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What does it mean to you?

2007-08-19 07:07:27 · 22 answers · asked by Anthony 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

22 answers

Simply~ A witch who brings their witching into the kitchen for the good of those she cooks for!
I will often add a pinch of this or that to my familys meals to give them what they need! I have so many herbs that they take up a whole shelf in the pantry and i have bucches of drying herbs all over! I also use crystals in my kitchen and place them on the table at meal times to promote harmony.
Kitchen witchery is also what i would term the process of making my "brews" be they tea or balms etc...
There is a little kitchen Witch in all of us!
~A~

2007-08-19 19:12:12 · answer #1 · answered by *~Ariel Brigalow Moondust~* 6 · 1 0

A witch who makes use of the tools at hand for ritual rather than having a "dedicated set" of tools.

A witch who knows the construction of spells and rituals well enough to improvise.

A witch whose usual spell work utilizes "kitchen cupboard" ingredients ("on hand" stuff) because s/he knows the properties of each well enough to make up his or her own tinctures, teas, oils, incenses, etc. without having to follow a recipe.

2007-08-19 08:14:16 · answer #2 · answered by Raven's Voice 5 · 4 0

I had a catalog yrs ago offering to sell a kitchen witch,a puppet witchform,said to be good luck for the kitchen ,in scandanavian countries,denmark,sweden,norway,iceland,etc. So,it was a traditional witch ,riding a broomstick,a lucky charm,like a 4,5,6leaf clover,horseshoe,rabbits foot,talisman,etc..

2007-08-19 07:23:29 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I think I know what you mean by that, but my first thought was that it sounded like a product you see advertised on tv.
"Get your Kitchen Witch today"!
;)

2007-08-19 07:14:54 · answer #4 · answered by like a BOSS 6 · 1 0

Someone whose house you would walk into and not see any visible signs they were a witch unless they told you.

Witches the way they were in the old days, when all their "witch" items had mundane uses as to not draw attention to themselves, every cooking spice had other uses, as did their cups, plates, knives etc.

2007-08-19 09:03:04 · answer #5 · answered by Black Dragon 5 · 3 0

Me, when I'm in the kitchen.
The only thing I do well that everybody likes is Thanksgiving dinner.
My husband's mother loved pre-packaged meals.
My mother liked and served us southern cooking.
We always dispute what to make and he always says that everything I make is "s*it".
I think I have a right to be a witch.

2007-08-19 07:11:52 · answer #6 · answered by Me 6 · 3 0

My grandmother was a water witch. Many witches use herbs in cooking and healing.Witchcraft in the past and today in honored and respected

2016-10-31 15:37:42 · answer #7 · answered by charlotte 1 · 0 0

It means the kitchen towels my mother bought me for some reason with "kitchen witch" on them and a witch on a broom. I use them for rags. We don't even celebrate Halloween.

2007-08-19 07:12:22 · answer #8 · answered by BERT 6 · 2 2

It means I am in the kitchen. Bless the buzzing flying insects.

2007-08-19 07:13:43 · answer #9 · answered by Lancaid 3 · 3 0

Someone who doesn't hold much with ceremonial ritual and practices on a more instinctive level. Also someone who does a lot of work with cooking and herbs.

I could be wrong, but that's what comes to mind for me when I hear the term.

2007-08-19 07:11:18 · answer #10 · answered by prairiecrow 7 · 7 0

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