Aunt Marg's Caramels and More

Aunt Marg's Caramels and More Honoring my aunt’s Christmas caramel tradition with new flavors, year-round availability, and expanded options. What can I craft for you?

AND indulging in creative crafting of unique works of art, writing, and idea generation.

June 13 and 20, Aunt Marg's Caramels will be back at Muscatine Area Farmers Market with our Barnyard Animals theme.  Hor...
06/07/2026

June 13 and 20, Aunt Marg's Caramels will be back at Muscatine Area Farmers Market with our Barnyard Animals theme. Horse Hay caramels, Pig Slop caramels, and of course Cow Pie caramels will be available for this limited time. C'mon down and check it out! 🐎🐖🐄

06/01/2026

We haven't been at market, but we've been busy preparing for our Barnyard Animals theme June 13 and 20. Your taste buds will salivate at our Horse Hay, Pig Slop, and Cow Pie caramels! Mark the date(s)!

We're at Muscatine Farmers Market with the last day of our Star Wars theme. Hurry down for your Tatooine caramels, or a ...
05/09/2026

We're at Muscatine Farmers Market with the last day of our Star Wars theme. Hurry down for your Tatooine caramels, or a glass of Blue Milk caramels, Jedi lightsaber friendship bracelet, almost-still-warm chocolate chip scones, and more.

Lots to see down at Aunt Marg's Caramels and More. Star Wars is the theme today. Blue milk caramels, cross stitch, scone...
05/02/2026

Lots to see down at Aunt Marg's Caramels and More. Star Wars is the theme today. Blue milk caramels, cross stitch, scones, and broccoli plants. What's not to love?

May the 4th be with you! Come on down the Muscatine Farmers Market and enjoy some Blue Milk caramels. Or caramels from T...
05/02/2026

May the 4th be with you! Come on down the Muscatine Farmers Market and enjoy some Blue Milk caramels. Or caramels from Tatooine. Don't mind the grit!

04/26/2026

Star Wars Fans. May the 4th be with you. And come be with us at Muscatine Area Farmers Market Sat May 2 and 9.

If you need a ready-to-go gift, we have just TWO boxed sets left. Each box contains 18 oz of Aunt Marg's Cozy Cocoa, a m...
12/19/2025

If you need a ready-to-go gift, we have just TWO boxed sets left. Each box contains 18 oz of Aunt Marg's Cozy Cocoa, a matching pair of mugs, hazelnut-flavored coffee creamer, and 3 add-ins (mini chocolate chips, mini freeze-dried chocolate marshmallows, and peppermint krincles). See comments for mug photo.

12/17/2025

"My name's Morris. I'm 73. I collect shopping carts in the Walmart parking lot. Worst job in the store. Heat, rain, snow, doesn't matter. I'm out there pushing carts uphill all day while my back screams.

Thirty years I gave to this company. Manager once. Then they "restructured." Now I push carts with the teenagers who don't show up half the time.
Bitter? Yeah, I'm bitter.

But about six months ago, something stupid happened. I was bringing in carts, and this old man was struggling to get one from the corral. Shaky hands, oxygen tank. He couldn't pull the carts apart.
I walked over. "Let me get that for you, sir."

He looked at me, really looked. "You're too old to be doing this work."
Hit me wrong. "Yeah, well, life don't care about fair."

But I got him a cart. Walked it to his car. He thanked me three times.
Next week, same old man, same struggle. I got him a cart again. Week after that, same thing. Started just watching for him. Thursday afternoons. Blue Buick. I'd have a cart waiting by his car before he even parked.

One Thursday, his daughter was with him. She stopped me. "You've been helping my dad."
"Just doing my job, ma'am."
"No," she said. "Your job is carts. Not kindness. Dad has Parkinson's. Shopping is his only outing. He talks about you all week. Says you make him feel like he still matters."

Something broke in me. "He does matter."
She handed me a card. "Thank you for seeing him."
After they left, I sat in my truck and cried. First time in years.

Started noticing others. Woman with a toddler and infant, struggling with cart and kids. Started helping her to her car, watching the kids while she loaded groceries. Veteran with one arm, couldn't manage cart and bags. Started being there.
Teenagers at work noticed. "Morris, you're doing too much."
"I'm doing what's right."

Manager called me in last month. Thought I was finally done.
"Morris, customer satisfaction surveys mention you by name. Seventeen times this quarter. Corporate's asking questions."
I shrugged. "I just help people."

He pushed a paper across the desk. "They're creating a new position. 'Customer Assistance Associate.' Mostly helping elderly and disabled customers. Inside work. Air conditioning. Same pay. They want you."
I stared at him. "Why?"
"Because you already do it. Might as well make it official."

I took the job. Now I'm inside, helping people who need it. But here's what gets me, that old man with Parkinson's, his name is Robert. He died two months ago. His daughter came to tell me.
"Dad's last words were about you," she said, crying. "He said, 'Tell Morris he gave me my dignity back. Tell him old men matter because of him.'"
I couldn't speak.

She handed me something. An envelope. Inside, a letter Robert wrote,
"Dear Morris, I see you. You're angry about where life left you. I was too. But you chose kindness anyway. That's not weakness. That's strength. You matter more than you know. Thank you for mattering to me. -Robert"

I'm 73. I spent thirty years climbing, then watched it all collapse. Spent the last year pushing carts in parking lots feeling worthless.
But I learned something, your circumstances don't define your impact. I had no power, no title, no respect. But I had hands that still worked. And a choice.

So wherever you are, whatever knocked you down, whatever bitterness you're carrying, hear this: you can still matter. Right now. Right where you are.
Help someone to their car. Hold a door. See the person everyone else ignores.
Because the world doesn't need your former glory. It needs your present kindness.
That's enough. That's everything."
Let this story reach more hearts....
Please follow us: CAAOX
By Grace Jenkins

12/14/2025

"My kid came home from school talking about the weird lunch lady.
"Mom, she's so strange. She memorizes everyone's name by the third day. Like, all 600 kids."
I figured she was exaggerating. Teenagers do that.
Then parent-teacher night happened. I was running late, hadn't eaten, saw the cafeteria was open. Grabbed a sandwich. The lunch lady, older woman with gray hair in a hairnet, was cleaning tables.
"You're Zoe's mom," she said without looking up.
I stopped. "How'd you know?"
"Same eyes. She sits table seven, always picks the apples nobody wants because they're bruised. Drinks chocolate milk even though she's lactose intolerant. Hurts herself rather than waste food."
I stood there, stunned. "You know this about my daughter?"
"I know it about all of them."
She kept wiping tables. Started talking, not to me exactly, just... talking.
"Marcus, table three, his dad left last year. Always takes double servings on Fridays because there's less food at home on weekends. Jennifer counts calories out loud to punish herself. Brett throws away lunches his mom packs because kids make fun of the ethnic food, but he's starving by sixth period. Ashley's parents are divorcing, she stress-eats in the bathroom."
"Why are you telling me this?"
She finally looked at me. "Because you're all at parent-teacher conferences talking about grades. Nobody's talking about this. About who's eating, who's not, who's hurting."
"What do you do about it?"
"What can I do? I'm the lunch lady. I make sure Marcus gets those extra servings without asking. I tell Jennifer the calorie counts are wrong, lower than they are. I pack Brett containers of his mom's food labeled as 'cafeteria leftovers' so he can eat it without shame. I bought Zoe lactose-free chocolate milk with my own money, tell her we're trying a new brand."
I felt like I'd been punched.
"Does anyone know you do this?"
"The kids who need to know, know. That's enough."
I went home and couldn't stop thinking about it. Started asking Zoe questions. She confirmed everything.
"Yeah, Mrs. Chen just... sees people. She stopped my friend from... she helped when nobody else noticed."
Turns out, Mrs. Chen had worked at that school for 22 years. Made $14 an hour. Knew the story of every struggling kid who came through her lunch line. Never reported it, never made it official, just adjusted portions, swapped items, paid for things quietly.
Teachers didn't know the extent. Administrators had no idea. She just showed up, served food, and saved kids in ways nobody measured.
Last year, Mrs. Chen had a stroke. Had to retire.
The school hired someone new. Efficient. Fast. Didn't learn names.
Within three months, the guidance counselor's office was flooded. Kids breaking down. Nobody could figure out why.
Until one kid finally said it: "Mrs. Chen knew when we were drowning. She threw life preservers disguised as extra tater tots. Now nobody's watching."
The school brought Mrs. Chen back. Part-time. Not to serve food. Just to be there. They called her position "Student Wellness Observer."
She's 68 now, walks with a cane, can't lift heavy trays anymore.
But she still memorizes all 600 names by the third day.
Still knows who needs what.
Still saves kids during lunch periods when everyone else is just serving food.
My daughter graduated last month. In her speech, she thanked Mrs. Chen.
"Some people teach math. Some teach history. Mrs. Chen taught us that being seen is sometimes the only thing standing between surviving and giving up."
The whole cafeteria stood up.
Turns out, weird lunch ladies who memorize names?
They're the most important people in the building."
Let this story reach more hearts....
Please follow us: CAAOX
By Grace Jenkins

We're on The List! Maybe not Santa's, but we'll be at the Art Center tomorrow with new holiday flavor caramels. Come see...
12/05/2025

We're on The List! Maybe not Santa's, but we'll be at the Art Center tomorrow with new holiday flavor caramels. Come see us in the music room.

Save the date - the Heartfelt & Handmade Family Festival & Market is on Saturday, December 6th from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. We are excited to welcome many of last year's vendors and welcome a few new vendors.

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Muscatine, IA

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