Travertine Candle Holder
$160.00
Order Your Travertine Candle Holder Today!
Handcrafted from Beige Travertine stone, the Travertine Candle Holder makes for an artistic touch in any space. This sculptural piece is the perfect addition to any home.
In stock
Estimated shipping 5-7 Days
This statement piece which is sculptural in nature can be placed onto a mantle, shelf or table. Candles not included. Need candles? Purchase here.
Material:
Travertine Stone
Finish:
Honed
Color:
Beige Travertine
Made in:
Turkey
Each piece varies as stone naturally varies in shade, characteristic swirls and veins.
Dimensions: 7.87" W x 3.74” H x 1.54” D
Candle Opening: 0.98” D
Weight: 4.3 lb.
Care: Wipe Clean
We offer ground shipping to 48 states within the continental U.S. (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) and Puerto Rico.
Commitment is scary, so we always take returns. We’re confident you will love your purchase, but if you are unsatisfied for any reason, we offer no-fear returns. You can return your undamaged order (unless damaged upon arrival) for a full refund, 365 days a year, no questions asked.
Please visit our FAQ page for more information on shipping and returns.
Love + Reviews
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This is the beginning of my story, documented in connection to yesterday’s post. It’s a long but one worth staying for.
I shot this during my time in Puerto Rico, a bit after my mom’s passing. I went with lots of intentions. First to visit her mom, my grandma, and her sister, my aunt. Two people who loved her dearly and didn’t get the chance to say goodbye in person. It was also the moment when I began the journey to recover my mother’s recipes.
It was emotional. It was raw.
My days were mostly spent cooking, talking about her, swapping stories, and finding out who she was through their eyes. I won’t lie, grief can be so nuanced. Sometimes it was beautiful. Other times it was extremely painful. But ultimately it was a bit of both. Tears and laughter. Lots of them.
I hope this reminds you to keep your loved ones close and cherish those recipes we might one day no longer have.
This story is also my inheritance.
As I sit here, trying to recover my own mother’s recipes that I lost when I lost her, I sit inside what these very sentences describes. In recovering these recipes from my elders, I see how clearly the systems that left our recipes to die affect me today. In my family, nothing has been written or documented. I’d venture to say perhaps in yours as well. And it’s not for lack of wanting but for lack of ability to do so.
It is my hope that this ends with me, and if you are in the same situation, that this, too, ends with you. ❤️
Video by @joseruizphoto
Roasted chicken might be dinner, but sofrito is what makes it Puerto Rican. At least it does for me (anything with sofrito, count me in).
This is the kind of meal that feels familiar and deeply comforting. A whole chicken rubbed with butter and sofrito under the skin, roasted until golden brown with potatoes, carrots, onions, lemon, and garlic.
Save this for Sunday dinner. Comment “chicken” and I’ll send you the recipe.
#puertoricanrecipes #puertoricancooking
There isn’t a Puerto Rican dish in my kitchen that doesn’t start here.
Sofrito is our base. The green, herbaceous foundation that gives Puerto Rican food its unmistakable flavor. Some families add ají dulce, others swear by recao, and some skip cilantro altogether, but the bones are always the same.
Make a jar. Freeze it in portions. Use it in rice, beans, stews, eggs, whatever needs depth. There is no Puerto Rican kitchen without it.
#sofrito #puertoricanrecipes #puertoricancooking #puertoricanfood


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