Last-minute Super Bowl snacks

As a lifelong Philadelphia fan, I don’t care who wins Super Bowl 50. Panthers? Broncos? What’s an Eagles fan to do?

radish-onion-dip-ictcrop_galDrink beer and chow down, that’s what a good sport does on Game Day. I’m heading to a Super Bowl party, where the hosts have planned a yummy menu that includes Colorado Pork Green Chile soup, Carolina Sweet Potato and Bacon soup and second half Mile High Brownies.

We are hoping for Philly cheesesteaks and soft pretzels next year.

It’s not too late to put together your own Game Day repast. Here’s a quick-and-easy recipe from the folks at Real Simple, Spinach and Carmelized Onion Dip. Serve it with crunchy broccoli, cauliflower and radishes.

Here’s the recipe:

INGREDIENTS

  1. tablespoons olive oil
  2. medium onions, chopped
  3. kosher salt and black pepper
  4. 116-ounce container sour cream
  5. 110-ounce package frozen chopped spinach, thawed and squeezed of excess liquid
  6. tablespoon white wine vinegar
  7. broccoli and cauliflower florets, endive spears, and radishes, for serving

DIRECTIONS

  1. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onions, ½ teaspoon salt, and ¼ teaspoon pepper and cook, stirring often, until golden brown, 12 to 15 minutes. Transfer to a medium bowl and let cool.
  2. Add the sour cream, spinach, vinegar, ¾ teaspoon salt, and ¼ teaspoon pepper to the onions and mix to combine. Serve with the veggies.

 

Tanger shares the love with shoppers

Tanger Outlets is showing its affection for shoppers with a Share The Love promotion, which will reward shoppers in February.

Tanger_RehoBeach-0023
So, how do they love thee? Let us count the ways:

1.) $2,500 SHOPPING SPREE:  Shoppers enter on-site at Tanger Shopper Services from Feb. 8-21. (Shopper Services are located at Tanger Surfside next to Van Heusen, and at Tanger Seaside next to Zumiez.)  A random winner will be chosen from among all Tanger properties nationwide.

2.) RANDOM ACTS OF KINDNESS:  Shoppers on the sidewalks and inside stores at Tanger Rehoboth will be surprised by a prize patrol. Patrollers hand out $100 each day in gift cards, and pick up the tab for purchases of lucky shoppers.

3.) FACEBOOK REWARDS: Tanger Rehoboth’s Facebook page will randomly reward customers with gift cards who express why they love shopping at Tanger Outlets.

Veganuary: The final hours

There are 31 days in January.

Veganuary, a month with no refined sugar, alcohol or meat of any kind, feels a lot longer.

red-apple-bite-300x299In these final hours, I’m taking orders. Food orders. Drink orders. What should I eat and what should I drink when all the edibles and beverages I have denied myself are back on the table?

The arrival of February brings more than the opportunity to fall off the wagon and into a vat of beef, bourbon and brownies. I will reflect on what I’ve learned during the month of Veganuary and report back to you. What did I miss the most? What does my body tell me? What does my soul have to say?

Meanwhile, I’m looking forward to breaking the fast.

Skin care for women who multitask

In the highly competitive marketplace, Clinique is bringing its A game with Clinique Smart, a line of custom treatments designed for women who multitask and want to simplify their skin care regime with products that multitask, too.

15164-clinique-smart-night-custom-repair-moisturizer-75-1442578223I received a review sample of Clinique Smart Night Custom-Repair Moisturizer, which went on the market this month (MSRP: $57). The company says the cream addresses lines and wrinkles, dehydration and uneven skin tone at night, when our skin is in a state of rest. If the formula does what it’s supposed to do, we awaken with firmer, brighter skin and softened lines.

Personally, I like the idea of something that works while I am sleeping. Would that this moisturizer could run the vacuum and do a load of laundry.

I also have been serious about good skin care for at least 15 years and have internalized that it’s a ’round-the-clock commitment.

Smart Night contains such ingredients as hyaluronic acid, which plumps up skin by retaining moisture, and peptides, which stimulate collagen production.

But does it work? For now, I will sleep on it. Literally. I’ll give Smart Night a trial run–and get back to you with the results.

 

Crunchies, the freeze-dried fruit snack

I think I know why people can’t stop eating potato chips.

Sure, salt and fat contribute to the attraction. But the big lure is the crunch.

Crunchies is a simple fruit snack that deliveries the crunch we typically associate with savory nibbles. In addition to giving fruit a novel texture, freeze-drying locks in the nutritional value while extending shelf life.

Blueberries_frontThe folks from Crunchies sent me a big box of snacks to sample. The treats arrived at an auspicious time, as I’ve sworn off refined sugar and other goodies for the month of January.

Crunchies contain no added sugar and no artificial flavors or coloring. They are non-GMO, gluten-free, vegan, and kosher- and-halal certified. A serving is only 40 calories. In short, Crunchies offend no one.

Strawberry quickly emerged as my favorite variety. Unlike strawberries that are picked long before they ripen, Crunchies are intensely flavorful, with the sweetness of just-plucked natural fruit. I eat them straight out of the bag. They liven up a bowl of oatmeal, too.

The line also includes mango, pineapple, blueberry, raspberry, grape, cinnamon apple, strawberry banana and mixed fruit. You can find Crunchies in stores nationwide for an SRP of $4.99 – 5.99 for resealable pouches and $1.25 for single-serve bags.

Veganuary: Week Three

IMG_0766

For the past three weeks, I’ve abstained from meat, refined sugar and alcohol. Call it going cold tofurky.

In winters past, the stove would be bubbling with braised lamb shanks, coq au vin or cod and leek chowder. And each blizzard was followed by a hike to Trolley Square to gather with friends at a neighborhood bar.

These days, it’s bean burritos, barley and veggie soup, and quinoa with a medley of yellow, red and orange tomatoes. A handful of dates for dessert. And water, water and more water.

So, has it been difficult maintaining my commitment? Yes, at times.

Have I stuck with the deal? Yes, absolutely.

But the question I hear the most is: How do you feel?

Other folks who have embraced a plant-based diet say they are bursting with energy. They sleep better. They are more focused. Their skin is smooth and dewy.

1222006Truth to tell, I already felt pretty darn good when I took the Veganuary pledge. I have noticed a slight increase in my energy level, especially in the evenings, when I traditionally wound down with a nice dinner–usually including poultry, beef or seafood–and a glass or two of wine.

It’s also easier to stay on track with other disciplined tasks. I’m exercising and practicing the piano every day.

With 22 days under my belt, I am heading into the home stretch with hopes that I soon will be sleeping like a log, completing tasks with laser accuracy and sporting a radiant complexion.

If I don’t realize those or any other benefits by the end of Veganuary, I am OK with it. I took on the challenge as an exercise in mindfulness, a time of eating and drinking thoughtfully. (Which brings me to another question. What will I eat and drink on Feb. 1?)

After three weeks, doing without meat, sweets and booze is a bit easier.

That said, I’m well aware that I need to keep my eyes on the prize, whatever that might be, as I enter the home stretch. I don’t want to be the figure skater who jumps and spins throughout 4 1/2 minutes of a 5-minute program, only to fall on my fanny on that last triple lutz.

Nine days to go.

 

Shoppers snowed out

snowman1bWinter Storm Jonas has arrived, throwing a cold, white blanket on retail.

Christiana, Concord and Dover malls all were buttoned up tight at 6 p.m., along with movie theaters, big box stores and most strip shopping centers. Concord Mall already has announced it will be closed on Saturday, when accumulation is expected to reach 24 inches of snow in northern New Castle County.

In Sussex County, where only 4-8 inches of snow are forecast, Tanger Outlets in Rehoboth and other retailers are planning to open at noon tomorrow, weather permitting.

So don’t venture out unless you have a dire need–and have confirmed that your destination is open for business. And don’t even think about calling out for pizza.

Enjoy your family. Read a book. Organize your closet. And if you must shop, put on your fuzzy slippers and browse on your laptop.

 

One less voice for the consumer

As a journalist, Mitch Lipka was an objective voice for consumers. He did important work, exposing fraud and guiding readers on making educated decisions and using their resources wisely.

IMG_0095He died earlier this week of cancer. He was 53 and writing to the very end. Here is his final column, published in the Boston Globe:

Just because someone tells you something’s a great deal doesn’t mean it is.

Commercials boast of laptops for less than $100 and big-screen TVs for about $50. And, by the way, shipping is free. This is where consumers should be saying, “What’s the catch?” instead of, “What a deal.”

Skepticism is vital, but, unfortunately, it is suspended far too often. That’s the backdrop for so-called penny auctions. These online auctions make it seem as though a great deal is around every corner. But what is the catch?

Penny auctions offer the chance to buy electronics, appliances, and other items at big discounts — up to 95 percent, some sites promise. They are unlike traditional auctions on sites such as eBay.com, where low bidders simply don’t get the product they are seeking. In penny auctions, unsuccessful bidders lose what they offered.

This is done by making consumers buy bid packs, which are what appear to be small chunks of money, usually starting around $25. Consumers use the bid packs to compete with other buyers — bidding up an item one penny at a time.

Even though the numbers appear small, making it feel safe to jump in, bidders will find those pennies can add up fast. Consumer advocates who tested the sites, in search of deals for such items as iPads, have found themselves losers time and again, as someone else overbid the value of the product.

In addition to leaving empty-handed — and with lighter wallets — users are dangled the booby prize: the option to buy the product at a price typically higher than what you would pay if you had shopped around.

Legal? Typically, yes, as the sites make no secret of their business model. But consumer advocacy groups argue against using penny auction sites, noting the similarity to gambling — including that the odds are stacked in favor of the house.

Don’t rely on self-serving representations made by a company or be seduced by testimonials they toss around. Weigh the risks against the possible rewards.

And remember, the best deals most often can be found through research and an understanding of the market.

 

ShopRite’s 45th Can Can Sale

ShopRite’s iconic Can Can Sale has returned for its 45th January in a row, the grocer’s largest stock-up sale of the year.

shoprite cancanYou can haul in provisions to get you through the blizzard expected to pummel the East Coast on Friday with such deals as 12 cans of Tuttorosso tomatoes for $7.88. No worries about water. Buy two 24-packs of Nestle Pure Life bottled water for $6.

Want to be prepared for a zombie apocalypse? Lay in ShopRite brand veggies priced at 49 cents a can. (Buy 12 or more cans of corn or green beans and the price is discounted to 33 cents a can.)

Other deals: StarKist solid white tuna, 88 cents a can, and Campbell’s soup, 99 cents a can. Buy three cans of Chock Full O’ Nuts coffee and the price drops to $2 a can.

The Container Store’s annual Elfa sale

It comes but once a year: The Container Store’s elfa sale.

Unknown-1Through Feb. 15, take 30 percent off everything in the line, which includes storage solutions for closets, laundry rooms, pantries,   garages and more. Think shelving, drawer systems, mesh baskets and flexible components to create such custom spaces as walk-in master closets, shoe closets and craft spaces.

It’s an event elfa enthusiasts mark on their calendars. Some folks plow through the closets in their homes, checking one off the list each year.

There are lots of finishes, including walnut and platinum, to choose from, as well as such options as smooth-gliding drawers. And customers at The Container’s Store new location at Christiana Fashion Center can take advantage of Delaware’s tax-free shopping.

DYI-ers can measure their spaces, order components and install storage themselves. Would rather have someone else do the heavy lifting? Installation is 30 percent off, too.