Archive for January, 2010

Popular summer destinations have been busy lately; being visited by tourists from all over the world. Everybody needs a break from their usual, busy routine. But planning a good vacation takes a lot of time and it isn’t always easy to plan after a hard day’s work. While on a vacation, apart from enjoying the beautiful sights that make the place you are visiting famous, you will also want to savor some of the local cuisines and try out new delicacies. Whether it’s Estancia in La Jolla, California or White Gull Inn in Door Country, Wisconsin, you would love to enjoy the best local flavors and make the vacation a pleasant memory.

The American tourism industry is booming and the rise in the number of foreigners visiting has led to a huge success in local restaurants. The U.S. has always been a melting pot of cultures and cuisines. No need to travel the world for a specific cuisine, you can find it right here–Chinese, Italian or a steak right off the grill.

There are many online restaurant guides that list with reviews all local options to dine. From the sandwich shop to the award winning restaurants, you can always find a place that prepares and sells the food you want at a reasonable price.

Whether you are exploring Chicago or chilling out on a sandy beach with clear water in Hawaii, you want to try out some local dishes. You can find these local dishes by visiting a reliable restaurant guide site and search using your preferences as keywords. You will get a detailed list of options to fit your style and budget.

Bon Appétit

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I believe many people are starting to try to eat healthier now.  It used to be tougher for those people who used to have a hard time finding gift baskets for those that were more health conscious.

Not that there is anything wrong, with getting the traditional cheese, chocolate, or cookie gift baskets that many people get.  As a matter of fact, that will probably never go out of style.

But what about those times, when you want your gift to say, “enjoy, but stay on that diet of yours”?  For those, they can be really thankful for the popularity that has grown from health food gift baskets.

Health food sometimes has a negative connotation.  Many people think because its healthy, it means it tastes lousy and nothing could be further from the truth.

Actually, most health food gift baskets carry food such as sugar free cookies or baked (not fried) potato chips, so just because it has the word “health” on the title doesn’t meant that you can’t enjoy a good snack.

There are also many gift basket companies who have gotten in to organic foods.  For example, Givens & Company has wide variety of organic gift baskets, such as all organic nuts such almonds, cashews, California nuts, and many more.

You can find out more about them by going to the gift basket reviews page.

These kind of gift baskets are perfect for any kind of occasion. They could be a congratulations for finally getting a promotion at their job.  It could al be as simple as for a birthday or anniversary of some kind.

The main goal is to splurge for a loved one, but also keep it on the healthy side. It also never hurts to get a fruit gift basket.  These will never go out of style, as they have been around for many years now, and will continue to do so.

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When it comes to food, the Chinese have a common saying, “The masses regard food as their heaven,” which means that food is people’s primal want. It should clearly justify the importance that “eating” holds in Chinese people’s lives. Eating is not just meant to fill the stomach; having food at one’s disposal, being able to consume a good amount of food, and knowing what and how to eat are all viewed as a good “fortune.” Those who promote food culture often use the words of Chinese philosopher Confucius, “diet and love-making, all primal needs of every human being,” finding an aspiring and positive thought basis for such an epicurean lifestyle. There’s probably not another place in this world that has as great a variety of delicious fare as China. If judging by the art and techniques of cooking, aside from France and Italy, perhaps the skills of chefs of no other country can gain recognition from the Chinese.

Extremely developed culinary techniques can make seemingly inedible ingredients, to foreign eyes, into dish after dish of delicious treats by the hands of Chinese chefs. The Chinese cookbook also contains quite an extensive list of foods, including just about anything edible with very few taboos. The Chinese, who see eating as a fortune and life as an art, not only created various kinds of regional food styles in its own vast lands, but have also spread Chinese food culture to far across the seas. Today, in this world where even the farthest corners can seem as close as one’s backyard, Chinese food can be enjoyed in each and every metropolitan throughout the world.

Like many other countries with a vast territory, Chinese cuisines are differentiated largely by its northern and southern regional tastes. Although the best quality rice in China is grown in its northeastern regions, people in those regions, however, just as other northerners, prefer to eat pasta or pastry instead. In the north, classic dishes include Beijing’s lamb hotpot (fondue) and roast duck, and Shandong province’s Lu style cuisines. In the south, the principal foods (foods that are the main source of carbohydrates and dietary fibers, e.g. bread and cereal in the west) are rice-based. A relatively greater variety of dishes are found in the south. There you can find the hot and heavily spiced Sichuan food, Xiang (Hunan) food, sweet and delicate Huaiyang food and the Yue (Cantonese) style which are mosdy seafood and soups. Thus foreigners who have been to China are often pleasandy surprised by the great differences in taste and food types by region.

Having Chinese food not only indulges people’s sense of taste, the sense of sight is also entertained. The Chinese culinary arts rely on the canon of “color (aesthetic beauty), aroma, and taste,” missing any one element would not make a good dish. To make the food pleasing to the eye, usually the appropriate meat and non-meat ingredients are selected; it would include a single main ingredient and two or three secondary ingredients of different colors. Blue, green, red, yellow, white, black and brown sauce colors are to be mixed inthe right combination. Through proper cooking techniques, aestheticism in food is achieved. “Aroma” is achieved by using the right spices, such as scallion, ginger, garlic, cooking wine, aniseed, cassia bark, black pepper, sesame oil, shiitake mushrooms and so on, to stimulate the appetite with the aroma from the cooked food. When preparing food, techniques such as fry, stir-fry, roast, steam, deep-fry, quick-fry, simmer and others are put to use, with the goal of preserving the natural taste and juices of the food. One can also add the right amounts of soy sauce, sugar, vinegar, spices, spicy pepper and other seasoning, making the dishes taste salty, sweet, sour, hot and much more. With tomatoes, turnip, cucumber and other sculptural vegetables to create elegant and intricate decorations to the plate, and the use of exquisite fine china for dining ware, Chinese cuisines really become a true art form complete with aesthetic beauty, wonderful aroma, and great taste.

Americans rely on calculating calories and cholesterol content from food to maintain good health and a shapely figure.

The Japanese are into trying various health foods to preserve an everlasting youth. Different from both, the Chinese way of looking at health lies in its philosophy of “food and medicine sharing the same roots.” The firm belief that food has healing powers and therapeutic effects has led to the introduction of many edible plants and herbs. And with the benefits of disease prevention and health preservation, they have become regular dishes in Chinese homes. At the same time, there is the pursuit of refinement in cooking. The amount of food and mixing of ingredients is very essential, and it is recommended that meats and non-meats be used in combination. Whether making dishes or soups, foods with suited nutritional contents are put in combination so as to achieve the goal of balanced nutritional intake. And it is recommended to dine until the stomach is about 70% to 80% full, as this practice is passed down the generations as a secret to long life.

At the dinner table, the Chinese has their own set of manners and customs. When dining, the eater must be seated. When people of all ages and both sexes sit at the same table, the elderly must be seated with priority. One must eat food held with chopsticks; when having soup, a soupspoon must be used. There’s also to be no noise when eating and so on. These etiquettes have continued to this day, but the biggest change is none other than the fact that more and more Chinese have proactively given up the rule of “No talking when eating.” Indeed, when dining with the Chinese, one would frequendy encounter a dining environment full of chatting and noises. Many people who have their mouths full still intend to chat away. This phenomenon may be due to the reason that contemporary Chinese have come to consider dining as an important social opportunity. People need, at this time, to relax and talk about certain soothing and joyous topics to increase understanding between those sitting at the table.

In recent years, due to the accelerated development of industries and commerce, aside from traditional menu-ordered food services, Chinese fast foods have dawned onto the scene. And not only this, cuisines from every corner of the world have, one after another, made their grand appearances in all major cities in China; Italian pizza, French gourmet, Japanese sushi, American burgers, German beers, Brazilian barbeque, Indian curry, Swiss cheese and more. Anything one can think of can be found, a true all-inclusive list of dining choices. It justifies the saying “Eat in China” even more so.

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