Emily’s Salsa in a Poem
Three big ripe tomatoes fresh off the vine,
Add a cup of red onion diced up quite fine.
A cup of cilantro leaves chopped from a bunch,
One minced jalapeno to give it some punch.
Blend all together, fridge an hour to chill,
Serve with big corn chips, a taste treat to thrill!
Happy Holidays, everyone.
A Note from Emily:
This salsa recipe is the one I've used for a long time, given to me years ago by San Antonio’s Taco Cabana head cook’s daughter.
Mistletoe
The Smokey Blues
Book 6
Emily Mims
Genre: Romance
Publisher: Boroughs Publishing Group
Date of Publication: November 20th 2017
ISBN: 978-1-979474-24-5 – print book
ISBN: 978-1-944262-99-0 - eBook
Number of pages: 227
Word Count: 65,450
Cover Artist: Boroughs Publishing Group
Tagline: Can the holiday season turn make-believe into real passion, love and romance?
Book Description:
Aspiring songwriter Caitlyn Murphy is tired of sister’s hand-me-downs. From toys and bicycles to men, it seemed like everything in Caitlyn’s life first belonged to her late sister. Roped into doing Christmas for motherless nieces, and entering into a pretend romance with their dangerously attractive father, Caitlyn soon finds herself falling in love with the girls, and the enigmatic Tanner Dyson. She resists the temptation and Tanner’s insistence that they make their pretend relationship real. She wants her own family, not the one her sister had first.
About the Author:
Author of thirty-four romance novels, Emily Mims combined her writing career with a career in public education until leaving the classroom to write full time. The mother of two sons and six grandsons, she and her husband live in central Texas but frequently visit their grandchildren in Tennessee and Georgia. For relaxation, she plays four musical instruments: the piano, the ukulele, the organ and the dulcimer.
Website: www.emilymims.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/emily.mims.756
Twitter: www.twitter.com/emilymimsauthor
Thank you for hosting me today. The heat level can be adjusted by substituting hotter or milder pepper.
ReplyDeleteBest, Emily