“… an extension of love”

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Luz McCook … Remember her name, and make sure you remember that you heard it first from Majestical Lips, INC. Luz is a beautiful mother of two darling boys, a working woman, a chef, and the owner and founder of PopupMIA and Discover Gourmet Catering. If that wasn’t enough to empress you Luz recently started a non-profit organization called Flowers Against Hunger, a food pantry that provides healthy fresh food for hungry families in South Florida. PhotoGrid_1427401258301

I have seen her passion in food through the food she produces, but I had to ask her how she grew to love cooking so much. Luz explained to me that as a child growing up she bonded with her father by cooking with him. That made cooking enjoyable for her, eventually making it a way for her to express herself. Her main ingredient ? Love ❤ Consider yourself lucky if you get invited to her home for any cooked meal, because Luz told me “if i cook for you consider it an extension of love”. Luz specializes in international cuisine, having cooked for celebrities and professional athletes. Before the birth of her youngest son she had an awesome gig cooking for student who lived on campus at FIU. Im sure it was better than mamas cooking !

img_0152Through mutual friends and the lovely social media I have had the please of becoming friends with this magnificent woman (If you couldn’t tell I’m all about women empowerment). I am excited to have her as a part of the MLI family. Her energy and positive vibrations are infectious. Growing up with a passion for cooking, Luz has always inspired me with her posts, I made Jamaican Patties years ago since I felt so inspired. None the less her presentation and creativity is beyond any of my home learned skills. Now I leave the cooking up to her and focus of spreading the holistic lifestyle. But, it is has been torturous, salivating over all of her post on Instagram like pan roasted chicken breast braised in homemade roasted chicken stock, served with congri with smoked sausage and steamed veggies YUM !!10150652_10102027488199378_1660800295902112925_n

I wanted to share Luz with you because Popup MIA will be presenting a series of spring brunches called Nice N’ Easy in the Majestical Lips Garden hosted by herself and Dahlia Brice. The first to be held on April 19, 2015 from 11:00am to 3:00pm Book your ticket here before the 17th and get the early bird special .. A portion of all tickets sold at this event will be donated to Flowers Against Hunger. Flowers Against Hunger is a weekly subscription of $4, with this small donation they send you a small bouquet of flowers for your office or home. So while feeding the less fortunate family you get a little reminder of how awesome you are for donating ! I could go on and on about why she is amazing but, the easiest way for you to find out is by making your way here to meet her and Dahlia for yourself!

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Click the above flyer to purchase tickets …

To contact Luz or Dahlia check out the information below

discovergourmetcatering@gmail.com or popupmia@gmail.com

505-23-miami

Poetic Garden

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Every third Friday of the month Majestical Lips, INC & friends host a open mic poetry event. Both new and old performers bless the stage all night!!! We set the tone with Miami’s hidden gem The Uncanny Reservoir, a great local band. There is always food and drink served, and the best part, a beautiful flow of positive vibrations all through the night.
April is National Poetry month, Majestical Lips is encouraging everyone to take the challenge and write poetry for our Poetic Garden. For more interesting information on National Poetry Month check out…  http://www.poets.org/national-poetry-month/about-celebration
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Spoken Word is poetry intended for onstage performance, rather than exclusively designed for the page. While often associated with hip-hop culture, it also has strong ties to storytelling, modern poetry, post-modern performance, and monologue theatre, as well as jazz, blues, and folk music.Due to its immediacy and direct rapport with its audience, this type of poetry often contains references to current events and issues relevant to a contemporary audience.

At its best, spoken word is a powerful, high-energy form of expression that attracts artists and audiences of all ages from a wide range of disciplines and socio-cultural backgrounds.

Poetry
A form of literature that uses aesthetic and rhythmic qualities of language—such as phonaesthetics, sound symbolism, and metre—to evoke meanings in addition to, or in place of, the prosaic ostensible meaning.

HERB: Mugwort

Mugwort/Artemisia vulgaris

Also known as : Altamisa, Armoise, Armoise Citronnelle, Armoise Commune, Armoise Vulgaire, Artémise, Artemisia, Artemisia Vulgaris, Artemisiae Vulgaris Herba, Artemisiae Vulgaris Radix, Carline Thistle, Felon Herb, Gemeiner Beifuss, Herbe aux Cent Goûts, Herbe de Feu, Herbe de la Saint-Jean, Herbe Royale, Hierba de San Juan, Nagadamni, Remise, Sailor’s Tobacco, St. John’s Plant, Tabac de Saint-Pierre, Wild Wormwood.

Parts used: Leaves and roots

Mugwort has been used throughout the world since Ancient times. It was considered one of the nine sacred plants given to the world by the god Woden. When Saint John the Baptist took off into the wilderness, he did so reportedly wearing a girdle of mugwort. The Romans planted mugwort at the edges of roads because they believed that putting it into your shoe would protect against exhaustion. Before the use of hops, mugwort was used in flavoring beer. Some Native American tribes used mugwort as a smudge to clear sacred spaces.

Mugwort $3.25 per oz

Organic Mugwort Herb C/S

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Herb History:

Herbalists have prescribed mugwort to treat many different conditions over the years. The Chinese have also used dried mugwort leaves (and sometimes leaves of other Artemisia species), or moxa, in moxibustion for centuries. In the middle ages in England, mugwort was sometimes worn on St. John’s Eve and was thought to protect the wearer from evil possession. .

One of the more interesting traditional uses of mugwort is that of a dream herb. It is often used as one of the main ingredients in sleep pillows, and it said to bring the dreamer more lucid dreams. Young women were told to sew mugwort into a small piece of cloth and place it under their pillows to induce vivid dreams. In the 1830s, Portuguese sailors introduced mugwort to France, where it became popular as a treatment for blindness and other illnesses. Mugwort has also been used as a tea, a beer flavoring, and occasionally as a spice for meats.

Benefits/Treats:

Abscesses, anti-spasmodic, arthritis, bowel pain, bruising (removes blackness), carbuncles, childbirth and afterbirth, colds, fever, flu, depression, diabetes, diarrhea, digestive stimulant, epilepsy, excessive menstrual bleeding, food poisoning, gout, hysteria, insomnia, kidney stones, gravel, jaundice, liver tonic, menstrual cramps, menstrual obstruction , mild narcotic, mushroom poisoning, nervousness, nervous shaking, regulates hormones (adrenal and pituitary), soothes nerves, stomach pains and disorders, stress, tropical ulcers (poultice), uterus, worms, (also for worming animals, with herbs/ eaten fresh or dried), white tail spider bite.
People take mugwort root as a “tonic” and to boost energy.

People take the rest of the plant for stomach and intestinal conditions including colic, diarrhea, constipation, cramps, weak digestion, worm infestations, and persistent vomiting. Mugwort is also used to stimulate gastric juice and bile secretion. It is also used as a liver tonic, to promote circulation, and as a sedative. Other uses include treatment of hysteria, epilepsy, and convulsions in children.

Women take mugwort for irregular periods and other menstrual problems.
Constituents/Properties:

Constituents: volatile oil, bitter principle (absinthin), flavonoids, tannin, beta-sitosterol, coumarins, and alpha- and beta-carotene.

Properties: * Abortifacient * Aromatic * Diaphoretic/sudorific * Diuretic * Emmenagogue * Nervine

Ways to prepare:

Mugwort can be taken in teas, or tinctures. Often mixed with lemon balm or other sweeter herbs.
Combo’s / Recipes:

*Mugwort hot tea:

Heat water to a boil.
Use 1 or 1.5 heaped teaspoons of mugwort for each cup of water.
In a teapot or french press, pour the water over the tea.
Cover and leave to infuse for 8-10 minutes.
Strain out the mugwort and serve.

*Dream Sachet:
The herbs in this blend are traditionally associated with rest and dreaming. Combine them with calming oils and create a dream inspiring sachet to slip into your pillow at night.
1/4 cup mugwort herb
1/4 cup hop flowers
1/4 cup dried rose petals
1/4 cup lavender flowers
5 drops Chamomile essential oil
5 drops Lavender essential oil

Recipe Instructions: Fill a cotton drawstring bag with the mixture or fill a handkerchief and tie it up with ribbon. If you are handy with the sowing machine, sow together some small pillows. Use holiday fabrics to customize great gifts.

*Fragrant Smudge Stick:
Burning herbs is a sacred practice used for prayer and purification that is respected in most American Indian traditions.

Mugwort, bergamot, mints, yarrow, bearberry and tobacco (not from cigarettes!!), make all be used to good purpose. Experiment with different aromatic herbs to find the combination that speaks to your spirit.

2 fresh stalks mugwort
2 fresh stalks yarrow
2 fresh stalks bergamot
Cautions: Do not burn smudges in enclosed areas, or around babies or those with respiratory problems.

Recipe Instructions: Smoke/Smudge :
Gather several fresh stalks of your favorite herbs with leaves and blossoms intact. Lay a sheet of newspaper open. Hold the herb stalks tightly in one hand, and bend them gently over onto themselves to form a 7 to 8 inch long wand. Roll up your herb wand tightly in the newspaper, working from an angle, and secure with string or rubber bands. Let the bundle dry thoroughly out of direct sun for at least several days. You can periodically unwrap and check the progress, securing the bundle more snugly each time. Humid weather will delay the drying process.

When the herbs are dry, unwrap the bundle and discard the newspaper. Tie the herbs with fine cotton string or cord. Ignite one end to burn. You can perch the bundled herbs upright in a coffee can filled with an inch or two of sand, or use as a ceremonial smudge.
Precautions:

Mugwort contains a naturally occurring chemical called thujone which can be toxic at high doses. Don’t be too alarmed; thujone is also present in the commonly consumed herb sage (sage essential oil is approximately 1/4 thujone). There’s no indication the thujone content of mugwort is radically higher than that, so it seems mugwort is no more dangerous than sage when taken at a normal dose.Caution should be observed when consuming large amounts of mugwort tea or drinking it over a prolonged period.
In nature, mugwort pollen is one of the most common triggers of hay fever (allergic rhinitis). Anyone who suffers from hay fever or other plant allergies should exercise caution when coming into contact with mugwort.

This document does not contain all possible interactions.Pregnant or nursing women, consult with their doctor before taking this or any other herb.