Showing posts with label Holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holiday. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Apple to introduce new iPads on October 22 — AllThingsD


SAN FRANCISCO — Apple Inc intends to introduce its latest line-up of iPads on October 22, tech blog AllThingsD cited sources familiar with the company’s plans as saying, meaning Apple would be updating its tablets in time for holiday shopping.

New versions of the iPad, which will go up against Amazon.com Inc’s latest Kindle Fire tablets and other gadgets made by Samsung Electronics, are expected to feature lighter, thinner designs and more powerful processors.

Supply chain sources told Reuters last week that Apple may run into a shortage of so-called “retina” displays for the iPad mini, a smaller version of the tablet that helped popularize the product in 2010. That could in turn limit supply of the gadget during the crucial season.

Apple declined to comment about AllThingsD’s report, which added that the company may also devote some time to detailing new Macintosh computers.

The iPhone-maker has come under pressure over the past year to preserve market share and bolster sales against rivals that are rapidly raising specifications and lowering prices.

Amazon’s new 7-inch Kindle Fire is priced from $229 for 16GB wifi-only models, while Google Inc’s second-generation Nexus 7 offers a similar screen size and storage capacity at the same price.

In comparison, the cheapest model in Apple’s current 7.9-inch iPad Mini lineup with 16GB of storage starts at $329.

source: interaksyon.com

Friday, August 9, 2013

Eat, pray, love? Pack your bags and go to Bohol!


Bohol, located in the Central Visayas region, may not be as party-savvy as Boracay, but it continues to steadily attract tourists for its delicious cuisine, traditional crafts, historical and religious landmarks, and but of course, it beaches and other natural sites. There’s more to Bohol than just swimming on its blue waters and lazing around its white-sand beach resorts throughout your stay—though not a bad idea, actually.

Need a change of pace from hurried urban life? Have to think some things over? Or even looking for a romantic getaway? Then pack your bags and take your next holiday vacation to Bohol.

Visitors can either rough it up by riding its public vehicles or rent a van complete with your very own tour guide to hop from one destination to the other.

Taste Bohol

What’s a holiday without enjoying a foodie trip? There aren’t any gigantic malls serving as go-to dining options but Bohol offers a range of restaurants scattered all over the island offering local and international cuisines. Seafood dining establishments are popular here while some Asian and European expats who have fallen in love with the place have also set up restaurants serving their authentic cuisines.


But, of course, when in Bohol, don’t leave the place without ever trying out a lunch buffet at the famous Loboc River Cruise Restaurant. True, it’s a touristy thing to do, but taking river cruise along Loboc River with a view of the mountains, getting serenaded by local singers, while enjoying an eat-all-you can Filipino buffet is quite a novel experience.

During the cruise, the boat makes a stop at a floating souvenir shop where local crafts are sold and locals perform traditional Filipino dances.


Centuries-old churches

Away from the beach and back in town, marvel at the centuries-old churches of Bohol. Catholic churches built from stone during the Spanish colonial rule in the Philippines feature beautiful architecture as well as antique religious icons.


One of the popular churches here is Baclayon Catholic Church, which has been declared as a National Historic Treasure in 1995. The original structure was built in 1595, although the present building is from 1724. Visitors can also check the museum of religious clothes and relics inside the museum. Free guided tours are available.

Some ancestral homes are also available for touring by scheduled arrangement.

Beautiful nature


Of course, one will easily fall in love with the natural attractions in Bohol as well. The waters around Balicasag island, for example, has been declared as a marine sanctuary. It’s home to whales and dolphins that one can see jumping joyously during early morning. Various marine life are also waiting to be discovered by divers and snorkelers.



On land, Bohol is home to the famous Chocolate Hills, a formation of hills that are green and vibrant during the rainy season but become brown as its grass and plants dry up by summer (thus, the name Chocolate Hills).

When in souvenir shops, get a t-shirt, a keychain, or mug. Most likely, it features Chocolate Hills to represent the province.

Another famous icon in many Bohol souvenirs is the tarsier. The Philippine tarsier, (Tarsius syrichta) is one of the smallest known primates in the world. Usually as tall as 3 to 6 inches, one can practically hold it on one’s hand.


Tarsiers look cuddly because of their size and enormous eyes but be warned that they are very shy animals. A nocturnal creature, the tarsier eats insects. Visitors are encouraged to view them at the Philippine Tarsier Foundation where they are protected and allowed to live in their natural habitat.


Luxurious stay


The starting point to all these enjoyable experiences happen in one’s temporary home in Bohol. Go all out and spoil yourself in the province’s many luxurious resorts.

Bluewater Panglao Beach Resort, for instance, has 46 deluxe rooms, four lofts, three honeymoon villas, and a family villa. Designed according to the Modern Filpino style by Benji Reyes, the hotel takes pride in its use of recycled wood for its cantilevered beds.

A freshwater pool has also been impressively designed with touches of wood.


Finally, a holiday vacation in this tropical destination isn’t complete without checking out Amuma Spa where its well-trained staff promises to keep visitors spoiled and feeling totally relaxed with is signature Hilot massage or its various massage therapies and body treatments.

source: interaksyon.com



Sunday, February 10, 2013

Raucous celebrations as Asia greets Year of Snake


BEIJING - A billion-plus Asians ushered in the Year of the Snake on Sunday with a cacophony of fireworks, after a Chinese televised gala featuring megastars including Celine Dion kicked off a week of festivities.

From Australia to South Korea, millions of people travelled huge distances to reunite with their families for Lunar New Year -- the most important holiday of the year for many in Asia -- indulging in feasts and celebrations.

As the clock struck midnight, Beijing's skyline lit up with color as residents braved freezing temperatures to set off fireworks, traditionally believed to ward off evil spirits -- a scene repeated across China.

But the capital' streets were eerily quiet on Sunday, with nine million out of 20 million residents returning to their ancestral homes for the festival, according to the state-run China Daily.

This year also saw a sharp reduction in the sale of fireworks as heavy smog in recent weeks has fuelled fears that Beijing's notorious air pollution levels could touch dangerous highs during the festival.

More than 260,000 boxes of fireworks were sold in the city in the days leading up to the New Year, a 37 percent drop compared to last year's sales, after the smog left citizens "worried", the Beijing News reported.

State broadcaster CCTV aired its annual gala variety show during the countdown to the New Year -- which rakes in hundreds of millions of viewers -- featuring a gamut of iconic stars including Celine Dion who sang in Mandarin.

Dion performed the classic Chinese folk song "Jasmine Flower" in a duet with local idol Song Zuying, before launching into her global hit "My Heart Will Go On" from the Hollywood blockbuster Titanic.

Celebrations were also reported aboard Chinese patrol ships in waters surrounding East China Sea islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, which are at the center of a bitter territorial row with Japan.

According to reports, the dispute had led to a ban on sales of fireworks labelled "Tokyo Explosion", though a stall in southern Beijing visited by AFP was still offering them on Saturday.

In China the snake has traditionally been seen as a symbol of wisdom, wealth and longevity, but it is considered less auspicious than other animals in the 12-year Chinese Zodiac such as the Dragon.

In Taiwan temples were thronged with the faithful seeking blessings, with President Ma Ying-jeou seen handing out traditional "red envelopes" with money (a token Tw$1) to well-wishers in Taipei.

People also rushed to lotto booths to buy special Lunar New Year lottery tickets with a jackpot of Tw$200 million ($6.89 million).

Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong used the occasion to exhort his compatriots to extend a baby boom in the just-passed Year of the Dragon, which saw a 7.4 rise in the birth-rate amid rising complaints over the number of foreign workers.

"We gladly welcomed more babies during the Dragon Year and hope that this continues into the Year of the Snake," he said.

In the semi-autonomous southern Chinese city of Hong Kong, thousands of people are expected to watch the annual night parade Sunday, at which illuminated floats will be showcased in a giant outdoor party with the city's iconic Victoria Harbour as the backdrop.

In Sydney fireworks overnight welcomed the Lunar New Year though the city's major event, the annual Twilight Parade featuring some 3,500 performers, will not be held until next weekend.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard wished the country's 900,000 people of Chinese ancestry a "healthy and prosperous Year of the Snake" on Twitter. Ministers in her government said it was an important celebration of Australian diversity.

The New Year typically marks the largest annual movement of people as millions of people across China and other Asian countries squeeze into packed trains and buses to journey home to spend the season with their families.

source: interaksyon.com

Tory Burch mixes good design with good fortune


MANILA, Philippines - Tory Burch is launching a special capsule collection in bright red, the traditional color of the holiday, symbolizing good fortune. It includes handbags, wallets, cosmetic cases and iPhone covers. These limited edition designs are now available at Tory Burch freestanding stores in Beijing, Tianjin, Hong Kong–IFC, Hong Kong–Harbour City, Hong Kong–Times Square, Makati City and Singapore. They will also be offered at 14 select locations in North America, including New York, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Honolulu and Toronto boutiques.

The Tory Blog will highlight Chinese New Year as well with a special feature. Visit blog.toryburch.com for more information.

This is the brand’s second year designing custom product for Chinese New Year, marking the important role of China in the company’s global expansion plan — it opened its Hong Kong office when the brand launched in 2004 and there are now eight stores in Greater China.

In the Philippines, Tory Burch is exclusively distributed by Stores Specialists, Inc. (SSI) and is located at Greenbelt 5 and Rustan’s Makati.

source: philstar.com

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Gaudy Christmas sweaters make a comeback


Retailers including boutique chain Kitson, based in Los Angeles, said ugly Christmas sweaters have made a comeback as ironic duds for younger generations.

Fraser Ross, owner of Kitson, said ugly Christmas sweater parties are filling the holiday void once occupied by tree trimming parties, as people in their 20s and 30s embrace the garishly decorated garments as humorous ways to celebrate the season, the Los Angeles Times reported Tuesday.

"It's the new theme for hostesses who are trying to bring the mostest to holiday parties," he said. "It's like having a Halloween party during Christmas."

Evan Mendelsohn, co-founder of San Diego clothing brand Tipsy Elves, said ugly Christmas sweaters -- including playful depictions of conga-dancing reindeer, and Santa spelling "Merry Christmas" in the snow with his urine -- are proving to be holiday bestsellers.

"The majority of people buying are in their 20s or 30s who are sort of making light of what can be a serious holiday. It gives them an excuse to wear something funny," Mendelsohn said. "It's not going to die like a normal fashion trend."

Carin Agiman, owner of Berkeley, Calif., clothing label GeltFiend, said he launched a line of Hanukkah equivalents for the ugly Christmas sweaters to let Jewish revelers get in on the fun.

His brand includes a sweater picturing Hasidic snowmen and a dreidel cardigan.

"I have a lot of non-Jewish friends, so I get invited to a lot of ugly Christmas sweater parties," Agiman said. "There's been a lot of pent-up Jewish angst over not having some equivalent ugliness."

source: upi.com

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

‘Hobbit’ fever beats Tom Cruise at box office


LOS ANGELES – The dwarfs and elves of “The Hobbit” overpowered Tom Cruise to take the box office title for a second time, grabbing $37.6 million in U.S. and Canadian ticket sales as a crowd of new films fought for pre-holiday audiences.

Cruise’s crime drama “Jack Reacher,” a film about a fatal sniper attack, landed in second place with $15.6 million. In third place, adult comedy “This is 40″ pulled in $12 million, according to studio estimates compiled by Reuters on Sunday.

Domestic ticket sales for “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” fell by about 57 percent during the film’s second weekend. Movie receipts typically drop 40 percent to 60 percent each week.

In international markets, “Hobbit” sales reached $284 million and brought the movie’s global take to $434 million, distributor Warner Bros. said.

“The Hobbit” is the first of three movies based on the classic J.R.R. Tolkien novel set in the fantasy world of Middle Earth. The films, produced by MGM and Warner Bros.’ New Line Cinema, are prequels to the blockbuster “Lord of the Rings” franchise that brought in box office gold a decade ago.

Producers of “The Hobbit” and other films hope to enjoy a big boost this week around the Christmas and New Year’s holidays. The current crop will face competition starting on Tuesday, Christmas Day, from Quentin Tarantino’s Western “Django Unchained,” musical “Les Miserables” and comedy “Parental Guidance.”

Sales over the coming days are expected to push 2012 to a domestic box office record. The year is on track to finish with $10.8 billion worth of ticket sales in the North American (U.S. and Canadian) market, according to a projection from box office tracker Hollywood.com. The current record is $10.6 billion, set in 2009.

Over the weekend, “Jack Reacher” debuted just days after the Newtown, Connecticut, school shooting sparked new debate about the impact of movie violence. “Reacher” begins with a sniper killing a handful of seemingly random victims. A red-carpet premiere and a screening to promote the $60-million production were postponed after the Newtown tragedy.

“We opened pre-Christmas with our eyes wide open,” said Don Harris, Paramount’s president of domestic distribution, adding that he expected the film’s box office take to grow over the coming weeks. He said the Newtown shooting had “no effect” on the movie’s opening.

Before the weekend, the studio had predicted sales of $12 million to $15 million.

Adult comedy “This is 40″ stars Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann as a middle-aged couple. The studio billed the $35 million production from “Bridesmaids” producer Judd Apatow as a “sort-of sequel” to 2007 comedy “Knocked Up.”

The president of domestic distribution for Universal, Nikki Rocco, said the film exceeded the studio’s estimates for opening prior to a mid-week Christmas, and dismissed talk of a Judd Apatow slump since his comedy “Bridesmaids,” which opened to $26.3 million in May 2011.

“Adults have choices at this time of year,” Rocco said, citing the broad slate of films already on

offer and those opening on Christmas day.

Comedy “The Guilt Trip,” starring Barbra Streisand and Seth Rogen as a mother and son on a cross-country drive, pulled in $5.4 million over three days. The movie opened two days before the weekend, on Wednesday, scoring a five-day total of $7.4 million.

Also this weekend, Walt Disney Co re-released 2001 animated Pixar hit “Monsters Inc” in 3D. The movie earned $5 million at domestic theaters. Next June, Disney is releasing a prequel to the film called “Monsters University.”

Another new release, the 3D “Cirque Du Soleil: Worlds Away,” with performances by the famous acrobatic troupe, earned $2.1 million.

In five theaters in New York and Los Angeles, thriller “Zero Dark Thirty” about the hunt for Osama bin Laden grossed $410,000 in what box office analyst for Hollywood.com Paul Dergarabedian

described as a “huge limited release start for the film.”

The movie, considered an Oscar contender, will expand nationwide on January 11.

“The Hobbit” was distributed by Time Warner Inc’s Warner Bros. studio. Paramount Pictures, a unit of Viacom Inc, released “Jack Reacher,” “The Guilt Trip” and “Cirque du Soleil: Worlds Away.” Comcast Corp’s Universal Studios released “This is 40,” and Sony Corp’s film studio distributed “Zero Dark Thirty.”

source: interaksyon.com

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Enjoy Christmas


Christmas! What is there to say that I have not said? This will be my 68th Christmas. All the spirit, joy, sorrow, shopping, fun, rituals, kisses, bites, everything that a person must go through, I have gone through. What is there to say about this Christmas that will make it different from years past?

I am not really ready for this season. Instead I’ve been working on getting jewelry done for delivery and am not sure I will finish but — so what? Nobody will die. My Christmas presents, such as they are, are piled on my dining room table, which, at any rate, is too long for the single person who eats there every day at least twice. So one end is reserved for my eating space. The rest is clutter space. And that space is full.

I don’t even have a Christmas list, very inefficient of me. But I don’t have the spirit and even that doesn’t bother me. I know I will get things together. If we live through today, I will have time to get the gifts done and delivered maybe on time for Christmas or maybe the day after Christmas. So what if I’m late? I can deliver gifts until the feast of the Epiphany, which is the Sunday after New Year, which strangely next year is January 6, as it was traditionally.

When I was small the feast of the Three Kings was one I really looked forward to. My mother would tell me to take three pairs of my favorite shoes and put them on the window sill. I would shine them to make sure they were clean and pretty. In the morning I would wake up delighted to find them filled with candy, plastic balloon, all sorts of little delightful things.

Maybe I should have kept my childhood beliefs — Santa Claus, the Three Kings, Ratoncito Perez, my mom’s version of the Tooth Fairy, and the Easter Bunny. They gave me the holiday spirit. Christmas was always something I genuinely looked forward to because of Santa, who would always bring me the gifts I desired most. He would write on a card in his odd large penmanship and wrap his gifts differently from my mommy’s gifts. He was quite a guy. He and the Three Kings filled my little life with Christmas spirit. But when you’re old and the grandmother of adults — where is the joy?

I remember when my eldest daughter dashed my dreams of perpetuating the Easter Bunny with her son, my oldest grandson. She had turned Christian when he was small. I was so excited about making Easter eggs when she stopped me and said it was not allowed in their church. Huh? Why not? It’s a very charming ritual and I love painting the eggs. No, Mom, I’m sorry, she said, but my son can’t believe in the Easter Bunny. That son is 28 now.


Ah, but there is the joy! This year for the first time the four children of my eldest daughter will be home for Christmas. They will join us for lunch at my youngest daughter’s house. We will roast a turkey. I will teach my daughter how to roast a turkey. That thought excites me. I have made a mental list of the things I will need. I will get them on December 23 and bring them on the 24th.

Once upon a time I was the roaster of turkeys. I have made them every way imaginable because once upon a time I was a very good cook. I would make them traditionally stuffed with a mixture of pork and beef bound with rice, raisins, chestnuts, celery and carrots. Once in the States I decided to stuff the turkey with fruit and to baste it with hoisin sauce. That was quite delicious. Now the children have grown and flown and so have some grandchildren. I think the last time I roasted a turkey for Christmas was 17 years ago, the year my grandson Julian was born. That was the last happy Christmas I remember us having.

Until this year, I hope, when we will mostly be together again. Now I have gotten myself excited not over the holidays but over seeing my grandchildren again. They are tall, handsome and the girl is lovely. I will take her shopping after Christmas and buy her things she might want to take back. I will love all of them and shower them with whatever goodies I can think of starting but not ending with the turkey, which their aunt will roast. I will simply teach.

That is the wonder of Christmas this year that I had somehow managed to forget until I had to write this article. My three grandchildren, who are usually not here, will be here. I will see them for a while but I love them dearly whether they are near or far.

source: philstar.com

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Gap between real holidays and expectations

There's a gap between what the holidays should be and what they can be and the real holidays we live, a U.S. pediatrician says.

Pediatrician Dr. George Askew said there is a big difference between the holidays people experience and the expectations we carry in our minds.

"If we can't do in our real holidays what we've come to believe we should do, what then? If you have 10 holiday must-dos, and you can't do all 10, shorten the list," Askew said in a statement.

"When you give yourself some room to not get all the things done, you know what? You'll be much happier if you let that kind of thing go. You're going to feel so much better about what you've accomplished in that day."

Askew also advised against just letting everything go, such as eating healthy, being physically active, and getting enough rest -- because they help you get through the holidays, too.

source: upi.com

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

5 Reasons to Use Your Credit Card for Holiday Purchases


Credit cards tend to get a bad rap. Many people focus on the interest charged, but forget about the perks and the protections that come with credit card use. When used with savvy and intelligence, a credit card can be a valuable financial tool.

As the holiday shopping season ramps up, consider using your credit card to make seasonal purchases. You have the opportunity to earn rewards, and you often receive a number of protections that may not be available with debit cards — and that certainly aren’t available when you pay with cash.




1. Extended Warranty

Many credit cards offer extended warranties among their perks. The extended warranty applies on top of the manufacturer’s warranty. If the item breaks after the standard warranty, but before the credit card’s warranty expires, you can still have the item repaired or replaced.

Consider electronics, which are popular holiday purchases. Many electronics come with a one-year warranty. Many credit cards will provide an extended warranty that covers an additional six months to one year. Instead of paying for the extended warranty at check out, you get the coverage free when you pay with credit card.

Make sure, though, that you understand how to use the warranty. You usually need the receipt (so save it), along with other information. There may also be a time limit for making a claim.

2. Price Protection

Some credit cards, especially the premier cards that charge annual fees, include price protection. If you find a lower price on an item you have already purchased, you can be refunded the difference.

This can be very useful when shopping holiday sales and buying gifts for others. However, price protection usually comes with a time restriction. Normally, the lower price has to appear within 30, 60, or 90 days. Check the policy so that you have an idea of the time limit.

You will need proof of the lower price. Save your receipts, and be sure that you document the lower-priced item. A sales ad promoting the lower price is one of your best options, or a screenshot or printout of an online price on the item.

3. Returns

Some credit cards will reimburse you if you want to make a return but the store won’t allow it. So, for example, if you purchase something, then decide later that you don’t want it, your credit card might refund you the purchase price.

Before you can use this perk, however, you have to try to return it to the store. If you can’t return it, you might receive a refund for the item if you show a copy of your receipt. Often, as long as you apply for the refund within the time limit (usually 30 or 60 days), it doesn’t matter why you wanted the return.

Most credit cards limit the dollar amounts you can be refunded. There is usually a per-item limit of up to between $200 and $500, and often an annual limit of between $1,000 and $3,000. Check your credit card terms for policy details.

4. Dispute Charges on Damaged Online Purchases

I do a lot of my holiday shopping online. Using a credit card provides peace of mind, since I know that if an item is damaged in transit, or if it never arrives, I can dispute the charge. If you are doing a lot of your shopping online, consider using a credit card to pay.

The Fair Credit Billing Act provides this protection to consumers when a purchase arrives damaged — or just isn’t delivered. You can dispute the charge fairly easily, and prevent the retailer from being paid.

Realize that the item has to cost at least $50. The law requires that the seller be within 100 miles of your home address, so this can apply to items purchased at local retailers and have delivered to your home (as in the case of a large appliance or piece of furniture). Many credit cards will still let you easily dispute charges even on items shipped from other parts of the country.

However, you do have to try to resolve issues with the seller before turning to your credit card issuer for resolution.

5. Fraudulent Purchases Don’t Come Out of Your Funds

If someone steals your card information and makes fraudulent purchases, you are often better off if you have paid with a credit card rather than a debit card.

Some debit cards also feature $0 fraud liability, but often with restrictions, such as requiring you to point out out fraudulent charges within two days, rather than the 60 you have with credit card purchases. Additionally, a PIN entered at the time of purchase may negate your claim to receive the same level of protection. If someone has stolen your card and knows your PIN, you could liable for some of those fraudulent purchases.

And even if your debit card provides all of the protections of a credit card, the fact remains that the money disappears from your account almost instantly. You don’t get the money back until after the issuer is satisfied that the case truly involves fraud. During that time, you won’t have access to those funds.

When your credit card is stolen and used fraudulently, the money used isn’t actually yours — it’s the bank’s money. Your money is still sitting in your checking account, safe and sound. You can dispute the charges and have them removed from your credit statement without ever putting your money at risk.

Smart Credit Card Use

Use your credit card for holiday shopping, but make sure that what you spend fits into your budget. You want to earn the rewards and gain the protections, but you don’t want to pay interest. Pay off the balance immediately, and you will receive the benefits without having to pay the costs.

source: wisebread.com

Saturday, November 24, 2012

US shoppers welcome early start to 'Black Friday'


NEW YORK/BLOOMINGTON, Minnesota - Retailers declared their experiment with earlier store openings to kick off the holiday shopping season a success on Friday, with those new hours expected to be a Thanksgiving night staple for more retailers next year.

Stores such as Target Corp opened hours before midnight on Thursday to try to capture a bigger piece of the retail pie. The move seemed to bring out a different type of shopper than the usual one who grabs the "Black Friday" deals, analysts said.

That meant by Friday morning, some shoppers, like Christian Alcantara, 18, at a J.C. Penney Co Inc store in Queens, New York, had already made a lot of their purchases. J.C. Penney stuck to a more traditional 6 a.m. EST (1100 GMT) Friday opening.

"They should open earlier. I've been everywhere else and I've already shopped," he said.

Shoppers like Alcantara are likely to force holdouts like J.C. Penney to move their post-Thanksgiving sales into Thursday night next year, said Liz Ebert, retail lead at consulting firm KPMG LLP.

"There will be pressure on them. There'll be an expansion of it next year," Ebert said.

Hard data on "Black Friday" store traffic will not come in until this weekend. But analysts said retailers who opened early brought in a non-traditional Black Friday shopper, with more families coming in together and buying more than just the "doorbuster" sale items.

"I've never seen parents bring so many kids on Black Friday," Toys R Us Chief Executive Jerry Storch said.

The National Retail Federation expects sales during November and December to rise 4.1 percent this year, below last year's 5.6 percent increase. That made store operators' strategy important as they battled each other, rather than seeing a growing pie in a season when U.S. retailers can make a third of their annual sales and 40 to 50 percent of their profits.

"Retailers want them to buy now, they want to get that share of wallet early," said Michael Appel, a director at consulting firm AlixPartners. He noticed that the Galleria Mall in White Plains, New York, was busy from midnight to 3 a.m., but that traffic, while still brisk, was less heavy by midmorning.

Shoppers used smartphones and tablets and a lot of research as they hit stores, a mobile phenomenon that started last year and seemed to be more prevalent this year.

Thom Blischok, chief retail strategist and a senior executive adviser with Booz & Company's Retail practice, was waiting on line with one woman in Phoenix, who was shopping for a refrigerator. Using her mobile device, she found the appliance online for the same price and left the store without. She intended to buy it online instead.

"There's a fundamental transformation of shopping," he said.

Mobile devices account for 45 percent walmart.com traffic and online traffic coming from Walmart's mobile app was three times bigger than last year, Joel Anderson, chief executive of Walmart.com, said.

Overall, online sales were up 20 percent versus the same period last year, through 3 p.m. EST (2000 GMT) on Friday, IBM said.

The National Retail Federation said 147 million people would shop Friday through Sunday, when deals are at their most eye-catching - down from 152 million the same weekend last year.

The NRF estimate did not account for Thursday shoppers and anecdotal evidence suggested retailers opening earlier may have cut into traffic on "Black Friday", the traditional start of the holiday season that denotes the point when retailers in the past would turn a profit for the year.

"People seemed to be shopping quite a bit, although in talking to mall management, it seemed that traffic was not as busy as last year," Deloitte retail analyst Ramesh Swamy said.

Retailers were also using technology better, allowing sales staff to match prices customers found online and having them use tablets as mobile "checkout stands" so buyers did not have to wait in line, a service consumers were quickly coming to expect.

"I even heard customers complaining about a retailer that didn't have mobile checkout," he said.

Saving up for Christmas spree

According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, two-thirds of shoppers were planning to spend the same amount of money as last year or were unsure about plans, while 21 percent intended to spend less, and 11 percent planned to spend more.

"I definitely have more money this year," said Amy Balser, 26, at the head of the line outside the Best Buy store in the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota. "I definitely don't think (the economy) has bounced back anywhere near as much as it needs to, but I see some improvement," she said.

For others, Christmas is the focal point of their annual shopping.

"We cut back spending on birthdays and anniversaries so we'd have more for Christmas. We've adapted," said Cheri Albus, 58, of Papillion, Nebraska, after shopping at J.C. Penney at Westroads Mall in Omaha.

Retail stocks rose in holiday-shortened trading on Friday, in line with gains across the market. Among the leaders, Wal-Mart ended up 1.9 percent and Macy's Inc rose 1.8 percent.

Starting early

Across the country, store lines were long - in the hundreds or more in many places - with the move toward earlier opening hours appearing to help. By sunrise on Friday, it was commonplace, even at large stores in the major cities, to find many more staffers than shoppers.

While the shift to earlier openings was criticized by store employees and traditionalists because it pulled people away from families on the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, many shoppers welcomed the chance to shop before midnight or in the early morning hours.

Some workers used the day to send a message.

OUR Walmart - a coalition of current and former Wal-Mart staff seeking better wages, benefits and working conditions - targeted Black Friday for action across the country after staging protests outside stores for months.

Nine protesters were arrested on misdemeanor charges after blocking a street outside a Walmart near Los Angeles, police said. Three of those arrested were Walmart workers, OUR Walmart said.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc's U.S. discount stores, which have been open on Thanksgiving since 1988, offered some Black Friday deals at 8 p.m. on Thursday and special deals on certain electronics, such as Apple Inc iPads, at 10 p.m.

At the Macy's store in Herald Square in Manhattan, the line at the Estee Lauder counter was four deep shortly after its midnight opening. The cosmetics department's "morning specials" included free high-definition headphones with any fragrance purchase of $75 or more, and a set of six eye shadows for $10.

But for some people, cheap wasn't cheap enough - like the Macy's shopper who bought Calvin Klein shoes at 50 percent off but was still not satisfied.

"I was hoping for deeper discounts," said Melissa Glascow, 35, of Brooklyn, New York.

That could actually be an intentional strategy to help retailers' profits.

"It appears that manufacturers and retailers are making concerted efforts to drive margins, which may take some of the sales sizzle out of a traditionally big selling day/period, but should be positive to gross margins," Credit Suisse analyst Gary Balter said in a note to clients.

Lines at Best Buy stores were similar to last year but the traffic to its website was "significantly" higher, Shawn Score, head of the company's U.S. retail business, told Reuters.

source: interaksyon.com

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Obama 'pardons' 2 turkeys


WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama "pardoned" two turkeys Wednesday ahead of the annual Thanksgiving holiday, when Americans dine on millions of the fattened fowl.

"They say that life is all about second chances," Obama told reporters gathered at the White House Rose Garden for the yearly ceremony. "This November I could not agree more."

The symbolic reprieve means the lucky birds -- Cobbler and understudy Gobbler -- won't end up on the dinner table but will instead live out their days in a custom-made enclosure on George Washington's estate in Mount Vernon, Virginia, the White House said.

Both are 19 weeks old and weigh about 40 pounds (18 kilos).

Their names were chosen from submissions by elementary schools and, for the first time this year, the US public was able to pick which of the two would become the "2012 National Thanksgiving Turkey" by casting a vote on the White House Facebook page.

"The American people have spoken and these birds are moving forward," said Obama, just back from a tour of Asia, in a nod both to the social media poll and his 2012 re-election campaign slogan.

In a further reference to his recent White House win on November 6, Obama joked that Nate Silver of the New York Times -- who in astounding detail had correctly predicted his victory against Republican rival Mitt Romney -- had also foretold which turkeys would be pardoned.

"I joke but for the first time in our history, the winners of the White House turkey pardon were chosen through a highly competitive online vote," he said.

"And once again, Nate Silver completely nailed it. This guy's amazing. He predicted that these guys would win."

The annual tradition dates back to former president John F. Kennedy.

While daughters Sasha and Malia looked on, Obama performed the pardon in an almost pontifical manner with a sign of the cross.

While Sasha gave Cobbler a quick pet on the back feathers, Malia shook her head and refused.

Thanksgiving was first celebrated by pilgrims who fled religious persecution in England. For many Americans, it has become a family-oriented day marked with an enormous meal that centers around roast turkey, an assortment of side dishes and a slice or two of pie.

Wednesday's pardon takes place amid criticism from animal rights group PETA, which urged Obama not to maintain the tradition.

"It makes light of the mass slaughter of some 46 million gentle, intelligent birds and portrays the United States' president as being in some sort of business partnership with the turkey-killing industry," it said in a letter.

"Turkeys do not need to be 'pardoned.' They are not guilty of anything other than being born into a world of prejudice."

Shortly before the turkey pardoning ceremony, PETA demonstrators dressed as turkeys staged a protest outside the White House holding signs that read "Gobble veggies, not turkeys" and "Pardon all the turkeys."

As in years past since 2009, the president and his family will do some community service on Wednesday afternoon before celebrating the holiday on Thursday.

source: interaksyon.com

Lox and Cream Cheese for Thanksgiving


During the summer, in the Catskills resort community where I grew up during the ’50s, getting great Jewish food was not a problem. The hotels on our side of the mountains in Fleischmanns, N.Y., were dying, but there were still enough city people that it was not hard to find smoked fish and salamis and decent rye bread.







In the off-season, it was a different story. The small community of year-round Jews, to which my family belonged, had to return to the mother ship, New York City, for supplies. We went to Houston Street on the Lower East Side, the neighborhood where my father was born.

Visiting what we called the appetizing stores was not the main reason for these trips. You came in to visit family or go shopping in the morning, see a show in the afternoon. My view of the city was shaped by my mother’s pronouncements of the indisputable facts, which she considered to be whatever came out of her mouth.

“You know how you tell a New York woman,” she’d say, before leaping out of the car at 34th Street to make for Ohrbach’s, a store famous for knocking off Paris fashions and offering them for a fraction of the price, a tactic she much admired. “When the wind is blowing and a New York woman has the choice between holding down her skirt and holding on to her hat, she holds on to her hat.”

Then she was out of the car, for the three or four hours when she could be one.

At age 8 I was too young for the rigors of Ohrbach’s. I went with my father on the food run, a special time for me as my father had no particular interest in kids. The first stop was Katz’s, on East Houston, where he had a pastrami on rye and I had a turkey sandwich and we both had a Dr. Brown’s, cream for him, black cherry for me. Then we went shopping, getting salami at Katz’s, where the slogan, “Send a Salami to Your Boy in the Army,” delighted me. Then, proceeding along Houston, to a pickle shop the name of which I cannot remember, and to Yonah Shimmel’s for knishes. Sometimes to Russ & Daughters, which had vats of creamed herring and rows of small white fish with gold crinkled skin and fat yellow dried apricots dipped in chocolate and was very fine.

My father was not a happy man. The death of his father when he was 19 forced him to quit college and take over a sagging Catskills boarding house and dairy farm. It had taken happiness out of him, if it was ever in him. But he was happy when he was buying food on the Lower East Side. I understand it now better than I did then: It was the happiness of a working man when he can afford to go into a fancy food store and buy not the basics, but the luxury items, for his family.

I never doubted the common wisdom that the oldest child feels most responsible, because I saw it in my family. First at the boarding house my father and his younger brothers ran with their mother, then, when I was about 10, at the building supply company they started. My father was the worrier, the planner; his younger brother Artie was the muscle, delighted when the opportunity arose to throw an annoying customer out; their youngest brother Hymie, the patient and sensitive one, was the detail man.

Now the three brothers are all gone and I am the oldest and my three younger cousins, Hymie’s children, have taken over the business.

We have our own food tradition. It happens at least twice a year, when I drive my car to the country in the fall to be put into storage or in the spring when I pick it up.

The tradition has varied a bit over the years as the Jon Vie Bakery in the Village, which had the best rugulah, went out, and as Murray’s Bagels, the bagel store I prefer, came in. But the touchstone is Russ & Daughters, on the same strip on East Houston I went to with my father. My order doesn’t change much: two pounds of nova; a large whitefish or two, boned; a pound of chopped liver; two big containers of creamed herring; cream cheese with chives; cream cheese without chives; a half pound of traditional belly lox, which is so salty you’re thirsty all day, but is the way my cousins and I remember lox so we like it. Two boxes of rugulah, traditional and chocolate. Sometimes some beautiful dried fruit dipped in chocolate.


I get to the family business around noon on Saturday, just after they close and my cousins are waiting for the laggard delivery trucks to come in. My cousin Steven wipes off his desk and covers it with paper towels and my cousin Lisa gets the tomatoes and onions from the pantry in the back office and slices them and I unpack the food. My cousin Jason and Lisa and I sit at the partners’ desk our fathers used to share; which was ruined in a flood and my cousins had refinished at absurd expense. There is a lot of comment on the food. When Steven says this particular whitefish is excellent, really excellent, and puts away a third of it, I am as happy as if I had made it.


We sit around and tell family stories, some of which only I, as the oldest, remember, some of which we know only second hand:

The racehorse the three brothers bought, which looked to be a winner, till it bolted the fence at the county fair in Delhi. The time Steven, age 16, on his first delivery run, was driving a five-ton truck down McKinley Hollow Road and the brakes failed and our Uncle Artie, seated beside him, reached over and slowly pulled the emergency brake, cool as you please. A farm dog named Ike. A hired man named Mike. The time Hymie paid a quarter for a box at an auction and opened it to find a litter of puppies. The time – this was before any of us were born – Artie, on a bet, slung a calf over his shoulders and was carrying it up the steep hill to the barn when our grandmother saw him and hollered in Yiddish, “Artie, put down the cow!”

I always have difficulty, during these lunches, getting my mind around the fact that my little cousins, whom I used to baby-sit, run a business that employs 18 people and are buying cement trucks; that our fathers and uncles are gone and we are the grown-ups.

“I still can’t get use to them not being here,” I say. “It feels like they’re still here.”

“We say that all the time,” Jason says. “We expect any minute they’ll come walking through the door and say, ‘O.K., you did a pretty good job, but we’ll be taking over now.’ ”

We eat whitefish and bagels and lox until we could explode and then we pack it up. The cousins divide the food, taking some home, leaving some at the business for lunch. I go back to the city, knowing they will be eating it and enjoying it for the next few days and I feel pretty good. Like my father felt, I suppose.

source: nytimes.com

Friday, November 16, 2012

8 Easy Ways to Make Money for the Holidays


The premature appearance of all-things Christmas may make you see red and feel green, but it’s actually a good reminder to start budgeting for this year’s holiday season. The National Retail Federation estimates the average consumer will spend nearly $750 on holiday-related purchases, up slightly from last year’s actual spending. This number doesn’t factor in the cost of holiday travel or the time away from your day job to connect with family and friends.

Making extra money is the best way to combat this significant seasonal expense. Since you don’t want to spend all your free time working, consider the following easy ways to score some extra cash by Christmas.










1. Get a Seasonal Job

Retailers, restaurants and even call centers are looking for extra help around the holidays. If your schedule allows, consider picking up a shift on weeknights or weekends and deposit your earnings into a separate account just for holiday expenses. MSN recently listed 16 companies in need of seasonal assistance.

2. Sell Gift Cards

Since nearly $40 billion in gift cards went unredeemed between 2005 and 2011, it’s likely you have a few unused cards cluttering your wallet. Stop wasting space and sell your gift cards for cash on GiftCardGranny.com, where you can make up to 92-percent of the card’s face value.

3. Get Paid for Chores

Remember when you used to get cash in exchange for taking out the trash or walking the dog? Yeah, the good ol’ days. Happily, you can still get paid for small chores through TaskRabbit, an online service allowing people to bid on to-do’s required by others.

4. Adjust Your Withholdings

Some people dread the holiday season but most people dread tax season even more. Though you don’t need to think about your 1040 just yet, you can line your pocket with a few extra dollars by adjusting your withholdings. If you received a hefty return this year, scale back that interest-free loan to the government to help offset your holiday costs.

5. Use Rewards for Gifts

Your credit card will likely get some serious action over the next couple months, so use your reward points wisely. If you have a good amount saved up, consider redeeming them for gift cards which you use to purchase gifts — or as gifts themselves — or help offset the cost of holiday travel. There’s an art to redeeming rewards, so check out this article from MarketWatch for savvy advice.

6. Get Free Services

Do you withdraw cash from an ATM every week? Text incessantly for a monthly fee? Pay for your kids’ meal when you go out? You can get all this and more for free, leaving money in your pocket for things that actually cost something. Get cash from the grocery store, download a free texting app like textPlus, and consult this list of over 100 restaurantswhere kids eat free.

7. Sell Your Stuff

You can consign your clothes, auction off accessories and eBay your electronics for extra cash. Swapping is another money-saving trend that offers new (to you) stuff for items you no longer use or wear. Host a swap party with friends or head to Swap.com to exchange your items online.

8. Freelance Your Skills

Whether you design websites or crunch numbers, your skills can make you money beyond the nine-to-five. Elance is an online service connecting freelancers with people who need talent, making it easy to browse for your next paycheck.

source: everythingfinanceblog.com

Monday, October 15, 2012

Best Credit Cards for Holiday Spending


Figuring out how you will pay for holiday purchases is as important as selecting the right gifts. For example, if you prefer to spread out payments, a no-annual-fee card with a 0% introductory interest rate could be just the thing.











Citibank offers three no-fee cards with a 0% rate on purchases and balance transfers lasting from 15 to 18 months. (You pay a 3% balance-transfer fee.) The Citi Diamond Preferred card (full rate: 11.99% after 18 months) provides access to person­alized concierge services that can help you book hotel rooms and flights. The Citi ThankYou card (full rate: 12.99% after 15 months) awards one ThankYou point for every $1 spent. Points may be redeemed for gift cards, travel rewards or cash. The interest rate on the Citi Simplicity card (full rate: 12.99% after 18 months) won’t increase even if you pay late.

If you pay off your entire balance each month, you may prefer a rewards card that offers a 0% intro rate plus a 5% rebate on varying categories of purchases. The new no-fee U.S. Bank Cash+ Visa Signature card (0% for six months, then 13.99%) allows cardholders to select two purchase categories each quarter for which they will earn 5%. You may also choose a category that will earn you 2%. All other purchases earn 1%. The no-fee Discover More card (0% for 15 months, then 10.99%) offers a 5% cash-back bonus on purchases in categories that rotate quarterly. With the no-fee Chase Freedom card (0% for 15 months, then 12.99%), you earn 5% on up to $1,500 spent on airline fares and hotels -- and at Best Buy and Kohl’s through the end of December.


source: kiplinger.com

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

iPad Mini production may hit 4M per month – DigiTimes

Apple Inc. may be manufacturing up to four million units of a seven-inch version of its iPad tablet starting September, a Taiwan-based tech site reported.
DigiTimes cited sources in the supply chain who said the supply volume for the 7.85-inch iPad is in preparation for the holiday buying season.
"The sources pointed out that the supply chain already started supplying a small volume of 7.85-inch iPad in June with a monthly volume at around several hundreds of thousand," it said.
Apple has been rumored to be making the smaller iPads to compete with smaller and cheaper tablets like the Kindle Fire.
DigiTimes noted rumors in the IT market showing Apple will launch its 7.85-inch iPad in October with a thinner screen frame.
This will allow the new iPad to have a bigger display area than other competing products.
Also, the mini iPad is expected to have a resolution similar to that of the iPad 2.

DigiTimes also said the device is being priced at $299, way above the $199 of Amazon and Google's 7-inch tablet PCs, but added its sources expect the smaller iPad to "create a strong impact on the two devices." — TJD, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Monday, August 27, 2012

Aquino arrives at Libingan ng mga Bayani for National Heroes' Day rites

President Benigno Aquino III arrived early at the Libingan ng Mga Bayani in Taguig City to lead the rites for National Heroes' Day on Monday.
Aquino was welcomed by Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief of staff Gen. Jessie Dellosa, radio dzBB's Sam Nielsen reported.
Aquino will offer a wreath to honor the nation's heroes, the report said.
In Manila, meanwhile, Mayor Alfredo Lim marked the occasion by offering a wreath at the Musoleo de los Veteranos de la Revolucion at the Manila North Cemetery.

A post on his Twitter account said: "Ang paggunita sa National Heroes Day dito sa Musoleo de los Veteranos de la Revolucion, Manila North Cemetery."
This year’s theme is “Pilipinong tapat, magiting, at makabayan: Ikaw ang Bayani sa Tuwid na daan (Honest, courageous and nationalistic Filipinos are the heroes of the straight path).”
The National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) said National Heroes' Day allows Filipinos to remember the patriotism of the country's heroes "whose selflessness makes them fitting role models worthy of esteem, reverence and gratitude."
"Through their ideals, we are able to follow the straight path towards true freedom and sustainable progress," the NHCP said.- VVP, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Thursday, August 9, 2012

5 tips for planning your summer vacation

Even though the global economy has shaken the travel industry in the last couple of years, many signs signal that there is a recovery trend. People are laying down the fear of uncertainty, and are trying to plan their upcoming vacations and chill-out from the exhausting year.

The recovered economy means that many are ready to spend on summer vacation again. But, that doesn't mean that now people are splashing all their savings on a week of joy and relaxation. More than ever, everybody is trying to save on a great deal. The best value for the money is always the key criteria for a deal.

In this article, we will try to give you some useful tips for planning your great summer vacation, thus not splashing huge on it.

Skip the middleman. Reaching the travel agencies is a classic approach for finding a place to rent a property for your vacation. Leaving aside all the advantages of this approach, if you want to find a nice deal, you got to skip the middleman and cut its margin in the value chain. Agencies are taking their margins for matching you as a traveler with the vacation property owners. There are plenty of online portals that will help you find your ideal destination, or wanted place at an affordable price. You can find homes, condominiums, villas, cabins, bed and breakfasts, all-inclusive resorts by reviewing the property costs and rental agreement quickly and easily prior to the booking.

Explore hidden gems. Sumner vacations in destinations such as Barbados, Fiji, and Hawaii etc. tend to cost a lot. Non-celebrities who are looking to avoid those crowds and get better deals should consider places often overlooked by most, such as Southern and Central Europe, Australia, Oceania, Africa etc. Places like Greece, Croatia, and Bulgaria are awesome for a classic summer vacation in a wonderful resort near the beach. Places like Turkey, Egypt and Tunisia are great for a late summer vacation for good prices. And cities like Nice, Barcelona, Venice, Cannes are fantastic for an early fall vacation and shopping.

Plan early but wait on deals. If you are planning a honeymoon trip, waiting is a risky strategy. Otherwise, booking the lowest-price room or vehicle and then upgrading on the spot can lead to better deals. Also, If you're expecting for a payout from your credit card issuer in the form of cash back, gift cards, or airline miles, that payout can be used to fund your summer vacation.

Group with friends. Gathering with your friends for the summer vacation can bring you extra fun and extra cost savings. Besides the wonderful time with your beloved ones, you can look for a vacation rental property from the owners for rent, like a villa, cabin, apartment or a hotel and share the costs. You will have the all privacy and convenience that a property would bring, and will save agreeing terms with the owner itself and bypass the agencies' fees.

Bring "everything". Packing your own stuff, like food, clothes and accessories is a job for the ladies, I guess. Nevertheless, note that there always will be something that is missing. But the most important thing is to pack the right attitude. Let the "what if" and live the adventure. If this is a vacation to get away and relax, then focus on activities and thoughts that will be relaxing. If your goal is to reconnect with family and build memories together, that can be done regardless of circumstances. If your goal is to sight-see and take in some special attractions or shows, then plan ahead and make the reservations needed and make sure you are all set for the challenges.

So if you are looking for value, by renting directly from property owners, here are a couple of sites: Holiday Rent Club , Rentalo , etc.

Article Source:
http://www.articlebiz.com/article/1051581463-1-5-tips-for-planning-your-summer-vacation/

Sunday, July 29, 2012

National Milk Chocolate Day: Try This Milkshake Recipe


Whether it's Valentines Day, someone's birthday, or just a Saturday afternoon watching the Olympics, milk chocolate can always be counted on to celebrate an occasion. But did you know there's an actual national holiday dedicated to the stuff?

It may seem a bit silly, since we celebrate the existence of chocolate every day – but you won't find us complaining on Saturday, aka National Milk Chocolate Day.

Before you head for the candy aisle at your local grocery store, check out this milkshake recipe from celeb-approved Max Brenner. The chocolate boutique – which has outposts in Boston, NYC, Philly, Vegas, and even Australia – is a fave of stars like Emma Stone, Andrew Garfield, John Travolta, and Eva Longoria.







80s Milkshake

• 1 ½ cups whole milk
• 12 ounces milk chocolate, chopped
• 4 cups ice
• vanilla ice cream

1. Bring milk to a boil. Pour over the chocolate in a heat-proof bowl, let sit until the chocolate begins to melt, and then stir until smooth. Cover and chill for at least 2 hours.

2. Add the milk chocolate mixture to a blender along with the remaining ½ cup milk and ice. Blend until smooth. Pour into tall, frosty glasses.

3. Top with scoop of vanilla ice cream. Drizzle with any remaining milk chocolate and top with chocolate whipped cream.

Bottoms up!

source: people.com

Monday, May 28, 2012

Memorial Day: Cat Cora, Padma Lakshmi Share Healthy Eating Tips for Summer


Memorial Day marks the start of the summer grilling season, and what better way to spend the holiday that with your family and friends – outside.

Celebrity chef Cat Cora – and star Bravo's Around the World in 80 Plates – says including your children in your meal planning can lead to fun and, most importantly, healthy dining experiences.

In Smart Chefs Stay Slim: Lessons in Eating and Living from America's Best Chefs, by PEOPLE senior editor Allison Adato, Cora is just one of many celebrity chefs (including Tom Colicchio, Wolfgang Puck, Rick Bayless) with nutritious tips to share.

Cora's big suggestion? Eat with your kids outside!

The Iron Chef and wife Jennifer are outnumbered by their four young sons. But the grown-ups still eat the healthy dinners they enjoy – and refuse to cave to kiddie food like buttered noodles or chicken fingers. At their home they'll grill fish, chicken and vegetables, appealing to the boys by making skewered versions.

Anything on a stick, says Cora, "the kids love it. We'll do a salmon skewer and romesco sauce [nuts, garlic, olive oil and peppers] or lamb with a mint-yogurt sauce and pita bread."

Looking for more ideas? PEOPLE recently surveyed many more chefs for their best healthy summer eating tips and tricks. Here is some more creative advice:

• "Make coconut water into ice cubes for drinks, or just suck on them like mini popsicles." – Melissa d'Arabian, host of Food Network's Ten Dollar Dinners

• "Slice chilled cucumbers, leave the skin on and sprinkle them with sea salt. They're a great potato chip alternative." – Geoffrey Zakarian, judge on Food Network's Chopped



• "Try mango chutney with apple and cheddar grilled cheese sandwiches." – Padma Lakshmi, host of Top Chef

• "Agave nectar is perfect to add to sweet tea or a cocktail!" – Patrick and Gina Neely, hosts of Food Network's Down Home with the Neelys (Agave nectar is natural syrup from the agave plant, which is sweeter than sugar.)

source: people.com

Monday, December 5, 2011

The family holiday can be amazing

The family holiday is still a preferred way to explore the world in the company of the people you love most of all. The family holiday gives a chance to the busy parents to spend some time with their children and to share some new emotions.

Some families prefer to have their family holiday in the summer and they choose a place where their children, as well as they themselves, may enjoy the sunny rays and the sandy beaches. However, there are such families who prefer to spend their family holiday in the tranquility and the wilderness of the mountains.

There are, however, and such families who want to go on a family holiday but just don’t have the financial ability to do this during the peak of the season and prefer to wait till the season is over and they may take advantage of some discounts.

There is no need to travel to a remote and exotic place to have a great family holiday. Actually, the idea of the family holiday is to be together, no matter whether you will choose the nearby city or another country. Most family holidays are really associated with a chance to relax. This is due to the fact that the parents spend a lot of time working and they really need to relax and to pull together as they will soon have to return back to work. That’s why the busy schedules which involve visiting a lot of places are not a suitable option for the family holiday.

All family members enjoy the family holiday and have a really amazing time together. They explore some places with rich history and share their impressions. They may practise some kind of sport together or may just sit and talk. The parents forget at least for a bit of their daily obligations including the job, the housework, the bills. Some of the best memories, which remain in your mind all life long, are made during the family holiday.

It’s important to choose such a destination for your family holiday which will respond to the expectations and the needs of all family members, especially if the children are older as they will need some entertainment.

Most families turn the family holiday in a tradition and it turns out to be a desired time which the whole family anticipates all year long.

There are special offers for the middle class families, for example, which give a chance to save some money on the holiday and still to have a great time. The family holiday is a good chance to show to your family how important they are for you and how much you actually need them. You can enjoy a variety of activities together and may talk about everything. The family holiday gives the families a chance to gather together and to share with each other all which has bothered or delighted them but they didn’t have a chance to talk about because of the tense everyday life.

Now you know how to plan the best family holiday (in Danish the term is familieferie) and have really good time. It is also a great idea to read some more tips like those available here.

Article Source:
http://www.articlebiz.com/article/1051514689-1-the-family-holiday-can-be-amazing/