Feb 092013
 

 

Today I am shar­ing with you the dates I chose for my “dates for a year” gift. If you missed that post,  you can find it HERE.

  1. Train ride to San Juan Capis­trano for Brunch at Ramos House Cafe’.
  2. Tick­ets to the Kings game.
  3. Walk­ing tour in San Diego’s Lit­tle Italy with a gift cer­tifi­cate to Extra­or­di­nary desserts.
  4. Lunch at Lucha Libre. It’s this dive Mex­i­can restau­rant where you can reserve the “booth”. Funky and fun!
  5. Puz­zle night at home. (this is some­thing they like to do together)
  6. Art Splash Carls­bad where locals come together and paint the streets and show­case their art. (sent them to break­fast first)
  7. Cineopo­lis, the fancy movie the­ater where you can recline in your comfy chair and have a wait­ress bring you a mar­tini, while you watch the lat­est James Bond flick!
  8. Go Cars in San Diego. Basi­cally I sent them to be tourists in their own city. Cafe Chloe’ fol­lowed for lunch. (a San Diego must)
  9. Pot­tery paint­ing at a local shop where they made each other a gift.
  10. Ice skat­ing in La Jolla so they could bring back the teen romance in their life! haha
  11. Their last date was a gift card to Michaels Craft shop so they can assem­ble their scrap­book together with their “year of dates” pho­tographs and memories…

 

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These were the dates I chose for my sis­ter and brother in-law. My ideas were truly end­less, espe­cially the longer I thought about it. Here is a lit­tle added bonus for you…

More date night ideas:
  • Pic­nic with all the trim­mings. (can­dles, blan­kets, wine and even a lap­top to watch a roman­tic movie)
  • Din­ner at a restau­rant, but at the “chefs table”. (this is the room or counter you eat at while watch­ing your food being prepared)
  • Spa day for fab­u­lous mas­sages and facials. A mini date at your local pedi­cure place would be great too!
  • Be a tourist in your own city. I espe­cially like using Groupons/Living Social coupons for this.
  • Whale watch­ing or sun­set din­ner cruise.
  • Cook­ing class at a local restau­rant or store, such as Sur La Table.
  • Amuse­ment park such as Dis­ney­land. Act like a kid again…even if for one day!
  • An unusual din­ner out such as “eat­ing in the dark” or try a new food. (Indian, sushi, vegan, etc…)
  • Museum or local art showing.
  • Music con­cert for an old favorite band.
  • Your local juice bar, fol­lowed by hit­ting the rock climb­ing gym. (fun even for beginners)
  • Plant an herb gar­den together.
  • Cre­ate a sig­na­ture cock­tail. Have fun exper­i­ment­ing with ingre­di­ents such as laven­der, rose­mary and mint. (look around on the inter­net for inspiration)


Date nights that are cheap or free:
  • Embrace the great out­doors by going on a hike or stroll along the beach, river, or local nature spot.
  • Wash each oth­ers cars together while blast­ing your favorite tunes. (if it’s warm enough, add a lit­tle water fight too!)
  • There is noth­ing more roman­tic than cook­ing a meal together. Do every­thing as a team,  from choos­ing the din­ner, gro­cery shop­ping, prep­ping and cooking.
  • Pam­per your sig­nif­i­cant other. Exam­ple: Let them watch their favorite t.v. , play video games, eat their favorite bad foods, GUILT FREE, while you make them food, always have a cold drink for them, do a few of their chores, give a lit­tle foot rub…you get the idea.
  • Garage sale or flea mar­ket date. Des­ig­nate $10 and have fun search­ing for a gift for one another.
  • Fol­low a local food truck to have some gourmet grub on a budget.
  • Pay it for­ward together. This might be the most bond­ing date. (tidy your elderly neigh­bors yard, babysit for a sin­gle par­ent, deliver a sur­prise din­ner to some­one sick or depressed, have a fund raiser such as a garage sale for some­one in need, vol­un­teer locally such as a beach clean up, help friends have their emer­gency kits together, I could go on and on…)
  • Attend a free con­cert in the park or movie in your local com­mu­nity. (usu­ally a sum­mer activity)
  • DIY spa day. Cre­ate a spa atmos­phere with sooth­ing music, water with cucum­bers and lemon, low light­ing, favorite can­dle scent…and give each other scalp, hand, foot or neck mas­sages. If you have a tub, draw a nice bub­ble bath for the other with a tray of a few of their favorite things. (book, bub­bly, soaps) Throw a towel in the drier so it’s nice and warm for them when they get out.
  • Game night,  such as chess or scrabble.
  • Get some house­hold chore done, such work­ing in the yard. It might not be the most roman­tic date, but you will get some­thing accom­plished TOGETHER. Make it enjoy­able by tak­ing a break and hav­ing some cold beer and chips/salsa together.

 

I think these sug­ges­tions should keep you busy for a while. Please feel free to share your ideas in my com­ment sec­tion to share with every­one!! I’d really appre­ci­ate your cre­ative input.

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This is the meal to make when you’re crav­ing that Sun­day sup­per that tastes like you spent all day slav­ing over the stove. I found a per­fect com­pro­mise with Ina Garten’s Bolog­nese recipe. The good news is that it only takes week­day effort to make. I was pleas­antly amazed by it’s rich, robust fla­vors that came together in such a short time.

Recipe Here

Tips:

  • Dou­ble the recipe (I did) and freeze the sauce for a future easy week­day dinner.
  • Be sure to print this one out and add it to your recipe file labeled, “company’s com­ing over for din­ner”.  It’s so easy to make the day ahead. On the day of you can just make a fresh salad and boil the pasta.
  • Put together a gift bas­ket. Most of the ingre­di­ents are dry and can be bought and assem­bled in a bas­ket. Include the recipe and what they need to add. (the beef) Keep it sim­ple or add a lit­tle extra with wine glasses, vino to drink, cloth nap­kins, can­dles, Ital­ian music cd, etc…


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I took a poll last week ask­ing if you’re dis­as­ter ready and here’s what you said:

  • Totally ready 13%
  • Almost ready 78%
  • Not ready at all 8%

I’m very happy to see most of you have attempted to be pre­pared. For us who need to fin­ish get­ting ready or start get­ting ready (please do!) I’ve listed some sites that pro­vide lists of rec­om­mended things to have. Let’s make it our goal to fin­ish our emer­gency kits before November!

ready.gov : A list of things you should have in case of an emergency,

the fam­ily plan :Your fam­ily may not be together when dis­as­ter strikes, so it is impor­tant to plan in advance: how you will con­tact one another; how you will get back together; and what you will do in dif­fer­ent sit­u­a­tions. A good sim­ple plan can be found on this site.

food safety : Guide­lines on food saftey if you’ve expe­ri­enced a dis­as­ter or power outage.

Costco : Pre-packaged emer­gency kits and tools you can pur­chase on-line from Costco (no, I have no finan­cial gain. I just thought it was con­ve­nient for some who don’t have the time to assem­ble one).

This is just a sam­pling of how we can be pre­pared. There are other ways and many more resources to be found. Hope­fully this will help you get started or help you finish.

Nellene’s extra tips:

  • Dur­ing our power out­age it was inter­est­ing that my husband’s phone car­rier worked where mine didn’t. Maybe it’s a good idea to be on two dif­fer­ent plans to increase the chance of hav­ing a work­ing phone.
  • I added a few “lux­u­ries” to my emer­gency kit that of course are not neces­si­ties but may come in handy. Who wants caf­feine with­drawals? Add instant cof­fee. Who needs to calm their nerves or relax? Add boxed wine. Who wants to stink? Add  body/baby wipes, deodor­ant and dis­pos­able teeth clean­ing strips.
  • Although we are reminded to be pre­pared at home, we should also con­sider hav­ing mini emer­gency kits in our car as well.
  • Have “to go” emer­gency back­packs for each mem­ber of the fam­ily that are eas­ily acces­si­ble in case we have to flee on foot in a hurry. Include all the basics that are listed on the above site that will fit. Also add a pair of ten­nis shoes.
  • Have extra ice stored in your freezer so if there is a power out­age you can pro­long the fresh­ness of your food. We imme­di­ately put bags of ice into the refrig­er­a­tor to make it act almost like a big ice chest. It really worked well.

 

 

 

 

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…but who has time to write a thou­sand words? I think it’s safe to say most of us are short on time. I have an idea how we can keep jour­nals that won’t require any writ­ing at all and will take very lit­tle time.

My “thou­sand words” jour­nal:

Grat­i­tude jour­nals are noth­ing new. I am a true believer in keep­ing a jour­nal. My dad always kept one when we were grow­ing up. It was cool because it wasn’t a pri­vate jour­nal, we could all read it. I do think some­times you need to change things up a lit­tle though. So start­ing today, I am switch­ing from writ­ing my “three things I’m grate­ful for this day” jour­nal to my new jour­nal I’ve named, “a thou­sand words”. The main dif­fer­ence being I will use pho­tographs instead of words to express my dif­fer­ent feel­ings of gratitude.

How to start your own:

  1. Have a cam­era read­ily avail­able if pos­si­ble. Most peo­ple have smart­phones these days which would be ideal to use due to it’s ease and convenience.
  2. Take pic­tures of things you love or appre­ci­ate, a beau­ti­ful blue sky, your adorable dog, Star­bucks latte, and your home. It can be some­thing tan­gi­ble or a scene that per­haps evokes a cer­tain mood.
  3. Choose only one photo daily and orga­nize it in a photo folder on your phone or com­puter. (Be sure the set­ting on album/folder will auto­mat­i­cally record the date for you.)
  4. At the end of 6 months, a year, or how­ever long you choose, you can make a slide show, an album, a cal­en­der for the next year, a photo col­lage to hang on your wall to remind you of the good things in your life, etc…

 

First entry to my “thou­sand words” journal.

I know you were expect­ing a photo of my son with a cheesy smile or my won­der­ful hubby doing dishes (believe me, you’ll even­tu­ally see those, haha) but the real­ity is I’m try­ing to keep this real. Although I am grate­ful for so much, I just felt like my one glass of red wine was what I wanted to pho­to­graph today.

 

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Need an easy but spe­cial Sun­day night din­ner idea? I’ve got just the recipe for you, shrimp fra diavolo. It’s saucy, spicy and deli­cious. A per­fect meal to end your week­end with. I’ve been mak­ing this for years but I really don’t have my own recipe mea­sured out. I found one that is iden­ti­cal to how I make mine. Of course it’s a Giada De Lau­ren­tiis recipe. The only thing I do dif­fer­ently is chop my onions instead of slice them. I also add a tsp of but­ter at the very end to give the sauce a silky, extra yummy touch. Serve with some Pane Rus­tico Ital­ian bread on the side. (a.k.a. crusty Ital­ian bread, the other name just sounds more appealing)

 

Wine sug­ges­tions:

Chilled white wine such as a Fer­rari Carano Pinot Gri­gio for a crisp clean taste or La Crema Chardon­nay if you pre­fer a more but­tery flavor.

Fun foodie rumor:

Accord­ing to Mario Batali (uber famous Ital­ian chef), this is more of an Italian-American dish that you rarely would find in Italy. It tastes so amaz­ing I don’t care who eats it where, just as long as I’m eat­ing in my house!

 

Buon Appetito!!

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I love Chi­nese food but it doesn’t really love me. Okay, sorry TMI… The good news is I found a super healthy and easy beef with broc­coli recipe. I just made it the other night and even my “picky” 16 year old son said it was bet­ter than any restau­rant! It’s a sim­ple din­ner that is packed full of fla­vor. I think I’ve solved your “what’s for din­ner?” dilema for today. Find the recipe here.

Tips:

–Use brown rice to make it extra friendly on your waistline.

–I used a lit­tle more soy sauce then the recipe called for.

–Don’t over cook the broc­coli for bet­ter tex­ture and flavor.

–Dou­ble the recipe and have left overs for lunches or din­ner the next night. (that’s what I did)

–I don’t love gin­ger so next time I will cut the amount in half. How­ever I know it’s needed to add the nec­es­sary fla­vor pro­files. If you like it, don’t change a thing!

–Use chop­sticks to make din­ner seem a lit­tle extra special/authentic.

–If you want to make this for com­pany, a party or even a pic­nic, buy cool Chi­nese boxes and serve the beef with broc­coli in them indi­vid­u­ally. Attach chop­sticks and a cookie on top of the box with raffia/twine. You can find a large vari­ety of pat­terned and dif­fer­ent sizes of Chi­nese boxes at craft stores such as Michaels and party sup­ply stores like Party City.

 

 

 

 

 

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As the days grow warmer and the day­light stretches longer, we all rec­og­nize that the lazy days of sum­mer are upon us. Wait a sec­ond! L-a-z-y? No way! There are sun-filled days at the beach, pic­nics in the park, back­yard bar­be­cues, pool­side bashes, and grad­u­a­tion par­ties to be planned. The first few things are con­ducive to the laid back atmos­phere of sum­mer, with lit­tle or no plan­ning involved, but when it comes to grad­u­a­tions, there is more plan­ning to done. For­tu­nately for me, I have another whole year to worry about plan­ning a grad­u­a­tion party. But this year, we have three grad­u­a­tion par­ties to attend, one for a mid­dle schooler, one a high school grad, and the other a col­lege grad. So I need to get busy in the gift buy­ing depart­ment. The gen­eral con­sen­sus among the ‘young folk’ is that cash or gift cards are a favorite. I can under­stand the rea­son behind that since it allows the recip­i­ent to get exactly what he or she wants or needs but for the gift giver that can be kind of bor­ing. Today’s blog is about adding a lit­tle flair to a cash or card gift to make it more per­sonal and cre­ative.

Click here for sev­eral gift card selec­tion ideas.

One way to present gift cards is to buy a cute wal­let and put a few cards inside. This doesn’t have to be expen­sive. Set your bud­get and divide among a few gift cards. A cash gift can also be put into a wal­let. As an extra touch, include a few inspi­ra­tional quotes or tips tucked away into the wallet.

I scanned my photo from my high school year­book and made it the cover of the music CD for my grad. Inside he will find his iTunes gift card and a burned disk of favorite songs from my high school days. Every­thing 80’s is hip again so one never knows, he may actu­ally enjoy some of the songs!

Meet Colleen, a.k.a. my “older” sis­ter. ;)

She will be a con­tribut­ing author for Style­bag­gage. Her tal­ents are end­less, so I won’t even attempt to list them…she’s a mother of a 17 year old son and a wife of a 43 year old guy. (remem­ber Pool Boy Roy?)  Although we are total oppo­sites, we’re like peanut but­ter and jelly, we just go together!

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Five things to do in San Diego under five bucks!

Money doesn’t buy hap­pi­ness.” I’d like to add “it doesn’t buy fun either”! (ok, maybe it does, haha, but it doesn’t have too) Here are some great ways to enjoy your week­end for under $5 in the San Diego area. Get inspired to spend more time with fam­ily and friends  with­out break­ing the bank. Whether you live in SD or not, get a lit­tle cre­ative and search out fun things in your area to do. You might be sur­prised how many neat gems you find.

Tips:

–Google your city name with words like, free, fun, week­end, enter­tain­ment, movies, music, etc…and you will find a ton of cool stuff. You might have to sift through the junk a little.

–Have a con­test with your friends or fam­ily mem­bers (kids espe­cially) to see who comes up with the best idea/option. Then you’ll have a stock pile for the summer!

 

 

 

 

 

1. San Diego Food Truck Fes­ti­val At Lib­erty Sta­tion June 19th. Be sure to buy your ticket on my attached link for the $5 deal. For all you food­ies this is a great way to sam­ple San Die­gos food truck craze…

 

 

 

 

2. Sum­mer movies in the park is a fam­ily friendly venue that is com­pletely free! Movies start at dusk so be sure to get there in plenty of time to set up your cozy blan­kets, chairs and pic­nic goodies.

 

 

 

 

3. Vital Climing Gym is a great way to get your boul­der on! The first visit is free and shoe rental is $2. Warn­ing: it is addic­tive so you may end up going all the time!

 

 

 

 

 

4. Keys Creek Laven­der Farm in Val­ley Cen­ter give free tours. June is peak bloom so this is the per­fect time to go! Times are at 10:30 and 1:30 every Fri­day, Sat­ur­day and Sun­day. It is a walk­ing tour that cir­cles the fields near­est the gift store. It includes a view­ing of the dis­tillery and a dis­cus­sion on how we dis­till essen­tial oil. We talk about the dif­fer­ent types of laven­der that we have on the prop­erty and the home­o­pathic ben­e­fits of laven­der. The walk includes steps and slight inclines so it may not suit­able for those with sig­nif­i­cant mobil­ity restric­tions. No reser­va­tions are required. We meet at the gift store and the tour takes approx­i­mately 30–40 min­utes. Great place to take a fam­ily photo too!

 

 

 

 

5. CB Cup­cake Shop in San Mar­cos is a cool lit­tle spot to “build your own” cup­cake. You pick the cake, then the frost­ing and then the top­ping! It’s $3.50 for muf­fin size cup­cake and $1.50 for a mini. Great for a date night or a treat for the lit­tle ones…

*Feel free to add your sug­ges­tions on my comments!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Let me intro­duce you to Mr. Nish, a.k.a. my dad. He is going to become a con­trib­u­tor for Style­bag­gage! (whether he wants to or not is com­pletely irrel­e­vant) He is a full time pho­tog­ra­phy teacher at City Col­lege San Fran­cisco. Before his career change and move to SF in 1999, Nishi­hira was a com­mer­cial pho­tog­ra­pher in south­ern Cal­i­for­nia for 18 years. He won a num­ber of awards includ­ing Awards of Excel­lence from CA Mag­a­zine and Print Mag­a­zine. His pho­tog­ra­phy appeared in ads, cat­a­logs, bill­boards, and annual reports. Bob’s clients include Call­away Golf, Encad, Fujitsu, IBM, Jack-in-the-Box, Kyocera, and Qual­comm. His work has appeared in Archi­tec­tural Record, Town & Coun­try, Vogue, and Sports Illus­trated.
Nish grad­u­ated from UCLA with a degree in Fine Arts. He is an avid base­ball fan and played ball at Pierce College.

To get things off to an easy start, here is some basic advice from Mr. Nish:

4 quotes that will dra­mat­i­cally improve your pho­tographs.

Please do not shoot any por­traits unless you look at the back­ground first, and make sure noth­ing there will dis­tract from your main sub­ject.” –Joyce Tenneson

The more you pho­to­graph, the more you real­ize what can be pho­tographed and what can’t be pho­tographed. You just have to keep doing it.”  Eliot Porter

If your pic­tures aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough.”  Robert Capa

Less is more.”  Mies Van Der Rohe

 

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