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Our mission at The Buzz is to inspire and connect people in our communities by telling their stories. We hope that when The Buzz arrives in your mailbox, you find something uplifting. I want to thank our readers for allowing us into your homes and trusting us with your stories. And of course we want to thank our advertisers, and our dedicated team, for 24 Buzzworthy years. Together, we have created something truly special. Nothing makes us prouder than the positive feedback we receive from our readers and advertisers. As always, we want to hear from you – share your stories and comments with us. Here’s to the memories we’ve made in 2025, the lessons we’ve learned, and the anticipation of what lies ahead in 2026. michael@thebuzzmagazines.com
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Todd Freed
Cindy Gabriel
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Michelle Casas Groogan
Dai Huynh
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On our cover: Donna Perillo and her daughter Lauren, Junior League of Houston members, make the Crème Brûlée French Toast from Peace Meals. Cover photo by Nikky LaWell, lawellphoto.com
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Thank you so much for bringing more awareness to girls’ flag football [Pulling Flags and Breaking Barriers: Girls’ flag football takes off in Houston by Annie Blaylock McQueen, Nov. 2025]. Annie did a great job highlighting the positives of the sport! The Meraki girls in the article are on cloud nine to be featured as they have fallen in love with flag football.
Whether it is with Meraki or any of the other organizations offering girls’ flag football, I encourage anyone interested to get involved in this fastgrowing sport as we push to become a UIL sanctioned sport! They don’t need to fully commit, schedules are packed already, but flag football is a great way to increase speed and agility for other sports. More importantly though, it is really fun!
Jeffrey Klam, owner, Meraki Sports Project
Thank you so much for writing the article about girls’ flag football. It is a great competitive sport and even better, it’s a lot of fun! My team, Standing on Business, and I really want Texas UIL to sanction girls flag football so we can play for our high school teams! Your article showing so many girls all over the Houston area playing and competing in flag football helps us prove to Texas UIL how popular girls’ flag is now and how it’s a growing sport.
I also really appreciate the very nice things you said about me. I love playing flag football and I want other girls to see that there are teams out there and that they can play flag football too! There is a real future for female athletes in flag football and I hope many girls will be inspired to join me.
Mary Margaret Dybesland
I play on the same flag football team as Mary Margaret, Standing on Business. Thank you for the great article about girls’ flag football. I have played flag football for five years and it gets more competitive every year. I am passionate about the game and grateful for every opportunity it has given me. I look forward to fulfilling my dream of playing in high school, college, and hopefully for the USA National Team.
I am glad to see so many girls playing flag football and I hope more girls will start playing. There are many leagues in the Houston area like Under Armour, NFL Flag, and flag football camps so I would encourage any girl interested in flag football to look up these opportunities. Join us on the field!
Brooklyn Sterling
It is amazing how many people have personally and favorably commented, to [my wife] Carole and me, about your well written article Born to Fly [by Michelle Casas Groogan, Nov. 2025]. Little did we know, so many years ago, that Carole’s first conversation with Alex at a CAF monthly meeting would lead years later to witnessing his maturation from a demure teenager


to a friendship and the mentoring of a now-FAA certified private pilot. Carole’s initiative could be a lesson for many. Make an effort to reach out to the curious youth of today, knowing an acorn today can be tomorrow’s oak tree.
Edward A. Vesely
A huge thank you to Michelle Casas Groogan for the wonderful article Born to Fly featuring my son, Alexandre, and Ed Vesely [Nov. 2025]. Their shared passion for flying has led to a strong and meaningful friendship, and the article beautifully captures how that bond was born and has blossomed. It’s also a reminder of how important mentoring is in the lives of young people.
The article brought me back so many great memories of when Alexandre was younger, and I’m grateful to have it as a lasting reminder of all these special moments. This article will also be something Alexandre can look back on with pride in the future. Bravo!
Michele Tropee
Email us at mailbag@thebuzzmagazines.com. Or send to Mailbag, The Buzz Magazines, 5001 Bissonnet St., Suite 100, Bellaire, Texas 77401. Please include your name, address, phone number and email address for verification purposes. Letters or emails addressed to The Buzz Magazines become the property of the magazine, and it owns all rights to their use for publication. Addresses, phone numbers and email addresses will not be published. Letters are subject to editing for clarity and length. Views expressed in letters do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Buzz Magazines, and The Buzz takes no responsibility for the content and opinions expressed in them.
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Bridging Generations with Community and Cookbooks: The Junior League of Houston turns 100 by Andria Dilling
As The Junior League of Houston celebrates 100, members reflect on meaningful experiences and JLH cookbook recipes that have been passed on through generations.
4 Publisher’s Note
Mailbag: Letters from Readers
Done with Doom: How we see the world matters by Cindy Gabriel
Beauty can emerge in the wake of loss. And perspectives make a difference.
Best Books of 2025: Favorite reads of the year by Cindy Burnett
Book reviewer Cindy Burnett lists favorite reads and Buzz residents share theirs, too.
Thirteen Years of Friendship: A Girl Scout Troop’s Senior-Year Adventure by Tracy L. Barnett
Troop 147007 has learned and grown together since age 7. Now high school seniors, they recently enjoyed a final troop adventure.
The House Where Santa Lives: A neighborhood’s beacon of Christmas cheer by Cathy Gordon
Leila Reynolds, 92, creates holiday magic and memories for the neighborhood.
Baking Christmas Memories: From intricate cakes to gingerbread cookies by Annie Blaylock McQueen
Melissa Cozart and her mom, Diane Hanks, create an intricate Christmas cake each year; Georgia Polley bakes gingerbread cookies for her sons to decorate.
Rumor Has It by Sharon Albert Brier
Buzz Reads by Cindy Burnett
Book reviewer Cindy Burnett recommends five recently or soon-to-be released titles.
Travel Buzz: Passport to Joy: 2025 Journeys that Inspired and Transformed by Tracy L. Barnett
Buzz residents share happy memories of 2025 trips.
SportzBuzz by Todd Freed
SportzBuzz Jr. by Annie Blaylock McQueen
From School Buzz: Crafting success by Kelsy Donovan
Neighborhood Tails by Goose
Buzz About Town by Angie Frederickson
Back Porch: Lazy Latkes: A Hanukkah miracle (and NYE perfection) by Andria Dilling
Instead of making a mess frying potatoes in a skillet for Hanukkah latkes, consider a new, “lazy” technique: using a sheet pan and an oven.


by Cindy Gabriel, staff writer
How we see the world matters
Ikeep thinking about a skit I once saw performed by the late, great Jeannette Clift George, founder of the A.D. Players theater company. In the skit, a woman (Jeannette) walked into a store and spotted a bottle simply labeled Joy. It was sitting next to a bottle labeled Pain. She picked up the Joy bottle and took it to the register. But the cashier refused to ring it up. Joy was part of a two pack. You had to buy the Pain bottle too. Of course, Jeannette only wanted the Joy without the Pain. But the cashier insisted you can’t have Joy without Pain
This summer in Alaska I was mesmerized by pinkish purplish wildflowers that kept appearing in contrast to the otherwise rugged terrain. The flower’s official name is Chamaenerion Angustifolium. In Alaska, Canada, and the cooler U.S. climates, it’s called fireweed. Why? Because in the aftermath of a forest fire, that sturdy little flower pops up from the scorched earth. In England, they call it bombweed because it emerged from the bomb-ravaged soil during WWII, bringing beauty and comfort in the wake of great loss.
But of course, fireweed (or bombweed) doesn’t just sit there and look pretty. It has work to do. For one thing, it stabilizes and nurtures the soil with nitrogen necessary for other plant life to emerge. It serves as vitamin-rich food for a range of hungry creatures from bees and hummingbirds to elk, grizzly bears, and humans. Native Americans make fireweed syrup or jelly from the blooms and fireweed tea from the leaves. Fireweed is an antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and antiseptic. Even their seed pods produce a white feathery substance that helps pad nests and pillows. Whew. That’s a lot to say about the work of one little flower after a devastating loss. It’s easy to overlook the upsides to the downsides.
Maybe, the end of the world isn’t really the end of the world. Maybe it's the beginning of something new. In between doom-scrolling, I have come upon a fast-growing podcast called Know Thyself, the brainchild of 28-year-old André Duqum. I love it when super young people seem wise beyond their years. Duqum interviews scientists and philosophers, physicians,

and others with incredible curiosity about what makes us humans do what we do. A recent interview was with Oxford fellow Iain McGilchrist, a psychiatrist, philosopher, and neuroscientist. He’s known for two paradigm-shifting books, The Master and his Emissary (2009), then, more recently, a twovolume, deeply researched tome that took him 10 years to write, called The Matter With Things (2021). McGilchrist studies the differences between the right and left hemispheres of the human brain.
He makes the case that for the past 350 years or so, the left hemisphere has been given the upper hand in our decision making. He challenges the notion that the left hemisphere of our brain is the more rational, reasonable mature adult side. Whereas, he says, we tend to view the right hemisphere as the airy-fairy side that skips around, paints pictures, writes poems, and generally needs monitoring by the left side. McGilchrist contends we have gotten the roles reversed.
McGilchrist says the left brain deals mostly with the material world, the here and now in space and time. It divides, labels, and categorizes things. It sees what it sees and doesn’t think there is more.
The left hemisphere is black and white in its thinking. It’s either this, or it’s that. There is no time for subtlety or nuance, for a bit of this or a bit of that; for the coming together of opposites.
The right hemisphere, on the other hand, is the intuitive side, experiencing the world around it, taking in multiple streams of thought. The right hemisphere wants to sit under a tree and ponder while the left hemisphere is in a hurry.
Everything in our life now tells us to speed up, to do things faster and faster and in doing so you can’t
really appreciate anything….
The ridiculous way our lives are overloaded with answering the questions and ticking the boxes until your life is drained away from you. McGilchrist says this approach strongly influences our approach to education.
The idea of education is putting information into children...that may be a byproduct of education and it’s an important one…but it can’t remotely constitute an education. An education is about drawing something out, not putting something in.
McGilchrist says the good news is that scientists and philosophers are starting to come out of their silos and collaborate more, offering new hope for our ability to reach our human potential.
I call myself a hopeful pessimist. I see things going wrong all around me, but I remain hopeful. That’s because I believe, despite what is happening, that human beings are a wonderful species. We focus all the time on what we have done wrong…but we should be grateful for what we can achieve at our best, which is extraordinary.
To view the whole interview, search Iain McGilchrist, Know Thyself
And while you are at it, there are many more fascinating interviews that offer hope. I, for one, feel like half my brain has just been let out of jail.


by Cindy Burnett, staff writer
Favorite reads of the year
As the year closes, I enjoy reflecting on my reading from the past year, evaluating what resonated with me. So many fabulous books were published, but I also had more misses than normal. After some intense deliberation, I narrowed down my favorites, those books that I still think about regularly.
Nesting by Roisin O’Donnell (fiction) –When Ciara Fay makes a split-second decision to grab her two young daughters and flee, she knows that leaving is the right thing to do, but she finds that staying away is much harder than the leaving ever was. With no job and little support, she struggles to find a home for her girls and herself as her emotionally abusive husband Ryan launches an unrelenting campaign for her to return home. Navigating the broken Irish housing system, Ciara bravely fights the odds in this compelling tale of survival and the effects of enduring the long-term consequences of emotional abuse. O’Donnell’s vivid prose brings to life the unsettling brutality of gaslighting and coercive partner control where the bruises are not physical.
Raising Hare: A Memoir by Chloe Dalton (memoir) – During the Covid lockdown in the English countryside, Dalton stumbles across a leveret (a baby hare) and brings it home. As she learns to feed it and take care of it with little guidance because raising a hare is quite rare, what results is an unlikely relationship between her and the hare, a development that completely changes the way Dalton views the world. This book contains so many beautiful passages that I stopped to absorb and reflect on and helped me evaluate how I move about in the world. I loved Raising Hare from beginning to end.
The Correspondent by Virginia Evans (fiction) – Most mornings, 73-year-old Sybil Van Antwerp sits down to write letters – to her brother, to her best friend Rosalie, to Joan Didion and Ann Patchett to give them her thoughts on their latest books, and to others. Sybil’s wry wit and clever sense of humor are present throughout, and the letters she writes and receives are a joy to read. The Correspondent explores the importance of literature, making connections, expanding worldviews through
experiences, as well as the ups and downs of a long life. I loved the reflections on love, loss, parenting, family, and most importantly the passage of time.
Culpability by Bruce Holsinger (family drama, mystery) – A family’s world is upended after their car swerves, causing an accident that results in the death of two elderly people in an oncoming car. Oldest child Charlie was in the driver’s seat and grabbed the wheel right before the wreck, but the car was self-driving with AI technology. Who exactly is at fault? This engrossing novel explores culpability in the age of technology, and as AI becomes more prevalent, what our role is as humans in a world dominated by machines. Against the backdrop of technology, Holsinger also explores family dynamics, grief, secrets, and parenting.

What Kind of Paradise by Janelle Brown (mystery) – In What Kind of Paradise, Janelle Brown evocatively wrestles with the effects of progress, technology, and power through the lens of a fierce and lonely girl and her paranoid and extremist father. Jane has spent her entire life in rural Montana living off the grid with her father. He is evasive about their past and educates Jane with 19th-century philosophical works while leaving her regularly for week-long jaunts. When she accompanies him on a trip that ends in murder, she realizes that nothing is as she believed it to be. Brown brings to life the early days of the internet with vivid detail, creating such a tense experience for the reader who understands how drastically different things are today from how early internet pioneers wanted or expected them to be. This haunting page turner explores right and wrong, extremism, technology, and family.
The Whyte Python World Tour by Travis Kennedy (fiction/thriller) – This hilarious and irreverent novel stars Rikki Thunder, a member of Whyte Python, a heavy metal band who is recruited by the CIA in the late 1980s to go behind the Iron Curtain and help spark a revolution through the power of rock. While this might sound like a strange premise, it is loosely inspired by allegedly true events. The Whyte Python World Tour is one of the most entertaining books that I have read this year. Rikki Thunder is a gem: naïve, unintentionally humorous, and a fabulous narrator. Kennedy weaves humor, heart, history, music, travel, and so much fun into this page turner.
The Book of Guilt by Catherine Chidgey (speculative fiction) – This lyrical combination of dystopian intrigue and historical fiction grabbed me from page one. Set in a 1970s English small town, the book follows triplet boys who are the only remaining residents at New Forest Home, in the care of three women they call Mother Morning, Mother Afternoon, and Mother Night. Their small and controlled world consists of taking their medicine to fight off an unknown illness, doing their chores, and playing games. A sense of dread builds in the reader as the story unfolds; clearly
(continued on page 14)



something is amiss, but what exactly? The tension ratchets up until the unexpected and highly satisfying ending. While there is a mystery at the heart of the story, so much more is at play – the nature of truth and control, testing the bounds of morality, and the age-old debate over nature versus nurture.
Gemini: Stepping Stone to the Moon, the Untold Story by Jeffrey Kluger (nonfiction) –“Without Gemini, there would be no Apollo.” This sentence encapsulates the profound importance of the Gemini program on the subsequent Mercury and Apollo programs. In Gemini, Kluger chronicles the history of the Gemini (pronounced Geminee) program from its origins, highlighting both its numerous successes and failures. Consisting of 10 flights over the course of just 20 months, Gemini sent men into space for the first time, but also led to deaths, near deaths, and all sorts of other failures that will have the reader marveling at how a moon landing ever happened at all. Kluger manages to bring a very human element to this riveting story as he details the challenges and dangers faced by the Gemini missions and the astronauts who participated.
Favorites from Buzz Readers:
In addition to compiling my list, I reached out to Buzz residents to hear what they loved this year (some were recently published, others were published previously). To my delight, I received so many responses that we did not have space to include all of them. Look out for more favorites from Buzz readers in an online Page Turners column this month.
Sally Mason: “Culpability by Bruce Holsinger (this book also made my list; see above). This book combines family drama along with moral responsibility and what that means in the age of AI.”
Michele Carlin: “Theo of Golden by Allen Levi – this unexpected gem was suggested to me by a friend, and I now find myself recommending it to everyone. Theo, somewhat of a mystery man, arrives in the fictional town of Golden, where he quickly establishes himself in the community. The book chronicles each relationship he builds, from the local barista to the bookstore owner to the homeless woman, and how his simple gestures affect them. I love this book because it movingly illustrates the positive impact of small acts of kindness and placing worth on others versus oneself.”
Paige Erwin: “Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver – a modern take on Charles Dickens set in the USA. So impressed by the author’s ability to speak in the voice of a teenage boy navigating the challenges of growing up in rural Appalachia. The story highlights the multiple layers and expanse of the interconnections between the economic dependencies of a rural community, the key roles of football and family, the opioid epidemic, and the challenges of overcoming adversity. I love how Barbara
Kingsolver and her husband are using the proceeds from this Pulitzer Prize winning novel to found and support Higher Ground Women's Recovery Residence.”
Elaine Schroller: “A Month in the Country by J. L. Carr. If I had to choose one favorite for 2025, this is the one. Having done in-depth research about WWI for my own novels, I’m drawn to books that explore the effects of war on the individuals who fought. While this story touches on Tom Birkin’s battle memories, it’s about his healing from them while he restores a medieval mural in a tiny church in an even tinier village. I was so transfixed by Carr’s evocative descriptions that I finished A Month in the Country in one day.”

Stacy Humphries: “The Road to Tender Hearts by Annie Hartnett is quirky, funny, and unexpectedly touching. I loved the eccentric, imperfect main character and the ‘chosen family’ theme that unfolds along a hilarious road trip (with help from a clever cat). Even when the story dips into tough territory, humor carries the reader through. If you enjoy books like Fredrik Backman’s, this one is for you.”
Kelly Hogan: “The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray – I love books about women doing amazing things and without compromise. This one is no exception and such an intriguing subject matter. The author does an incredible job writing about the early 1900s, educating us about the time period without muddling the main storyline.”
Lori Fisher: “The Correspondent by Virginia Evans (also on my list; see above) – I loved getting to know the main character, through nothing but the letters she has written and received. Each letter is dated and addressed to various recipients. A very unique reading experience.”
Amanda McGee: “One Golden Summer by Carley Fortune. I am a huge Carley Fortune fan and thought this was her best book yet. She did an amazing job of making it a sequel to Every Summer After and at the same time allowing it to be a stand-alone novel.”
Chris Cander: “In Dictée by Theresa Hak
Kyung Cha (published in 1982), the reader is beckoned into a poignant interplay of language and identity, where author Theresa Hak Kyung Cha crafts a lyrical exploration that transcends the confines of traditional narrative. Each section unfolds like a delicate origami, revealing the layered complexities of belonging and memory through a kaleidoscope of voices. Cha’s prose, at once haunting and luminous, breathes life into the fragmented experiences of diaspora, capturing the struggle to communicate that lingers in the spaces between words. As the pages turn, the reader feels the weight of history, the pressure of silence, and the power of reclaiming one’s identity.”
Jen Fink: “The Borrowed Life of Frederick Fife by Anna Johnston. It is a lovely, feel-good story about friendship, forgiveness, and finding family. The main character’s kindness and sense of humor in the wake of his hardships allows him to begin again even in his elderly years. I really enjoyed the quirkiness of it!”
Celia Anderson: “Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall has it all! A terrific love story, a parent’s sorrow and twists you didn’t see coming! Dorcet, England with a strong 1960s vibe! A beautifully told, engrossing story that you won’t be able [to] put down!”
For more book recommendations and bookish thoughts, see Cindy’s monthly Buzz Reads column, her award-winning Thoughts from a Page Podcast or follow @ThoughtsFromaPage on Instagram.


by Tracy L. Barnett, staff writer
The mega bed was born of necessity and nerves. Eight Girl Scouts, away from home for one of their first overnight camping trips, discovered they couldn’t push their bunk beds together at Camp Casa Mare. So they did what Girl Scouts do: They problem-solved.
“We made a mega bed,” Alexa Camp recalled with a laugh. “And we all slept together, and it was like 102 outside, so it was boiling in there, but we didn’t move. We had to stick to our guns.”
That was nearly a decade ago, when the girls of Troop 147007 were seven or eight years old, experiencing their first night away from their parents. Now, at 17 and 18, they’ve just returned from their final adventure together – a five-day Royal Caribbean cruise to Cozumel – before dispersing to colleges across North America.
“I still feel like I’m moving on the ship because literally, we just got off a few hours ago,” said Tania Campbell, one of three troop leaders who have shepherded these girls since kindergarten. The mothers and daughters conducted three interviews over three months from their respective homes in Houston, voices chiming in over video chat, beginning in July with a journey back in time, ending on Labor Day with the excitement of their journey still palpable in the afternoon heat.
It started, as many lasting friendships do, with a moment of mutual uncertainty. At a Girl Scout open house at Horn Elementary 13 years ago, the organization asked for volunteer troop leaders. Alexa’s mom, Tina Villard, and Tania, who had met through Bellaire Young Mothers, looked at each other across the room.
“I’ll do it if you do it,” they decided, as Tania recalls it.
Neither had been a Girl Scout, so there was a lot to learn. “There’s a lot that goes into it,” Tina admits. But being a leader comes with orientation and trainings and lots of paperwork – “making sure that we were doing all the right things through each level that the girls got through.”
Soon after, Erique DeGrange joined them –
a former Girl Scout herself and a teacher who brought invaluable experience to the trio. “I actually don’t really remember not having Erique there,” Tina said. “Pretty quickly, I think we talked her into being the third mom and the third troop leader.”

SMILES, SASHES, AND SERVICE Back in 2018, these bright-eyed Horn Elementary fourth graders from Girl Scout Troop 147007 helped make the school’s fifth-grade graduation extra special – handing out programs and tissues as proud families filed in. Formed in kindergarten, the troop began with all Horn students and has stayed strong ever since, even as some members moved away. Pictured, from left, are Skylar Campbell, Isabelle DeGrange, Alexa Camp, Anneliese DeGrange, and Aria Jin, who are still part of the troop today.
The three women, all working mothers, crafted a vision that was both ambitious and achievable. It needed to be something not too overwhelming – “Maybe we meet monthly, maybe not as frequent, but we’re going to meet,” recalled Tania. “We’re going to keep this consistent, keep it stable, and learn throughout this experience.”
The Horn years were all about discovery –learning songs, geocaching in the park, and their first sleepover at Misty Meadows. It was a safe, joyful space, and none of them imagined how much they’d need that anchor once middle school pulled them in different directions.
When middle school arrived, the troop faced its first real test. The girls scattered to four or five different schools. For many friendships, this might have been the end. For Troop 147007, it became their reason to continue.
“I was scared, and I was sad,” Anneliese DeGrange, Erique’s daughter, remembered about the separation. “We all got phones. We started texting, and Girl Scouts also helped salvage all these friendships.”
Isabelle DeGrange, Anneliese’s twin sister, agreed. “I think Girl Scouts really became an intentional way for us to see each other and keep up these friendships,” she said.
The monthly meetings became an anchor in their changing lives. “Because they were so consistent,” explained Skylar Campbell, Tania’s daughter, “I could look forward to those monthly meetings where I would see all the same faces.
And, honestly, I feel like half of our meetings were just us catching up on what was happening at each other’s schools.”
Even during Covid-19, when the world shut down, the troop found ways to maintain their connection. They met in parks, properly distanced, doing yoga and talking. They held virtual meetings that became lifelines during isolation. “I really appreciated having these set times to see people, just to talk about the crazy life events that were going on,” Isabelle recalls.
The girls found ways to serve their community during the pandemic. Aria Jin describes how she and Eden Harris organized a project where students made hundreds of cards for Texas Children’s Hospital nurses: “We know that during Covid it was really hard for them having so many losses, and so we just wanted to show appreciation.”
Over 13 years, the troop has tackled projects that would challenge many adults. They’ve built sidewalks to make garden paths wheelchairaccessible at Pershing Middle School. They’ve seeded bluebonnets at Willow Waterhole Greenway that still bloom each spring. They’ve made blankets for animal shelters, written conservation essays, and raised funds through countless cookie sales.
“I never would have ever thought I would have done that,” Anneliese says about the side-
walk project. “We put in the sand. We leveled the pavers. It was something I never would have done. But it was actually really fun. And I think it was really cool that I got to say I helped build a sidewalk.”
These weren’t just service projects – they were lessons in perseverance, problem-solving, and leadership. Each girl has achieved her Bronze and Silver Awards, and many are now completing their Gold Awards, the highest achievement in Girl Scouting. Isabelle is publishing a children’s book as her Gold Award project.
“I remember when I first conceptualized that idea I was like, there is no way in a million years this is ever gonna actually happen,” she said with a laugh. “But every day that I showed up to work on it I got a little bit closer, and now I’m at the point where I’m having final conversations with a publisher.”
The troop has provided an education that goes beyond what school or sports can offer. They’ve learned budgeting through cookie sales, saving money over years for big events like the cruise. They’ve practiced public speaking by approaching strangers to sell cookies outside grocery stores. Most importantly, they’ve learned that leadership can be quiet and collaborative.
“I think that Girl Scouts has taught me that being a leader is often more silent than people realize,” Skylar observed. “Leadership isn’t always about just being the loudest; it’s about doing a lot of the work behind the scenes that not everyone sees.”
The cruise – a first for almost everyone – was everything they’d hoped and more. The ship felt like “a floating city,” Erique said, with ice skating rinks, rock climbing walls, and shows featuring triple axels performed on ice at sea.
But the most treasured moments were the simple ones. “I definitely thought just having free time to spend with these girls I’ve known my whole life, was really special,” Isabelle reflects. “We normally don’t ever get to do that. And that was something really special that I think I’ll remember.”
They danced everywhere – in elevators with strangers who joined their impromptu parties, at karaoke every night, during ’80s night on Deck Five. They maintained their buddy system, negotiating between Anneliese’s desire to tan and Alexa’s need for shade. They snorkeled together, spotting “Dory” fish and brain coral, dodging tiny jellyfish, and watching flying fish leap from the waves only to be caught by seabirds.
At formal dinner one night, Tania gave each girl a Girl Scout-themed bracelet. “It was in that kind of moment,” Isabelle said, “I was like, wow, this group of girls that have been with me through this organization for almost my entire life, almost as long as I’ve been alive – we’re all going to split up… and it’s imminent, you know?”

FROM COOKIE BOOTHS TO CARIBBEAN SUNSETS Troop 147007 has done it all. After 13 years together, these Girl Scout ambassadors celebrated their journey with a cruise to Cozumel, Mexico, capping a legacy of leadership with Bronze, Silver, and now Gold Awards for several troop members. Pictured, from left, are Aria Jin, Alexa Camp, Sloane Smith, Jenna Mirza, Anneliese DeGrange, Isabelle DeGrange, Skylar Campbell, and Eden Harris. These girls all earned their Bronze (2019) and Silver (2021) awards, which count towards prerequisites for the Gold Award. Current Gold Award recipients are Skylar, Sloane, and Isabelle (as of Nov. 2025). The Gold Award is the highest and most prestigious award that Girl Scouts can earn.
Ask these young women what they’ve found in each other, and the word that keeps surfacing isn’t “friend” – it’s “family.”
“I’ve always wanted a sister,” Alexa says. “And I just literally looked to my left and saw Anneliese. My whole life, I’ve wanted a younger sister... And I’m just now realizing, I always had one. It just wasn’t the way that I expected it to be.”
The feelings are mutual. “I literally love her,” Anneliese says of Alexa. “I think about her every day. And I can’t imagine life without her.”
Several of the girls have already designated each other as future maids of honor. They talk about their bond as unconditional, unbreakable, something that transcends the typical boundaries of friendship.
“We just know that we’re always going to be a part of each other’s hearts,” Anneliese explains. “We don’t need to talk or hang out every day. We just know that we’re so important to each other.”
The three troop leaders have discovered the same thing. “These ladies will be in my life for the rest of my life,” Erique said. “And that was sort of an unexpected outcome for me as well.”
“I feel like Erique, Tania, and I are not going to disconnect,” Tina agreed. “I mean, I think there’s been times even during the summer where the three of us would get together, even outside of the Girl Scout stuff.”
They’re already talking about maintaining their meetings, just as friends rather than as a troop. The mothers joke about future reunions, knowing they’ll be “crying on each other’s shoulders” when the girls leave for college.
Camping on Tania’s property near Point
Blank, the girls have learned that even when trucks get hopelessly stuck in mud, even when someone falls face-first into a creek, even when you try to use cow patties as kindling and smoke up the entire campsite with the smell – you figure it out together. You find a solution. You laugh about it later.
“Girl Scouts taught me that really you can do it and it’s fine,” Anneliese says. “It really broadened my horizons by a lot.”
As Troop 147007 prepares to close this chapter, they carry with them 13 years of inside jokes, traditions, and memories. They still end every meeting the same way they always have, standing in a circle with arms crossed right over left, singing a Girl Scout song about friendship. Someone always gets the hands wrong; someone always ends up in “a puddle of giggles,” as Erique describes it.
But that’s what makes it perfect. That’s what makes it theirs.
“We were very goofy,” Aria says simply, and in those three words lies the secret to their success: They were allowed to fail, encouraged to try, and given the space to be exactly who they were, together.
The cruise may be over, the troop meetings may be ending, but for eight young women and three mothers in Houston, the voyage continues. They’ve built something stronger than any sidewalk, more enduring than wildflowers, more valuable than all the cookies they’ve ever sold: a family bound not by blood, but by choice, time, and “13 years of funny moments,” as Anneliese puts it, that have become the foundation for lifetimes of friendship ahead.

by Cathy Gordon, staff writer
Ask children in this neighborhood where Santa lives, and they might hesitate to say the North Pole. They might be inclined to point to a modest mid-century house in Memorial Forest where St. Nick winks, shimmies, and twinkles from nearly every nook and cranny.
Leila Reynolds’ house.
The 92-year-old – grandmother to four and great-grandmother to three – has lived in this house for 60 years. It’s where she raised her two daughters and son, all now in their 60s. It’s the kind of home that holds onto its warmth, even when the world seems cold and moves faster than it used to, say neighbors.
It’s the place of holiday magic.
Nearly every Christmas season for the past 12 years, Leila has turned her home into a wonderland of crimson and white, a maze of Santas on nearly every surface. A merry museum of sorts. But unlike a museum, this is a hands-on experience.
Neighborhood youngsters spill into her pecanpaneled den, forming a semi-circle at her feet as she passes figurines around, weaving history and heart into tales about each one – carved statute Santas, stuffed ones, animated jolly gadgets that jingle, sing, and dance. She shares stories about Santa and his accoutrements, like his lunch box.
Leila’s Santa Show and Tell is instilled in childhoods. Kids who once toddled wide-eyed from room to room, giggling at the Santa who snores, still pop in over college break.
Leila is the main attraction, say friends and neighbors.
She never lets the magic fade.
“She’s one of the most cheerful people we’ve ever met. She sees the silver lining in everything,” says neighbor Layne Childs, whose three daughters have scurried to Leila’s door multiple years for the Santa experience. “My girls love that everything is so touchable. She has several stuffed ones that sing and move, and they go straight for those. And they always leave with a candy cane.”
“It makes me so happy to see the children giggle and get so excited,” says Leila, a spunky sort who says she never set out to curate a Santa collection. “It just happened!”
Decades ago, she stopped putting up a Christmas tree. But she had a Santa here and

there. Then friends and family gifted them, and it became a thing. There’s the bulbous Santa gourd. And a jolly face painted on stone by her mother-in-law. Santa flags staring from windows. Santa night lights. Snow globes. Kitchen utensils. A giant Santa Snuggie that she makes
an adult model for the children, inciting belly laughs.
“It’s Santa everything. Everything! Even Santa soap the kids can wash their hands with,” Leila says. “It’s so much fun!”
Son Miles Reynolds, in industrial sales, trav-


HO-HO-HOME COLLECTION Top left: Neighborhood children form a semi-circle at Leila’s feet as she shares her many Santa figurines. Bottom left: Just a few Santas in her collection, soft squishy ones that children love to hold and hug. Right: Leila’s neighbor Carol Gilmore, right, has made the seasonal across-the-street jaunt to Leila’s Santa “museum,” with her twins over many years. Her children, now college-aged, think of Leila as a grandmother.
els the globe for work. But Thanksgiving and Christmas are hardwired into his calendar, says the Ohio resident. Time for Mom and his childhood casa. And the unpacking of Santas.
It was his first birthday when the family moved into that house in 1965.
“After Thanksgiving, we put them all out. She tells me where to place them,” he says. “I go every year. It’s fun to watch how much the kids love it. I think it’s a great experience for them. And her.”
Twins Clayton and Deveny Gilmore, acrossthe-street neighbors, are now in college. They grew up on Leila’s witty Santa tales. The true magic of the holiday season, they say, begins when children in the neighborhood receive a handwritten note from Leila in the mail, her lyrical Dr. Seuss-style invitation tucked inside, inviting them to pop over.
“My grandmother wrote me letters, and I remember how special that made me feel to get something addressed to me in the mail,” Leila recalls. “Every child needs that.”
“It did make me feel special, says Deveny, a University of Georgia sophomore. “I only had one grandmother growing up and she lived kind of far away, so Mrs. Reynolds definitely is like a surrogate grandmother to me.”
Ditto, says Clayton, a student at the University of St. Thomas. “I really like her

Santa on a pair of skis. She’s gotten Santas from around the globe. I enjoy going over and chatting with her. She was there our whole childhood pretty much.”
“She puts so much heart and soul into it,” adds the twins’ mother, Carol Gilmore. “She’s
The true magic of the holiday season, they say, begins when children in the
neighborhood
receive a handwritten note from Leila in the mail, her lyrical Dr. Seuss-style invitation tucked inside, inviting them to pop over.
just as sweet as can be. All the neighbors watch out for her to see if there’s anything she needs because we love her. She’s a part of our lives.”
“My neighbors are just the best!” exudes Leila. “When we had that bad freeze a few years
back, they came out of the woodwork for me. When I had my knee replaced, 12 women signed up for a rotation dinner. These people are like family.”
Li Zhang, Leila’s next-door neighbor of 15 years, places Leila’s newspaper on her porch chair every day, rain or shine. She loves how her elder neighbor signs letters to her children, sketching a miniature picture of herself with a little mop of curly hair. Li has one child in college; another is a high school senior. Both are huge Leila fans with many Santa tours under their belt.
“For her age, she has great mental clarity. She’s sharp. She remembers my children’s birthdays every time,” Li says.
“She’s the best neighbor we’ve ever had,” says Debbie Davies, who moved here from South Africa. “She’s always written my children, like on Valentine’s, and it’s such a nice personal thing for them to get in the mail. They were young when we moved here, and now they are teenagers and it’s just so nice that they’ve had that experience with her in their lives. It’s part of their childhood that is so special.”
“Childhoods should be filled with wonder,” Leila says.
Hers was.
Little Leila Marian Poppen grew up in Muskegon, Mich. Come winter, her attorney father became an alchemist (continued on page 20)



BIRTHDAY BASH Top: Leila and family organized a birthday bash for her 90th a few years back, with a food truck and juggler, among other activities. Neighbors gathered on the lawn for a group picture. Some neighbors presented Leila, a puzzle whiz, with a custom puzzle later, depicting that scene and other vignettes from that day. Bottom left: Birthday queen Leila sits front and center with family surrounding her. Bottom right: The 90 & Fabulous Leila is all smiles on her special day.
(continued from page 19)
of ice. Under the moonlight of a cold sky, he turned their backyard into a surface of dreams, an ice-skating rink. He cleared the yard of snow, hosing it down layer by layer, a ritual of patience and precision. Mobs of mittened neighbors swirled about their yard that glistened like glass.
“Oh, what a memory!” says Leila. Her only sibling, Sherman – Sherm, as she called him –was her companion in childhood. “And sometimes, teaser and tormentor!” she quips.
Life opened up, wild and full of laughter, in the alley of their Muskegon home. They played marbles and chase, and invented games with
their own rules, like explorers setting the course.
Leila points to an object in her home, the Snurfer, the forerunner to the popular snowboard. Seems Sherm possessed an inventive streak that extended far beyond that alley. On Christmas Day 1965, he braced two children-sized skis together for his two daughters’ newest snow time thrill, then had the business acumen to get a patent on it. It became the first mass-produced snowboard. By 1968, there were Snurfer competitions, drawing participants far and wide.
A 10-foot Snurfer sculpture was erected in Sherm’s honor in downtown Muskegon. “He gave a wonderful speech about how community
is built in an alley,” Leila recalls of its unveiling.
The original Snurfer is displayed in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, along with a tribute to Sherm. Leila owns one of the first Snurfers off the production line.
When he died in 2019, Leila’s world dimmed a bit. She scattered his ashes in the alley of her childhood home. “I miss him terribly.”
Former neighbor Suzanne Chaffin knows grief. When she first moved across from Leila years ago, she was deeply grieving her teenage son. The family enacted a scholarship in his name and Leila helped evaluate applicants by reading their essays.



“Leila was such a comfort to me. I’d go over and sit on her couch for hours. She was such a blessing in such a dark time in my life. She’s like a mom to me.”
While Suzanne now lives in Cypress, they see each other often. And they share a love of puzzles.
There’s a “Leila way” of doing puzzles, says family. And many in her family follow suit.
To Leila, referring to the puzzle picture is cheating. It warrants a cursory glance when you open the box, then it’s tossed aside.
She sits at her kitchen table, like a general surveying a battlefield, thousands of pieces sprawled before her, timer set, and magnifying glass at the ready. Oftentimes, her beloved Astros are on in the background.
“Oh, that’s the only way to do it,” says the nonagenarian whose penchant for puzzles started as a child.
She and her family organized a block party for her 90th birthday, replete with a food truck, juggler, and a bevy of activities for the kids. A few days later, some neighbors presented her with a custom-made puzzle, a group picture of neighbor and family partygoers, sprinkled with fun vignettes.
Leila’s daughter Nancy Musgrove, the school nurse at Frostwood Elementary, loves that children experience her childhood home and her mom’s storytelling. Nancy started first grade at Frostwood the year they moved into the home. Her siblings attended Frostwood as well. Her daughter, Jenny Musgrove, teaches first grade there.
“I remember that it was that fat gourd painted as Santa that she loved so much. I think that’s kind of what really kicked it off. I remember going to art festivals and stuff looking for fat Santas to add to the collection. And then word got out and she started being gifted all kinds of Santas.”
“It was fun connecting the dots about Leila’s family,” says neighbor Missy Purgason. “My kids started at Frostwood where Nancy’s the nurse and her daughter teaches. We love to brag that we live across the street from school nurse Nancy’s mother, that we know three generations of them.”
The mom of four says her children love receiving hand-written letters from Leila and jokes she sends at Halloween.
Leila’s firstborn Holly Montalbano is a holiday story herself. Leila and husband Miles, long since deceased, welcomed her on Christmas Day, 1957. Thus, the name Holly.
“Childhoods should be filled with wonder,” Leila says.
Her mom was hosting a Christmas party when she went into labor with her. But a newspaper birth announcement misspelled it as Holy, an altogether different meaning when missing an L. “I think she was probably horrified!” Holly says of her mom.
The Midland, Mich. resident is the event director for a nonprofit think tank, a career that keeps her busy. “But we will be with Mom this Christmas, all of us. My daughter and her husband, too. We haven’t all been together as a big family for Christmas in probably 15 years. We are very excited about that!”
While her mother was great at, well, being a mom, she was always community-driven, Holly adds. Her children grown, Leila worked for the local New Age Hospice, now known as Houston
Hospice. As a new concept in its infancy, “people barely knew how to pronounce it. They’d pronounce it like ‘spice’ on the end,” she says. She and a partner eventually started their own company, Hospice Development Resources, that helped start hospices in Kansas, Michigan, and Indiana. “That was so rewarding.”
Even before hospice years, she volunteered. She started working for a group called Taping for the Blind in the late 1970s. She was recorded while reading books aloud, a program under the Library of Congress, created for the blind and print-handicapped. It’s now called Sight into Sound. Leila went from being a reader to president of the organization, adept at fundraising. She’s still on its board.
One of her volunteer gigs led to finding Santas. At 68, she volunteered for an exchange program, teaching English to students in Xi'an, China. The ancient city wall is a must-see for tourists, built under the order of the first emperor of Ming Dynasty. “And when I climbed up that wall there’s all these dusty little shops, one that has these little clay Santas in it. They went home with me.”
She’s looking forward to Christmas, lots of family, and her Santas to keep her company.
But a fun fact, she says. Of all the houses in the neighborhood, hers lacks a chimney. A small faux chimney, detailed in red brick paper, stands against a den wall, a prop peppered with festive figurines and stockings.
“But, aha! No problem!” she says with a lilt. “How does Santa get in if I don’t have a chimney, the children might ask? Well, he has a special key, I tell them! I show it to the kids. They look at it, touch it, and you can just see their little minds working! I think they think that’s cool!
“Santa has a key to my house. Of course!”

by Andria Dilling, staff writer
Even before women could vote, or serve on a jury, or be a CEO, or wear pants, there was The Junior League. Specifically, there was The Junior League of New York, which started a movement in 1901 when one Barnard College student organized a group of her peers to volunteer outside of their homes, independent of their husbands, to address the social issues they saw around them.
From there, Junior Leagues sprang up across the country. In 1923, there were 63 of them, plus dozens of women’s service organizations applying for the designation. These Junior Leagues were progressive before their time: The St. Louis League fought for women’s suffrage, organizing a march outside of the 1916 Democratic Convention. The Brooklyn League created what became the model for free school lunches across the country. In 1923, The Junior League of Dallas published a Junior League Cook Book, an entirely new way of fundraising.
And in 1925, 12 Houston women started The Junior League of Houston (JLH).
Originally, Houston’s League focused on a well-baby clinic, which, founded in 1927, eventually became the Junior League Health Care Clinic at Texas Children's Hospital. Since then, the League has partnered with hundreds of Houston organizations, providing thousands of trained volunteers and millions of dollars in funding – all in service of building a better community
Those 12 founders would have had no inkling of the impact their organization would have in Houston. In 2000, for its 75th anniversary, the League collaborated with Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital, the City of Houston, HISD, and Harris County Hospital District to launch a new generation of well-baby clinics: the SuperKids Pediatric Mobile Clinic. (This writer fondly remembers sitting on the floor of another volunteer’s home, two tiny babies in carriers with us, working on the publicity for the SuperKids Clinic.) This year, to celebrate 100 years, the League raised $2 million to fund the new Junior League of Houston Volunteer Services Building at DePelchin Children’s Center. Through it all, the League has set the standard for preparing women to be effec-
tive volunteers and leaders in the community.
Those 12 founders also could never have dreamt that their recipes and the recipes of volunteers to come, celebrated in the four Junior League of Houston cookbooks, would be the center of holiday traditions for so many families, and for so many generations.
PeggyRoe, a nonprofit consultant, joined The Junior League of Houston when she was 34. “I’ve been a member for 46 years,” she says, recalling that she’s been president of the Sustaining Club (the volunteers who have completed their active years and remain active in the League socially and philanthropically) and, more recently, served on the Centennial Campaign Cabinet, helping with fundraising.

STEADY LEAD Peggy Roe has been a leader in the community and in The Junior League of Houston for her entire adult life.
“I grew up in Oklahoma, and my husband and I moved to Texas for him to go to grad school at UT,” Peggy says. She joined the League because, “I knew it would open doors for me all over Houston.”
And that it did. “We went all over the city and learned about all these wonderful projects. It was our job to be volunteers,” Peggy says. “I never would have known so much about our community. And it sparked a curiosity for me about what made Houston tick. Why was it such a philanthropic community? Honestly, I think it’s because people in Houston never took for granted what they had been given. They wanted others to feel
the benefits of their good fortune. In Houston, it’s gratitude that generates generosity.
“The League taught me how to be a good fundraiser, and to be a good leader.” Since her active days in the League, Peggy has led several nonprofits in different capacities. “Sitting on the board of the Junior League, learning the bylaws and proper meeting protocols, realizing the importance of being good stewards of other people’s money – those lessons have played into my life as a nonprofit consultant and fundraiser ever since.”
Peggy was on the committees for both the Star of Texas Cookbook and Stop and Smell the

Rosemary. Her family’s Christmas breakfast always includes the Moncrief Monkey Bread and Sour Cream Coffee Cake from The Junior League Cook Book, published in 1968 and referred to by Peggy and her friends as “Old Yeller.” “My daddy loved that bread,” Peggy says. “When he and my mother would come over, he would take not just a piece, but a big handful of it. That gave me so much joy.”
From Stop and Smell the Rosemary, Roasted Red Pepper Soup and the Wild Rice Medley both star at the Roes’ Christmas dinner. “I like that the soup is colorful and looks Christmas-y,” she says, laughing about the time she brought it, frozen, on the plane to Christmas in Washington, DC, where two of her three children and their families live. “They confiscated my luggage, because it wouldn’t go through security,” she says. “I thought, you’ll take that over my dead body! Thank goodness I got it back.”
Sour Cream Coffee Cake, from The Junior League Cook Book
½ pound butter
2 cups sugar
2 eggs
1 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups sifted flour
¼-½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder

2 teaspoons cinnamon
4-5 tablespoons brown sugar ¾ cup chopped pecans
Grease and flour large bundt pan. Using electric mixer, cream butter and sugar. Add eggs, one at a time. Mix sour cream and vanilla together. Sift flour, salt, and baking powder together. Add flour mixture to butter alternately with sour cream. Pour 1⁄3 to ½ of batter into prepared pan. Combine cinnamon, brown sugar, and nuts; sprinkle over cake batter. Spoon remaining batter into cake pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 60-65 minutes. Cake will rise, then fall slightly. Cool for at least 10 minutes before removing from pan. Sift powdered sugar over top of warm cake if desired.
Adkins, executive director at the TIRR Foundation and member of several nonprofit boards, joined the League when she was 22 and teaching second grade at River Oaks Baptist. “It was so long ago, I’m not sure I can count back that far,” she laughs. “My mother and my aunt had put me up, and in that day and time it was completely different. They sent out a ballot to the entire membership and everyone would vote. That’s how it worked.” Today, anyone interested and willing to put in the time can join.
“When we joined, we had a really strict provisional course. We went around the city and
learned about all the different institutions and nonprofits. I remember seeing the Port of Houston. I had never seen the Port of Houston! I became enthralled with the community,” she says, adding, “I love to help people. That’s where I get my excitement.”
Once Cynthia started her family – both of her grown daughters are members of the Junior League, one in Georgetown and one in Houston – she worked in the Tea Room, and then leadership roles started to come her way. She was asked to chair the building of a new League headquarters.
“I knew nothing about building a building,” Cynthia says. “But it was the most fun thing I ever did in the League. We designed our committee with people in charge of the kitchen, the ballroom. We interviewed a project manager, and he was a great guy. Why he took the job answering to all of us, I don’t know. But he was great. We interviewed a construction firm, a design firm, an architecture firm, and off we went on this crazy journey.” That building still stands at 1811 Briar Oaks Lane and has hosted countless weddings, showers, meetings, and more.
A little-known story: When Cynthia was president of the League, her Tea Room chairman and others put a new Tea Room menu together. “We all looked that thing over and over,” Cynthia says about
(continued on page 24)


MAKE-AHEAD TREAT Donna Perillo and her daughter Lauren make the Crème Brûlée French Toast from Peace Meals. “It is a make-ahead casserole that tastes like dessert,” Donna says. “It’s been our holiday brunch tradition since I tested recipes on the Peace Meals team!”
(continued from page 23)
proofing it. But when it was printed, instead of Crab Cakes, the menu read Crap Cakes. “She [the Tea Room Chairman] was mortified, but mistakes happen,” Cynthia says. “We lived with it.”
There are no crab cakes at Cynthia’s family’s Christmas dinner, but there are Garlic Cheese Grits. “From the yellow cookbook,” she says, speaking of the 1968 The Junior League Cook Book. “Then the Milk Punch from that book as well. Sometimes, if I do Mexican for Christmas Eve, I’ll make the Portuguese Chicken in The Star of Texas cookbook. It’s really good, and it feeds a crowd.” She adds that there’s a delicious recipe in The Star of Texas that combines potatoes with Velveeta cheese (Hot Potato Salad)
“Nothing in it is the least bit healthy,” she says. Maybe not, but it was a delicious sign of the times.
2 cups uncooked grits
1 roll (6 ounces) garlic cheese
½ pound sharp Cheddar cheese, grated
½ cup butter
2 eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon Tabasco
¼ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Paprika
Cook grits. Add other ingredients, except paprika, and mix well. Pour into large, shallow casserole. Sprinkle with paprika. Bake in 350degree oven about 30 minutes. May be made early in the day and heated at serving time. Serves 12.
Elizabeth Kendrick and her sister Emily Walter followed in the footsteps of their mother, Sharyn Robinson, when they joined the League.
“When we were little, we would go to the Tea Room and watch [my mom] serve,” Elizabeth
says. Outside of her job as Director of Change Management for Phillips 66, Elizabeth led the 100th year celebration as Centennial Chairman. “We’ve had a whole season of festivities,” she says. “We reconnected with our sustainers, and with the agencies and donors we have worked with over the last 100 years. The most recent celebration was a donor recognition luncheon this fall.” Ann Stern, a former League president and president and CEO of Houston Endowment, spoke at the event about the League’s impact and response to community needs.
“At the same time our 12 founders were thinking about what the biggest needs in our community were,” Elizabeth says, “Jesse Jones was building the Houston Ship Channel,” transforming Houston into a major port city. “At the time, the idea of having a well-baby clinic…there wasn’t anything like it. From that point forward, we have continued to progressively support our community. We were caring for children with AIDS before we even knew what that meant.”
Today, more than 90 percent of JLH volunteers work outside their homes. “That’s a significant shift,” Elizabeth says. “These are strong, dedicated women who come from diverse backgrounds, and each have their own reasons for choosing to spend their free time volunteering.” She adds that the League is not only addressing community needs, but also training volunteers. “You have to have training to appreciate what different populations in our community look like. So, yes, the League is a wonderful group of women who come together and volunteer and have a good time. But we are working to better ourselves as volunteers, and to better the community. Women leave the League, and they are chairmen of boards, presidents of organizations.”
As impactful as they have been, the Houston Junior League’s cookbooks are no longer in print, and Elizabeth was the League’s last Publishing
Chairman. “I have a real soft spot for the cookbooks,” she says. “They are such a treasured part of our history. It’s legacy, it’s tradition, it’s the culture of Houston. My mom got her first Junior League cookbook from her grandmother. She gave us our first League cookbooks. I have all of them on my shelf. The cookbooks, and the recipes, bring people together outside of our League walls.”
For as long as Elizabeth and Emily can remember, their family has spent Christmas morning sharing the Sausage Cheese Pie from The Star of Texas cookbook. “Before I knew what the League was, I knew what the Sausage Cheese Pie was!” Elizabeth says.
½ pound sausage, cut into ¼-inch slices
1 8-inch pie shell, partially baked
½ pound grated Cheddar cheese
3 eggs, slightly beaten
½ cup milk
2 tablespoons bourbon
1 tablespoon lemon juice
½ tablespoon salt
1⁄8 teaspoon pepper
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Cook sausage slices until browned. Drain well and spread over bottom of pie shell. Cover with grated cheese. Beat eggs with milk, bourbon, lemon juice, salt and pepper, and pour into pie shell. Bake for 40 to 50 minutes or until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean. Serves 6.
Lauren Perillo is an attorney and a volunteer at the League. “Joining the Junior League myself has definitely felt like a full-circle moment,” she says. “I remember hanging out in the seating area upstairs [at the Junior League] as a kid and proudly seeing Peace Meals in Barnes

& Noble.” Lauren’s mother Donna Perillo was a member of the Peace Meals steering committee. “I was a little nervous about joining, because my job is pretty demanding,” Lauren says. Still, she says, “[Meeting] other hard-working women there…has been an incredible part of the experience. I love that I’m getting to follow in my dad’s footsteps as an attorney and my mom’s as a volunteer at the same time. It is really an amazing experience to grow up and be able to do some of the same things I was most proud of both of them for at the same time.”
Earlier this year, Abigail Simpson, the daughter of one of Donna’s Junior League friends, took part in Lauren's wedding. “It’s had an impact on my life already in a million ways.” One small impact that has become a big tradition is the Crème Brûlée French Toast from Peace Meals that Lauren’s family looks forward to every Christmas morning.
Crème Brûlée French Toast, from Peace Meals
¾ cup (1½ sticks) butter
1½ cups firmly packed brown sugar
3 tablespoons corn syrup
1 loaf challah bread, sliced 1-inch thick with each piece sliced in half diagonally
6 eggs
2 cups (1 pint) half-and-half
2 cups (1 pint) milk
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
cup sugar
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon Grand Marnier (optional)
Powdered sugar, for dusting
This recipe requires advance preparation. Lightly butter a 9x13-inch baking dish and set aside. Melt the butter and brown sugar with the corn syrup in a small saucepan over medium heat; stir until smooth and bubbly. Pour the mixture into the prepared dish. Arrange the bread slices on top in two overlapping rows, slightly stacking the bread. In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs, half-and-

half, milk, vanilla, sugar, salt, and liqueur until well combined; pour evenly over the bread. Cover with foil and chill for at least 8 hours or overnight. Preheat the oven to 350° F. Bake until set in the center, approximately 45 minutes, then uncover and bake an additional 15 minutes or until golden brown. Dust with powdered sugar and serve with the sauce from the dish. Serves 8.
TaylorLuce, 27, and her sister Lauren, 25, both say they grew up going to the Junior League building with their mom Keli. “We did homework there when Mom had her office at the League,” Taylor says, referring to one of Keli’s many high-level volunteer placements, requiring her to maintain an office in the building. “She had a ton of roles,” Taylor remembers. Keli currently serves as the Tea Room Sub-Council Sustainer Advisor, and Taylor is Tea Room Special Events Chair, a full-circle moment as she prepares to chair “Lunch with Santa” this year, remembering all the years they attended as a family. Keli says seeing her girls volunteer with the League is especially meaningful. “To see them building their own connections, finding their own purpose, and understanding the joy that comes from giving back and building a better community…feels like a legacy of service and sisterhood continuing through them.”
Each Christmas, their family gets excited for the Spicy Rosemary Cashews and Soft Ginger Cookies from Peace Meals. Taylor, a business transformation consultant at IBM, and Lauren, marketing coordinator at Pennington Wealth Management, say their family snacks on the cashews all month long. “They’ve become a staple on our charcuterie boards, and the scent alone instantly feels like the holidays,” Lauren says. The girls would leave the ginger cookies out for Santa, adding red and green sprinkles to up the holiday factor.
Soft Ginger Cookies, from Peace Meals
2 ¼ cups flour
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1 teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground cloves
¾ cup (1 ½ sticks) unsalted butter, softened
1 ¼ cup sugar, divided
1 egg
¼ cup molasses
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Combine the flour, ginger, baking soda, cinnamon, and cloves in a medium bowl; set aside. Mix the butter and 1 cup of the sugar together with an electric mixer in a large bowl. Add the egg and molasses, and mix well, scraping the sides of the bowl as necessary. Add the flour mixture gradually to the egg mixture. Place the remaining ¼ cup of sugar in a small bowl. Shape the dough into 1 ½ inch balls and roll in sugar. Place the balls 2 ½ inches apart on an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake on the center rack until light brown and puffed, about 10 minutes. Do not overbake. Allow the cookies to cool on the cookie sheet for 2 minutes then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
Onehundred years, 10 decades, and multiple generations of women, following their grandmothers’ and mothers’ leads or paving their own paths. The Junior League of Houston has impacted every corner of the city, the lives of countless beneficiaries and volunteers, and the tables of all of us who turn to the iconic cookbooks not just for recipes, but for traditions. As 2025 closes and Houston’s Junior League Centennial celebrations come to a close, as we appreciate all the League has done for us personally and for Houston, one question looms large: When can we get our hands on a new generation’s Junior League of Houston cookbook?
Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, happy volunteering, and happy cooking!
Editor’s note: Find all JLH recipes mentioned in this article online at thebuzzmagazines.com.

by Annie Blaylock McQueen, staff writer
Every December, mother-of-two Melissa Cozart and her mother, Diane Hanks, roll up their sleeves, tie on aprons, and take on a holiday challenge that has become a centerpiece of their family tradition: creating an intricate Christmas cake made with love by the talented pair.
Not just any cake – the kind you hesitate to cut because it is almost too beautiful to slice. From detailed, hand-piped tree branches to a charming buttercream Frosty the Snowman, each year’s creation has been a memorable masterpiece for the family.
Each year, they choose a cake to create, and gather with their baking ingredients in Diane’s kitchen in Melissa’s childhood home of 50 years, to spend the day creating their annual Christmas cake.
“Mom makes the ingredient list, and my dad [Victor] helps to procure the materials,” Melissa said. The cakes have over-the-top decorations that look almost too good to eat, but luckily, you can. “Most of the cake decorations are foodgrade and edible. The greenery and berries are fake. Rosemary or mint is gathered from our garden,” said Diane. “Use caution though,” she laughed. “There was an instance of slight lip numbness from some pittosporum leaves. We can laugh about it now.”
While the cake process is a two-person operation, their audience is ready and waiting. Melissa’s children, Hudson, 17, a Bellaire High School student and Hunter, 12, a Pin Oak Middle student, along with their Hanks cousins Jack, 21, Emma, 19, and Hattie, 13, happily leave the baking to the experts and focus on the best part: enjoying the delicious cake.
The idea was born in 2016 after seeing winter-themed cakes on the pages of a Southern Living magazine Christmas issue. That is where they gather their cake inspiration each year and decide on which cake to make.
As Melissa and Diane flipped through the pages nine years ago, they decided to take on the challenge themselves and copy a lovely candy cane cake.
Their first creation, with white frosting, crushed peppermint on top, and a glass orna-
ment candy cane, was a success and they were hooked.
“It is a special time we like to spend just the two of us,” said Melissa. Melissa takes the day off work. Neighbors sometimes knock to sneak a peek at their Christmas cakes and Diane’s friends eagerly await the Facebook reveal.


The pair has endured mishaps in their baking process, such as one time when they didn’t allow for enough cooling time before starting the decorating portion. As a result, a sliding cake layer came crashing onto the floor. With no time to start over, they pieced the cake together with extra icing. “No one knew the difference, and we laugh about it every year,” said Melissa. They let the cake thoroughly cool now.
BAKED WITH LOVE Mother-daughter duo Melissa Cozart and Diane Hanks (pictured, from left) share a beloved Christmas tradition of baking their special Christmas cake together each year. It is cherished time together and a sweet tradition nearly a decade in the making.
Chocolate-Gingerbread Toffee Cake [from 2023 Southern Living],” said Melissa. (Find the link in the online version of this story.)
Over the years, their creations have included a snowman with chocolate pretzel antlers, a festive cardinal like the ones outside Diane’s window, a Christmas tree cake covered in sugared cranberries and green icing, and a Bûche De Noël with bark-textured frosting.
One of their most ambitious cakes was a white chocolate Poinsettia Cake in 2019. It featured a gold-edged sugar cookie bloom and took three days to complete.
Some years reflect the mood of the season. The 2021 cake was understated outside but rich inside, they say, a nod to the pandemic days and slower time together.
“We make a cake,” Melissa said. “But mostly we chat. We catch up. It is tradition. Mother and daughter doing something fun together.” Their 2025 cake? The family eagerly awaits to find out. They flip through the pages of the magazine to get ideas. “I have my eye on a
Georgia Polley celebrates a sweet baking Christmas tradition that is equally treasured in her family. She can trace hers back to a printed recipe from a recipe website titled The Most Wonderful Gingerbread Cookies with pages she has held onto since December 2008.
“It was the year my youngest was born,” Georgia said. “I figured if we are putting out cookies for Santa, they better taste good,” she laughed.
Every December she prepares the dough herself but happily hands over the decorating to her two sons, Hawkins and Foard. “I love to decide which cookie cutter shapes to use, and which sprinkles to buy and colors of icing and then let the boys decorate,” she said.
As her sons have grown into a junior at Baylor University and a Stratford High School senior, the cookies have grown with them.



into young adults, they still enjoy their family gingerbread cookie tradition.
Friends often join in. The prettiest cookies get shared with neighbors. The slightly wobbly ones are saved for Santa if they do not disappear first, she said.
While Georgia says Thanksgiving is one of her favorite holidays, the gingerbread cookies have made her countdown to Christmas.
At the Hanks home, the cake is unveiled when the entire family gathers for Christmas dinner with all 11 family members. At the Polley home, the cookie plate disappears into crumbs and sticky fingers throughout the days leading up leaving the last for Santa.
This holiday season, the cakes will be sliced. The cookies will be eaten. But the laughter, the storytelling, and the family memory magic will be what lasts a lifetime.
Originally found at www.recipezaar.com; now
can be found at www.food.com.
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 1⁄2 teaspoons baking powder
3⁄4 teaspoon baking soda
1⁄4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon ground ginger
1 3⁄4 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1⁄4 teaspoon ground cloves
6 tablespoons unsalted butter
3⁄4 cup dark brown sugar
1 large egg
1⁄2 cup molasses
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest (optional)
In a small bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, ginger, cinnamon, and cloves. In a large mixing bowl, beat the butter, brown sugar, and egg on medium speed until well blended. Add the molasses, vanilla, and lemon zest; continue mixing until smooth. Gradually stir in the dry ingredients until the dough is blended and smooth.
Divide the dough in half, wrap each portion in plastic wrap and let stand at room temperature for at least 2 hours or up to 8 hours.
Heat oven to 375°F. Line baking sheets with parchment paper. Place one portion of dough on a lightly floured surface. Sprinkle flour over the dough and rolling pin. Roll the dough to just under 1⁄4-inch thickness, adding flour as needed to prevent sticking. Cut out cookies using your favorite cutter.
Place cookies 11⁄2 inches apart on the prepared baking sheet. Bake one sheet at a time for 7 to 10 minutes. (Bake on the lower end of the range for softer cookies.)
Remove from the oven and allow cookies to cool on the sheet until firm enough to transfer to a wire rack. Once completely cool, decorate as desired.
A powdered sugar glaze works well for quick decorating, and royal icing creates a classic look.
Note: Dough can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Allow it to return to room temperature before rolling.

When it comes to holiday cake traditions, Diane Hanks says it all began with a simple class. “I took a cake decorating class years ago when Wilton (est. 1929) offered classes at area department stores,” she said. It helped her establish her basic skills.
As Diane and Melissa’s cake-making tradition has evolved, they have upgraded their baking tools. “Melissa brought the real artistry to the table,” Diane said.
Diane’s Starter Kit Essentials
• A turntable for smooth, even icing • An array of piping tips
• Food storage baggies DIY-ed into piping bags • An offset spatula for that polished finish
Diane says their teamwork and creativity are what give each cake its character. “Both of us have an eye for what we want it to look like,” Diane said. “We bring our different styles to the final product.” Another tip? “Freeze the cake layers before decorating,” said Diane. “That helps.”
Diane’s advice for beginners is straightforward: “Start simple. Try something fun. And don’t worry. Perfection isn’t the point!” said Diane. “If you think you can do it, you probably can.”

by Jordan Magaziner Steinfeld, staff writer
There are so many ways to celebrate the season and make memories with friends and family. Find some festive events here. Wishing you all a joyful holiday season and happy, healthy 2026! Note: Event details are subject to change; please find the most up-to-date information online.
76th Annual H-E-B Thanksgiving Day Parade
Thurs., Nov. 27, 9 a.m.
Downtown Houston
Free
The annual Thanksgiving Day Parade will be led by Houston’s beloved sports mascots Clutch, Diesel, Orbit, and Toro as Grand Marshals. The entertainment lineup includes Christian music star Danny Gokey; rising country star Payton Howie; a medley from White Christmas: The Musical by TUTS; dance team the Apache Belles; Kam Franklin, lead singer of The Suffers; local performance group Adams Davy; and more.
Holiday in the Plaza
Sat., Nov. 29, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
CityCentre
Free
Visit with Santa and two of his reindeer. Help fill Santa’s Cadillac with new, unwrapped toys to be donated in exchange for a complimentary photo with Santa. Dance along to holiday classics with the Holiday Show Choir.
37th Annual West U Christmas Tree
Lighting Ceremony
Mon., Dec. 1, 5:30 p.m.
Friends Park
Free
The annual West U holiday event will feature dance performances, vendors, holiday games, selfie stations, face painting, reindeer, and more. Enjoy holiday music and watch as the Mayor and City Council welcome the crowd before announcing the 2025 Coloring Contest Winners, who will have the honor of flipping the switch to light up the Christmas tree.
Bellaire’s Selfies with Santa Weds., Dec. 3, 4:30 p.m.
Bellaire Civic Center
Decorate cookies and take pictures with Santa before his official arrival at Holiday in the Park. Time slots start at 4:30 p.m. Bring your

Bellaire’s Holiday in the Park
Thurs., Dec. 4, 68:30 p.m.
Bellaire Town Square Free
Snow is forecast for a festive evening in Bellaire, including music from local choirs, food, and family fun.
12th Annual Southside Place Winter Wonderland Carnival Fri., Dec. 5, 4-7 p.m.
Fields outside Southside Clubhouse
$25/person for age 2+
The annual Southside Place Winter Wonderland includes inflatables, train rides, a petting zoo, hot cocoa, cookies/photos with Sata and friends, and a huge pile of snow. All proceeds go toward funding improvements to Fire Truck Park.
Deck the Park
Fri., Dec. 5, 5-9 p.m.
Memorial Park Clay Family Eastern Glades
$10/adult; $5/child; kids 2 and under are free Deck the Park – the kickoff to Memorial Park’s Holiday Lights, which will remain lit through early Jan. – includes holiday activities, a tree-lighting ceremony (6:30 p.m.), an outdoor movie screening (7 p.m.), and festive treats such as a s’mores station.
Christmas Village at Bayou Bend
Dec. 5-30; timing varies by day. Closed Dec. 8, 9, 15, 16, 24, 25
Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens
$18 (ages 13+), $12 (ages 5–12); free (ages 4 & younger)
Discover an immersive Christmas experience at Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens. A dazzling bridge brings you into a winter wonderland featuring thousands of lights. Sled down faux snow, toss cotton snowballs, hunt for Santa's reindeer, enjoy a 3-D video animation, listen to carolers, look for unique holiday gifts, and more. Take a photo with Santa (by Dec. 23) for $10. New this year: New York-based gingerbread artist and Guinness World Record holder Jon Lovitch will be creating a 500+ gingerbread vil-
lage sculpture. The Weihnachtsfilm Festival Berlin will also show indie short films with a Christmas-theme.
Deck the Hall: The Mayor’s Holiday Tree
Lighting Concert
Sat., Dec. 6, 4-8 p.m.
Hermann Square at City Hall
Free
Kick off the holiday season with The Mayor's Holiday Tree Lighting Concert, including live music, entertainment, and the lighting of Houston’s official holiday tree. Grammy-nominated R&B legend Brian McKnight will headline the evening. Activities begin at 4 p.m., with the concert starting at 6 p.m., culminating in a fireworks finale and snow. New: Winter Wonderland Kids Zone, offering crafts, games, and activities. Families can visit Santa’s Workshop for photos.
Levy Park’s Holiday Festival
Sat., Dec. 6-Sun., Dec. 7, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Levy Park
Free
Levy Park’s two-day festival features a festive holiday market, craft station with Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa activities, a family photo booth with Santa (pups welcome), live music and a special performance by River Oaks Dance, and holiday eats and drinks.
16th Annual Gingerbread Build-Off Sat., Dec. 13, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Levy Park
Free for spectators
Architecture Center Houston hosts the annual, delicious competition at Levy Park. Competing teams will create 100 percent edible, architectural masterpieces using gingerbread, candy, and other sweet treats. Spectators can cheer on the teams, play in the kids’ construction zone, enjoy lawn games, and more.
Carols on the Green
Sat., Dec. 13, 7-8:30 p.m.
Discovery Green
Free

Celebrate the season at Carols on the Green with Houston Grand Opera. This year’s event is a festive celebration of Latin American culture. Enjoy an evening of traditional Spanish songs, carols, mariachi, and more.
PJ Library's Family Chanukah Party
Sun., Dec. 14, 2-4 p.m.
Family-friendly brewery in Sugar Land (location provided after RSVP)
Free
Join PJ Library for a family Chanukah party, including treats, crafts, and snacks. The location has a large playground.
Bellaire Chanukah Festival Sun., Dec. 14, 4 p.m.
Bellaire Town Square
$15/adults; $12 for children
The Shul of Bellaire’s annual Chanukah Festival includes a delicious dinner buffet, Menorah lighting, live music, face painting, crafts, a surprise entertainer, Judah the Maccabee on stilts, and a Gelt Launcher.
9th Annual Memorial Villages Twinkle Light Parade
Thurs., Dec. 18, 6-8:30 p.m.
Parade begins at 6 p.m. at Frostwood Elementary and arrives at Memorial Drive Presbyterian Church by 7:30 p.m. for an outdoor community holiday celebration.
Free
The annual Twinkle Light Parade will include dozens of festive floats, vehicles, and golf carts parading through the Villages. After, join at MDPC for a celebration including cookie decorating, snow, hot chocolate, a balloon artist, live music, and pictures with Santa.
HMNS Holly Jolly + Trains Over Texas
Throughout the season
Houston Museum of Natural Science, Level 1
Prices vary by event. General admission: adults: $25; children: $16
HMNS is offering holiday activities and events, including Santa’s Workshop (Sat., Dec. 6), Santa Claws (Sun., Dec. 7), Breakfast with Santa (Sat., Dec. 13), The Polar Express screening (Sun., Dec. 14), Cookies with Santa (Sat., Dec. 20), and Snow Flurry (Sun., Dec. 21), plus holiday favorite Trains Over Texas, a popular special exhibit.
Astros Light Up the Park
Through Jan. 4
Daikin Park
$20-$45
This new immersive experience presented by Houston Methodist will offer a festive blend of lights, sounds, and holiday joy with an Astros twist. Expect themed Astros- and Houstoninspired light displays and shows; special guests including Astros Santa and Orbit, holiday treats, and theme nights.
TXU Energy Presents Zoo Lights
Through Jan. 4
Houston Zoo
$26+
Explore a dazzling winter landscape filled with fantastical bursts of color, immersive light displays, and festive experiences for all ages. As the Zoo
transforms into a nighttime holiday spectacular, visitors will journey through vibrant realms like the Enchanted Forest, marvel at the shimmering Iridescent Immersion, and sip hot chocolate by cozy s’mores stations. Santa returns to his workshop through Dec. 23, and new features include Wild Wonder Lights and the Neon Playground.
Space Center Houston’s Galaxy Lights
Through Jan. 4, 6-10 p.m. (Closed Nov. 27, Dec. 10, Dec. 24, and Dec. 25)

RADIANT Inspired by traditions celebrating the Lunar New Year, the zodiac calendar, and regional plant and animal life, Radiant Nature at Houston Botanic Garden is a Chinese lantern festival with larger-than-life installations.
Space Center Houston
$19.95-$27.95
Experience the magic of the holiday season and the wonders of space at Galaxy Lights. View the Apollo-themed lantern activations, take a walk under the stars through a 200-foot LED light tunnel and 30-foot-tall light display of the Space Launch System rocket, enjoy LED light swings under the 747 Boeing aircraft, a crystal fireworks light show choreographed to an epic playlist, a 40-foot-tall shooting star light display, and daily screenings of the original film Holidays in Space. Then, gather around a fire pit station and enjoy hot cocoa and s’mores.
Sugar Land Holiday Lights
Through Jan. 4
Constellation Field
$18.24+
The 12th annual Sugar Land Holiday Lights features millions of dazzling light displays, Santa Claus (through Dec. 23), a new 9-hole Mini Golf Course, a carnival (Nov. 28-Jan. 1), a synthetic ice rink, vendors, food, and more.
Cistern Illuminated Through Jan. 18
Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern
Tickets vary
Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern will be transformed into a transcendent spectacle of color, echo, and optical illusion. Tours will be offered Weds.-Sun., 10 a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m., 2 p.m, 3 p.m., and 5 p.m. On select evenings, Cistern Illuminated will be further enhanced with live performances by Ars Lyrica.
Green Mountain Energy Presents Ice at Discovery Green Through Feb. 16; hours: Mon.-Thurs., 5-10 p.m., Fri., 5-11 p.m., Saturday and HISD school
holidays, 11 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun., 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Thanksgiving Day, 11 a.m.-11 p.m., Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve, 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Christmas Day and New Year’s Day, 1-7 p.m., Martin Luther King Day, 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Discovery Green
$18 plus tax (includes skate rentals)
Glide under the glittering lights of downtown. Enjoy festive themed nights like Skate with Santa or DJ Skate nights.
Winter Wonderlawn Through Jan. 11
POST Houston
Weekdays: $12; Fri-Sun: $19; Children 5 and under: Free
Skylawn, the five-acre rooftop park at POST, is decked out in illuminated lights and décor this holiday season. Enjoy thousands of lights, two 25-foot Christmas trees, and multiple holidaythemed activations with a fantastic view of Houston’s skyline. After Thanksgiving, take photos with Santa on Saturdays from 5-8 p.m.
Radiant Nature
Through Sun., Feb. 22, timed entry from 6-8:30 p.m. Open Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, along with select weeknights
Houston Botanic Garden
$28.50+. Get $2 off admission on Thursday and Sunday nights.
Inspired by traditions celebrating the Lunar New Year, the zodiac calendar, and regional plant and animal life, Radiant Nature this year will celebrate the Year of the Fire Horse. The floral-inspired portion of Radiant Nature includes a field of giant Texas bluebonnets, the vibrant red of holiday poinsettias, a tunnel of morning glories, and a glowing peach tree.
Editor’s note: See this story at thebuzzmagazines.com for links to all events.



. by Sharon Albert Brier, staff writer
Girls’ French trip. Gal pals Lindy Folloder, Suzy Godwin, and Lisa Stephens began their 18-day adventure in Honfleur, France, channeling their inner Monets at the 17th-century La Ferme St. Siméon – where even the butter deserves its own museum wing. Lindy swears she’d return just for another taste of that Normandy magic on a warm boule. From there, the trio cruised through the Baltic States, sampling mushroom soup, dark rye, and enough wheat beer to float the Regent ship themselves. With five-star service, postcard views, and laughter as rich as the butter, they’re already plotting their next grand escape for 2026.
The Mob was there. Anita Drink, Earl Gray, Brooks & Dunn, and Luna Sea were just a few of the shady “characters” at the Houston Jr. Forum’s Death of a Gangster Murder Mystery Dinner. Fifty guests turned suspects tried to unmask the killer – while sipping martinis under blinking glasses and roaring ’20s backdrops worthy of Gatsby’s ghost. Glam chair Susan Fisher and her mob – Karen Darnell, Carolyn Staples, Kathi Guillory, Julia Heller, and Susan Loberg – transformed All Saints Church into a speakeasy. Husbands-turned-“gangsters” David Fisher and Korey Heller swapped mob tales, proving once again that crime – and cocktails–make excellent company.
Dance, dance, dance. The Racket Club Fall Dance hit all the right notes – 95 years of music, mayhem, and marvelous moves celebrated at the Houston Country Club. Barbara Files had extra reason to boogie, joined by her daughter Jessica Liff (fresh from Tennessee) and son Jason Clem and Jamie Barrere marked 30 years of membership with spins worthy of “Dancing with the Stars.” The floor stayed hopping with Connie and Cal Dalton, Rachel Messina and Victor Yang, the Roitschs, the Jubans, the Frels, the Bryants, and a chorus line of party pros from Roz Cooley, Barbara Hinds, Pat Moon, Diane Davis, Sheila Rice, Paul Wobbe, and Mary Sage and Frank Nadolney. It was all types of rhythm.
Adventurous. Seven flights, six hotels, three countries, and two heroic carry-ons later, Ron Thompson proved that love means mas-

tering airport security with style. His prebirthday adventure for wife Peggy Thompson covered five UNESCO World Heritage Sites, starting in Lima, climbing up to Machu Picchu, and splashing down at Argentina’s Iguazu Falls – 165 waterfalls in just one mile. In Buenos Aires, they toured Eva Peron’s mansion, where her closet once boasted 400 dresses and 600 hats –Peggy’s luggage suddenly felt modest. The grand finale each year is Peggy's New Year's Eve birthday, when fireworks light up the sky for everyone… but somehow, no one remembers it’s actually for her. Ron does – and he’s got the passport stamps to prove it. No tricks, only treats. The Longshadow Moms’ Block Party was frightfully fun! The cul-de-sac bash has grown up with the kids – more teens danced to the DJ on the Medinas’ drive than bounced in the bouncy house. Fueled by pizza and candy, “Warden” Morgan Zarghouni kept order starting at 4 p.m. on October 26, as costumed creatures filled the night: a walking dinosaur, Hoffman pirates, a skeleton (Bob Guldner), a gallant knight (Nick Medina), “Prisoner” Mehrzad Zarghouni, and spirited neighbors Meg Guldner, Adams Braly, Marnie Medina, and Lauren Rutherford. It was a hauntingly good time – proof Halloween magic is alive and dancing in Hunters Creek! Was Sir Lancelot there? Probably –but Laurie and Kevin Foxx were too busy living their own legend! True castle connoisseurs, they never met a turret they didn’t like. Their royal romp through the U.K. began at Bamburgh Castle in Northern England, where knights, Vikings, and dragons once ruled the lore. From there, they toured Balmoral Castle – the Highland retreat of the Royal Family, newly opened to the public – and finished with a
swoop at Loch Lomond in Scotland. At Cameron House, Laurie took up falconry, sending a barn owl and a hawk soaring across the golf course. With a leather glove hiding a tasty morsel, she quickly learned the secret to attracting a bird’s affection – feed it first, then strike a regal pose!
Frights, friends, and fancy gelato. John and Joni Zavitsanos once again proved that Halloween is best celebrated with costumes, cocktails, and a cauldron of Brazilian stew. Their annual bash mixed spooky spirit with serious flavor – hot dogs for the little goblins, plenty of wine and beer for the grown-ups, and a new star attraction: Constantino Artisan Gelato in decadent flavors like Crème Brûlée and Bananas Constantino. A front-yard bouncy house kept the kids airborne until the sugar kicked in. About fifty neighbors and friends showed up rocking Rocky Horror tees, neon shirts, and capes galore. Seen haunting the fun: Linda and Steve Schweitzer, Chris and Kathy Hollister, Juanita and Alex Leon, Natasha Becton, Tiana Shriver and Michael Bonderer, and Mary and Jim Gosnell – no tricks, just treats (and maybe seconds of gelato).
See Rumor Has It at thebuzzmagazines.com for additional photos. Have some good news to share? Email us at info@thebuzzmagazines.com.



. by Cindy Burnett, staff writer
Buzz Reads is a column about books by reviewer Cindy Burnett. Each month, Cindy recommends five recently or soon-to-be released titles.
Best Offer Wins by Marisa Kashino (mystery/thriller) – Best Offer Wins is an unhinged, hilariously entertaining thriller set in the highly competitive Washington, D.C. real estate world. Margo, who is desperate to find her dream home and willing to find it at any cost, quickly becomes consumed by her search to purchase the perfect house. What results is a fresh thriller with clever plotting and a commentary on status, coveting what others have, and people’s ability to go after what they think they deserve no matter the cost. The story is filled with witty banter and over-the-top machinations. The reading experience is a bit like watching a train wreck in slow motion. This book is a great fit for those wanting a fast-paced, fresh thriller.
Family of Spies by Christine Kuehn (nonfiction) – In Family of Spies, Kuehn chronicles how she learned as an adult that her family was directly involved in the bombing of Pearl Harbor by passing secrets and intel to the Japanese while they were living in Hawaii. Prompted by a letter from a journalist, she begins to uncover her family's horrific, secretive involvement in a pivotal aspect of World War II. Kuehn examines what it is like to come to terms with the despicable acts committed by her grandparents and other family, something that has always personally intrigued me. How do descendants move forward from atrocities committed by ancestors and cope with the generational trauma that often results? Who should atone and how? Kuehn spent years researching her family’s hidden past, and her determination to tell their story results in a captivating and compelling read. This book will appeal to those who love family sagas, World War II history, and engaging nonfiction.
Grace & Henry’s Holiday Movie Marathon by Matthew Norman (fiction) – Both Grace and Henry lost their spouses nearly a year ago. Grace’s husband died of cancer at age 42, and Henry’s wife was killed in a plane crash. Hoping to help their children process their grief, their

mothers conspire to bring them together. While both say they are not willing to date yet, they concede that sharing their grief with someone who understands would help so they begin watching holiday movies together. As Henry begins to integrate into Grace’s family (she has two kids and a dog), both slowly begin to feel somewhat normal again. Norman expertly handles grief and the myriad of ways that it presents, and the characters are fabulous. Henry and Grace’s witty banter kept me smiling the entire time I was reading. Grace & Henry’s Holiday Movie Marathon is a delightfully engaging read for fans of holiday movies and romance novels with some depth.
WHAT TO READ This month's selections include a clever thriller set in a competitive real estate location, the true story of how a woman learned as an adult that her family was directly involved in the bombing of Pearl Harbor, a heartwarming novel about grief, romance, and the holiday season, a fascinating and thought-provoking climate change novel, and a book of short stories in tribute to Jane Austen.
A Guardian and A Thief by Megha Majumdar (fiction) – Who is the guardian and who is the thief? This question will challenge the reader throughout the entire tale. Set in near-future India when climate change has devastated the country and its population, A Guardian and a Thief centers around two families whose drives to protect each other and survive clash in heartbreaking ways. The book thoughtfully examines how morality and civility break down during a tragic event such as climate change. Ma, together with her father Dadu and young daughter Mishti, are counting down the days until they leave for the United States after being approved for climate visas. Days before they are to leave, Boomba, a young man down on his luck, breaks into their apartment and steals their food and Ma’s purse, which contains their passports and visas. This profound and gutwrenching story is a fast read that packs a very powerful punch. The audio production is outstanding. It is a good fit for fans of literary fiction, thought-provoking tales, and climate fiction.
Ladies in Waiting: Jane Austen’s Unsung
Characters by various authors (fiction) – In honor of Jane Austen’s 250th birthday, a group of authors come together to write happy-everafters for several of the author’s minor characters. However, Ladies in Waiting not only pays homage to Jane Austen, it is a fresh, creative celebration of her stories that reimagines the world in which she inhabited. Each entry allows readers to revisit this landscape through the characters who play minor roles in Austen’s classics. Emma’s Miss Bates stars in several stories, and Sense and Sensibility’s Margaret Dashwood is determined to have a romantic adventure, while another story provides a tale about Colonel Brandon’s first love, Eliza. Pride and Prejudice features prominently in the collection with the Bennet family residing in contemporary Greenwich Village in one story, Lydia Wickham finding true love when she is older in another, and Georgiana exacting her revenge on Wickham in a third. This inventive group of short stories will delight readers while also demonstrating Austen’s timeless allure. Avid Austen fans as well as historical fiction fans will devour this one.
Editor’s note: Book reviewer Cindy Burnett also writes our weekly Page Turners column at thebuzzmagazines.com. She hosts an award-winning book podcast entitled Thoughts from a Page Podcast www.thoughtsfromapage.com, runs the Instagram account @thoughtsfromapage, and regularly speaks to groups about books.



. by Tracy L. Barnett, staff writer
Travel this past year wasn’t just about seeing the sights. For many Buzz families, it was about celebrating milestones, strengthening friendships, and finding joy in shared discovery. From the sunlit cliffs of Capri to the misty trails of the Dolomites, from a Texas weekend to a German family reunion, these Buzz-area travelers found that the best souvenirs are the stories they brought home.
Few birthdays are as memorable as Valerie Dieterich’s 50th, which she celebrated in grand style on Italy’s glittering isle of Capri with her husband, Tracy, and four close couples. The group spent four unforgettable days surrounded by turquoise water, lemon-scented air, and the kind of joy that only comes when good friends gather in a beautiful place.
The celebration began with a welcome dinner under a canopy of lemon trees – the perfect prelude to a weekend of “food, fun, and wine,” as Valerie described it. The group spent a carefree day at a beach club, then set sail for a day on the Mediterranean, enjoying the sun and sea together before returning for their “final-final dinner” at their favorite restaurant, Aurora.
There was laughter, toasting, and plenty of reminiscing – the kind of easy camaraderie that years of friendship bring. “Capri is the best place on earth,” Valerie said afterward, and her friends were quick to agree. For Valerie, the milestone trip was as much about gratitude as celebration–a reminder that the best memories are those shared with the people who make life sparkle.
When Tania Campbell’s teenage daughter Skylar dreamed up a mother-daughter getaway to Greece, she had one whimsical wish: to take pictures with cats. The two ferried from Athens to Paros, where whitewashed streets, deep-blue waters, and sunbathing felines greeted them at every turn.
Days were filled with reading on the beach (“I highly recommend Medusa’s Sisters [by Lauren J.
A. Bear],” Tania noted), endless Greek salads, and matching sundresses for sunset photos. “Paros delighted both of us for its deep-blue water beauty, outdoor cafés, and cats,” she said. It was the perfect mix of beauty, simplicity, and connection.

For Skylar, a senior at Bellaire High School, the trip was a post-junior year reward and a time to unwind; for Tania, it was a rare chance to slow down and savor their bond before senior year begins.
As the Aegean sunsets turned the sky pink and gold, they realized that what made the trip unforgettable wasn’t the scenery – it was each other.
For Bellaire’s Susan Tallman, Spain’s Camino de Santiago is a path that keeps calling her back. Years ago, she walked it solo – a journey of quiet reflection in an era before smartphones kept everyone connected. This summer, she returned with longtime friend Kim Jacobson from West U to tackle the Portuguese Camino with a group of 10 other women, led by the travel company Spanish Steps.
“It was a completely different experience,” she said. “The first was solitary and raw; this one was cushy, communal, and full of laughter.” Two Caminos, two ways of seeing the world – both, she said, “life-changing.”
Some friendships are best maintained under the Mexican sun. Travel advisor Nora McMordie (Memorial High School ’83) has turned Cabo San Lucas into her favorite reunion spot, traveling there several times a year with her longtime friends– many of them fellow travel buffs from her Memorial High days.
This year alone brought four different getaways: a 60th birthday celebration at Pueblo Bonito Los Cabos for classmate Laurie Fenner
(MHS ’83); a girls’ trip to Casa Dorada with Laurie Nuss, Jamie Breslow, and Katie Rafferty (all MHS ’83); a stay at Rosewood Las Ventanas with Michelle Rogers (Kinkaid ’82) and Yvonne Stocker (MHS ’83); and a finale at the Four Seasons Cabo with Jamie Breslow, Michelle Rogers, and Nora herself – “travel agents traveling,” as she put it with a laugh.
“When travel agents travel with friends, everyone is happy,” Nora said. Her friends love that she handles the details while they “just show up and relax, shop, eat, and drink.” After so many shared sunsets and laughs, these trips have become something of a cherished tradition – proof that friendship, like fine tequila, only gets better with time.
Not every getaway requires a plane ticket. For travel consultant Virginia Mampre, San Antonio remains one of Texas’ most rewarding escapes – close enough for a weekend yet full of history, flavor, and surprises. “Parts of it feel like old Spain or old Europe,” she said, pointing to the city’s Spanish missions, centuries-old architecture, and the ever-charming River Walk.
San Antonio’s layers of history unfold from the ancient to the Spanish Colonial era and to the present with modern sculptures, buildings, and a cross-cultural feel along with restored buildings from many eras. The Alamo, of course, anchors the story, along with the other four missions that were named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2015 – but Virginia noted that there’s an ongoing archae-
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ological dig on the grounds, adding fresh intrigue to this iconic site. The city’s cultural landscape continues to grow, too, with world-class art museums, restored theaters, beautiful parks, and a dining scene that rivals the best. And then there’s SeaWorld, Fiesta San Antonio, and the many fiestas with river boat parades as well as street parades.
“It’s an interesting stop for families, couples, and solo travelers,” she said. And with San Antonio’s population projected to reach five million in the coming years, its growth and energy are palpable. For Virginia, it’s a reminder that sometimes the most fascinating destinations are just down the highway.
Some family reunions span backyards; others span oceans. This summer, Erin Kimsey’s extended family gathered in Germany, drawing about 150 relatives – 100 Americans and 50 Germans – to a scenic stretch of the Rhine River near Cologne.
The reunion retraced ancestral roots with a bus tour to the family’s original village and church, a hike to castle ruins, and an oompah band in a barn. Even the town’s mayor, a distant cousin, gave a welcoming address. “The oldest attendee was 94, the youngest less than a year,” Erin said. “Seeing them together was unforgettable.”
The event was a recreation of a reunion last held 45 years ago – and a reminder that the ties that bind can stretch across continents and generations.
For Pamela Zane and her husband, Randy, every trip is a victory lap of gratitude. Nine years after her pancreatic cancer diagnosis – and amid his own rare eye cancer – the couple continues to travel widely, averaging about one trip per month.
This June, they joined their daughter and son-in-law, Andrea and Blake Feinman, and two grandsons, Zane and Knox, ages 11 and 8, on what Pamela calls “the most fabulous trip” to Southern Africa. Her daughter, a teacher and travel agent behind The Petite Cosmopolitan, planned a dream itinerary: Johannesburg and Cape Town sightseeing, safaris in Kruger National Park, and side trips to Zimbabwe’s Victoria Falls and Botswana’s Okavango Delta “The boys loved absolutely everything,” Pamela said. From feeding elephants and zip-lining over the Falls to fishing in the Delta, every day brought new wonders. “All our guides were exceptional, and our grandsons adored them,” she said. “It was nothing short of magical.”
For Carolyn and John Johnson, Rwanda

offered a once-in-a-lifetime mix of adventure and inspiration. Their summer journey began with four days in Kigali meeting local nonprofits that are transforming lives through education and community projects – experiences Carolyn described as “deeply moving.” But the highlight awaited in Virunga National Park, where the couple embarked on a seven-mile hike through misty jungle terrain to visit one of the park’s most famous residents: the Amahoro Gorilla Family, a 15-member group known for its calm and curiosity.
“It was like stepping into National Geographic,” Carolyn said. “I still get goosebumps thinking about it.” The trek took them through dense bamboo forests and steep, slippery trails, but every step was worth it when they reached the gorillas. “The patriarch was sitting there so regally,” she said. “You could see the intelligence in his eyes. It felt almost spiritual.”
For Carolyn, the trip was more than a wildlife encounter – it was a humbling reminder of connection and conservation. “To be so close to such magnificent creatures and to know they’re being protected was profoundly hopeful,” she said. “It reminded me how small we are – and how much we share this planet.”
After their gorilla trek, the couple stumbled upon this little gem: Kari Vodka, a new distillery founded and run by Karen Sherman, a native Oregonian. This award-winning vodka, made from little "unloved" potatoes left behind in the farmer's field, is filtered through volcanic rock, then bottled and labeled by hand by local women. What a win-win!
Prosecco and Perspective in the Dolomites
High in Italy’s Dolomites, Bina and Anil Dara found their happy place – a mix of fresh mountain air, friendship, and history. Staying in the village of Borca di Cadore with their friend Nancy, a retired anthropology professor who knows nearly everyone in town, they were treated to an immersion in local life: homemade pasta, prosecco toasts, and nightly dinners with friends.
One highlight was their hike to Monte Piana, an open-air museum of World War I trenches at 8,000 feet. “Seeing and walking through the trenches taught me never to use the phrase ‘down in the trenches’ lightly ever again,” Bina said. Surrounded by snow-capped peaks, she reflected on “the sadness and futility of war.”
Before heading home, they joined villagers for the Fešta del Dešmonteà – the “cows coming home” celebration marking the end of summer grazing. “We breathed in the mountain air every day,” Bina said. “I’m hoping for some lasting benefits now that we’re back home in Bellaire.”
From birthday toasts in Capri to family reunions on the Rhine, Buzz families turned travel into something richer this year – a way to celebrate life, deepen bonds, and rediscover wonder. Whether the destination was a few hours away or halfway around the world, each journey left behind memories that shine brighter than any souvenir.
Editor’s note: Share your recent Buzzworthy travel stories with us! Email info@thebuzzmagazines.com.



. by Todd Freed, staff writer
For the fourth time in the last five seasons, the Kinkaid Falcons are SPC 4A Football Champions. The Falcons secured this year’s title with a 31-21 victory over the rival Episcopal Knights in the title game. “We had an extremely young team to start the season after graduating the bulk of starters from last year’s team,” said Falcons head coach Nathan Larned
“We had a revamped offensive line, a new quarterback, new receivers, and, as a whole, it was a pretty green team. Our lack of experience showed in our first couple of games, but we realized this group was also very talented. They grew up in a hurry and did a great job to come on strong as the season went on to win another championship.”
In the title game victory, junior running back Wayne Shanks Jr. led the way for Kinkaid with a lofty 234 rushing yards and two touchdowns. For the season, Shanks, who has collegiate offers from over a dozen major collegiate football programs, rushed for nearly 1,800 yards and 24 touchdowns. If all that weren’t enough, he also caught another six touchdown passes along the way.
“Wayne is just tremendous and can do it all out of the backfield,” said Larned. “He has great speed, vision, and power. He’s the full package and is also the humblest and most hard-working kid on top of it all. Wayne is the best player on the team and one of the best people.”
On defense for Kinkaid in the SPC final, Tommy Crosswell and Nate Chambers both had big games, with each coming up with critical interceptions in the victory.
The SPC championship also capped off an outstanding season for junior quarterback Ross Wynne, who threw for 1,916 yards and 21 touchdowns in his first season as a full-time starter. “Ross is an athletic kid who can make throws from all angles. He was just learning the position this season so I’m looking forward to seeing his growth for next year,” said Larned.
For Larned, the SPC championship marked his 100th victory since becoming the Falcons head coach 12 years ago, while winning eight SPC championships in that 12-year span. “I think our success begins with our community. Our parents and administration allow us to focus on our job without any interference, which isn’t
always the case at other schools. Plus, we’re able to hire some great coaches and, of course, you need to have talented players.”
Itwas a sensational season in cross country for Memorial Mustangs junior Sophie Peterson, who finished 10th in the state at the UIL 6A State Cross Country Meet. Peterson posted the top 10 finish in a time of 18 minutes flat over the 5K course (3.1 miles).
“I was just so thankful to be competing with so many talented girls and just really happy to see how far I’d come,” said Peterson. “Finishing top 10 in the state was a big goal for me, and I’m definitely looking to place even higher next season.”

No runner placed any higher than Peterson at the UIL 6A Region III Cross County Meet leading into state, where Peterson finished first in a winning time of 18 minutes and two seconds. “I knew going in that I would have a chance at the title, but I was coming off a hard training week and there’s of course a lot of girls challenging for the title. I was happy with the way I competed and closed in on the finish, which is always the best way to end a race.”
Peterson’s success this season has been even more rewarding considering previous setbacks she faced, including a stress fracture in her foot as a freshman and then battling pneumonia leading
into last year’s state cross country meet. “I think those setbacks just really drew me to appreciate the smaller things in running,” said Peterson.
“Sometimes we take for granted even the ability to race healthy and I think that’s really impacted how I’ve raced this season. It’s made me a whole lot more grateful, and I’m just really excited to see what I can do this coming track and field season.”
Editor’s note: Todd Freed is the host and executive producer of H-Town High School Sports, which airs Saturday at 10:30 p.m. on CW39 and Monday-Thursday on AT&T SportsNet SW. To submit high school sports news for possible inclusion in SportzBuzz, please email todd@thebuzzmagazines.com.



. by Annie Blaylock McQueen, staff writer
Welcome to SportzBuzz Jr., a column spotlighting neighborhood athletes in elementary and middle school.
The Spring Branch-Memorial Sports Association JV 7on7 team proudly posed for a photo after defeating an undefeated opponent to secure their spot in the Gold division play-off bracket. Each player wore a beautiful blue #Kindness4Kellyanne bracelet in honor of Kellyanne Lytal, remembering her bright spirit and the kindness she shared before her passing in the July Fourth Texas floods. Their victory was not only a triumph on the field but also a moment to pause and give tribute to her legacy after the game. Pictured (from left) are Oliver Dreiss, Max Perry, John Henry Forshey, Jack Griffin, Royce Clemens, Klein Clemens, Zeppelin Davis, Oscar Verma, Aydin Dhanani, Jamison Forshey, Jackson Brunecke, and coaches Brian Perry, John Griffin, and Koby Clemens.
The spirit of friendly competition was on full display as a talented group of third graders from Rummel Creek Elementary and neighboring schools took the field for an exciting 7-on-7 matchup between the Bulldogs and the Longhorns. With teamwork and determination, the young athletes gave it their all in a fun and memorable game. The Longhorns came out on top, and both teams were all smiles afterward. Pictured (back row, from left) are Charlie Mann, Shepherd Shushtari, Tucker Morrison, Luke Pitzinger, Wally Thompson, Knox Powers, Jack Frost, Zach Rice, Kyle Autin, Van Michaelson, James Lupan, Grayson Herne, Jaxon Jurkash, Cole Cogdell, Thomas West; (front row, from left) Robison Balhoff, Kayden Saucier, Jack Robinson, Henry Jackson, Harrison Lui, Walker Lake, Gaines Bradshaw, and Will Alleman
The energy was sky-high as more than 1,500 young athletes from over 170 schools including runner Jadyn Vang (pictured) took over Spring Forest Middle School and Nottingham Park for the 8th Annual FamilyPoint Resources Hay Bale Cross Country Championship. The event, the largest youth running meet in Texas this season, featured FamilyPoint’s signature hay bale obstacles that added extra excitement to the course. From the starting horn at 8:30 a.m. to the final finishers just before noon, spectators lined the course, cheering on every runner.
Editor’s note: Send your best high-resolution photos and behind-the-scenes stories about young local athletes, in both team and individual sports, to SportzBuzz, Jr. at info@thebuzzmagazines.com. Include all contact info, names, ages, grades and schools. Featured athletes must live in Buzz-circulation neighborhoods. Items will be published on a space-available basis.







CREATIVE COMPANIONS Kate Bonner and Addie Keracik, sophomores at Memorial High School and Houston Christian (respectively), show off a newly painted banner. The two girls run a business called Simply Organized Creative, where they offer banner painting and several other services.
by Kelsy Donovan, Memorial High School senior
This year, sophomores Kate Bonner (Memorial) and Addie Keracik (Houston Christian) remain particularly busy with their small business, Simply Organized Creative. The two girls initially thought of the idea at a sleepover in 2023, inspired by their shared love for all things organization and creativity.
Originally, the girls focused on organizing rooms and bookshelves for friends and neighbors. They have since expanded their services to bottle paintings, watercolor designs, banner painting, and even a day camp. Their growing Instagram account, with over 700 followers as of November, has helped them reach new customers.
“From bottle paintings to banner painting, we have done it all,” Keracik said. “We love that Simply Organized has kept us close despite going
to different high schools. We are so grateful for Simply Organized!”
Their banner painting has especially caught attention. They have sold over 100 banners for several different events, namely school dances, birthday parties, and gender reveals. The girls work together to design markups digitally before painting. After getting approval from the customer, they move to sketching and painting on paper.
“Our favorite craft is probably banners,” Bonner said. “We love to come up with different ideas and designs when planning the banner out… [It’s] like doing a giant coloring book, but with paint!”
Over the summer, Bonner and Keracik hosted Mini Makers Camp, a week-long day camp for young girls to channel their creativity skills. “It


was definitely the most challenging project we’ve taken on,” Bonner said. “It involves so much planning, decorating, and crafting – it’s exhausting but also fulfilling in the best way!” Some crafts included making charm necklaces, arranging flower bouquets, painting tote bags, and learning calligraphy skills.
“Their little smiles are worth it all,” Bonner said. “We have had so many parents come back to us and tell us how much their daughters enjoyed it and were begging for us to do another week.”
Though balancing high school life with a growing business isn’t always easy, Bonner and Keracik remain motivated by their passion for creativity and organization.
Editor’s note: Visit @simply_organized_creative on Instagram to see more.








Hi there! The name’s Goose. I was named after the Top Gun character, which means I’m destined for adventure, high-flying antics, and maybe a little mischief (I like to think I’m Maverick-approved). Humans say cats “find you” – I totally believe it because I ended up in the purrfect family. I was rescued from a parking lot by the sweetest foster mom ever, who fed me and my siblings from bottles like newborns – middle-of-the-night wakeups included! Thank you for getting me to my forever family. Now I nap, play, and explore without a care. Life here is sleeping, jumping, tackling my mini soccer ball, chasing bugs, and – of course – inspecting shoes. I still haven’t mastered the couch jump, but soon I’ll be watching TV with the family too. I’m falling for my family this year, ready to spend all nine lives with them. Bugs are fast, shoes are fun, and naps are essential – let the furry shenanigans begin! Got a cute critter? Email a picture of your pet with approximately 150 words to info@thebuzzmagazines.com or mail it to The Buzz Magazines, 5001 Bissonnet, Suite 100, Bellaire, Texas 77401.











Cast your vote for The Buzz Magazines’ 2025 Buzz Pet of the Year. Here is a sampling of our contestants. The winner will be announced on our website, Thursday, Dec. 11. The winner will receive a $500 gift certificate to DOGMAN training and boarding in West University. Vote at thebuzzmagazines.com/petcontest or scan the QR code. Want your pet to be considered for a 2026 Neighborhood Tails column? Email a high-resolution photo and 150 words from your pet’s perspective to info@thebuzzmagazines.com.

Do you keep a foreign bank or brokerage account? For trips back home? To help parents abroad? Will you inherit assets from them? The IRS requires reports of foreign assets and income, with severe penalties that can exceed the value of unreported items. If you are a U.S. citizen, hold a green card, or meet income tax residency tests, pay attention. Income tax on your worldwide income is only the beginning.
Schedule B of the 2024 Form 1040 reminds every filer about two more forms. Part III asks about financial accounts in foreign countries. If filing FinCEN Form 114 is required, each country must be disclosed. Part III also asks about foreign trusts and reminds the taxpayer of Form 3520. Unmentioned is Form 8938, to report foreign entities.
The Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts, known as FBAR or FinCEN Form 114, must be filed electronically by April 15 (with automatic extension to October 15) if your foreign financial accounts exceeded $10,000 in aggregate at any time during the year. This modest threshold means even small accounts can trigger filing requirements. Penalties for non-willful violations now reach over $15,000 per violation. Willful failures carry penalties of up to 50% of the account balance or over $150,000, whichever is greater. Penalties are inflation-adjusted each year.
Form 8938, Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets, applies at higher thresholds – generally $50,000 for unmarried taxpayers or $100,000 for married couples filing jointly, though these amounts increase substantially for taxpayers living abroad. This form captures foreign stocks, partnership interests, and real estate held through foreign entities, and is due with each Form 1040 (April 15
unless extended). Penalties begin at $10,000 and can reach $60,000 for continued failures, plus a 40% penalty on any tax underpayment attributable to undisclosed assets.
Form 3520 addresses gifts, bequests, and trust transactions. U.S. taxpayers receiving more than $100,000 from foreign estates or nonresident aliens must file this form with their income tax return. The penalties are harsh – 5% of the unreported amount per month, up to a maximum of 25%. A failure to report a $100,000 foreign inheritance for one year results in a $25,000 penalty.

These reports overlap in confusing ways. FBAR requires disclosure of accounts at foreign branches of U.S. financial institutions; Form 8938 doesn't. Form 8938 requires disclosure of foreign partnership interests; FBAR doesn't. Neither requires reporting foreign real estate held directly, though Form 8938 captures real estate held through foreign entities.
Compliance is expensive. Non-compliance is more expensive. Moving smaller accounts onshore, e.g., $500,000 or less, may avoid the cost of future compliance, but does not avoid prior years’ reporting obligations.
We write wills and go to probate court. Foreign nationals and international families welcome.
Russell W. Hall, Bellaire Probate, Attorneys at Law, 6750 West Loop S. Ste. 920, Bellaire, Texas 77401, 713.662.3853, bellaireprobate.com/blog



. by Angie Frederickson, staff writer

Laurie Sanders, Mark Chesnutt, and Susan Plank (pictured, from left) donned their finest western attire for the eighth annual Kick Up Your Boots for Kids event. More than 250 guests celebrated at The Ballroom at Bayou Place and raised $400,000 for Dec My Room, an organization that decorates hospital rooms for pediatric and young adult patients to reflect their special likes and interests. Kendall Plank and Susan Plank founded the organization in 2007, leading volunteers to personalize and decorate more than 10,000 rooms in more than 180 hospitals around the nation. David Ackel led the evening
as emcee and auctioneer and country artist Mark Chesnutt kept everyone moving on the dance floor. Supporters Aimee and Wynne Snoots and Jen and Matt Brice were celebrated as the evening’s honorees.
Members of the Rummel Creek Elementary PTA (pictured) hosted a day of tennis at Lakeside Country Club. Moms and community members enjoyed friendly matches and fun on the courts to support the PTA’s efforts to fund special programs, support staff positions, and other resources for students, teachers, and staff. Event chairs Lindsey Buckingham, Kelly Buster, Lindsay Gentry, Catherine Henry, Jenny Mayo, Kari Oatman, Lesley Schick, Kate Schneider, and Elle Wiens served up a great day of tennis to support students. Game, set, match!
Roger and Kacy Clemens (pictured, from left) enjoyed the inaugural Lost is Not Alone event benefiting Texas EquuSearch and celebrating 25 years of the organization. Honorary chairs Debbie and Roger Clemens, Andre Johnson, and Dan Pastorini welcomed more than 470

guests to The Post Oak Hotel and raised more than $750,000 to support the global volunteer organization that assists families of missing loved ones. Tim Miller, who founded Texas EquuSearch in 2000, shared his story about starting the organization after his family’s tragic loss. Guests also heard from fathers Thad Heartfield and Mike McCown, who lost their children during the Hill Country floods. To raise funds for the organization, guests supported a wine pull, raffle, silent auction, and live auction. The night concluded with a performance by Sundance Head, winner of The Voice (2016) and former American Idol finalist, who performed his original song about the Hill Country floods.
Deborah Duncan, Brigitte Kalai, and Alicia Smith (pictured, from left) attended PetSet’s inaugural Le Brunch fundraiser at Le Tesserae. The event raised nearly $1 million for Houston’s homeless animals, focusing on grants for local shelters and rescue organizations. In the past, PetSet’s largest annual
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fundraiser was a traditional evening event, but the new brunch format was a huge hit. Le Brunch was co-chaired by Kirby Matocha Edmunds and co-presidents Tama Lundquist and Tena Lundquist Faust; Great Day Houston’s Deborah Duncan served as emcee. Supporters enjoyed headliner special guests Billy Bob Thornton and The Boxmasters.
John and Mary Eads, David and Denise Baggett, and Wynne and Amy Snoots (pictured, from left) co-chaired 11th annual Houston Botanic Garden luncheon at River Oaks Country Club. The Building Branches event honored The Garden Club of Houston and River Oaks Garden Club for their efforts supporting the 132-acre Houston Botanic Garden since before its inception. Guests enjoyed a Palm Beach Country Club-inspired luncheon with festive shades of coral, pink, and light orange throughout the ballroom, and raised more than $600,000. Rebecca Gardner, founder and cre-

ative director of Houses & Parties and author of A Screaming Blast!, delivered the keynote presentation to the crowd of more than 400 garden and outdoor entertaining enthusiasts.
Mary Helen Bowden, Peggy Roe, Meg Kissinger, and Elizabeth Pagan (pictured, from left) joined more than 370 other guests at River Oaks Country Club for the Circles of Hope luncheon benefiting re:MIND. Formerly known as Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance Greater Houston, re:MIND provides free and confidential support groups for those affected by depression and bipolar disorders. This year’s luncheon honored Peggy Roe and raised nearly $420,000 to support mental health programming. Peggy received the Gary Levering Mental Health Impact Award, named for the organiza-

tion’s founder, for her work with re:MIND to build awareness and address the stigma of mental health disorders. Circles of Hope was chaired by Mary Helen and Pete Bowden, Jill and Brad Deutser, and Elizabeth and Greer Pagan, and featured guest speaker Meg Kissinger, Pulitzer Prize finalist for her memoir While You Were Out: An Intimate Family Portrait of Mental Illness in an Era of Silence.


Backpack program provides bags of food for food-insecure students to take home on Fridays to keep them fed between Friday’s free school lunch and Monday’s free school breakfast. The fundraising luncheon featured local cookbook author, recipe creator, and cooking instructor Marcia Smart. Founded by Melissa Peter in 2012, Bayou City Blessings is part of the Blessings in a Backpack national program for elementary school children. The Bayou City chapter serves more than 2,300 children at 14 Spring Branch ISD and Houston ISD elementary schools.

William Purdy and founder Heidi Ham (pictured, from left) hit the red carpet at Spectrum Fusion’s inaugural gala, Spotlight on the Stars: Rolling Out the Red Carpet for Autism. The event was held at The Junior League of Houston and honored Spectrum Fusion’s Media Team, a group of 20 talented autistic adults working or interning as film editors, videographers, copywriters, illustrators, and graphic designers. Spotlight on the Stars raised more than $263,000 to help expand the program and hire additional Media Team members. The night opened with a video produced by the Media Team, followed by a surprise Great Gatsby-themed flash mob. DJ Cory Baum then introduced Grammy-nominated singer and Broadway star Ashley Támar Davis, who performed “Fame.” Emcee Courtney Zubowski, host of Texas & Me, turned the program over to Spectrum Fusion founder Heidi Ham, who shared highlights of the organization’s support of more than 500 autistic adults and their families since 2018.
Clint and Nina Rand and Tracy and William Northington (pictured, from left) partied like it was 1999 at the Children’s Museum Houston prom-themed gala. More than 460 guests channeled their inner ’90s selves at The Corinthian for the museum’s annual gala that raised a record-breaking $1,163,000. The event space was transformed into a “high school gym” straight out of a ’90s teen movie, and Will Northington and Ellen Bookout were crowned Prom King and Queen. Event chairs Kathryn

and Travis Boeker and Cassandra and Ryan Dalton, underwriting chairs Rebecca and Bill Adler and Blair and Barry Kessler, and auction chairs Tracy Northington and Nina Rand created a memorable evening for everyone and Prom Night: Party Like It’s 1999 had everyone reminiscing about the good old days. The Drywater Band kept guests on the dance floor, and the hit of the night was the She’s All Thatinspired flash-mob dance to Fatboy Slim’s “The Rockafeller Skank,” performed by the gala cochairs.
Frances Moody Buzbee, Laura Ward, and Tony Buzbee (pictured, from left) celebrated a recordsetting fundraising evening for Houston Children’s Charity. The 28th annual gala, If
You’re Gonna Play in Texas, featuring a performance by Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Alabama, raised $9.4 million including 98 wheelchair-accessible vans donated to support mobility for Houston’s disabled children. More than 820 guests dressed in Texas black-tie glam gathered at The Post Oak Hotel for an evening honoring Frances Moody Buzbee and Tony Buzbee. Supporters heard from Houston Children’s Charity chairman of the board Tilman Fertitta, vice chairman of the board Gary Becker, and president and CEO Laura Ward, along with Houston Mayor John Whitmire
Be seen in Buzz About Town. Send your high-res photos and community news to info@thebuzzmagazines.com. Items are published on a space-available basis. Also share your upcoming-event listings on thebuzzmagazines.com.




. by Andria Dilling, staff writer
Could there be a month more steeped in tradition than December? The holidays – Christmas and New Years and Hanukkah – and all the ways we choose to celebrate them throughout the month are filled with meaning, and more than a bit of nostalgia.
For Jewish people celebrating Hanukkah, latke recipes are one of those things we look to our grandmother (or somebody’s grandmother) for. The hashbrown-like, fried potato pancakes remind us of the Hanukkah miracle that a single day’s worth of oil lit up the temple for eight days. (Hence, the eight-night Hanukkah celebration.) The thing is: Cooking latkes is oily, splattery, and leaves behind a sticky, smelly mess. Short of picking some up at Kenny & Ziggy’s (which are delicious) or resorting to hashbrowns in the freezer section, a latke mess is just par for the course. Or so we thought.
Last year in our online cooking column Back Porch Table, we tried a lazy version of the real deal, which amazed my own family and also prompted a Buzz reader to chime in and ask, “Why haven’t I always done it this way?!”
Food writer Rebecca Firkser shared a recipe with Food 52 called “Shockingly Crisp Baked Latkes,” that uses an oven instead of a stove for frying, making quick – and much less messy –work of a generations-old major Hanukkah project. We took her technique and paired it with a very slightly adapted version of Pam Gruber’s latke recipe – the one made famous by her son Ziggy’s restaurant Kenny & Ziggy’s – and we think we have landed on the great Hanukkah latke compromise (miracle?). And if you are looking for a fabulous New Year’s Eve nibble, try these topped with a bit of sour cream, a sprinkle of chives, and a dollop of caviar. You can’t get much better.
Avocado oil (or another neutral, high smoke point oil)
2 pounds russet potatoes
1 large onion
2 large eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 cup flour
2 teaspoons kosher salt
½ teaspoon freshly ground pepper
Applesauce, sour cream, snipped chives, and/or caviar for serving
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees and pour a generous ½ cup of oil on a rimmed baking sheet.
Peel and grate the potatoes, using a large box grater or a food processor fitted with the grating blade, and do the same with the onion. Place the grated potatoes and onion in a clean kitchen towel over a colander, and press down to eliminate excess water. Gather the edges of the towel and squeeze out as much liquid as possible. Do this a couple of times.

TRADITION UPDATE Instead of making a mess frying potatoes in a skillet for Hanukkah latkes, consider using a sheet pan and an oven.
we love at our house, Hanukkah or otherwise.
Spiced Homemade Applesauce
Place the baking sheet in the oven for 10 minutes to heat the oil. Meanwhile, place the potatoes and onions in a large bowl. Add the eggs, baking powder, flour, salt, and pepper, and mix well with your clean hands.
Remove the sheet pan from the oven. Scoop ¼-cup mounds of the potato mixture carefully onto the sheet pan. Use an offset spatula or the bottom of a ¼-cup scoop to slightly flatten each mound. Bake for 20 minutes, until the bottoms and edges are golden. Remove the baking sheet from the oven and use a spatula to carefully flip the latkes. Bake for another 10 to 15 minutes, until golden on both sides. Transfer the latkes to a paper-towel-lined clean baking sheet and sprinkle with salt.
If needed, add another ¼ cup or so of oil to the original baking sheet and warm in the oven for 10 minutes. Repeat the process with the remaining potato mixture.
Applesauce and sour cream are the must-have accompaniments to latkes. Here is a recipe that
9 apples (we like to use 3 Honeycrisp, 3 Fuji, and 3 Granny Smiths)
2 cinnamon sticks
3 whole star anise pods
1 teaspoon whole cloves
Juice and zest of 1 lemon
Peel the apples, then core and chop them into 1-inch chunks. Put the chopped apples into a large pot with a lid. Add the cinnamon sticks, star anise, cloves, lemon juice, and zest. Mix everything together, turn the heat to medium-low, and partially cover the pot. Cook for an hour or so, stirring occasionally. Once the apples are soft, turn the heat off, keep the pot covered, and let it sit for 30 minutes. Then, stir the apples with a wooden spoon to break them up. From here, you can leave the sauce chunky, or you can mash it with a potato masher, the back of a fork, or an immersion blender.
Wishing everyone a Happy Hanukkah, Merry Christmas, and happy, healthy 2026!

