If you prefer to stay in and cook, rather than to go out for romantic occasions, you might want to consider getting your date (and yes, it can still be a date if you're married to each other) involved in the kitchen with you if you don't already. The experience gives you more together time and makes the evening into an event, rather than just another meal. You can work together on any recipe from any cookbook, but Dinner Dates: A Cookbook for Couples Cooking Togethergives you a good place to start because it is designed for this purpose. And if you tend to get a little protective of your space in the kitchen, it couldn't hurt to have the tasks divided up for you.
The "dates" are complete menus with both casual and more gourmet options. For example, "Fun with Fajitas" will get you margaritas, chicken and steak fajitas and ice cream sundaes, while the "Ultimate Valentine's Dinner" has french onion soup, filet mignon with herbed butter, and chocolate dipped strawberries and biscotti. There are a total of ten different dates, as well as information on prepping your kitchen and plenty of other foodie tips.
With only a few days left until Valentine's, we thought that it would be fun to take a look at the role that food can play in our relationships with a little mini series leading into February 14th.
There are lots of reasons why couples break up and chances are that they don't always have to do with food (unless you changed your eating habits to impress someone with really restrictive diet and it just didn't work out), but it's not entirely uncommon for the relationship to - literally - end over food because some people like the restaurant breakup.
The restaurant breakup is just what it sounds like: a breakup in a restaurant. The reason that some people like to end their involvement over dinner is that they're hoping to avoid a scene, trying to use the food as a distraction and the other diners as a way to keep the fuss to a minimum. As long as they're picking up the tab, some of those doing the breaking up feel somewhat absolved of guilt - after all, s/he got a free meal!
In the movies, there is always one breakup restaurant, usually a quiet and dimly lit Italian place with women sobbing quietly into their risottos. Have you ever ended up in one of these restaurants, either as a party to the breakup or simply as a bystander? Would you break up in a restaurant?
With only a few days left until Valentine's, we thought that it would be fun to take a look at the role that food can play in our relationships with a little mini series leading into February 14th.
Yesterday, we talked about what it was like to date someone with really restrictive diet, or conversely, what it was like to date someone with a very broad palate when you were the one with a restricted eating habits. Some shared that the felt it gave them new perspective and forced them to become more creative in the kitchen, while others were of the mindset that "if you are a picky eater, that is remarkably unsexy and you are gone." This all leads us into today's question, which is whether or not you would change your eating habits to impress?
Small things are easy to change and it isn't uncommon for us to be more aware of our eating quirks when we're out on a first date and want to make a good impression. For example, even if you don't particularly care for broccoli, you might find yourself taking a few bites if it is served with your dinner on a first date with a girl you really like. Or perhaps you are a chicken-and-fish kind of girl, but decide to share in an order of beef chili fries at a big football game, since you know your date loves them. The more restrictive the diet, however, the more difficult the change, but there are some dedicated meat-lovers who are willing to go vegetarian, or mostly vegetarian, to try and impress a vegan or vegetarian significant other.
The interesting thing about these types of dietary changes is that they are not permanent. Meat-lovers go back to eating meat and broccoli-haters continue to avoid broccoli, which makes you wonder whether the change is worthwhile in the first place, since there is minimal intention of changing your overall inclinations.
Perfect for a night in with a friend or a significant other, The Tasty Show's Chocolate Tasting for Two kit is a cute way to eat some chocolate, expand your palate and talk about food. The kit includes 15 different kinds of gourmet chocolate, a tasting guide and a couple of ratings cards so you can compare your reactions to the chocolate. The chocolates in the kit are small, but a good size for tasting so that you don't overdose on chocolate (yes, it is possible) and get bored before you get through all the samples.
An alternative to the kit is to simply buy several different types of chocolates from gourmet and specialty stores, but at just under $30, the kit really gives you a wide range of milk and dark chocolates - a wider range that $30 could buy you at many pricey gourmet stores - and you have the added benefit of getting some insight into chocolate tasting from the included guides. After you have something to work from, then you can head out to that specialty store and choose (and appreciate) your favorites, new or old.
No, the groom is not dressed like a jellybean. Bride-to-be Lori Woolery is simply being escorted down the aisle by a well dressed Jelly Belly during her wedding at Jelly Belly Center in Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin. It was there that she married Daymon Tracy this Wednesday. "We were looking for something different," Woolery told the Associated Press. The vice chairman of the Jelly Belly Candy Company even drove in for the event.
If you happen to be single on Valentine’s Day, there is no reason to feel blue. After all, it’s
only one day a year that the media lets us know that we are really supposed to be part of a couple. It’s worse if
you’re a woman, of course. The message to men seems to be to celebrate the fact that they’re not
“obligated” to take someone of to dinner and ply her with chocolates and flowers. Women, on the other hand,
are expected to eat ice cream and chips by the pound and cry while watching sappy movies.
Single or not, a sappy movie from time to time is not a bad thing, but I definitely take issue with the ice cream
and chips side of the equation. If you want to meet someone, eating ice cream in front of the television is not the way
to go about it. And besides, there are much better things that you can be eating, even if you’re alone, whether
you are a guy or a gal.
On Valentine's Day, more than 30% of all Americans will eat at a restaurant, making it the second most
popular holiday for dining out, after Mother's Day. When numbers are broken down by age, it is not surprising to see
that for people between the ages of 25 and 34, the numbers are much higher, with 41% of people dining at a
restaurant on February 14. The highest numbers are among the 18-24 year olds, with 47% percent heading out to
eat. Those who dine out will spend an average of $62 dollars on dinner, while possibly spending more on gifts
such as chocolates and flowers. OpenTable.com is a great way to check for
reservations are some of your favorite restaurants across the country and the world.
Though dining out can be fun and romantic, for some lovebirds there is nothing as romantic as a home-cooked meal
shared across a table for two. Cooking together or cooking for a loved one can be a more romantic and thoughtful gift
than a box of chocolates, for those who enjoy cooking.