CHERYL’S WINNERS!

Hi everyone! I want to thank you ALL for stopping by today and making my release day for Landon so special. As always, here at Petticoats & Pistols, we appreciate your  reading and participation! 

I’ve got three winners today! If you will please contact me tomorrow at fabkat_edit@yahoo.com and provide your contact information, I would appreciate it. Some people use a different email for their Kindle reads than their regular email, so I always want to be sure I’m sending these prizes to the right place! 

My winners are:

CRYSTAL STEWART

BN100

KATE SPARKS

Congratulations, ladies! Let me hear from you ASAP so I can get these prizes headed your way, and thanks again for taking part in my release day today! 

 

LANDON–RELEASE DAY AND A GIVEAWAY! by Cheryl Pierson

Hi everyone! I am so excited to announce RELEASE DAY for my book, LANDON, Book #9 in the GUN FOR HIRE series! This is a 10-book, multi-author series that is the brainchild of Charlene Raddon, and I’m so grateful to her for having this fabulous idea and putting this all together.

Each of these stories is a stand-alone tale, but they are all about a hero who lives by the gun. In the end, of course, he’s going to find happiness when he meets the woman he comes to love passionately and who loves him back just as fiercely.  Is there any better kind of story?

The books began making their debut in March, and we are about to complete the series with mine and Winnie Griggs’ stories, so they are all available but Winnie’s now, and hers will be out in 2 weeks! In the back of my book is a sneak peek at Winnie’s story (and it is a grabber!) Take a look at these beautiful covers Charlene created for us. Every one of them just makes me itch to pick it up and sit down in a comfortable chair and read all afternoon!

Covers of all books in Gun For Hire series

When I started thinking about the characters for this story, I knew I had to have a hero who was fueled by the need for justice of some kind, and he was determined to get it no matter what. Though I don’t go into his former life in the story, I mention that he was responsible for other men at one point.  Was he an outlaw? A fugitive? A lawman? A soldier? A prisoner? It’s not clear, and I liked it like that because it leaves a bit of mystery in his personality, and we don’t know whether he is on the side of the law or not. All we have to go on is the same thing Alissa can see in him when she first meets him and gets to know him through their time together.

Alissa has been in a tight spot for many years now. After her own mother dies, her father marries a much younger woman. When the woman dies almost as soon as their baby is born, it’s up to Alissa to step in and raise the boy, even though she’s only 14 at the time. With a no-good gambler for a father, her life has been misery to try to provide even  the most basic necessities for her younger brother. When her father is killed, she sees it as both a blessing and a curse. Set to travel to Indian Territory for the land rush of 1889, she has no choice but to continue with the plans her father has made and try to do it alone with a 5-year-old to care for.

Some of this series is available in paperback and in Kindle, and Landon is one that can be purchased in either format—and, hopefully, soon, in Audible, as well.

Here’s the blurb to whet your reading appetite! You can order LANDON now, as well as the rest of the series, all except Winnie’s – and of course, you can PRE-ORDER hers! (See links below!)

BLURB FOR LANDON

Alissa Devine finds herself in an unthinkable situation when her father is murdered, and she’s left to raise her young brother, Zach. With $22 to her name and her no-account gambler father’s burial to pay for, Lissie has no choice but to carry on with her father’s plan to take part in the Oklahoma land run. But single women aren’t allowed on the wagon train.

Landon Wildcat’s mission for months has been to find the man who abducted his younger sister. His search ends when crooked gambler Happy Devine gets what he deserves at the end of Land’s gun. But that act of vengeance leaves Lissie and Zach alone with no man to accompany them on the wagon train.

Wagon Master Bill Castle hires Land as his scout; a devil’s bargain—for both of them. Land offers Lissie his protection, suspecting the unscrupulous Mr. Castle has indecent intentions toward her.

When one of the settlers is murdered, Land takes the outlaws on in a desperate battle to protect the only witness, and nearly pays the ultimate price. Land’s life hangs in the balance, but the wagon train moves on, callously deserting him and the teen boy he saved, along with Lissie and Zach.

Through the hardship, Lissie and Land both realize how much they love one another, and what they have come so close to losing. Though danger lurks around every curve in the road, Lissie believes with all her heart there is a place for their small band of settlers in this untamed Territory. Now that love has finally come, will Fate allow a miracle for their happiness with this new beginning?

I’m giving away a KINDLE COPY of LANDON today!  Here’s my question for the day: Alissa had several years of hardship before finding happiness—what was the hardest time you ever went through and what brought you happiness at the end of it? Be sure to leave a comment for a chance to win!

AMAZON GUN FOR HIRE SERIES PAGE

ORDER LANDON HERE! 

I love series like this one. The heroes and heroines are all different because they come from varying backgrounds and places, but the heroes have something in common that holds the thread of the series together. 

CHERYL’S AMAZON AUTHOR PAGE

WHAT’S ON YOUR READING SHELF? PART 2 by Cheryl Pierson

Hi everyone! Like most everyone I know, I’m always on the lookout for good reads (even thought I’ve got a huge stack of books on my nightstand, and I’m a VERY slow reader!) From time to time, I like to blog about some favorite books, and hopefully you all will comment about some of your faves, as well! This gives me more books to add to my to-be-read pile, and I love that because I learn, from you all, about books and authors I might not have known about otherwise. 

I have sure read some wonderful books lately, when I’ve been able to have time to read! I’ve been working on my own story, LANDON, for the GUN FOR HIRE series and so my reading time recently has been pretty limited. But–I always find time for a good story, even if it’s just a chapter when I sit down to eat lunch.

Right now, I’m reading Kristin Hannah’s wonderful story, THE WOMEN. This is about a young girl who impulsively joins the Army as a nurse during the Vietnam War. This book is especially poignant for me since I grew up during that era, and both my brothers-in-law were serving in the military over there.

I was too young to consider going, and I didn’t know any women who were there–this book makes the point that even people who SHOULD have known there were women serving as nursesin Vietnam did not know it, and Frankie, the heroine, had that–among other things–to contend with when she finally came home. No one believed she had been a combat nurse for the past two years.

 

Here’s the blurb, and it’s a wonderful story, told in a way that puts you right there with Frankie during everything. 

 

BUY ON AMAZON: https://tinyurl.com/4v3zm6w3

Women can be heroes. When twenty-year-old nursing student Frances “Frankie” McGrath hears these words, it is a revelation. Raised in the sun-drenched, idyllic world of Southern California and sheltered by her conservative parents, she has always prided herself on doing the right thing. But in 1965, the world is changing, and she suddenly dares to imagine a different future for herself. When her brother ships out to serve in Vietnam, she joins the Army Nurse Corps and follows his path.

As green and inexperienced as the men sent to Vietnam to fight, Frankie is over-whelmed by the chaos and destruction of war. Each day is a gamble of life and death, hope and betrayal; friendships run deep and can be shattered in an instant. In war, she meets?and becomes one of?the lucky, the brave, the broken, and the lost.

But war is just the beginning for Frankie and her veteran friends. The real battle lies in coming home to a changed and divided America, to angry protesters, and to a country that wants to forget Vietnam.

The Women is the story of one woman gone to war, but it shines a light on all women who put themselves in harm’s way and whose sacrifice and commitment to their country has too often been forgotten. A novel about deep friendships and bold patriotism, The Women is a richly drawn story with a memorable heroine whose idealism and courage under fire will come to define an era.

Another wonderful story I just finished reading is called THE KEEPER OF HAPPY ENDINGS by Barbara Davis. This is my first book by her that I’ve read, and it definitely will not be the last! What a wonderful storyteller she is, and I love her masterful weaving to all the storylines together to bring the novel to an end that I never would have suspected. 

Buy here on Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/48ybtv3x

An enchanting novel about fate, second chances, and hope, lost and found, by the Amazon Charts bestselling author of The Last of the Moon Girls.

Soline Roussel is well schooled in the business of happy endings. For generations her family has kept an exclusive bridal salon in Paris, where magic is worked with needle and thread. It’s said that the bride who wears a Roussel gown is guaranteed a lifetime of joy. But devastating losses during World War II leave Soline’s world and heart in ruins and her faith in love shaken. She boxes up her memories, stowing them away, along with her broken dreams, determined to forget.

Decades later, while coping with her own tragic loss, aspiring gallery owner Rory Grant leases Soline’s old property and discovers a box containing letters and a vintage wedding dress, never worn. When Rory returns the mementos, an unlikely friendship develops, and eerie parallels in Rory’s and Soline’s lives begin to surface. It’s clear that they were destined to meet—and that Rory may hold the key to righting a forty-year wrong and opening the door to shared healing and, perhaps, a little magic.

I’ve discovered a wonderful author, thanks to fellow-filly Linda Broday, named Lisa Wingate. Lisa, I learned, is also a fellow Oklahoman. She writes some excellent stories, and every one of them has been intricately researched down to the finest detail. She also includes a very extensive bibliography of all her references, which I LOVE. But now, more about the stories I want to tell you about. I started with her second book, THE BOOK OF LOST FRIENDS. I can’t do justice to it, so I’ll include the blurbs for it and for the other one, BEFORE WE WERE YOURS. A lot of her books are based on actual historical events–things you might never have heard of. These were both new to me, and very interesting. She has a wonderful way of putting her characters in these stories and making them come alive. I keep a box of tissues handy, and my goodness, I NEEDED THEM! 

Here’s the blurb for THE BOOK OF LOST FRIENDS, and the buy link in case you want to read it. I highly recommend it.

Buy here at Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/yswmfshc

Bestselling author Lisa Wingate brings to life startling stories from actual “Lost Friends” advertisements that appeared in Southern newspapers after the Civil War, as newly freed slaves desperately searched for loved ones who had been sold away.

Louisiana, 1875: In the tumultuous era of Reconstruction, three young women set off as unwilling companions on a perilous quest: Hannie, a freed slave; Lavinia, the pampered heir to a now destitute plantation; and Juneau Jane, Lavinia’s Creole half sister. Each carries private wounds and powerful secrets as they head for Texas, following roads rife with vigilantes and soldiers still fighting a war lost a decade before. For Lavinia and Juneau Jane, the journey is one of stolen inheritance and financial desperation, but for Hannie, torn from her mother and siblings before slavery’s end, the pilgrimage west reignites an agonizing question: Could her long-lost family still be out there? Beyond the swamps lie the limitless frontiers of Texas and, improbably, hope.

Louisiana, 1987: For first-year teacher Benedetta Silva, a subsidized job at a poor rural school seems like the ticket to canceling her hefty student debt—until she lands in a tiny, out-of-step Mississippi River town. Augustine, Louisiana, is suspicious of new ideas and new people, and Benny can scarcely comprehend the lives of her poverty-stricken students. But amid the gnarled live oaks and run-down plantation homes lie the century-old history of three young women, a long-ago journey, and a hidden book that could change everything.

I mentioned Lisa Wingate had two books I wanted to tell you about–actually, there are a whole slew of them, but I want to talk about BEFORE WE WERE YOURS since it was the first book she wrote, if I’m not mistaken. Once I read THE BOOK OF LOST FRIENDS, I could not get enough of her stories, and BEFORE WE WERE  YOURS did not disappoint at all.

Here’s the blurb:

Buy here at Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/y8me9dnc

Memphis, 1939. Twelve-year-old Rill Foss and her four younger siblings live a magical life aboard their family’s Mississippi River shantyboat. But when their father must rush their mother to the hospital one stormy night, Rill is left in charge—until strangers arrive in force. Wrenched from all that is familiar and thrown into a Tennessee Children’s Home Society orphanage, the Foss children are assured that they will soon be returned to their parents—but they quickly realize the dark truth. At the mercy of the facility’s cruel director, Rill fights to keep her sisters and brother together in a world of danger and uncertainty.

Aiken, South Carolina, present day. Born into wealth and privilege, Avery Stafford seems to have it all: a successful career as a federal prosecutor, a handsome fiancé, and a lavish wedding on the horizon. But when Avery returns home to help her father weather a health crisis, a chance encounter leaves her with uncomfortable questions and compels her to take a journey through her family’s long-hidden history, on a path that will ultimately lead either to devastation or to redemption.

Based on one of America’s most notorious real-life scandals—in which Georgia Tann, director of a Memphis-based adoption organization, kidnapped and sold poor children to wealthy families all over the country—Lisa Wingate’s riveting, wrenching, and ultimately uplifting tale reminds us how, even though the paths we take can lead to many places, the heart never forgets where we belong.

Last but not least, I’m reading my way through the GUN FOR HIRE series that I’m so fortunate to be a part of! Caroline Clemmons’ story, SHAD, just released, and you can buy the first seven stories in the series that are RELEASED now, as well as pre-order the other three that are yet to come! 

My story is called LANDON and I want to share the blurb and picture with you. 

PRE-ORDER ON AMAZON HERE: https://tinyurl.com/mt48unuz

GUN FOR HIRE SERIES PAGE ON AMAZON:  https://tinyurl.com/4vxwzkz7

Alissa Devine finds herself in an unthinkable situation when her father is murdered, and she’s left to raise her young brother, Zach. With $22 to her name and her no-account gambler father’s burial to pay for, Lissie has no choice but to carry on with her father’s plan to take part in the Oklahoma land run. But single women aren’t allowed on the wagon train.

Landon Wildcat’s mission for months has been to find the man who abducted his younger sister. His search ends when crooked gambler Happy Devine gets what he deserves at the end of Land’s gun. But that act of vengeance leaves Lissie and Zach alone with no man to accompany them on the wagon train.

Wagon Master Bill Castle hires Land as his scout; a devil’s bargain—for both of them. Land offers Lissie his protection, suspecting the unscrupulous Mr. Castle has indecent intentions toward her.

When one of the settlers is murdered, Land takes the outlaws on in a desperate battle to protect the only witness, and nearly pays the ultimate price. Land’s life hangs in the balance, but the wagon train moves on, callously deserting him and the teen boy he saved, along with Lissie and Zach.

Through the hardship, Lissie and Land both realize how much they love one another, and what they have come so close to losing. Though danger lurks around every curve in the road, Lissie believes with all her heart there is a place for their small band of settlers in this untamed Territory. Now that love has finally come, will Fate allow a miracle for their happiness with this new beginning?

What books have you read lately? Do tell! I love to add new books to my reading list!

 

 

CHERYL PIERSON BOOKS ON AMAZON: https://tinyurl.com/576zh766

Hometown Hoedown – Cheryl Pierson

 

My hometown was a little place in central Oklahoma called Seminole. Though I was born in Duncan, Oklahoma, we moved to Seminole the summer I turned six. In fact, we celebrated my birthday sitting on drawers turned on their end around a big cardboard box with the ONLY store-bought birthday cake I ever had on it.

Seminole was an “oil boom town” that, at one point, produced more oil than anywhere else in the world. But in the beginning, When Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory merged to become the U.S. state of Oklahoma in 1907, there were 206 residents. But with the discovery of a high-producing oil well in the city in 1926, Seminole transformed from a town of 854 to a boom town of 25,000 to 30,000 residents. (Wikipedia reference.)

The streets were so muddy, travel was hard, but they managed. Finally, they paved the streets with bricks—and those bricks are still there to this very day! As you can see, this mud was something else, and it was not going away.

Seminole was in competition with Wewoka to become the county seat of Seminole County, but Wewoka won out. They were our arch-rivals in high school sports competitions, too. Here’s a picture of the high school where I attended—we were the Seminole Chieftains, and at every sporting event, one of the town elders said a prayer  over the loud speaker in English, and then repeated it in the Seminole language, as well, before we started. This lovely old building was abandoned for many years, but has recently been bought and is under renovations. The newspaper clipping shows the school in 1930, when it was new. See the architectural arrowheads around the top? These were later removed as they had begun to crumble and fall. I was in school there in the 1970’s, and by then, the arrowheads were gone.

I was so lucky to get to move there just as I turned six and start school at Woodrow Wilson Elementary School. The school was only a couple of blocks from my house, and I could walk or ride my bike, most days.

Our neighborhood was filled with kids, and as luck would have it, another little girl, only one year older than I, moved in about three houses down on the opposite side of the street the very same week we moved. Her name was Jane, and she and I became fast friends. Both of us had much older siblings and were so lonely for a playmate—and now, we had one another! Here we are in my sandbox on a fall day, when I was 8 and Jane was 9.

The principal’s assistant at our elementary school, Mary Jo Edgmon, was the sister of folk singer Woody Guthrie. One of my enduring memories was how, in the mornings, sometimes our teacher would put the intercom on so it could be heard in the office, and our class would start the day with a couple of songs—we’d sing a lot of Woody Guthrie songs. So many times, at the end of our song performance, Mrs. Edgmon would say, “That is so beautiful! I wish my brother could hear you all singing his songs. It would mean the world to him.” Sadly, by that point in time, Woody Guthrie was in the final stages of Huntington’s Disease that eventually claimed his life. So often, I’ve wished I’d looked her up as an adult and spoken with her about him.

Growing up, going to the movie theater was a huge part of our entertainment. For a while, we had three movie theaters, but by the time I was old enough to go by myself, there was only one. This was such a small, safe town, our parents would take us down and drop us off at the theater with money for a snack (usually about $1.00–you could get a huge dill pickle for $.10, popcorn for $.15, or a candy bar for $.25, and cokes were about $.25, as well)  and $.10 for the pay phone at the nearby drugstore when the movie let out. We were all about 9 or 10 when we were deemed old enough to behave ourselves without parents along, and what a milestone that was! Can’t tell you how many James Bond movies we all went to watch (none of us understanding what in the heck was going on, it just meant a lot to all be together and say we’d seen that movie!)

As we got older, the theater would close in the summer time and ONLY the drive-in theater would be open. BOO-HOO! What did we do? We drove over to nearby Shawnee, which was a little bigger than Seminole, and went to the movies there. But sometimes, of course, the drive-in movie was the best option.

Time passed, our lives taken up with school activities, band, piano lessons, dance lessons, and lots of socializing, of course. In the summers, Seminole merchants hosted a CRAZY DAYS sale, where they put out their sale goods on the sidewalk and we could all just walk and look to hearts’ content, with a bit of money in our pocket to buy something we might not be able to live without.

The library was another wonderful haven–it was housed in an old building that was accessed by a stairway. The head librarian was an older woman named Miss Goldie. She climbed those stairs every day and always had a smile for us kids. It was cool in the library and a wonderful place to be able to go and spend time while our parents were shopping or at the beauty shop or the do-it-yourself dry cleaners.

In August 1970, Seminole hosted its first All-Night Gospel Singing. During its heyday an estimated twenty-five thousand people attended the annual event. I honestly do not remember this–probably because we were caught up in so many other activities. By that time, I was thirteen years old. The Viet Nam war was raging and both my brothers-in-law were in the service, so we did have our worries. 

One of our exciting hobbies on those Friday and Saturday nights was to borrow the family car and “make the drag” downtown. This included driving past our NEW SONIC DRIVE IN, where we could pull in (if there was a parking space available) and order the most wonderful food and drinks ever. The founder of the Sonic Drive-In chain, Troy N. Smith, was from Seminole.

This was our view of Main Street, Seminole, Oklahoma, during the ’60’s – ’70’s. All these stores are gone now, with the advent of malls within driving distance, and of course, Amazon. I have not been back to Seminole in many years, but from what I hear, there are few of these individual stores left operating. 

In the summer of 1974, my dad got transferred to West Virginia, and we had to move. I was very lucky–most oil field engineers got moved around a lot more often, but I had been able to go to school in the same place ever since first grade through my junior year. Now…we had to go. To say I was heartbroken is an understatement. I loved my life there–my school, my classmates and friends, all the local “haunts” we’d frequent, and I knew moving for that last year of school was going to be horrible. I was not wrong. LOL But I got through it, and still have so many good friends from my growing up years in Seminole.

I think the biggest “hoe-down” times must have happened back in the 1920’s and 1930’s, on into the 1940’s–when Seminole was a huge, prosperous oilfield town. There are so many stories of things that happened back then –it had to have been such a raw and wild time, especially coming so soon after statehood (1907). 

A short “aside” story: Our house in Seminole was between two HUGE mansions that were built back in the heyday of the oil boom. In one house lived the widow of a prominent attorney, and in the other, the widow of one of the oil tycoons. They were in their late 80’s when we moved to Seminole in 1963–and were probably two of the only people left who could remember Seminole as it was in those old days. They would not speak to one another! I’ve so often thought about how hard it must be to have someone who had shared knowledge and memories of a time and place no one else around you had, yet, dislike them so that you wouldn’t even talk to them or reminisce with them. A real pity! But perhaps those oil boom “hoe-down” days were too much, too painful, to remember for them somehow.

By the time we moved there in 1963, there were still many operational rigs nearby, but those wild and woolly days of the “boom town” were over. This is a picture of the train depot for the Rock Island line. It was at the end of Main Street. Just look at the throngs of people here–this was during the oil boom.

Do you have any particular childhood memories, good or bad, that stand out for you to this day? One of mine was learning to ride a bike BAREFOOT and cutting my foot open so that I had to go get stiches! My dad couldn’t stand the sight of blood and he was driving like crazy to get us to the hospital. It was a holiday weekend–4th of July, I think. My mom was trying to just keep calm for everyone. I was 6 or so. what do I remember most? The tension in that car. LOL What about you? 

 

(NOTE: I do not own any of these pictures other than the one of me with Jane in the sandbox. All credit to the respective owners and I’m not sure who they are.)

A BEAUTIFUL REMEMBRANCE 100 YEARS LATER–by Cheryl Pierson

Have you ever noticed how obituaries of yesteryear seem to always “say more” than many of the current ones do? (I don’t know—maybe it’s just me—I’m an obituary reader! Even those of people I don’t know.) I think one reason for this is, of course, now, everything is shortened and abbreviated to the point that sometimes the heartfelt meaning is lost. We have to make it “fit on the page” and not “run too long” in the fast pace of our modern world.

In 1921, William Allen White was the owner of the Emporia Gazette. So when his teenage daughter, Mary, died suddenly, he penned one of the best obituaries that probably ever has been written. Reading this final summation of her young life, I felt like I knew Mary without, of course, having ever met her. Her obituary became famous throughout the United States at the time it was published, 100 years ago this month.

In my upcoming novel, LANDON, a young woman about the same age as Mary dies. She happens to be a central player in the story, even though she dies before the story ever begins. Though there was no obituary written for Little Dove in my story–she was half Indian, the wife of a gambler–I wanted to show how loved she was by the other characters in the story who are left behind. In a twist of fate, she is the reason that Landon and Alissa fall in love–she’s Landon’s younger sister, and also the mother of Alissa’s young half-brother, Zach. Landon had planned to take the boy from Alissa however he could, but he never planned on falling in love with her. Alissa had no idea that Landon and Little Dove were connected in any way until much later, after she was as in love with him as he with her.

AMAZON PRE-ORDER LINK FOR LANDON: https://tinyurl.com/ap9f493n

This obituary written for Mary White is so precious and lovely, I found myself wishing that Little Dove had had some kind of remembrance like this as well, but I think for her, it would be enough to know how much her brother and her friend loved her, and kept her memory alive for her young son.

Mary’s obituary is long, compared to those of today. I hope you’ll read it all the way through and share this father’s love and truly,  the entire community’s love, for this young woman. She must have been such a  shining star, even at her young age.

 

Mary White obituary

by William Allen White

Emporia Gazette, May 17, 1921

 

The Associated Press reports carrying the news of Mary White’s death declared that it came as the result of a fall from a horse. How she would have hooted at that! She never fell from a horse in her life. Horses have fallen on her and with her—”I’m always trying to hold ’em in my lap,” she used to say. But she was proud of few things, and one of them was that she could ride anything that had four legs and hair. Her death resulted not from a fall but from a blow on the head which fractured her skull, and the blow came from the limb of an overhanging tree on the parking.

 

The last hour of her life was typical of its happiness. She came home from a day’s work at school, topped off by a hard grind with the copy on the High School Annual, and felt that a ride would refresh her. She climbed into her khakis, chattering to her mother about the work she was doing, and hurried to get her horse and be out on the dirt roads for the country air and the radiant green fields of spring. As she rode through the town on an easy gallop, she kept waving at passers-by. She knew everyone in town. For a decade the little figure in the long pigtail and the red hair ribbon has been familiar on the streets of Emporia, and she got in the way of speaking to those who nodded at her. She passed the Kerrs, walking the horse in front of the Normal Library, and waved at them; passed another friend a few hundred feet farther on, and waved at her.

 

The horse was walking, and as she turned into North Merchant Street she took off her cowboy hat, and the horse swung into a lope. She passed the Tripletts and waved her cowboy hat at them, still moving gayly north on Merchant Street. A Gazette carrier passed—a High School boy friend—and she waved at him, but with her bridle hand; the horse veered quickly, plunged into the parking where the low-hanging limb faced her and, while she still looked back waving, the blow came. But she did not fall from the horse; she slipped off, dazed a bit, staggered, and fell in a faint. She never quite recovered consciousness.

 

But she did not fall from the horse, neither was she riding fast. A year or so ago she used to go like the wind. But that habit was broken, and she used the horse to get into the open, to get fresh, hard exercise, and to work off a certain surplus energy that welled up in her and needed a physical outlet. The need has been in her heart for years. It was back of the impulse that kept the dauntless little brown-clad figure on the streets and country roads of the community and built into a strong, muscular body what had been a frail and sickly frame during the first years of her life. But the riding gave her more than a body. It released a gay and hardy soul. She was the happiest thing in the world. And she was happy because she was enlarging her horizon. She came to know all sorts and conditions of men; Charley O’Brien, the traffic cop, was one of her best friends. W. L. Holtz, the Latin teacher, was another. Tom O’Connor, farmer-politician, and the Rev. J. H. Rice, preacher and police judge, and Frank Beach, music master, were her special friends; and all the girls, black and white, above the track and below the track, in Pepville and Stringtown, were among her acquaintances. And she brought home riotous stories of her adventures. She loved to rollick; persiflage was her natural expression at home. Her humor was a continual bubble of joy. She seemed to think in hyperbole and metaphor. She was mischievous without malice, as full of faults as an old shoe. No angel was Mary White, but an easy girl to live with for she never nursed a grouch five minutes in her life.

 

With all her eagerness for the out-of-doors, she loved books. On her table when she left her room were a book by Conrad, one by Galsworthy, “Creative Chemistry” by E. E. Slosson, and a Kipling book. She read Mark Twain, Dickens, and Kipling before she was ten—all of their writings. Wells and Arnold Bennett particularly amused and diverted her. She was entered as a student in Wellesley for 1922; was assistant editor of the High School Annual this year, and in line for election to the editorship next year. She was a member of the executive committee of the High School Y.W.C.A.

 

Within the last two years she had begun to be moved by an ambition to draw. She began as most children do by scribbling in her school books, funny pictures. She bought cartoon magazines and took a course—rather casually, naturally, for she was, after all, a child with no strong purposes—and this year she tasted the first fruits of success by having her pictures accepted by the High School Annual. But the thrill of delight she got when Mr. Ecord, of the Normal Annual, asked her to do the cartooning for that book this spring, was too beautiful for words. She fell to her work with all her enthusiastic heart. Her drawings were accepted, and her pride–always repressed by a lively sense of the ridiculous figure she was cutting–was a really gorgeous thing to see. No successful artist every drank a deeper draft of satisfaction than she took from the little fame her work was getting among her schoolfellows. In her glory, she almost forgot her horse—but never her car.

 

For she used the car as a jitney bus. It was her social life. She never had a “party” in all her nearly seventeen years—wouldn’t have one; but she never drove a block in her life that she didn’t begin to fill the car with pick-ups! Everybody rode with Mary White—white and black, old and young, rich and poor, men and women. She like nothing better than to fill the car with long- legged High School boys and an occasional girl, and parade the town. She never had a “date,” nor went to a dance, except once with her brother Bill, and the “boy proposition” didn’t interest her—yet. But young people—great spring-breaking, varnish-cracking, fender-bending, door-sagging carloads of “kids”—gave her great pleasure. Her zests were keen. But the most fun she ever had in her life was acting as chairman of the committee that got up the big turkey dinner for the poor folks at the county home; scores of pies, gallons of slaw, jam, cakes, preserves, oranges, and a wilderness of turkey were loaded into the car and taken to the county home. And, being of a practical turn of mind, she risked her own Christmas dinner to see that the poor folks actually got it all. Not that she was a cynic; she just disliked to tempt folks. While there, she found a blind colored uncle, very old, who could do nothing but make rag rugs, and she rustled up from her school friends rags enough to keep him busy for a season. The last engagement she tried to make was to take the guests at the county home out for a car ride. And the last endeavor of her life was to try to get a rest room for colored girls in the High School. She found one girl reading in the toilet, because there was no better place for a colored girl to loaf, and it inflamed her sense of injustice and she became a nagging harpy to those who she thought could remedy the evil. The poor she always had with her and was glad of it. She hungered and thirsted for righteousness; and was the most impious creature in the world. She joined the church without consulting her parents, not particularly for her soul’s good. She never had a thrill of piety in her life, and would have hooted at a “testimony.” But even as a little child, she felt the church was an agency for helping people to more of life’s abundance, and she wanted to help. She never wanted help for herself. Clothes meant little to her. It was a fight to get a new rig on her; but eventually a harder fight to get it off. She never wore a jewel and had no ring but her High School class ring and never asked for anything but a wrist watch. She refused to have her hair up, though she was nearly seventeen. “Mother,” she protested,” you don’t know how much I get by with, in my braided pigtails, that I could not with my hair up.” Above every other passion of her life was her passion not to grow up, to be a child. The tomboy in her, which was big, seemed loath to be put away forever in skirts. She was a Peter Pan who refused to grow up.

 

Her funeral yesterday at the Congregational Church was as she would have wished it; no singing, no flowers except the big bunch of red roses from her brother Bill’s Harvard classmen—heavens, how proud that would have made her!—and the red roses from the Gazette forces, in vases, at her head and feet. A short prayer: Paul’s beautiful essay on “Love” from the Thirteenth Chapter of First Corinthians; some remarks about her democratic spirit by her friend, John H. J. Rice, pastor and police judge, which she would have deprecated if she could; a prayer sent down for her by her friend Carl Nau; and, opening the service, the slow, poignant movement from Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata, which she loved; and closing the service a cutting from the joyously melancholy first movement of Tchaikovsky’s Pathetic Symphony, which she liked to hear, in certain moods, on the phonograph, then the Lord’s Prayer by her friends in High School.

That was all.

 

For her pallbearers only her friends were chosen: her Latin teacher, W. L. Holtz; her High School principal, Rice Brown; her doctor, Frank Foncannon; her friend, W. W. Finney; her pal at the Gazette office, Walter Hughes; and her brother Bill. It would have made her smile to know that her friend, Charley O’Brien, the traffic cop had been transferred from Sixth and Commercial to the corner near the church to direct her friends who came to bid her good-by.

 

A rift in the clouds in a gray day threw a shaft of sunlight upon her coffin as her nervous, energetic little body sank to its last sleep. But the soul of her, the glowing, gorgeous, fervent soul of her, surely was flaming in eager joy upon some other dawn.”

 

Mary’s father, journalist and newspaperman William Allen White, Feb. 10, 1868-Jan. 31, 1944

Don’t you feel like you know Mary through her father’s words? Have you ever read an obituary that touched you deeply? One that made you laugh? This one, especially that last lovely paragraph, brings tears every time I read it.

Cowgirls in the Kitchen – Cheryl Pierson – April 28

Hi everyone! Time for another edition of Vintage Recipes here at “Cowgirls in the Kitchen”!  Oh, golly, I had a lot of trouble deciding what recipe to feature today–so guess what? I had to include more than one! I think you will enjoy all of these and they are for very different types of “eating pleasure”, but none of them are hard to make (you know my rule about having to be something easy if I make it!)

This first one is one my best friend’s mom used to make sometimes when we were all over at her house and hungry. I had never had these before, and I begged my mom to make them, but with my dad’s work schedule, we rarely had leftover mashed potatoes, which is a key ingredient for these coveted MEXICAN HATS!  And these are so simple–I still make them sometimes just because I love them. (I will say, if I’m remembering right, ours looks more like a Mexican Hat than this picture, but this will give you an idea).

MEXICAN HATS:

You will need only three basic ingredients:

Bologna

Sliced American Cheese

Leftover Mashed Potatoes (though I have been known to make fresh or buy some ready-made)

On a griddle, place 4 pieces of bologna. Place a dollop of leftover mashed potatoes in the center, in a circle (like the rise of a sombrero) and cook on low heat. As the bologna begins to cook, the edges will turn up, curving around the mashed potatoes (again, like a sombrero). Place a piece of cheese on the top and let it begin to melt over the potatoes. Remove them from the heat, and season as you like. I’ve even been known to eat these with a little picante sauce.

Another version is to put these in the oven–I’ve never done them that way, but here’s how they say to do it, if you want to try that instead of the griddle–(and this calls for instant mashed potatoes, which of course, were not available back when I was eating them as a kid):

Heat oven to 325-350 degrees. place bologna on a cookie sheet and bake until bologna is desired color. Meanwhile cook the instant mashed potatoes according to directions on package. Take the bologna out of oven and put the 1/2 cup of mashed potatoes on it. then put the fat free kraft single on top and bake until cheese melts.

They are wonderful no matter how you eat them, and boy, do they bring back some great childhood memories.

FOR DESSERT: RUM CAKE AND GLAZE

My mom loved to make Rum Cake. This was back in the 60’s and 70’s when bundt cakes became all the rage. She got a HEAVY bundt cake pan (no teflon lining in it, that hadn’t become the norm yet) and that’s what she made these in.

 

Here’s the original cake recipe written in my mom’s handwriting. It’s really faded, and I’ve had to recopy it, but I keep this copy as a keepsake, remembering all the times she made this wonderful recipe and how much we all loved it and looked forward to it.

I’ve written the instructions below so you can read it better.

RUM CAKE AND GLAZE

1 box of golden deluxe butter recipe cake mix (you may have to substitute this for yellow cake mix–not sure they make this one anymore)

1 package Jello instant vanilla pudding

1/2 cup oil

1/2 cup water

1/2 cup rum, OR 1 teaspoon of rum flavoring

4 eggs

Grease and flour pan– you can sprinkle butter pats, brown sugar and nuts in before filling pan with batter. Bake at 325 degrees for 50-60 minutes. Let cool about 15 minutes before inverting on cake plate and putting the glaze on.

GLAZE:

1/2 cup butter

1/2 cup granulated sugar

1/2 cup brown sugar

1/4 cup of rum

1/4 cup heavy cream

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Add all ingreditents to saucepan over medium heat. Stir well until butter has melted and mixture is smooth. Bring mixture to a boil, stirring, and boil for TWO  minutes. You can pour the glaze over the top, or you can put the cake back into the pan and poke holes in it and pour some of the glaze over that to let it soak it up, then pour the rest of the glaze over the top. Mom always just poured it over the top and it was always wonderful.

And last, but not least, a tried and true recipe for plain, good ol’ fashioned pancakes that is simple to make and you can make it from ingredients you usually have on hand.

PANCAKES:

1 cup flour

1 cup milk

1 tbsp. baking powder

1 tbsp. sugar

1 tbsp oil

1/2 tsp salt

1 egg

Measure and sift dry ingredients. Add slightly beaten egg, milk, and oil together and mix well. Add dry ingredients and mix. Don’t OVER mix. Spoon mixture onto griddle for whatever size/thickness of pancakes you want to make. Garnish with fruit, if you like, or you can also add chocolate chips, pecans, etc. while they are cooking. These are really good!

CHERYL’S WINNERS–PRE-ORDER OF LANDON!

Hey everyone! Thanks so much for stopping by and commenting today! You made my post so much fun–you guys are the HEART of our group and we appreciate you so much! 

I’ve picked THREE winners today because we had such a wonderful turnout today–picking one would just stack those odds too much, so three it is! 

My winners are:

BRIDGETTE SHIPPY

SHERRY WELCH

SHARON B.

Y’all winners COME ON DOWN and email me at fabkat_edit@yahoo.com. Be sure to put WINNER in your subject line! I will send you a pre-order of  LANDON and when JULY15 rolls around, he will appear like magic on your KINDLE APP! 

HISTORY OF MARTY ROBBINS’ “EL PASO TRILOGY”–and a GIVEAWAY–by CHERYL PIERSON

Hi, everyone–I did a series on “learning history through songs” a while back, and I just knew I had to include this “series” of songs by one of my favorite songwriters/balladeers, the incomparable Marty Robbins. This isn’t specific history, but these songs give us an idea of how life was for this particular gunfighter, then for his love, Feleena, and then how a modern-day man feels such a connection to it all. I love that there is “history” as we think of it, and then the modern-day connection to it all to “complete the circle.”

How many songs do you know that had sequels to them? Remember “back in the day” when recording artists would sometimes “answer” a song with one of their own? Well, if you love Marty Robbins like I do, you’ll know that his song El Paso had not only one sequel, but two, and he was working on a third sequel when he died in 1982! I think that’s a “record” for musical sequels, don’t you? I love ballads, or story-songs, and to find out that there were sequels to my all-time favorite one was pure pleasure!

El Paso was written and originally recorded by Marty Robbins, and was released in September 1959 (I was two years old at the time, but Marty was my man from the minute I heard this song!) Though it was originally released on the album Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs, within a month it was released as a single and immediately became a hit on both the country and pop music charts, reaching NUMBER 1 IN BOTH at the start of 1960! But that wasn’t the end of it at all—it also won the Grammy Award for Best Country & Western Recording in 1961, and with good reason. It still remains Robbins’ best-known song, all these years later.

 

Wikipedia states: It is widely considered a genre classic for its gripping narrative which ends in the death of its protagonist, its shift from past to present tense, haunting harmonies by vocalists Bobby Sykes and Jim Glaser (of the Glaser Brothers) and the eloquent and varied Spanish guitar accompaniment by Grady Martin that lends the recording a distinctive Tex-Mex feel. The name of the character Feleena was based upon a schoolmate of Robbins in the fifth grade; Fidelina Martinez.

The storyline is this: The song is a first-person narrative told by a cowboy in El Paso, Texas, in the days of the Wild West. The singer recalls how he frequented “Rosa’s Cantina”, where he became smitten with a young Mexican dancer named Feleena. When the singer notices another cowboy sharing a drink with “wicked Feleena”, out of jealousy he challenges the newcomer to a gunfight. The singer kills the newcomer, then flees El Paso for fear of being hanged for murder or killed in revenge by his victim’s friends. In the act of escaping, the singer commits the additional and potentially hanging offense of horse theft (“I caught a good one, it looked like it could run”), further sealing his fate in El Paso. Departing the town, the singer hides out in the “badlands of New Mexico.”

The song then fast-forwards to an undisclosed time later – the lyrics at this point change from past to present tense – when the singer describes the yearning for Feleena that drives him to return, without regard for his own life, to El Paso. He states that his “love is stronger than [his] fear of death.” Upon arriving, the singer races for the cantina, but is chased and fatally wounded by a posse. At the end of the song, the singer recounts how Feleena has come to his side and he dies in her arms after “one little kiss”.

Robbins wrote two songs that are explicit sequels to “El Paso”, one in 1966, one in 1976. Robbins intended to do one more sequel, “The Mystery of Old El Paso”, but he died in late 1982 before he could finish the final song.

Feleena (From El Paso) (FIRST SEQUEL TO EL PASO)

In 1966, Robbins recorded “Feleena (From El Paso)”, telling the life story of Feleena, the “Mexican girl” from “El Paso”, in a third-person narrative. This track was over eight minutes long, but what a story it tells! This may be one you have not every heard before–I didn’t know it existed until I was an adult.

Born in a desert shack in New Mexico during a thunderstorm, Feleena runs away from home at 17, living off her charms for a year in Santa Fe, New Mexico, before moving to the brighter lights of El Paso to become a paid dancer. After another year, the narrator of “El Paso” arrives, the first man she did not have contempt for. He spends six weeks romancing her and then, in a retelling of the key moment in the original song, beset by “insane jealousy”, he shoots another man with whom she was flirting.

Her lover’s return to El Paso comes only a day after his flight (the original song suggests a longer time frame before his return) and as she goes to run to him, the cowboy motions to her to stay out of the line of fire and is shot; immediately after his dying kiss, Feleena shoots herself with his gun. Their ghosts are heard to this day in the wind blowing around El Paso: “It’s only the young cowboy showing Feleena the town”. Here’s a 1973 performance of the original EL PASO on Midnight Special!

 

El Paso City (SECOND SEQUEL TO EL PASO)

In 1976 Robbins released another reworking, “El Paso City”, in which the present-day singer is a passenger on a flight over El Paso, which reminds him of a song he had heard “long ago”, proceeding to summarize the original “El Paso” story. “I don’t recall who sang the song,” he sings, but he feels a supernatural connection to the story: “Could it be that I could be the cowboy in this mystery…,” he asks, suggesting a past life. This song reached No. 1 on the country charts. The arrangement includes riffs and themes from the previous two El Paso songs. Robbins wrote it while flying over El Paso in, he reported, the same amount of time it takes to sing–four minutes and 14 seconds. It was only the second time that ever happened to him; the first time was when he composed the original “El Paso” as fast as he could write it down.

Though there have been many cover versions of the original “El Paso” song, Marty Robbins put out more than one version of it, himself. There have actually been three versions of Robbins’ original recording of “El Paso”: the original full-length version, the edited version, and the abbreviated version, which is an alternate take in stereo that can be found on the Gunfighter Ballads album. The original version, released on a 45 single record, is in mono and is around 4 minutes and 38 seconds in duration, far longer than most contemporary singles at the time, especially in the country genre. Robbins’ longtime record company, Columbia Records, was unsure whether radio stations would play such a long song, so it released two versions of the song on a promo 45—the full-length version on one side, and an edited version on the other which was nearer to the three-minute mark. This version omitted a verse describing the cowboy’s remorse over the “foul evil deed [he] had done” before his flight from El Paso. The record-buying public, as well as most disc jockeys, overwhelmingly preferred the full-length version.

I can’t tell you how many times I played my 45 record of El Paso on my little portable record player as a little girl. As a country and western song, this has to qualify as my all-time favorite, and my husband even managed to record and adapt the ringtone for me on my iPhone, so when my phone rings it plays the opening words to EL PASO. This has been a huge embarrassment for my kids when they were teens and had to be with me in public, but also was a source of amazement for them when other people actually smiled and said, “Hey! Marty Robbins!

Now THAT recognition is the mark of endurance—a song that is still beloved by so many after over sixty years!

A picture of “retro” Rosa’s Cantina that hangs in my breakfast nook.

 

In the new sweet western historical series GUN FOR HIRE, all the heroes have something in common–they live by the gun, some of them walking a very thin line on the right side of the law. My hero, Landon Wildcat, is half Seminole/Choctaw Indian, and half white. He’s done a lot of things, including being a sniper and scout for the army. He has a good education, having been sent to a mission school. Yet…there is more than a hint of dangerous savagery in him, as the heroine finds out near the beginning of the story. I had to find the right mix of civilization and ruthlessness to make his character believable and make the heroine, Lissie, still fall in love with him. Though his story is not the same as the singer in these El Paso songs, he does share the longing for a brighter future, though he’s not sure at the beginning what that might mean, since Lissie is off limits to him for many reasons.

My LANDON is available for pre-order at Amazon, and will be released on July 15, 2025. BUT, there are 10 books in this wonderful series and they are coming out every two weeks, with Linda Broday, Margaret Tanner, and Charlene Raddon’s stories already being available, and Heather Blanton’s coming at the end of April!

 Aren’t these covers gorgeous? 

 

I’m offering a free copy of LANDON to one lucky commenter today (USA only)–so don’t forget to leave a comment and your contact info!

What’s your favorite classic country & western song? Is there a sequel to it?

Here’s the link for the series page. The link for LANDON is just below.

AMAZON GUN FOR HIRE SERIES PAGE

PREORDER LANDON HERE! 

I love series like this one. The heroes and heroines are all different because they come from varying backgrounds and places, but the heroes have something in common that holds the thread of the series together. 

CHERYL’S AMAZON AUTHOR PAGE

NEW WHR SERIES “GUN FOR HIRE” KICKS OFF WITH A BANG! by Cheryl Pierson

There’s a new series in town! GUN FOR HIRE is a multi-author series that focuses on ten men who must rely heavily on their guns throughout their lives. They don’t expect to ever settle down and have a normal life, much less ever fall in love! But, and there is a big but…they didn’t ever expect to meet “the” woman who can make all of that fall into place for them, either!

GUN FOR HIRE includes books by some present and past fillies, and many other talented authors, including Charlene Raddon, who put the series together. It was her brainchild and she made all the gorgeous covers! I was so thrilled to be asked to participate because I had a story in mind I’d been wanting to write and it fit right into the broad premise that Charlene had come up with.

Linda Broday kicked off the series with her book, CREEK, yesterday. Oh, my stars, y’all. Let me just say, I think I’m in love with every one of these men – and that’s before I’ve even read their stories! I’ve ordered CREEK and am just waiting for the perfect time to be able to sit down and immerse myself in his tale.

Next comes DUSTIN by Margaret Tanner. Her story will be available on March 30, but you can pre-order NOW! Charlene Raddon’s story, KIRK, follows on April 15. (So pay your taxes and then treat yourself to a great story!) LANCE by Heather Blanton follows two weeks later, and then DEVON by Carra Copelin.

Jo-Ann Roberts’s hunky hero is named ASH, and SHAD is Caroline Clemmons’s heartthrob. Tracy Garrett’s story is CLINT, and my LANDON is next in the lineup, rounded out by Winnie Griggs’s  story, LUKE.

My LANDON won’t be out until July 15, but boy, there’s lots of great reading in the months ahead, and of course, Winnie’s story just after mine, at the end of July.

Some of these stories will be available not only on KINDLE, but also in print, including my tale about LANDON. Aren’t these covers gorgeous? 

Here’s the blurb to whet your reading appetite! You can pre-order LANDON now, as well as many of the others, and the availability to pre-order the remainder of the others will follow soon.

Landon: Gun For Hire Sweet Western Romance Series #9

Alissa Devine finds herself in an unthinkable situation when her father is murdered, and she’s left to raise her young brother, Zach. With $22 to her name and her no-account gambler father’s burial to pay for, Lissie has no choice but to carry on with her father’s plan to take part in the Oklahoma land run. But single women aren’t allowed on the wagon train.

Landon Wildcat’s mission for months has been to find the man who abducted his younger sister. His search ends when crooked gambler Happy Devine gets what he deserves at the end of Land’s gun. But that act of vengeance leaves Lissie and Zach alone with no man to accompany them on the wagon train.

Wagon Master Bill Castle hires Land as his scout; a devil’s bargain—for both of them. Land offers Lissie his protection, suspecting the unscrupulous Mr. Castle has indecent intentions toward her.

When one of the settlers is murdered, Land takes the outlaws on in a desperate battle to protect the only witness, and nearly pays the ultimate price. Land’s life hangs in the balance, but the wagon train moves on, callously deserting him and the teen boy he saved, along with Lissie and Zach.

Through the hardship, Lissie and Land both realize how much they love one another, and what they have come so close to losing. Though danger lurks around every curve in the road, Lissie believes with all her heart there is a place for their small band of settlers in this untamed Territory. Now that love has finally come, will Fate allow a miracle for their happiness with this new beginning?

Our GUN FOR HIRE series page is still populating, but the first four are up if you want to go take a look at them, too, and pre-order. Here’s the link for the series page. Here’s the link for the series page, and keep checking back to see more as they are added there. The link for LANDON is just below–he hasn’t made it to the series page yet, but he’s coming, along with the rest of the gang!

AMAZON GUN FOR HIRE SERIES PAGE

PREORDER LANDON HERE! 

I love series like this one. The heroes and heroines are all different because they come from varying backgrounds and places, but the heroes have something in common that holds the thread of the series together. 

CHERYL’S AMAZON AUTHOR PAGE

 

“GO-TO” RECIPES–PEPPER STEAK IN A CROCK POT–EASY AND GREAT! by Cheryl Pierson

Hey, everyone! I am SO excited! No, it’s not a book or a character this time around that’s got me all “hyped”—but, of all things, a RECIPE. Now, hear me out, and I think you’ll be just as happy to get this on your kitchen table as I was.

Y’all know, my “recipe” for a great RECIPE is that it has to be two things: EASY AND GOOD. This takes the cake for both of those things, and also, I was able to make about 3 meals from it. Now if hubby had not been sick, he’d have helped me and it wouldn’t have lasted even that long! I DID have to purchase three items I don’t use that much when I cook (bouillon cubes, cornstarch, and soy sauce), but that’s okay, because I’ll be making it again.

I simplified this even more by buying beef fajita strips already cut (they were perfect!) and I did add about 4 small sweet colored peppers that I already had in the fridge—you know the ones, yellow, green, red, orange, and much smaller than the bell peppers—they added some pretty color! Our Sam’s store carries a brand of spices that makes a blend of salt, pepper, and garlic—that’s what I used on the beef strips.

Don’t be concerned if the beef bouillon cube doesn’t completely dissolve. I stirred in the cornstarch when it was about half dissolved and heated the entire mixture (water, bouillon, cornstarch) up again in the microwave for about 30 seconds, and broke it up at that point.

 

I can’t say enough how easy this was and how GOOD. I served it over some rice, and ate a small salad with it the first night—and the 2nd time I ate it I made corn on the cob to go with it. There are lots of other things you can serve with it—I was sure wishing I’d bought some rolls! LOL

 

Look at this scrumptious feast! All cooked up in one big ol’ crock pot and ready to eat with very little tending once it’s all assembled. This is definitely going to be one of my “go-to” recipes, summer or winter, now that I’ve made it!

Here’s the recipe, and I sure hope you enjoy it. I was thinking, you could probably serve it over noodles, too, if rice is not up your alley. I cooked it for 4 hours on high in my crockpot and the meat was so tender, and everything blended great.

 

PEPPER STEAK IN A CROCK POT

INGREDIENTS

2 pounds beef sirloin, cut into 2 inch strips

¾ teaspoon garlic powder, or to taste

3 tablespoons vegetable oil

1 cube beef bouillon

¼ cup hot water

1 tablespoon cornstarch

½ cup chopped onion

2 large green bell peppers, roughly chopped

1 (14.5 ounce) can stewed tomatoes, with liquid

3 tablespoons soy sauce

1 teaspoon white sugar

1 teaspoon salt

 

DIRECTIONS

Sprinkle beef sirloin strips with garlic powder. Heat vegetable oil in a large skillet over medium heat and sear beef strips, about 5 minutes per side. Transfer to a slow cooker.

Mix bouillon cube with hot water in a separate container until dissolved, then mix in cornstarch until dissolved. Pour into the slow cooker with beef strips. Stir in onion, green peppers, stewed tomatoes, soy sauce, sugar, and salt.

Cover, and cook on High for 3 to 4 hours, or on Low for 6 to 8 hours.

ENJOY!

Do you have a “go-to” recipe that’s easy and wonderful? I’m always on the lookout!  Would love for you to share if you have something your family loves that’s not too complicated to make (cooking is not my forte!) LOL 

Petticoats & Pistols