Posts Tagged ‘Hanukkah’

Christmakkah World Tour of the Web

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

Whether traveling or staying home this holiday season, this World Tour of the Web will make you want to drink a cup of egnnog and fry up a potato latke. My family celebrates both Hanukkah and Christmas (Christmakkah, if you will). Here are some wacky, useful, interesting, and beautiful stories that focus on these two winter holidays.

Christmakkah tree

A Butter Message to the USA 
by Tommy, My Life as Tommy
With Christmas fast-approaching Tommy is quite displeased that he will not be able to make the traditional Norweigian holiday pussycat cake for which butter is the main ingredient. I can’t stop doing impersonations of this flamboyant blogger from Norway chastising Americans for our lack of compassion over his country’s butter shortage this holiday season. Warning, soon you too will be announcing, “I will force you to watch me while I eat all of your butter that you were going to have at Christmas evening!”

Celebrating Hanukkah When You Travel 
by Debbie Dubrow, Delicious Baby
Here are some helpful tips for celebrating Hanukkah while away from home including travel menorah tips and gifts to give on-the-go, as well as where to celebrate and get your Hanukkah traditional treats.

Around the Tree and Around the World 
by Kymri, Mira Terra Travels
Take a trip around the world from Africa and Asia to Europe, North America and beyond in this photo-centric post featuring the well-traveled author’s vast souvenir ornament collection.

Over Achieving Elf on the Shelf Mommies 
by Jen, People I Want to Punch in the Throat
On a blog dedicated to all things and people punch-in-the-throat-worthy, this post lampoons those moms who make the rest of us look bad by spending WAY too much time moving their Elf on a Shelf too often and even having the little bugger ”play tricks” on the kiddos by baking loads of cookies and leaving mom a big mess to clean up. I’ll one up the author; I want to punch anyone who even OWNS an Elf on a Shelf. I’ve got enough to do during the holidays without adding an annoying elf to the mix!

6 Jolly Reasons to Spend Christmas in Alaska 
by Rachel Denning, BootsnAll
This clever post uses the lyrics from Christmas carols plus gorgeous photos to convince us to head to Alaska for a white Christmas.

Where Can You Find the World’s Largest Hanukkah Menorah? New York City Of Course! 
by Nadia Carriere, Child Mode
There’s not as much hullaballoo surrounding Hanukkah as there is for Christmas but those who want to celebrate the Festival of Lights can do so in grand style in New York City. There are nightly lightings throughout Hanukkah plus a few special events like a Grand Menorah Parade on December 22 and a party with singing, games, chocolate gelt, and latkes on December 25.

Carlson School of Management Flash Mob, Deck the Halls 
by UMN Videos

Need a little perking up? I dare you to watch this festive flash mob at the University of Minnesota without smiling.

Photo by kakisky (Creative Commons)

Your turn!
Share your favorite winter holiday post using the Linky below. Be sure to include http://. This World Tour of the Web focuses on Hanukkah and Christmas, but stories on all winter holidays are welcomed! You don’t need to link back to Travel Mamas on your site to add your story. Come back every Wednesday to link up your posts!

Oprah’s Favorite Things 2011, Travel Mamas Style

Sunday, December 4th, 2011

Are you missing Oprah’s “Favorite Things” as much as I am this holiday season? There’s just something so joyous about watching all of those audience members go bananas over the simplest…and the grandest things. I thought I’d attempt a blog version to fill the void this Christmas by sharing with you what I would give to my audience (that means you!) if I had Oprah’s money, clout, and staff. Alas, I have none of these things so this list of my favorite finds for 2011 is a make-believe version. Still, I hope it inspires a gift or two for yourself or someone in your life.

Chuao Potato Chips in Chocolate Bar

Chuao Potato Chips in Chocolate ($18 for three-pack)

Chuao Potato Chips in Chocolate Bar
I can’t decide what I like best…salty, sweet, crunchy, or smooth. Why not combine them all into one delightfully sinful treat? The Chuao Potato Chips in Chocolate Bar may sound weird, but trust me, it is a glorious indulgence ($18 for three bars). Chuao Chocolatier is the master of combining wacky ingredients to create incredible chocolate sensations, like their Chevre bonbon filled with goat cheese, Pear Williams and crushed black pepper buttercream; or the Candela bonbon with macadamia nut praline and smoky chipotle. 

Dearfoams slippers

Dearfoams Fair Isle Clogs ($28)

Dearfoams Slippers
These are my work shoes. Blogging may not pay much but at least I get to snuggle my tootsies into these pillowy soft slippers while I clack away at my keyboard. You might be thinking, “Those are just slippers.” You would be wrong. These Dearfoams are FABULOUS slippers. When my 3-year-old first saw my Christmassy-looking Fair Isle Clogs ($28), he said, “Mama, did Santa bring you snow shoes?” (Adorable, huh?) Another favorite is the Velour Clogs in leopard print with faux fur trim ($24).

Pacifica Lotion

Pacifica Magic Carpet Ride Trio of Body Butters ($28)

Pacifica Body Butter
I am addicted to Pacifica Indican Coconut Nectar Body Butter. It’s organic, vegan, gluten-free, and never tested on animals. Plus, it smells like a tropical beach vacation! This lotion is thick and creamy but doesn’t cause my skin to break out. The Magic Carpet Ride trio ($28) includes the top three best-selling scents offered by Pacifica: Island Vanilla, Tuscan Blood Orange, and my coconutty fave. You can purchase Pacifica products at Sephora.

Skechers Bikers shoes

Skechers Bikers Shoe in Natural ($52)

Skechers Bikers Shoes
Sometimes I actually leave my computer and go out into the world. When I am performing the “travel” duty portion of my role as a travel blogger, I want to look stylish but still be comfortable while I traipse through LEGOLAND Florida or Shreveport-Bossier, Louisiana. These Skechers Bikers Shoes are comfy without looking clodhopper-ish. As a busy mom, I can’t be bothered with tying laces. (Simplify! Simplify! Simplify!) I can slip right into these when I hop in the minivan to pick up the kids from school ($52). Okay, the minivan isn’t so cool, but the shoes are!

Limoncello

Fabrizia Limoncello ($15.99)

Limoncello
At some point in the “Favorite Things” show Oprah typically trotted out some type of holiday drinkie with which to toast her audience. When in Sorrento, Italy five years ago I visited L’Agruminato, a lemon garden that peddles delicious bottles of Limoncello. This liqueur is essentially vodka infused with sugar and lemon to make a tasty, potent concoction. We brought two bottles home with us. My husband and I drank one bottle soon thereafter but held onto the second as a memory of our wonderful Disney Cruise through the Mediterranean. While it pained me to say goodbye to this lemony liquid representation of better times, life is meant to be enjoyed and shared with others so we toasted our friends with our Limoncello at a birthday celebration earlier this year. While our souvenir Limoncello is not available for purchase online, you can buy a variety of Limoncellos from your local BevMo or this this all-natural Fabrizia brand is for sale for just $15.99 via Snooth.com.

Adele

Adele’s Live at The Royal Albert Hall DVD

Adele’s CD
I think Adele is the most talented new recording artist to come into our lives in a very long time. She is over-played on the radio, and yet I still stop and listen when she comes on every single time. At this point in the show, Oprah would say something like, “What’s Christmas without a carol or two?” The curtain would lift and Adele, all decked out in some sparkling gown, would wow us with an incredible version of “Silent Night.” Since this is not the Oprah show, I will instead provide you with a link (click the image above) to watch a trailer of her Live at The Royal Albert Hall DVD. I love this trailer for the same reasons Oprah would; it shows Adele fulfilling a lifelong dream and living her best life. You can get her amazing album “21″ on Amazon ($9.99) or from iTunes ($10.99).

Harry and David's Tower of Treats

Harry and David Ultimate Holiday Tower of Treats ($199.95)

Harry and David Tower of Treats
When I was growing up, my dad received an awesome Harry and David Tower of Treats every year from his employers for the holidays. There was such an overwhelming array of goodies to nibble on…salted nuts, cookies, cheeses, crackers, chocolates, apples, and Harry David’s most famous item, their incredible pears. I don’t know how they grow pears to be so much tastier than regular ol’ grocery store pears, but somehow they do. I’ve given various versions of the Tower of Treats ($29.95-$199.95) over the years, from the Happy Birthday Tower to the Hanukkah Tower. Every type of treat comes in its own festive little box, turning each snack into a wondrous gift.

Disney Hawaiian Resort Aulani

Disney’s Aulani Resort on Oahu ($399 per night)

Trip to Disney’s Aulani Resort in Hawaii
You know Oprah always had some over-the-top finale gift to wow her audience. A trip to the recently-opened Disney’s Aulani Resort in Hawaii would be more than enough to make those lucky Oprah show-goers jump and scream while Oprah shouted, “YOU’RE GOING TO AULANI! YOU’RE GOING TO AULANI!” While a stay at this luxury resort is far from cheap ($399 per night, rack rate), many included extras make it more affordable than you might think, like free childcare for children ages 3-10 at Aunty’s Beach House and the complimentary Starlit Hui show with hula dancing and Hawaiian music. With its incredible pools and waterslides, crescent-shaped cove, elegant spa, and Disney character meals — a vacation to this resort would make anyone’s wildest holiday dreams come true.

If you could give away your favorite things this year, what items would be on your list?

You might also like:

Disneyland-Hilton Garden Inn Passports with Purpose Prize Pack

Disney’s Goal: Hawaii’s Greatest Hotel Pool

Holidays in Phoenix at Zoolights

The Travel Mama’s Holiday Wish List – 2010

A Note from The Travel Mama: I chose all of these products because I really, really like them. I am under no obligation to any of these brands to include these things on TravelMamas.com. I think I got a Chuao Potato Chips in Chocolate Bar in a BlogHer swag bag or it may have been at the Travel Bloggers Exchange Conference–since then I have purchased more bars than I would like to admit. My friend Stacey Ross, a.k.a. San Diego Bargain Mama, gave a pair of Dearfoams to me as part of a blogger promotion  during a dinner out together. I didn’t really have any intention of writing about the slippers, but I fell in love with them. I went to Aulani on a media trip for which many expenses were covered. The rest of the stuff I bought myself.

All photos were taken from the brand websites listed above, besides the Aulani photo, which I took.

Happy Holidays from The Travel Mama & Family

Friday, December 24th, 2010

Merry Christmas! Happy Hanukkah! Feliz Navidad! Happy Kwanzaa! Mele Kalikimaka! Happy Omisoka! Happy Winter Solstice! Joyeuses Fêtes! Happy New Year! And Happy Festivus for the Rest of Us!

The Travel Mama and Family with Santa Claus

No matter how you say it or what you celebrate, we hope your holiday season is filled with joy!

 

Warmest Wishes,
The Travel Mama & Family 

 

 

How to Survive Visiting Family during the Holidays

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

You want to visit family during the holiday season to introduce your little one to long-treasured traditions and catch up with far-flung loved ones. But you may be nervous about cramped sleeping quarters, squeezing in quality time with everyone on your must-see list, and staying sane on someone else’s turf. Below are some strategies to make sure your visit is as stress-less and joy-filled as possible.

No Room at the Inn?
Settling in at a loved one’s home can be a restful retreat under the right circumstances. Staying as a guest at grandma’s house makes it easy to engage in holiday activities like cookie baking and tree trimming. It also gives you easy access to gift wrapping necessities and a kitchen for food preparation and storage. You may even be treated to some home-cooked holiday meals during your stay! Plus, after your child’s bedtime you are free to chat, watch “It’s a Wonderful Life,” or play board games with your hosts. 

All the better if your hosts are eager, or at least willing, to help out with childcare duties! Most grandparents and other doting relatives are more than happy to babysit while you duck out for last-minute gift shopping or a much-needed night on the town. Whenever I stay at my folks’ house in Arizona, my mom outdoes the best nanny – she helps with naps, feeding the kids, and even does our laundry! 

Consider staying at a hotel if there there isn’t enough room for you at the in-laws or if having your own space will be the best way to keep your family’s schedule (and sanity!) on track. Choose a convenient middle ground between far-spread family members to cut down drive-times. A hotel near eateries and amusements or with amenities like an indoor pool, may increase the fun factor of your trip. Staying in a hotel can make your visit seem more vacation-like too. After all, your Aunt Emily doesn’t offer room service, daily towel changes, or chocolates on your pillow.

Another option is to book a vacation rental home or condo, or do like I often do, and participate in a home exchange. Check out HomeExchange.com or Homelink.org.

Plan a Holiday Potluck Party
In the several years since I moved from the Midwest to the West Coast, I have slowly pared down the list of must-see people during visits home. Hosting (or asking someone to host) a holiday potluck is a festive way to get everyone together while disbursing the cooking duties and keeping stress to a minimum. A casual get together enables you to 1) show off your darling prodigy, 2) squeeze in time for second tier friends and relatives, and 3) free up your schedule for other activities – like naps!

Double-Up Social Visits and Make Your Schedule Known
During one family visit, my mother-in-law broke into tears when she learned my husband and I – and most importantly, our children – were booked for brunch at my sister’s house for our last few hours in town. We eventually convinced her and Grandpa to join us for pancakes and playtime, but not without more tears for her and guilty feelings for us.

Spelling out which days will be spent with whom ensures quality time with everyone on your must-see list, sets appropriate expectations for everyone, and decreases guilt-trips significantly!  This is especially true during the holiday season. If visiting more than one set of grandparents, make sure to spell out which nights of Hanukkah will be spent with which family members or with whom you will be celebrating Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Doubling-up visits with multiple families or social circles can give you some much-needed down-time. 

Safety-Proof Your Temporary Digs
A Christmas tree laden with glass bulbs, tinsel, and strings of beads is a beautiful holiday tradition, but one that can pose a hazard to young children. If traveling with a baby or toddler, ask your hosts to encircle the tree with a safety gate or to place the tree in a room separate from where your child will be exploring. Likewise, holiday candles and decorations should be kept far out of grasp.

Long-treasured items saved by well-meaning grandparents can be dangerous for your child as well. The high chair at my mom’s house, for example, is 45-years-old, which happens to be my sister’s age. The rickety chair has no belt or leg divider to keep a baby from slipping out.  The tray threatens to pinch tiny fingers with its metal claw mechanism for attaching to the base. Even more dangerous are old cribs, in which little arms, legs and (heaven forbid) heads can get stuck, leading to serious injury or even death. Many old cribs were painted with lead-based paint too. Scary old cribs, although sentimental to a grandmother who has stored it for 20-plus years, should be tossed in the trash.

To avoid such hazards, have baby gear shipped to your destination through a company like JetSetBabies.com. An alternative is to rent highchairs, cribs, and other items from a baby gear rental company. You may also want to pack some outlet covers and hide away grandma’s delicate collection of Hummel figurines for the duration of your stay.

Schedule Alone Time
Constant social visits will stress out even the most easygoing parents and children. Why not sneak away from the holiday hubbub for a stroll to see holiday lights or to take a jog to work off all of those gingerbread cookies and candy canes? Making room for exercise and relaxation will minimize meltdowns and enable you to be at your best when showing off your adorable offspring! 

Enter to Win
To make your holiday travels even merrier, enter to win a $150 gift certificate to JoggerMom.com, your ultimate resource for joggers, strollers, and travel gear like baby carriers and travel bags. THIS CONTEST IS NOW CLOSED.

Kelly Morse is the creator of Joggermom.com and the mother of four children (a set of triplets and one singleton).  She was inspired to create the company while attending a stroller fitness class. She said, ”I kept noticing that the mommies pushing the (strollers with small wheels) were always in the back of the class. I was pushing all four of my kiddos the first few months of class so I could not understand why they would want to work harder than they had to pushing a smaller wheeled stroller. The bigger the tire, the easier it is to push.” JoggerMom caters to parents of all types: moms and dads interested in fitness, parents of multiples, traveling parents, and parents looking for the perfect stroller, jogger, baby carrier, or stroller accessory to fit their family’s needs.

One winner will be selected at random using RANDOM.org. You may enter up to three times, using each method of entry once, by Saturday, December 12, 2009. JoggerMom.com will provide the gift certificate to the winner.

1) Visit JoggerMom.com and pick out which SPECIFIC item(s) you would choose if you won the giveaway and how this prize would help you travel better. (For example, don’t just say, “a jogger,” tell us which jogger you want!)

2) Sign up to Become a Travel Mama to receive the Travel Mamas bimonthly e-newsletter. If you are already on our mailing list, instead post a comment mentioning the e-newsletter and stating what you like about TravelMamas.com.

3) Tweet about this contest on Twitter by copying and pasting the entire phrase below. Be sure to post a comment with a link to your tweet!
Win a $150 gift certificate to JoggerMom.com! Visit @TravelMamas to enter! http://bit.ly/5jcjL5

You might also like:

4 Packing Sanity Savers

New York City Holiday Travel Tips for Families

Tips for A Romantic Getaway WITH the Kids!

Top 6 Reasons to Take a Thanksgiving Vacation

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New York City Holiday Travel Tips for Families

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Here are some festive child-friendly activities for Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hanukkah, and New Year’s Eve in New York. I interviewed Fodor’s author and New York aficianado, Meryl Pearlstein, to gather these tips for families traveling to the Big Apple during the holidays.


Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade (Photo Courtesy of Macy’s)

Meryl has attended the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade a whopping eight times. Although it is often a chilly affair, the unique experience is worth the low temperatures. She said, “There’s something about watching all those fabulous balloons float overhead that is mesmerizing.  Older kids will also appreciate the music and dance talent on the floats.”


Rockefeller Center Ice Skating Rink and Christmas Tree
(Photo Courtesy of Tishman Speyer-Photographer Bart Barlow)

No matter your children’s ages, Meryl advises visiting Rockefeller Center after its famous Christmas tree is already up rather than attending the crushingly popular tree-lighting ceremony. You can take in the beauty of the huge twinkling evergreen tree and watch the skaters, or lace up some rental skates and take a spin on the world-renowned ice rink. Afterward, do some holiday shopping at the center’s 49 shops.

A favorite Christmastime activity is perusing the city’s decorated store windows, which are elaborately dressed up for the holidays. Head to the world’s largest department store, Macy’s on 34th Street, for some of the city’s best window-shopping.


Dyker Heights Home Decorated for the Holidays
(Photo Courtesy of Meryl Pearlstein)

For a memorable experience, Meryl suggests taking the Slice of Brooklyn Bus Tour: Christmas Lights & Cannoli Tour. The tour takes visitors to Brooklyn’s Dyker Heights to view homes lit up for the holidays with an array of lights and over-the-top animated displays. The tour concludes with a sweet trip to the Mona Lisa Pastry Shop, a family-owned bakery that specializes in Italian goodies like cannoli, biscotti, and pignoli cookies.


Hanukkah Festival at 92nd Street Y (Photo Courtesty of 92nd Street Y)

Looking for Hanukkah celebrations? Meryl suggests the Annual Family Hanukkah Party hosted by The Jewish Museum. This fundraiser entertains families with children aged ten and younger with live music, arts and crafts, face-painting, balloon art and more. The 92nd Street Y hosts a Hanukkah Festival each year at which children can build their own menorahs, make candles, and decorate dreidels.

Although tweens and teens may get a kick out of ringing in the New Year in Times Square, Meryl warns the scene is overly crowded and not very family-friendly. Instead she advises traveling families celebrate New Year’s Eve by viewing the craziness of Times Square on television together from the safety of a hotel room. Order some pizzas or rooms service, get some noise makers and party hats, play a few rounds of charades, and toast the New Year with some sparkling cider!

For more tips on what to see, what to do, and where to eat in New York with children, buy a Fodor’s Family: New York City with Kids or enter to win one below. Meryl has been writing Fodor’s New York City guides since 2005. She writes restaurant reviews for Gayot.com and has written for New York Magazine and Boston Herald. She is the mother of two boys, ages 15 and 19. Read her blog Meryl Pearlstein’s Travel and Food Notes for travel and food observations from around the world and everything New York City.

Enter to win one of four copies of Fodor’s Family: New York City with Kids in this week’s giveaway. Fodor’s provided the giveaway copies as well as one copy for me to review. Travel Mamas is picking up the costs of shipping. The winner will be selected at random using RANDOM.org. You may enter up to three times, using each method of entry once, by November 28, 2009. THIS CONTEST IS NOW CLOSED.

1) Add a comment below about which New York holiday event listed above you would most like to attend and why.

2) Sign up to Become a Travel Mama to receive the Travel Mamas bimonthly e-newsletter. If you are already on our mailing list, instead post a comment mentioning the e-newsletter and stating what you like about TravelMamas.com.

3) Tweet about this contest on Twitter by copying and pasting the entire phrase below. Be sure to post a comment with a link to your tweet!
I love the holidays in NY! Visit @TravelMamas to win a ”Fodor’s Family: New York City with Kids” this week http://bit.ly/6jcyTC

For more information on this topic see:

New York City’s Best Sites, Activities, and Restaurants for Kids

Top 6 Reasons to Take a Thanksgiving Vacation

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New York City Family Travel