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2 Aug 2007

Feast of Bread News 2007

~ THE TURNING OF THE WHEEL ~ FEAST OF BREAD 2007

“You tear apart my body- Though the corn king dies he dies has died and dying still. He shall rise again and sink back into earth.

And …

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21 Jun 2007

Summer Solstice 2007 News

~ THE TURNING OF THE WHEEL ~ SUMMER SOLSTICE 2007

“On June twenty-first, the Germans build big bonfires all around the town, especially a hilly one. When the fire has burned down low enough to leap across, each boy takes a girl …

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1 May 2007

May Day 2007 News

~ THE TURNING OF THE WHEEL ~ MAY DAY 2007

We’ve been out in the woods all night, gathering in the May.

~Kipling

I remember as a child in a rural public school, the typical project each …

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21 Apr 2007

Feeding Our Roots ~ Editorial

As soon as you name something you destroy part of it’s vital essence. That being said, words have power and are useful for communicating ideas. For all practical purposes, we call ourselves Heathens, meaning we honor the beliefs and practices of Pre-Christian Europe. …

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21 Apr 2007

Days of the Week

I have been thinking about the days of the week. In Western cultures, the week commonly consists of five weekdays and two days of weekend. The Germanic gods, runes, and myths have left their traces in the very names of the days. This tells something of their enduring, Hidden power. …

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21 Apr 2007

Kitchen Medicine & Magic

In each issue, this column will explore commonplace medicinal/magical foods & tools in our 21st-century kitchens—many of the very same resources found at heathen hearths a thousand years ago. By investigating history, Norse sagas, and other folklore, we hope to rediscover some of the lost ancestral knowledge and power in our own kitchens. This section hopes to deepen our spiritual connections to, and enhance ritual workings of, Heathenry as a folk religion as well. Our premier article introduces three elements found in both cooking and creation lore, with ideas for their use in your spring rituals—fire, water, and salt. …

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21 Mar 2007

Review: Yule (Tor Lundvall)

Emotional electronica with a mistletoe arrow, this limited edition CD (only 333 originally available), leads us on a city mouse journey through the winter holiday. From entering the station to catch a homebound train, to being awaken on a snowy morning by bells and the promise of mysterious gifts, to the end of Yule and the beginning of the New Year, we are led by Xmas ghosts. …

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21 Mar 2007

Review: Blood of the Black Owl (Blood of the Black Owl)

Consisting of seven tracks, this ambitious metal journey begins by delivering the listener to the heart of the storm immediately upon pressing ‘play.’ A broad range of instrumentation is woven through the heavy rhythm guitar in a unique and entrancing manner. The stark, raw vocals of the opening turn to echoing screams and cavernous growls, surrounded by doom tempo drums and meditative breaks of pure drone. …

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21 Mar 2007

Review: Cherries (Agnivolok)

The sound of Agnivolok is an often uneven, yet masterfully produced fusion of European classical and folk with dark, atmospheric experimentalism. The lyricist and songwriter, Vera Agnivolok, creates some beautiful, warm melodies through the use of guitar, piano, and accordian. Yet her jarring and haunting vocal style, is one of the strong ingredients which sets this band apart form all others. …

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21 Mar 2007

THE HEX

Poem by William J. Meter …

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21 Mar 2007

Whey-fermented Salsa

Salsa is a great way to preserve the summer’s bumper tomato crop. But you may also use this recipe as an outline for ‘putting up’ vegetables as condiments in general. …

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21 Mar 2007

Whey and Cream Cheese

This simple recipe will not only give you cream cheese (plain or add fresh/dried herbs, green onions, fruit—the options are endless) but also whey for soaking grains and legumes, in addition to fermenting vegetables and fruits. …

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21 Mar 2007

Schmorgurken mit saurem Rahm und Dill

This dish is of the same ilk as warm potato salad. It’s easy to make and great for a cool summer night after the cucumbers start going crazy in the garden. …

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21 Mar 2007

Aunt Hannah’s Lebkuchen

This traditional cake recipe was taken from the: Pennsylvania Dutch Cookbook, Culinary Arts Press, Reading, PA …

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21 Mar 2007

Gravlax—Dry Curing Fish

Gravlax (pronounced “grov-lox”) is taken from the Swedish name for this dish. Norwegians also call it Gravlax and the Danish refer to it as Gravad laks. It literally means “buried salmon” and the name refers to the traditional method of preparation for this food: fresh salmon was heavly salted and buried in dry sand to ferment and cure. …

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21 Mar 2007

Artwork Issue 1

Sif by Markus Wolff SIF original cover art by Markus Wolff

Extersteine photographed by Erik Baumann

Extersteine photographed by Erik Baumann

Muspellheim by Jeroen van Valkenburg

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