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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I am going to show you how to put together an entire year of dates. This is a unique idea you can arrange for your sig­nif­i­cant other or as a gift for that cou­ple who has every­thing. I came up with this idea for my sister’s 20th wed­ding anniver­sary. To get a quick idea of how this works, click here to read the let­ter they were given. Remem­ber you can cus­tomize this idea to fit your needs. Per­haps a year is too ambi­tious or expen­sive for you. You can alter this idea for 3, 6 or 9 months very eas­ily. I accom­plished this by using a scrap­book that had “dates” in envelopes inside the pages. For their last date they would get to com­pile their “year of dates” mem­o­ries and photos.

Items you will need to assem­ble your date scrapbook:

  • Scrap­book or photo album. (with enough pages for each date)
  • Ship­ping tags (2 3/4 x 1 3/8 is the size I used)
  • Large envelopes. (enough for one per date and an extra one for the mem­o­ra­bilia at the end of the book)
  • Tiny envelopes that will hold your “date topic”. (enough for one per date)
  • Printer and 8 1/2 X 11 paper.
  • Optional items: fun scis­sors for paper edges, stick­ers, etc… (see photos)

(click on pho­tos to make them larger to see details)


 

What you need to do:

  1. Cre­ate a budget.
  2. Make a list of date ideas you have.  Ask your­self what their hob­bies, likes and dis­likes are. One date might be fancy and the next casual. (and even free) Think ahead and take sea­sons and weather into account when plan­ning as well. You wouldn’t want to give them a date to snow­board in June or an out­door pic­nic in December.
  3. Pur­chase the gift cer­tifi­cates, gather any “date” spe­cific items you may need (ex: map to a secret pic­nic spot) and money envelope
  4. Write your “date night top­ics”  in WORD (or what­ever pro­gram you use). Print them out, cut and stick them in the tiny envelopes. (see photo for exam­ple below)
  5. Print maps, direc­tions, menus, etc… that you will need for the dates. You can pro­vide sug­ges­tions in addi­tion to the main date. For exam­ple, if they were going to the Kings Hockey game for their  date, you could give them a list of cool restau­rants nearby with links to reviews, prices and menus. I took screen shots to help me pro­vide more infor­ma­tion and cool photos.
  6. Cre­ate the fin­ish­ing touches for each date and put them in their indi­vid­ual envelopes. Be sure they are labeled.

You need to include a cover let­ter explain­ing the gift and how it works. Here is a sam­ple of the let­ter I included for my sister’s gift of “dates for a year”. SAMPLE LETTER

 

IMG_3734

 

Extras:

  • This idea can be used for almost any recip­i­ent whether sin­gle or married.
  • Remem­ber it’s the small details that make a dif­fer­ence. For exam­ple, I photo-shopped my sister’s face into the Date Night movie poster for the cover of the scrap book. This worked out per­fectly and was very cus­tom since it’s about date nights and my bro-in– law hap­pens to look  like Steve Carell.
  • If you need to stretch the bud­get, add some no cost dates in the mix. It’s more about mak­ing them take the time to relax.

IMG_3743

 

 Stay tuned for my list of date night ideas…

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unique way to gift money

Here is my lat­est idea on how to gift money other than stuff­ing an enve­lope with a check or cash. My co-worker was mov­ing away (sob, sob) and it wasn’t prac­ti­cal to bur­den her with more “stuff” to have to move. There was no doubt in my mind money would be the best gift. I like to add a lit­tle whimsy when gift­ing dough. Since my co-worker is a seri­ous choco­holic and mov­ing away to col­lege, I came up with the shadow box idea.

 

Sup­plies you will need:

  • shadow box (can be found at most stores that carry frames such as Michaels, Tar­get, etc…)
  • choco­late or choice of treat your recip­i­ent would like
  • small enve­lope to hold money
  • four coins (pen­nies matched my decore best)
  • paper to print “In Case Of Emer­gency Break Glass”
  • ham­mer
  • safety glasses (can be found at Home Depot for a few bucks)
  • glue gun

What to do:

  1. Hot glue your coins onto the enve­lope that you put your money in.
  2. Print out the “In Case Of Emer­gency Break Glass” onto your paper of choice, then cut it to fit the frame size.
  3. Hot glue your enve­lope and your choco­late bar onto the print out.
  4. Assem­ble inside the shadow box. From the back side I hot glued the frame shut so that she really would have to smash it open to get to the goods!
  5. Your done, wrap it up in a gift bag or box.


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Life is like a box of chocolates…

 


I’ve writ­ten a lot of posts on how to “gift money”. This is my lat­est idea with a sweet twist to it. Start by get­ting a box of See’s (or your favorite) choco­lates. Go to a store like Cost Plus that has nov­elty can­dies. Find any money themed choco­lates to add to your box. I pur­chased gold coins and choco­late dol­lar bars. As you can see how I did it in the above photo, ran­domly put the money choco­lates with the See’s can­dies and then of course add the real money. This is a sim­ple, but thought­ful way to gift money for all occa­sions. I cre­ated this one for a grad­u­a­tion celebration.

 

On the card you can add a fun quote like, “Life is like a box of choco­lates…” fin­ish the quote with some­thing appro­pri­ate for the occasion.

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Jun 152012
 

Today I’m shar­ing my lat­est repur­pos­ing project that’s per­fect for your next party! Take old records and melt them down to bowls. They not only look groovy, but are very func­tional. My sis­ter made these for her son’s grad­u­a­tion party recently. His party theme was the Bea­t­les, so these were the per­fect acces­sory. The process to make them is very easy too!

INSTRUCTIONS HERE

 

How to get your groove on:

  • fill them with snacks and candy (be sure they’re wrapped food items for safety)
  • a great stor­age for t.v. remotes
  • loose change anyone?
  • where did I put my keys?”…a thing of the past
  •  place your small gift or gift card (think iTunes) in the bowl and wrap with cellophane

If you don’t have any unwanted records lay­ing around in your attic, you can pick them up for next to noth­ing at a garage sale or thrift store. Have fun and don’t for­get to crank your tunes!



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Apr 012012
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On my recent trip to Idaho I wanted to send a post­card home to fam­ily. How­ever, I didn’t want to just send a bor­ing paper post­card. I came up with the idea of mail­ing an actual Idaho potato with my mes­sage writ­ten on it. My friends didn’t think the postal ser­vice would mail it, but I didn’t let that stop me. I bought my potato, scrubbed it clean, let it dry, wrote my mes­sage on it with my Sharpee and headed to the post office. To my friends sur­prise, they were will­ing to mail it. There was only one glitch in the whole thing, it weighed more than a pound, so the postal stick­ers that needed to be placed on it were too big for the potato size. I wanted to share my story to ignite cre­ative ideas to mail cards and post­cards to friends and fam­ily when you’re on your next vaca­tion away…

HELPFUL TIPS:
  • be sure your object is under one pound
  • don’t assume they will or will not mail a cer­tain item, ask
  • make sure your sur­faces are cleaned well so postage will stick to surface
  • use a Sharpee pen so your message/address doesn’t smear off
IDEAS:
  • Mail an object as your post­card that has to do with the area you are vis­it­ing. Think coconuts for Hawaii, apples for New York, pota­toes for Idaho…you get the idea!
  • If you’re feel­ing more tech­ni­cally cre­ative, use an app like Cards by Apple, to mail a photo post­card right from your smart phone.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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This lat­est cre­ation has been made by a mod­ern day Martha, my sis­ter, Colleen. Well, she’s a lot more hip than her, but you get the idea.

It all started when she gave a friend of ours a bot­tle of wine for their 25th wed­ding anniver­sary. She wanted them to be able to have a lit­tle memento from the evening. After the bot­tle was empty, I sneaked the cork in my purse(it’s not steal­ing, because she got it back!). From there my sis­ter worked her bril­liance! The cou­ple she was mak­ing it for love two things in life, wine and gar­den­ing. (yes in that order, jk!) That’s when she remem­bered being inspired by a photo from Piccsy. A mini cork suc­cu­lent planter mag­net. Does it get any cuter? I don’t think so! It’s sen­ti­men­tal, com­pact, prac­ti­cal, green and stylish.


Needed:

  • Corks made from cork not plastic
  • Mag­nets
  • Pot­ting soil
  • Very small suc­cu­lent cuttings
  • Puncher
  • Par­ing knife
  • Glue gun

How to:

  1. CAREFULLY, hol­low out the cen­ter of a wine cork with the puncher and knife until you’ve hol­lowed it out halfway.
  2.  Glue mag­net onto cork.
  3.  Fill the hole with pot­ting soil and add the succulent.
  4.  Use an eye­drop­per to water.
  5. Put on your fridge and enjoy!

WARNING: This might not be a craft for a child or a clumsy adult!

   

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Per­fect For:

  • Host­ess gifts
  • Spe­cial occasions
  • Wine lovers
  • Green lovers
  • Me
  • Thank you gifts
  • Green thumb friends
  • really, any­one!

 

 




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Look­ing for some­thing dif­fer­ent that you haven’t expe­ri­enced in your culi­nary life as of yet?

Out­stand­ing in the Field is a rov­ing adven­ture – lit­er­ally a restau­rant with­out walls. They set the long tables at farms or gar­dens, on moun­tain tops or in sea caves, on islands or at ranches. Occa­sion­ally the table is set indoors: a beau­ti­ful refur­bished barn, a cool green­house or a stately museum. Ingre­di­ents for the meal are almost all local and gen­er­ally pre­pared by a cel­e­brated chef of the region. This really is a great way to expe­ri­ence the farm to table trend.

I per­son­ally have not had the plea­sure of shar­ing a meal at one of their tables. They’re not always in your area and dip deep into your pock­ets. How­ever, it is on my list of things to do…eventually. I’d also like to men­tion I have no finan­cial gain by shar­ing this infor­ma­tion with you. It’s just some­thing I found to be inter­est­ing that I wanted to share with my read­ers. MARK YOUR CALENDAR, MARCH 20th TICKETS GO ON SALE! Look at their sched­ule now and plan ahead. Tick­ets sell out in minutes.

 

DIYD: (do it your­self dinner)
  • If you know the day you can burn a few hun­dred bucks is not in your near future, but you’re inspired by the idea, why not try to recre­ate your own “farm to table” dinner.

 

What to do:
  • Loca­tion! Loca­tion! Loca­tion! Find a spe­cial space whether indoors or out that is a lit­tle more adven­tur­ous then the din­ing room. Think-the beach, along the river, in a cac­tus for­est, on a ranch, at a local park, in a pri­vately owned library, under a big tree, in the mid­dle of the street at the end of a cul de sac, on a basketball/tennis court. Think out­side the box and have fun!
  • After your loca­tion is estab­lished, decide on how many guests you will be serv­ing. A roman­tic din­ner for 2? A fam­ily reunion for 20? You decide! Once the num­ber of peo­ple is estab­lished be sure you have enough long ban­quet tables and fold­ing chairs to recre­ate an out­door din­ing room.
  • Cus­tomize the din­ing décor to your own indi­vid­ual lik­ing. For me, I would use as many can­dles as would fit! Oth­ers may use hay stacks for the benches with crisp white linens drap­ing the tables. Have fun and remem­ber there are no rules! (Martha won’t be attending)
  • Next, decide on your menu. Choose sea­sonal items that you can get at your local farm­ers mar­kets. If you really pre­pare in advance, you can even grow some of your own ingre­di­ents your­self.  Try to select items that can be pre­pared fully in your kitchen and brought to the sight in cool­ers or warm­ing bags.
  • Remem­ber the details such as weather con­di­tions, bugs, restroom avail­abil­ity, park­ing, dietary restrictions/allergies , wine pair­ings, music, throw blan­kets, etc…
  • If you like the idea but don’t want all of the work, cater the event and have it deliv­ered to your site.  Try to find a store or restau­rant that makes farm to table meals. The con­cept and ambiance will still be enjoyed by all.

 

Buon Appetito!

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iphone appsI should begin by clar­i­fy­ing these are my per­sonal top five favorite iPhone Apps. I have been a big fan of Mac com­put­ers since the begin­ning of my tech­nol­ogy life. How­ever, I refused to get an iPhone for some time. In case you’re curi­ous as to why, I really don’t know. If you saw my museum of old Apple com­put­ers that I refuse to get rid of, you’d get a good laugh. Any­how, I am now a happy owner of my iPhone 4s. One thing I’ve been slowly learn­ing about is Apps. Today I am shar­ing the ones that have become instant hits with me and my lifestyle. (no finan­cial gain here…just shar­ing the love)

1. Insta­gram — Since I believe a pic­ture is worth a thou­sand words, this App is per­fect. It’s a free, fun, and a sim­ple way to make and share pho­tos on your iPhone.
Pick from one of sev­eral gor­geous fil­tered effects or tilt-shift blur to breathe a new life into your mobile pho­tos. Trans­form every­day moments into works of art you’ll want to share with friends and fam­ily.
Share your pho­tos in a sim­ple photo stream with friends to see — and fol­low your friends’ pho­tos with the click of a sin­gle but­ton. Every day you open up Insta­gram, you’ll see new pho­tos from your clos­est friends, and cre­ative peo­ple from around the world.

2. Emo­jifree — Add emoti­cons to your text mes­sages, notes, and emails! Express your­self in new and cre­ative ways! Think mar­tini glass icons and wink­ing smi­leys. Note that non smart phone users will not see the pictures.

3. Cam­era plus — There are about ten mil­lion cam­era apps for iPhone (approx­i­mately). Some are great, some are spe­cial­ized, and some are a com­plete waste of your time. The best, how­ever, is Cam­era+ thanks to its fast oper­a­tion, abil­ity to make your iPhone feel like an actual cam­era, and great shar­ing features

4. Pock­et­Booth — I’m cur­rently addicted to this app! Turn your iPhone into a vin­tage pho­to­booth with Pock­et­booth: the pho­to­booth that fits in your pocket. Pock­et­booth per­fectly repli­cates the inti­macy, spon­tane­ity, and hilar­ity of a tra­di­tional pho­to­booth. Per­fect for a party, or a laid back fam­ily gath­er­ing.
The most excit­ing new fea­ture of Pock­et­booth is the abil­ity to Print & Ship a pho­to­strip. If email­ing, tweet­ing, or Face­book­ing a strip just won’t cut it, why not send a real live pho­to­strip to a friend or loved one? You pick a pho­to­strip, tell us where to send it, and we do the rest. Pho­to­strips are pro­fes­sion­ally printed then pack­aged in a cus­tom enve­lope and shipped via USPS the fol­low­ing busi­ness day.
If you’d like to print to your own printer, Pock­et­booth still includes Air­Print capa­bil­ity for instant grat­i­fi­ca­tion. (requires com­pat­i­ble printer)
Metic­u­lously designed to emu­late the expe­ri­ence of a 1950s-era Model 11 Pho­to­booth, Pock­et­booth is as beau­ti­ful to look at as it is fun to use. The inter­face makes tak­ing self-portraits a snap — even if you’re using the rear-facing camera.

5. Flip­board — Flip­board cre­ates a per­son­al­ized mag­a­zine out of every­thing being shared with you. Flip through your Face­book news­feed, tweets from your Twit­ter time­line, pho­tos from your Insta­gram feed and much more. Fill Flip­board with the things you like to read, from niche blogs to pub­li­ca­tions like Rolling Stone or Van­ity Fair, and use Instapa­per or Read It Later to save arti­cles to read later. Con­nect Flip­board to all your social net­works, and you’ll have a sin­gle place to enjoy, browse, com­ment on and share all the news, pho­tos and updates that mat­ter to you.
In addi­tion to Twit­ter, Face­book and Insta­gram, you can flip through your news­feeds and time­lines from Google Reader, LinkedIn, Tum­blr, Flickr and 500px on Flip­board.
New to Flip­board on iPhone is Cover Sto­ries, a selec­tion of inter­est­ing arti­cles and pho­tos being shared with you right now. And it gets smarter every time you use it.


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Dec 262011
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gone are the days of gourmet meals and per­sonal pam­per­ing when you fly in the sky. This doesn’t mean you can’t take mat­ters into your own hands and make the most of your travels.

Half the vaca­tion fun for me is get­ting to my des­ti­na­tion by air­plane. I’m shar­ing some of my tips and tricks to make your next adven­ture first class, even when you’re in coach.

I’m Bored:
  • The iPad is def­i­nitely my newest lux­ury item to help keep the bore­dom blues to a min­i­mum. Plan ahead and down­load movies, t.v. shows, mag­a­zines and boooks so you can watch them with­out hav­ing access to inter­net. If you’re a nos­tal­gic junkie like me, you can enjoy a few good hours of some seri­ous Pac Man. Be sure to dou­ble check that your bat­tery is com­plet­ing charged before, which will give you approx­i­mately 10 hours of use. Don’t for­get to bring your own ear piece and a split­ter if you’re not trav­el­ing alone.
  • If you don’t have an iPad, pack a few good mag­a­zines, a book you haven’t had time to read and deck of cards. For those who are crafty, knit­ting can be a relax­ing and enjoy­able way to pass time. (see TSA reg­u­la­tions here for knit­ting details)
I’m Uncom­fort­able:
  • I always bring an inflat­able neck pil­low. It helps me sleep when space is so lim­ited and espe­cially when I’m prac­ti­cally sit­ting com­pletely erect. Don’t for­get earplugs and eye pads if you’re plan­ning on get­ting some rest. (think cry­ing babies and the neigh­bor who won’t close their win­dow shade)
  • Although I’d love to bring a cozy blan­ket, it’s not always prac­ti­cal due to space. Instead I wear a com­fort­able coat that can dou­ble as a blanket.
  • Com­pres­sion socks really help keep swollen feet at bay. They’re not exactly styl­ish, but they work wonders.
  • I like to take my make-up off after take-off and slather a lot of mois­tur­izer on. Pack some travel size make-up remov­ing cloths. Then occa­sion­ally I spritz a lit­tle water on my face which really helps with skin dehy­dra­tion. (which helps pre­vent air­borne blem­ishes to appear)  I also pack a mini make-up kit so I can reap­ply a lit­tle before land­ing. For me that might be some mas­cara and lip­stick that dou­bles as blush.
I’m Hun­gry:

It would be nice if I fig­ured out how to bring my own shrimp cock­tail and filet mignon, fol­lowed by a choco­late lava cake. Until then, I have a few sug­ges­tions on mak­ing the most of your culi­nary expe­ri­ence above the clouds.

  • Pack a vari­ety of snacks that include a pro­tein, salty and sweet option. Good qual­ity beef jerky from your local farm­ers mar­ket is a good choice. A tiny box of Godiva choco­lates will usu­ally do the trick too. Get some gourmet good­ies that you wouldn’t ordi­nar­ily buy at home. I pack a mini brie’ cheese, crack­ers, salami and dried apri­cots depend­ing on my flight. Bring what­ever will make you happy! After all, you’re on vacation.
  • I also pack a goodie bag for each of us fly­ing which includes some of the basics like gum, lol­lipops (the only thing that helps my ears pop) hand san­i­tizer, etc…
  • Due to safety reg­u­la­tions we can­not bring bev­er­ages like the good old days (think, sneak­ing on mini bot­tles of vodka). How­ever, you can bring your own high qual­ity tea bags, honey sticks, nat­ural sugar packs and Star­bucks instant cof­fee pow­der, which def­i­nitely will help you feel like you’re in first class.

mini gourmet foods to pack on the plane

fake first class by taking your own caviar

 

 

Cost Plus is one of my favorite stores to stock up on air­plane goodies.

 

 

 

For up to date TSA reg­u­la­tions click here.

Please share any of your travel secrets with us in the com­ments section…

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