (not my favorite place). 
Alligators, bugs, humid, and swampy (there are 100 lakes). I've discovered pythons are now residing, too. I found it much more humid than Charleston.  

Foods? Key Lime Pie, Classic Cuban Sandwich, and fried alligator. While not a holiday standard, they are all delicious.

Let's zip forward to 2025.


My "gingerbread" kitchen table

The table is set, and tomorrow the decorations will be scattered about the living room. My little Christmas tree will be displayed on December 1st. And, yes, I'm baking and freezing holiday treats.

Pecan pie will be my Christmas dessert; the rest will be standard holiday fare.  Collard greens and black-eyed peas will be served for good luck on New Year's Eve.

Yes, Connie has several projects in the works...



And I'm working out the kinks and mishaps of my upgraded computer and the operating system.  (me relying on my back-up system).

Happy Reading,

Connie

Visit: Amazon
or your favorite online vendor for my books

Lynx is available in audio!  audible





Friday, September 6, 2013

A Few Lines From. . . Connie Vines

Brede swallowed, trying to ignore the thick, tight feeling wedged in his throat.  He didn't welcome the onslaught of emotion that filled his chest and caused him to stroke her jaw with an unsteady finger tip.  He reminded himself that he didn't need to be involved in her problems; he had enough of his own.  As soon as the roads were passable, he'd get her to a doctor and the police could take care of the rest.

Still, no matter how hard he tried to remove himself from the situation, he kept remembering how fragile she'd seemed in his arms.  he felt as if he'd carried a sparrow, all feathers and tiny bones, out of the gully.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Connie Vines
Expect the UnExpected!
https://twitter.com/connie_vines

Stop back next week for a few lines from Joan Hall Hovey.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

What Woman Doesn't Love A Cowboy?


I was sitting on a hard, cold wooden bench, watching a rodeo in Thedford, Nebraska at the time.  This town had been a spot on my usual off-the-tourist radar places I frequent during family vacations.  This was the second time my husband, two young sons and I, had visited the small town and were absorbing the ambiance the western United States offered.  My father,  a fourth-generation Texan, amature rodeoed when he attended high school, so I understood the battering bronc riding had on the body. However, I hadn’t realized how strong the rodeo fan base was outside of the Lone Star State.

Everyone I’d spoken to loved cowboys, though he/she was a cowboy/cowgirl, wanted to become a cowboy, or simply loved the concept of ‘being a cowboy’.
That was when Lynx Maddox entered my life.
What a cowboy! 
With a dangerous reputation for taking chances and tempting, fate, rugged cowboy Lynx Maddox had one goal in life—to win the coveted Silver Buckle rodeo championship.  But when he sets eyes on lovely Rachel Scott, he becomes determined to capture her as well. . .

I hope you enjoy reading my Rodeo Romances.  “Lynx” is Book 1 of the series.
Please log on and watch my book trailer: http://Vimeo.com/57894742
I’ll be back on blog in 30 minutes, and will be blogging throughout the day.  So, grab a cup of coffee, watch my book trailer and read my book teaser—www.amazon.com/dp/B00ATSATM2. Or, visit my website: www.novelsbyconnievines.com
Today’s blog updates:
A recipe for “Cowboy Kisses”.  Nope it’s not a sweet candy.  Interested in other culinary recipes?  Look over my blog: www.naughtynibbles4you.wordpress.com
 An interview with Lynx Maddox.
My own ‘western days’ and photos of my horses.
"Never approach a bull from the front, a horse form the rear, or a fool from any direction,"

Connie

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