Lancaster County · Anno MMXXVI
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An Almanac · No. I
Eli Yoder
An Almanac

The old remedies that kept my family well at home.

Generations of plain-folk healing and from-scratch cooking — the teas, poultices, salves, tonics, breads, and ferments the Amish leaned on long before the drugstore. Gentle, honest home care you can make from the pantry, written down so it isn’t lost. Comfort and good plain care — never a cure, and the book says so.

120+
Remedies & recipes
200+
Illustrated pages
60s
Instant delivery
Not for becoming Amish. For keeping your family well, the old way. Eli Yoder · Lancaster Co.
I.

The Almanac

One book. A whole pantry of remedies and honest food.

Coughs, colds, sore throats, aches, sleep, digestion, skin, and the everyday upkeep of a well home — plus the breads, broths, and ferments that keep a family nourished. Real ingredients, plain steps, and an honest note on what each one does. Start tonight with what’s already in your kitchen.

Illustrated ebook · 200+ pages · Instant access

The complete almanac of Amish home remedies and wholesome cooking.

Honey-and-onion cough syrup. A mustard chest poultice. Chamomile and elderberry for the first sniffle. Calendula salve for chapped hands. Sourdough, bone broth, and lacto-ferments for a strong gut. More than 120 remedies and recipes the plain folk have used for generations — with the exact ingredients, plain steps, and gentle cautions. Comfort and care, not a cure — and the book says so plainly.

$37 $77 Launch price — ends Sunday

What you get for $37:

  • The Amish Healing Almanac — 200+ page illustrated ebook, 120+ numbered remedies & recipes, ingredients, plain steps, and gentle cautions $37
  • The Pantry Remedy Quick-Start — the ten remedies to make first from what’s already in your kitchen $19
  • The Home Apothecary Checklist — the simple shelf of herbs, honeys & staples to keep on hand, and where to buy them cheapest $19
  • The Seasonal Wellness Calendar — what to gather, brew, and put up through the year $14
  • Lifetime updates — every revision, every new edition, no extra charge $19
  • Total value $108
  • You pay today $37

Instant access · Pay once · Yours forever

II.

The Savings

What a year of store-bought comfort costs. And what the pantry costs instead.

Add up a year of drugstore remedies, supplements, specialty cleaners, and store-bought bread and broth. The right-hand column is the same household making them from the pantry with the Almanac.

A typical household Per year

  • Cold, cough & flu remedies$180
  • Vitamins & supplements$300
  • Skin salves, balms & creams$160
  • Digestive & sleep aids$140
  • Store-bought bread & baking$620
  • Specialty cleaners$220
Annual $1,620

BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey · retail averages

The same household, from the pantry Per year

  • Pantry remedies (honey, ginger, herbs)$70
  • Home tonics & elderberry syrup$60
  • Calendula & beeswax salves$30
  • Teas & simple sleep blends$25
  • Home bread, sourdough & broth$180
  • Four-ingredient cleaners$25
Annual ~$390

Every number has a recipe in the Almanac with ingredients and steps

Net annual savings: $900–$1,200 — depending on how much your household buys today and how many of the remedies and recipes you actually make. Made at home, from real ingredients you control.

III.

What's Inside

Everything in the Almanac, by the shelf.

More than 120 numbered remedies and recipes. Each one: the ingredients, the plain steps, what it’s good for, and an honest note on when to set it down and call a doctor. Use what fits your family — you don’t have to make all of them.

Coughs, Colds & Throat

For the first sniffle and the long winter cough.

  • Honey & onion cough syrup
  • Ginger-lemon throat tea
  • Elderberry syrup
  • Mustard chest poultice
  • Steam & thyme for congestion
  • Salt-water gargle
  • Garlic honey
Aches, Skin & Comfort

Salves, soaks, and poultices for the body.

  • Calendula healing salve
  • Beeswax & herb balm
  • Epsom & arnica soak
  • Plantain drawing poultice
  • Peppermint for the head
  • Chamomile compress
Digestion & Sleep

Settling the stomach and easing into rest.

  • Peppermint & fennel tea
  • Ginger for the stomach
  • Lacto-ferments for the gut
  • Chamomile & lemon balm at night
The Healing Kitchen

The food that keeps a family strong.

  • Everyday sourdough bread
  • Long-simmered bone broth
  • Fire cider tonic
  • Sauerkraut & pickles
  • Herb-infused vinegars
  • Nourishing porridges
  • Honey & warm milk for sleep
The Home Apothecary

The simple shelf every plain home keeps stocked.

  • Build & keep the seasonal apothecary shelf
IV.

How Families Use It

How the Almanac is meant to be used.

Three illustrative scenarios — three ordinary kitchens — showing how the remedies and recipes in the book come together. Comfort and good plain care, not medical treatment.

Example № 1 · The first sniffle

Example: at the first scratchy throat, brew the ginger-lemon tea and start the elderberry syrup from the book — both made from pantry staples for pennies a cup, instead of a $12 bottle from the drugstore. Honest comfort while the body does its work.

— A young family in Ohio
Example № 2 · The winter pantry

Example: a Sunday of baking sourdough and simmering bone broth from the recipes stocks a week of nourishing meals — and replaces the $9 loaves and $5 cartons most households buy without thinking.

— A household on the Kansas plains
Example № 3 · The home shelf

Example: one quiet afternoon making calendula salve and herb balm fills the family medicine shelf for the year, for the cost of a little beeswax and oil — the kind of small, steady self-reliance the Almanac is built around.

— An older home in the Virginia hills

Illustrative examples based on the remedies in the book. Traditional home care, not medical advice. Individual results vary; see a doctor for anything serious.

V. About the Author

Eli Yoder.

I was raised in a plain farming home where the doctor was far and the pantry was near. When someone took ill, my mother reached for honey, onion, ginger, and the jars on the cellar shelf — and most of the time, that was enough. When it wasn’t, we knew to send for help, and I’ll tell you plainly in the book when to do the same.

I share these old ways with families across America — people learning to care for themselves the way our grandparents did, with real food, simple remedies, and a well-kept home.

This Almanac is that knowledge, written down and put in order. More than 120 remedies and recipes, with the ingredients and the steps, and an honest word on what each one can and can’t do. Read it once, keep it on the shelf, and lean on it for years.

It is not an instruction set for becoming Amish. It is an instruction set for keeping your family well, the old honest way.
VI.

Order the Almanac

$37 once. No subscription. Yours forever.

Instant access — in your inbox within 60 seconds of payment. Read on any phone, tablet, or computer. Print at the kitchen table if you want. Pay once — no subscription, and the Almanac is yours to keep forever.

Illustrated ebook · 200+ pages · Instant access

The Amish Healing Almanac

More than 120 home remedies and wholesome recipes — teas, syrups, salves, breads, broths, and ferments — with the ingredients, the plain steps, and honest cautions. Make the ones your family needs. Leave the rest on the shelf.

$37 $77 Launch price — ends Sunday

What you get for $37:

  • The Amish Healing Almanac — 200+ page illustrated ebook $37
  • The Pantry Remedy Quick-Start — ten remedies to make tonight $19
  • The Home Apothecary Checklist — the shelf to keep on hand $19
  • The Seasonal Wellness Calendar — what to brew and put up $14
  • Lifetime updates — every future revision, free $19
  • Total value $108
  • You pay today $37

Secure Checkout · Pay once · Yours forever

🔒 Secure Checkout·Visa · Mastercard · PayPal · Apple Pay·Instant access

VII.

FAQ

Questions buyers ask before they click.

Are these remedies safe?

They are gentle, traditional home remedies — teas, broths, honeys, salves, and warm comforts our grandparents used. The book is honest about what each one is for, and it tells you plainly when a symptom means you should set the kettle down and call a doctor. Never give honey to a baby under one year old; when in doubt, ask your physician. This is comfort and care, not a cure.

Is this medical advice?

No. The Amish Healing Almanac is a record of traditional folk practice, shared for learning and for comfort. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace your doctor. Use it with good sense, alongside real medical care — never instead of it.

I’ve never made a remedy before. Is it still for me?

Yes. Most remedies use what’s already in your kitchen — honey, onion, ginger, oats, vinegar — with plain steps anyone can follow. No special equipment and no foraging required to start. The Quick-Start guide points you to the ten easiest first.

How fast can I start?

Tonight. The Pantry Remedy Quick-Start lists the ten things you can make right now from what’s in your cupboard — a cough syrup, a throat tea, a simple salve — before the book even finishes downloading.

What format is the Almanac?

Instant access — emailed to you within 60 seconds. Read on any phone, tablet, computer, or print at the kitchen table. No DRM, no app, no subscription. Yours forever.

Are there more books coming?

Yes. This one covers home remedies and the healing kitchen. The next cover the garden and the still-room, and putting food by for winter. Buy this one and you’ll be the first to know when each new one ships, with a discount.

Can I share it with my family?

Your purchase is for your own household. Please don’t resell or redistribute the file, but everyone under your roof is welcome to read it and cook from it. Because it’s a digital book delivered instantly, all sales are final.

Last call

Keep your family well the old, honest way.

$37 once. Instant access. Yours to keep forever. More than 120 remedies and recipes you can make from the pantry.

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