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Phyllis Curott (born February 8, 1954) who goes under the craft name Aradia, is a Wiccan priestess, attorney, and author. [1] She is founder and high priestess of the Temple of Ara, one of the oldest Wiccan congregations in the United States.
Flying ointment is a hallucinogenic ointment said to have been used by witches in the practice of European witchcraft from at least as far back as the Early Modern period, when detailed recipes for such preparations were first recorded and when their usage spread to colonial North America.
Patricia "Trish" Telesco (born 1960) is an American author, herbalist, poet, lecturer, Wiccan priestess, and folk magician who has written more than 60 books on a variety of subjects ranging from self-help and cookbooks to magic, folklore and global religion.
He is also co-founding a plant-based seafood company Good Catch Foods, [4] and he was previously Senior Global Executive Chef of Recipe and Product Development at Whole Foods Market. [5] He participated in the 2016 Seed Food and Wine Fest in Miami, including using mushrooms to "taste, and even feel, like your favorite meaty meals" according to ...
The Wiccan Web is a user guide to the online Wiccan culture of the late 1990s and early 2000s. It opens with a chapter on accessing the Internet, noting that while experienced users could disregard that chapter, some potential readers may have had little or no exposure to using computers or finding websites.
recipes, apparently without any magical intents; TO MAKE GOOD BEER. Take a handful of hops, five or six gallons of water, about three tablespoonfuls of ginger, half a gallon of molasses; filter the water, hops and ginger into a tub containing the molasses. [4] home remedies without explicit supernatural elements: CURE FOR THE TOOTHACHE.
Oak galls and ferrous sulfate. A 14th century recipe for "Pact Ink for Devils and Spirits" is: [1] [unreliable source? Gall nuts - 10 ounces (280 g); Roman Vitriol or Green Copperas (ferrous sulfate) - 3 ounces (85 g)
The religious studies scholar Hugh Urban noted that Fortune was "one of the key links" between early twentieth-century ceremonial magic and the developing Pagan religion of Wicca. [43] Similarly, the Wiccan high priestess Vivianne Crowley characterised Fortune as a "proto-Pagan". [48]