My Story
I, Gracie Jane, did not grow up with an understanding of food, farming, or nutrition. Food was simply something to consume and move on from. My early career began in hospitality management, working with Hyatt Hotels and in event production—industries centered around service, experience, and bringing people together.
But everything changed when I became a mother.
After leaving the corporate hospitality world to homeschool my three children, I found myself stepping into a new kind of stewardship—one that began with my own body and my home.
What started as a personal journey quickly became a decade-long pursuit of understanding how our bodies are designed to thrive. Over the last ten years, I have studied, researched, and learned alongside health practitioners while implementing everything I teach in my own life.
My greatest “credential” is the life I live. My own health and the vitality of my children have become my business card.
Through years of walking alongside other mothers—answering questions, sharing what I’ve learned, and helping families reconnect to nourishing food and life-giving rhythms—I have become a trusted guide for women seeking a more grounded, integrated approach to health.
Six years ago, friendships with local farmers opened an entirely new world for me: food literacy.
Learning directly from the land and the people who steward it expanded my understanding beyond personal health to something much bigger—how human health, the soil, community, and creation are all deeply interconnected.
This realization shaped the foundation of my work today.
I believe that living well means returning to God’s design: honoring the body, respecting the land, and restoring the rhythms that bring harmony between people, food, and nature.
At the heart of my vision is a return to the hearth.
The hearth—the fire at the center of the home—has always been where nourishment, conversation, and community gather.
My work is ultimately about restoration: restoring harmony within our bodies, restoring connection with the land, and restoring community with one another.
The power for change does not come from institutions, but from people.
Ordinary families choosing to follow their God-given intuition, gather around the table, and live differently.
And when people come together, everything begins to change.