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  • NaBloPoMo Soup: Add Your January Posts

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 20:03:32 by: www.blogher.com

    You have posts and we want to read them. This is a way for people to post a link to their daily January NaBloPoMo posts that they publish on their personal blogs. Please use the linky feature below daily to add your post, and peruse the ones already entered in order to find great things to read as well as support your fellow NaBloPoMo'ers. Bookmark this post so you can use it all month. Melissa writes Stirrup Queens and Lost and Found. Her novel about blogging is Life from Scratch.

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  • Steve Jobs and Apple's Influence on Apps

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 20:03:12 by: www.blogher.com

    Lorraine Akemann at Moms with Apps read the biography of Steve Jobs. She took some valuable lessons from it that she applies to app development. Really, the lessons could apply to any endeavor. She writes, I am not an Apple employee, but I’ve often wondered about the company’s DNA. With some downtime over the holidays I was able to read Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs. The narrative helped me peer into Apple’s core values. And as I step back, I find myself less frustrated by the chaos of the App Store, and more grounded about which apps matter and which don’t. Image: pressureUA via Shutterstock.com

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  • A Bright Pop of Color

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 18:14:55 by: www.blogher.com

    Ok I'm REALLY into an orange front door, especially since Shawn said "go" to it for our house. We both just agree that it's too soon to paint the house (4 months-fresh) even though we are just NOT tan/beige/taupe house people.I think taking this baby step towards hanging our freak flag will get the neighborhood used to us. Here's some other orange doors that are GORGEOUS.     MMmmmm to this color!So which front of our house looks the best?!   You pick! Tell me in the comments!  

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  • Farfalle with Pistachios

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 16:00:00 by: www.blogher.com

    [Editor's Note: This quick and easy farfalle recipe adds some elegance even to regular weeknights. But it might be something to consider making the first course of your New Year's Eve meal, too, if you have the ingredients on hand. --Genie] Farfalle with Pistachio Nuts | Ciao Italia Family Classics Review This is the kind of recipe you need on hand for those nights when you don’t really feel like cooking, because it comes together so fast. And I absolutely adored the pistachios and loved the crunch and texture that they brought to the dish. They definitely lost their crunch in the leftovers, so it’s best eaten the same day you make it, but I still happily ate the leftovers!! Image Credit: Taste and Tell, used by permission.

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  • Eat Some Lucky Foods for a Prosperous New Year

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 13:19:02 by: www.blogher.com

    [Editor's Note: There are lots of foods considered lucky to eat as one year transitions into another. As 2012 begins, will you be dining on lucky foods? This post from our archives features plenty of great options to bring a little good fortune to your new year. --Genie] People all over the world have special traditions for celebrating the arrival of the new year, and often celebrations include the idea of eating lucky foods, thought to bring happiness and prosperity in the year to come. Just which foods are lucky depends on where you are, but there are some traditions that are pretty widespread. Here are suggestions for lucky foods from around the world, but if you have a New Year's Food tradition that brings you luck, please share your link or recipe in the comments. Foods Shaped Like CoinsIn many places, foods shaped like coins are thought to bring prosperity in the new year. If you're in North America, especially the Southern U.S. states, black-eyed peas are a tradition for New Year's Day, possibly dating from the civil war, when most crops were burned and people survived on this type of field pea, also called cow peas. In the South black-eyed peas are most often served in a traditional dish called Hopping John, usually containing ham, rice, and collard greens and paired with macaroni and cheese. Last year on Blogher I shared more ideas for cooking black-eyed peas if you'd like to get the black-eyed peas luck in a less traditional dish. Many African Americans make a type of coin-shaped cookie called Benne Wafers for good luck in the new year, or as part of the celebration of Kwanzaa. In Italy people often eat lentils and sausages just after midnight on New Years Eve, and lentil dishes also symbolize good luck for New Year's in Germany and Brazil. In some eastern European countries, the lentils are combined with sauerkraut, and the long strands of sauerkraut symbolize long life. In Turkey pomegranates symbolize good luck for the coming year because of the red color and the shape of the seeds, which represent money and prosperity. Eating GreensEating vegetables such as cabbage, collard greens, mustard greens, chard, or kale for New Year's seems to be associated with the idea that the folded greens symbolize money and are thought to bring good fortune. While southerners in the U.S. are often adamant that the choice must be collard greens, in Germany Sauerkraut is traditional, and in Denmark Kale cooked in white sauce and sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon is common for New Year's luck. Eating Grapes In Spain, Portugal, Mexico, Cuba, Ecuador, and Peru, it is often traditional to eat 12 grapes at the stroke of midnight, one for each month in the coming year. Some people say the name of the month as they eat each grape, and if that grape is sweet, it will be a good month. Pork for New Year'sPork is a symbol of prosperity in many cultures, which is one reason pork dishes are often associated with New Year's feasts. Pigs are considered good luck because they root forward, symbolizing progress, and the fatty meat is also symbolic of fattening wallets in Italy, where pigs trotters with lentils or Zampone is a traditional New Year's dish. The wide variety of pork dishes eaten all over the world at this time of year includes things like roast suckling pig (Ireland, Cuba, Spain, Portugal, Hungary, and Austria), roast pork and sausages (eastern Europe), ham and collard greens (U.S.), Pig's feet (Sweden), or Sausages with Bigos (Poland). Fish Scales to Symbolize SilverFish, especially those with silver scales, are thought to be a lucky food for the new year in some places. In Germany many New Year's feasts will contain carp, and some people will put some of the scales from the fish in their wallet to bring luck. Many people in Germany or Poland eat Pickled Herring on New Year's, with good fortune coming to those who eat it. In Denmark and other Scandinavian countries, Boiled Cod with Mustard Sauce is eaten to bring in the new year. Bread or Cakes with Things Baked Inside Traditional cakes or bread with symbolic items baked inside are a New Year's custom in many places. In Greece sweet breads often contain coins, and the person who gets the slice with the coin will have good luck that year. In England Christmas puddings often contain coins or small trinkets which symbolize what will happen to you in the new year. In Mexico, a traditional King's Cake or Rosca de Reyes contains a doll, and the person who gets the doll becomes king for the day and must find a woman to be his queen. In Holland the New Year's treat is Olie Bollen or "oil balls" which are a type of puffy doughnut filled with apples, raisins and currants. Eating Noodles at Midnight In Japan Buckwheat Soba noodles are an important part of the Japanese New Year Celebrations. The long noodles are meant to symbolize long life, and you should take care to eat them without breaking the noodles. Buddhist Monks also eat a type of crunchy noodles at midnight on New Year's Eve, and in Buddhist temples bells are rung 108 times. Ring-Shaped Foods Foods like doughnuts or bagels which are shaped like rings are thought by some people to represent the year coming full circle, and are believed to bring luck. An example of this type of lucky food is the Linzer Torte Cookies eaten in many eastern European countries. How do Food Bloggers Celebrate the New Year? Blackeyed Peas and Collard Greens are a favorite of Lisa from Champaign Taste. (That's Lisa's photo of the Black-Eyed Peas and Collard Greens above.) Maki from Just Hungry remembers New Year's Eve Feasts in Japan. Black-eyed Peas are essential for Lisa from Homesick Texan. The Joy of Soup makes Lucky Bean Soup for New Year's Eve. Love and Cooking makes New Year's Lentil Soup. Foodie Obsessed suggests Deep Fried Black Eyed Pea Bites. In Paris, Ms. Glaze will be sharing a New Year's Eve menu, starting with Gateau Chocolat. It's no surprise that Alison from Sushi Day always has Sushi on New Years. Akumakan Recipes shares a delicious sounding New Year's Black-Eyed Pea Salad. At Tezcape - An Escape to Food, Tigerfish thinks of abundance in the new year when she prepares Fried Fish in Soy Sauce and Ginger. Sources: Lucky Foods for the New Year from Epicurious.com New Year's Food Customs Around the World from Daytimer.com New Year's Traditions from Mealtime.org Lucky Foods for the New Year from Lower Hudson Online New Year's Foods for Good Luck from Suite101.com Blogher Food Editor Kalyn Denny also blogs at Kalyn's Kitchen. She often makes Hopping John Soup on New Year's Day for good luck in the year to come.

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  • Google Health Goes Offline: How To Download Your Data

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 05:24:19 by: www.blogher.com

    Last June, Google announced that it was pulling the plug on Google Health, a service online that allowed users to keep track of their health records. As someone who skips around the world as much as I do and who has had hospitals misplace her files a few times, the launch of this service had been a great way for me to manage my information no matter where I found myself. I was sad to see it go, but nowhere as sad as I would have been if I hadn't gotten a reminder message about downloading my information before they pulled the plug on it. "Health records" via Shutterstock. The doors officially close on the first of January, 2012, limiting functionality on the service to downloading a user's data in ZIP format, transferring the information to another service and deleting one's account. Though Google will allow users to download their data for an additional year after that before permanently deleting all the content on Google Health, after the first of January, a user will no longer be able to view, enter, edit or print their data. It is uncertain whether Google will limit or discontinue a user's ability to transfer their profile on Google Health to another service, as one can currently do. If you have information on Google Health, go to health.google.com and enter your Google ID and password. The main menu bar offers several selections. Print Under the "Print" option on the meny, you will find an option to print a wallet card or a profile section. Choose to print a profile section, a window will open allowing you to choose to print all sections, or any specific section. Download Under "Download," you will be given the choice to download your health records in several formats: An easy to print PDF file with all profile data. An industry-standard Continuity of Care Record (CCR) XML file that can be imported into other personal health record tools such as Microsoft HealthVault. Comma-separated value (CSV) files that can be imported into spreadsheets and database programs. HTML and XML versions of the original data sent and contained in your profile from other providers. A ZIP file containing all profile data in all of the above formats. In this same drop-down menu, Google Health also offers the opportunity for users to transfer their information to another service. Currently, the only service that appears to be available for such a transfer is Microsoft HealthVault. For information about how to move your data over to another service, go to this Google Support article. Make sure you do not delete your profile before checking to make sure the transfer was successful or that all your information has downloaded and the files are complete. Save the downloaded files in a safe location. If you have issues with downloads, try to download the files again. For information on how you can keeping using the profile data you have downloaded after Google Health is gone, see this article. Once you have finished downloading and verifying that the information is secure, click on the notification in yellow at the top of your profile. At the bottom of the information on the page, you will see a button that reads "Continue closing your Google Health account." Click on this button. On the following page, read the information, check the box stating "I confirm that I have downloaded and verified copies of all data that I need from my Google Health account, and I understand that my data will be deleted from Google's servers when I close my account" and click the button to continue to the next step. This page will show you whether you have any profiles that are linked with external services or providers. Review the information here and then click "continue to the next step." On this last screen, you will be asked to verify that you want to close your account. Once you do this, deletion will begin immediately and there will be no way for you to access your files, so be sure that you’re ready. Clicking "Delete profiles" will log you out of Google Health. That's it. It is my hope that Google will reintroduce this service once online medical record-keeping becomes a more popular practice. In the meantime, best of luck with the alternatives you find. AV Flox is the section editor of Love & Sex and Health on BlogHer. You can connect with her on Twitter @avflox, Google Plus +AV Flox, or e-mail her directly at av.flox AT BlogHer.com.

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  • A Skier's Dream

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 03:01:41 by: www.blogher.com

    The first heavy snow fall always reminds me of my father. It was his belief the first snow was one that would determine the winter for cross-country skiing. He dreamed of the fresh powder which allowed you to glide with ease across the open trails in the winter time. After a really good storm we would tie our skies to back of the car and drive off to the ski club. At that age I didn’t appreciate the beauty, the silence, or the fresh scent of pine cones along the trail. My poor father would hear the lamenting of a ten-year old complaining of cold feet and ice-cold cheeks. It was my father’s promises of hot chocolate and warmth in the ski lodge that kept me moving along the trail. The first sip always burning the tongue but the rich warmth of the flavor would engulf my whole body. The times spent by the wood stove we would chat and warm-up munching on the baked cookies my mom had made for our trip. It was these special moments in time that take me back to a special place with my Father. Only years later with the birth of my two sons you could see the twinkle in my Father’s eyes and I knew he was waiting for the perfect age to take them out on their own set of skies. They were only toddlers and not quite ready! But if he had his way they would have been on skies the moment they began to walk. Sadly, he never got the chance to take them out on the open trail and share the warmth of a hot chocolate in the wooden lodge. It was the year before my father passed away he logged over 1200 kilometers on his cross-country skies and it was his perfect winter. He hung his certificate with beaming pride looking forward to another great season. Sadly, he never got to relive that moment of glory. On his last night on earth we stood by his bed side and looking out at the gentle snowfall - it was a skier’s dream. It was at his last moments of breath I envisioned him with his backpack skiing through the starry ski and reaching up to heaven above. It is now when I am skiing with my own kids I feel the warm glow of the sun glisten through the trees and it feels as if my dad is watching down over us. It’s at those moments my heart warms just a little more and I reflect on the beauty of winter memories. How do you honor the spirit of loved ones who have passed? Do you feel their spirit with you in your heart?

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  • 10 Fun & Creative Ways to Make Hot Chocolate

    Posted Sat, 31 Dec 2011 00:01:16 by: www.blogher.com

    [Editor's Note: Do you still rely on powdered mixes to make hot chocolate when the weather outside is frightful? This post from the archives will help you break that habit in any number of delicious ways! --Genie] It's one more laugh-out-loud, who-are-they-kidding? moment when somebody publishes a list of the best hot chocolate mixes. For special occasions, you know, like, um, today's breakfast, nothing beats the experience and taste of warming milk and chocolate for, you know, yummy hot chocolate, not boxy-powdery-milk-product-instilled-with-chemical-chocolate-flavored-watery-sugary-drink. Julie from Dinner with Julie says it beautifully. "I know I wax poetic on the subject of hot chocolate ... but it really is something that’s so dead easy to make, and yet so many people resort to the instant packaged stuff, which is full of all sorts of nastiness. Really, if you’re going to bother, it might as well be fantastic." For Julie's take on Dorie Greenspan's Hot Chocolate Bisque, she uses the blender to concoct a silky smooth hot chocolate. Let's look at nine more ways to make homemade hot chocolate, jazzing it up from the simple to the spectacular. My Colombian Recipes adds a little cinnamon to make Colombian-Style Hot Chocolate. Your Home-Based Mom uses two 'secret ingredients' (oh so easy, I promise!) in her hot chocolate and even, this year, put together a Hot Chocolate Bar for a holiday party. Fun! Rookie Cookie warms up milk, cream and white chocolate, then adds a drizzle of raspberry syrup to make White Hot Chocolate with Raspberry. Thought for Food grapples with her three-year old's allergies but devises a dairy-free and soy-free hot chocolate by starting with coconut milk. Life's Ambrosia is sold on a now-traditional recipe for a Peppermint Patty, “Just think a minty hot chocolate for adults”. Perry's Plate decided to skewer cubes of fudge with homemade marshmallows, it's like Hot Chocolate on a Stick! Savory Sweet Life was heart-broken when Starbucks discontinued her favorite coffee addiction but now can't live without Salted Caramel Hot Chocolate where the hot chocolate itself ranges from Swiss Miss to homemade chocolate ganache. One Perfect Bite makes big batches of Cocoa for a Crowd starting at Halloween. Not Martha displays Martha Creds by building miniature gingerbread houses for perching onto a cup of hot chocolate. And you? And you, what's in your hot chocolate? Leave an idea in the comments! This year, BlogHer food editor Alanna Kellogg will serve hot chocolate on Christmas morning along with the make-ahead Eggnog French Toast. Foodies Forever

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  • Beauty Trend: Sparkly Eyeshadow

    Posted Fri, 30 Dec 2011 21:16:25 by: www.blogher.com

    A beauty trend that I have such a crush on right now is glittery/sparkly eyeshadow. I love how they've been dolling up a lot of the girls on The Sing Off with this and I think it's just the perfect sparkly touch for a holiday party or event. Here are a few pretty examples of glittery eyeshadow. You can make it as glam or as subtle as you want by mixing up the color palette and how course or fine the glitter is.    Or, for an even more subtle look, you could try a sparkly liner.   Photos via Pinterest So, do you think you'd try this look?

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  • NFL Player's Wife Dies of Cancer One Month After Wedding

    Posted Fri, 30 Dec 2011 21:03:37 by: www.blogher.com

    (Editor's Note: Professional athletes often make news for off-court antics that aren't exactly flattering. They sometimes think they're above the law and are cited for everything from packing a gun, to driving under the influence to sexual assault (not naming names here). But there are good guys too and NFL player Chris Draft is clearly one of them.  Nordette's post profiles more of a love story than a sports story - but one that transcends classification and will touch your heart on so many levels. ~js)I discovered this true love story through a friend who shared it on Facebook via Clutch Magazine. The couple in the video, LaKeasha Monique Rutledge-Draft and NFL free agent Chris Draft were married on November 27, 2011, and one month later, December 27, Keasha died from cancer.

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