Free Recipe Friday!

Happy Friday, Amish Readers! We have another hearty recipe for you today…great for a chilly Fall evening! (And I think I picked this recipe as much for its fun name as I did for how good it looks!)

Thanks to The Homestyle Amish Kitchen Cookbook for another great recipe. Happy Eating!

Shipwreck Stew

1 1/2 lb. hamburger, browned and drained
1 large onion, diced
1 quart potatoes, cooked and diced
1 pint carrots, cooked and diced
8 oz. egg noodles, cooked
1 pint peas
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 can cream of celery soup
1 can cream of mushroom soup
Velveeta cheese slices

Layer in the order given (except the Velveeta) in a casserole dish and bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Slice Velveeta cheese as thin as you can and lay over the top of the casserole. Return to the oven to continue baking until the cheese is melted and bubbly.

A Wednesday Book Pick

Hello, Amish Readers! I thought I’d help us here at mid-week by going into our “vaults” and recommending an Amish novel that was published in 2008–Rachel’s Secret by BJ Hoff. It’s set during the Civil War, where a wounded riverboat captain finds himself in need of the safety and assistance of an Amish community. If you’ve read it, I’d love to hear what you thought of the story. And if you haven’t, maybe the book trailer below will persuade you to put it on your TBR (“to be read”) list.

Happy Reading!

What’s In Your Closet?

Though few of us would choose to limit our clothing options as severely as the Amish have, there is something to be said for the simplicity of the Amish way of dressing. Think about the amount of time you spend on clothing–shopping for it, coordinating outfits, cleaning it, storing it, finding the right shoes and the right accessories, and so on.

Imagine, then, how it would feel to wake up and face a simple closet or row of clothing pegs, knowing that your only choice is between three colors of the same dress. Many days I wish I could have such a streamlined wardrobe and spend my time on far more important matters!

Thanks to Mindy Starns Clark and A Pocket Guide to Amish Life for today’s insightful thought.

A Friday Book Pick

Greetings, Amish Readers! Occasionally here at AmishReader.com we’ll recommend a non-Amish novel that we think you all would enjoy. Today I have just such a recommend: The One Who Waits for Me by Lori Copeland. It’s a romantic story set just after the Civil War ends with unforgettable characters who truly believe in God’s promise of a future. If you read it, let us know what you think! And if you haven’t seen the book trailer yet, it’s here:

Take a Technology Break

Author Mindy Starns Clark shares some wonderful insights regarding our technology choices in today’s post, taken from her helpful little book A Pocket Guide to Amish Life.

On a recent vacation to upstate New York, my family and I stayed in a cottage near Lake Champlain. The place was surrounded by all sorts of opportunities for water sports, hiking, sightseeing, and more. When we arrived, I told my husband I was glad to see that the cottage had a television, as I had brought my Wii Fit just in case.

Wii Fit?” he laughed. “How about we go outside and enjoy some real fit?”

It’s easy to forget how “simulated” our lives are these days. Studying the Amish way of life reminds us that we can survive without all of the gadgets and devices that we think are so indispensible.

We also need to keep in mind technology’s “dark side”: cell phones that stop us from ever getting away from the office, texting that lets our teenagers carry on conversations with their friends while pretending to listen to their teachers, cable television that brings things into homes that we would never invite.

Just as I put away the Wii Fit and picked up a canoe paddle at the lake, may we all pause now and then to evaluate our technological choices, weigh the pros and cons of each, and eliminate or moderate as necessary. By emulating the peaceful, technology-free evenings in Amish homes, may we bring peace and quiet back to our own.

Happily Ever After

Hello, Amish Readers! If you haven’t read Jerry Eicher’s latest release yet, I hope you will soon–I think you’ll love it. Ella Finds Love Again is the wonderful conclusion to his Little Valley Series. If you haven’t seen the book trailer yet, it’s here:

Hate Crimes Against the Amish

While researching my current book, A Marriage for Meghan, God placed the perfect person to help me in my path. Although my main plot focuses on a struggling teacher, I developed a concurrent sub-plot which involves escalating criminal acts against the Amish. I met Lieutenant Matthew Linnscott of the sheriff’s department where I live in a Subway Restaurant. He gave me firsthand information about crimes against the Amish in Wayne and Holmes Counties, Ohio. Thugs had been robbing them on deserted country roads as they returned from auction sales or the grain elevator. They would block the buggy’s path with their cars and then rob these pacifistic people of their cash. How does one catch criminals in sparsely populated rural areas? I’ll tell you how the sheriff’s department handled it. In a joint effort of several agencies, including the FBI, teams of detectives borrowed buggies, dressed in Plain garb, and meandered down country roads during the time period the thieves favored. What a surprise for those thugs when their “helpless victims” turned out to be well-armed, highly-trained officers of the law. Now there are a few less criminals on the streets. And I was able to “pump the brain” of one of my local department’s finest for accounts of other hate crimes aimed at the gentle-hearted Plain folk. Nothing like being in the right place at the right time!

The Radical Amish

With all the tumult the Occupy movement has caused lately it’s interesting to compare the sort of uproar they create compared with the uproar the Amish don’t create.

The Amish don’t fly the flag. They won’t join the military or the police force. In wars past they have never purchased war bonds and they have never enlisted or taken up arms.They won’t celebrate the Fourth of July.

Due to this they have been considered not only unpatriotic by some but treasonous by others.

In the First World War they faced some pretty severe persecution for their pacifist stance. So did the Mennonites, the Quakers and the Hutterites, among others.

Churches were vandalized or burned down. People harassed. Some Amish were forced to enlist, drill with rifles and go through boot camp in the hopes of getting them to convert to a warlike mind set.

Some were imprisoned and beaten. Some were killed.

Despite this, none of the Amish of 1917 and 1918 retaliated. Nor did they stop loving America or praying for their country.

The stance they took 100 years ago is a stance they maintain today. It is just as radical now as it was then and just as likely to cause offense. Yet they do not stand on soapboxes or march or occupy buildings or snarl up traffic. They do not shout slogans or lash out in anger or hurl verbal abuse at those who disagree with their pacifism. They do not shake their fists in the air and curse. They live their radical lives quietly, trying not to draw attention to themselves. They live what they live without demonstrations or speeches or marches on Washington.

Unquestionably many people do not agree with the stance the Amish take. The Amish understand that. But they are not running for Congress or trying to win a popularity contest. They are simply trying to live out their faith in Jesus Christ. Agree or disagree with their views on the flag or July 4th or enlistment in the military, it is hard not to respect them precisely because they aren’t screaming out their point of view or handing out pamphlets on street corners or driving into town with MAKE LOVE NOT WAR painted in white letters all over their buggies.

If they are introduced to a man in uniform they will not snub him. They will shake his hand. Despite their beliefs about wars and armies, the Amish do not hate those who do what the Amish do not like. That also is radical. Most people cannot befriend those with whom they strongly disagree. They might be able to do it for a friend or family member but not for a stranger. The Amish do it all the time.

It would be nice, wouldn’t it, if more groups of people who had sharp disagreements with their country on certain matters adopted the Amish approach? We all know what they believe. The nations of America and Canada (who have Amish in Ontario) are well aware not only of the Amish commitment to pacifism but their avoidance of most modern technology. Yet this awareness is not due to Amish attacks on military bases and service personnel or destruction of iPods or iTabs or farm tractors or pickup trucks. There is no violence against what they dislike.

We know what they believe because they live it out in peace

So we watch. And wonder. Then go about our business. Which may include flying an F-18 fighter jet or driving a Buick.

Sometimes, if they want to, people join the Amish who are not born into the faith.

When they join they do so quietly. And are welcomed quietly and with warmth. The Amish do not make a show of it or market it or use converts for propaganda purposes.

Something else that is radical about the radical Amish.

I wrote a book about all this, in a 1917 and 1918 setting, and made it into a story. THE WINGS OF MORNING will be published by Harvest House of Oregon this  January, 2012.

I really hope you will get your hands on a copy, read it and let me know what you think. I also hope you will enjoy it and that it will mean something to you.

The Amish of 2011 and 2012 are the same as the Amish of 1911 and 1912.

And 1917 and 1918.

Free Recipe Friday!

Happy Friday, Amish Readers! Today’s recipe from The Homestyle Amish Kitchen Cookbook is one you might want to try on a chilly Fall evening. Happy Cooking!

Amish Bacon Bean Soup

1 pound bacon ends* or sliced bacon, cut into small pieces
1 pound navy beans
1 onion, chopped
4 quarts water, approximately
salt and pepper to taste

Place all ingredients in a large pot and simmer for at least 2 hours or until beans are thoroughly cooked.

*Bacon ends are inexpensive and have lots of smoke flavor and meat.

In Praise of the Slower Pace

The Amish say that riding in a horse and buggy gives them a place for quiet and reflection, maintains the slower pace of their lives, and allows them more time to look around and notice the beauty of their surroundings. That probably doesn’t hold true during a rainy rush hour on the main streets of Holmes or Lancaster Counties, but at other times and on less traveled roads, the slow pace of a buggy ride undoubtedly allows them to take in the sunshine, flowers, and rolling-hill vistas of farm after beautiful Amish farm.

We non-Amish probably won’t be converting our garages into stables anytime soon, but we would do well to remember that our own forms of slower transportation, such as walking and biking, carry more benefits than merely providing good exercise. Leaving the car at home also allows us to slow the pace, pause and reflect, and enjoy nature, which is good for both the mind and the soul. Regardless of the mode of transportation we choose–foot or bike or scooter or golf cart or horse and buggy–the important thing is to take a cue from the Amish and travel without our cars whenever we can.

(Thanks to Mindy Starns Clark and A Pocket Guide to Amish Life for this reminder!)