Monday, November 12, 2018

‘Queer Eye’ Food Expert Antoni Porowski Shares His Friendsgiving Tips and Tricks

They say friends are the family we choose and there’s no better way to choose to celebrate your besties than with a Friendsgiving. While this concept may be foreign to those outside of major cities or universities, its popularity has gained significant traction, resulting in food and alcohol-driven affairs far superior to Aunt Mildred’s watery yams, judgmental in-laws, and arguments at the dinner table on actual Turkey Day.

We were lucky enough to attend a Friendsgiving hosted by Boursin and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy‘s Antoni Porowski for an evening full of laughs, wine, and lots and lots of cheese. Looking to plan a Friendsgiving of your own? Check out some tips and tricks from the Netflix star himself.

Chowhound: If you were to bring any dish to a Friendsgiving, what would it be and why?

AP: Yukon Gold potatoes. They’re the sweetest, they’re the most flavorful.  Boil them, peel them—usually I use skins but not for those because they’re too rough—half a stick of butter, one whole thing of Boursin, whip it up, and then, on top, add some kind of another sharp cheese, like a gruyere. Then bake it with a bit of paprika—or even an Old Bay Seasoning is really nice—so you have a sort of savory, crispy cheese thing and you have the oozy, creamy cheese on the inside. And then you can just re-bake it when you get there.
 
Chowhound: What would you recommend a self-proclaimed “horrible cook”  bring to a Friendsgiving?
AP: A cheese and charcuterie board. Be creative. Fresh fruit is a lot harder to get in the winter months, except if you’re in New York or L.A, but go to Trader Joe’s, get your dried apricots or dried whatever fruit you have, [and] buy high quality $8-9  packages of crackers. Bring those and a really cute cutting board—just go to West Elm or wherever and assemble a nice cute platter that you can leave [with the host]. You can’t mess that up.

Dave Kotinsky/Getty

Chowhound: What is a traditional Thanksgiving dish that people can’t seem to get right?
 
AP: People are constantly trying to figure out how to make the best turkey. And there’s so much debate. Is it a wet brine? A dry brine? I take advice from my O.G. mentor and dear friend, Ted Allen. He taught me dry brining. If you salt it heavily, it releases all of the moisture, and then it soaks it back in with all of the flavoring and aromatics that you put in. I [also] do not trust the legs, where you tie them together. If you leave them separate, it gets crispy along the edges so you have more skin surface. Don’t be afraid of butter. This is not the time to be cheap with butter. Baste that mother f#!ka’ and just get butter under the skin. Be healthy the next day.
What I [also] like to do is deconstruct it. Even if you cut it in half and you lay it flat, it allows for an even cooking surface if you have a smaller bird and you can fit that.

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Chowhound: What is a quick tip for someone throwing his or her first Friendsgiving?
AP: Keep it simple. It’s a good opportunity, especially living in New York,  to be surrounded by people from all these different cultures. Tap into your herotage, tap into what it was like being a kid, things your parents prepared. And you know what, if your grandma made really shitty brussels sprouts, figure out how to make them right and roast them and get them brown and crispy. Just make it right.


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9 One-Dish Thanksgivings You Don’t Have the Guts to Make

Toss all pretense out the window when it comes to Thanksgiving cooking. Let’s be real. It’s a holiday of gluttony. Sure, we’re thankful and all, but these days, almost nothing about Thanksgiving is sacred. Case in point: BuzzFeed’s Thanksgiving in a Bucket, which is exactly what it sounds like: stuffing, mashed potatoes, Brussels sprouts, sweet potatoes, turkey, gravy, and cranberry sauce, all layered on top of one another in a three-gallon pail. (We can just hear Patton Oswalt singing “I want a failure pie in a sadness bowl” in our heads right about now.) We prefer not to taste all of Thanksgiving in one bite, but should you feel inclined to do so, here are six mash-ups to inspire you.

1. Turkey Pot

Fetch Bar & Grill

Who needs plates at your Thanksgiving dinner? Over-rated. At Fetch Bar & Grill in Warwick, New York, Executive Chef Adam Powers makes a one-dish Thanksgiving dinner in a small pot that you normally use just on the stove. He starts with fresh, oven-roasted turkey breast served over cranberry sauce and pan-style herbed stuffing. Then comes onion-mushroom gravy, mashed potatoes, and it’s topped with frizzled red onions. Check it out and see if you can mimic this “Powers”-ful play — if you dare.

2. Simple One-Sheet Thanksgiving Dinner

PBS

Sorry, this dish isn’t that nutty. It kinda makes perfect sense. With a pound each of herbed, spiced potatoes, sweet potatoes, and Brussels sprouts, as well as two ginormous turkey drumsticks, there’s a chance this could feed more than two people. Get the recipe.

3. Butternut Stuffed Turkey Tenderloins with Cranberries and Pecans

skinnytaste

Now you don’t think of the word “healthy” when you think of cramming all of Thanksgiving into one dish, but think again. Gina Homolka of SkinnyTaste figures it out. There’s sage, maple syrup, shallots, and either kale or spinach in there too. Note the lack of mashed potatoes, stuffing, and gravy, however. Hmmmm. That’s a little risky. Get the recipe.

4. BuzzFeed’s Thanksgiving in a Bucket

Lauren Zaser/BuzzFeed

The whole premise of Thanksgiving in a Bucket is that it saves a lot of space and travels well. So maybe it’s a good bet if you’re hosting a picnic in November at the world’s smallest apartment?

5. Our Thanksgiving Turkey Cake

Chowhound

OK, so we did our own experimenting a few years ago and came up with a centerpiece made with layers of turkey cake, mashed potatoes, cranberry citrus sauce filling, sausage stuffing, sweet potatoes, and toasted marshmallow topping. The warning—“This dish is not recommended for people who require an inch of space between food groups”—says it all. Get our Thanksgiving Turkey Cake recipe.

6. Ed Levine’s All-Pie Thanksgiving Fantasy

Robyn Lee & J. Kenji López-Alt/Serious Eats

Serious Eats founder Ed Levine made his all-pie Thanksgiving fantasy a reality one year with green bean casserole pie, mashed potato pie, stuffing pie, and turkey pot pie with cranberry on the bottom.

7. One-Dish Thanksgiving

Anndrea Bailey/Just A Pinch

This is certainly a one-dish Thanksgiving if your idea of a holiday meal is small and protein-focused. You cook cornbread or good old turkey stuffing mix, then spread it out in a baking dish, covered with precooked turkey strips and a jar of gravy. Cover with foil, bake, and voila, the core holiday experience. Bonus: it’s contained enough to make eating in bed a distinct possibility.

8. Rachael Ray’s Turkey Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie

Food Network

Rachael Ray covered all the Thanksgiving bases in just 60 minutes with an all-encompassing main—a turkey sweet potato shepherd’s pie—and cran-applesauce sundaes for dessert.

9. Kelsey Nixon’s Potato Latkes with Smoked Turkey Leg and Kumquat Chutney

Cooking Channel

Cooking Channel’s Kelsey Nixon went for traditional with a twist, creating potato latkes with smoked turkey and kumquat chutney to achieve the entire experience of Thanksgiving in one bite.

Whatever you decide to make, this Cast Iron Dutch Oven will be your best co-pilot.

Related video: How to Make Sheet Pan Thanksgiving Dinner

— An earlier version of this article is by Susannah Chen; updated in 2018 by Chowhound Editors.



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International Thanksgiving Dishes To Broaden Your Horizons

Indian tandoori turkey for global Thanksgiving

Heavily touted as a holiday that brings people together, Thanksgiving is a perfect time to welcome new flavors into the fold as well. Traditional dishes needn’t be banished from the banquet this fall, but even the old standbys can be given new life with unexpected seasonings.

Of course, many American Thanksgiving tables already include regional and international dishes and influences. We are a melting pot, after all, and generations of immigrants from all over the world have incorporated their own foods and flavors into the canonical holiday spread. You might find a dish of sauerkraut beside the sweet potato casserole, a pot of menudo and a platter of tamales next to the gravy boat, a bowl of daal nestled up to a biryani-stuffed turkey, a Chinese-style steamed turkey as centerpiece, or even a soy-roasted duck in place of the bigger bird.

Whether your meal already includes multicultural dishes but you’re always hungry for more delicious new twists on familiar favorites, or your family feast is way more traditional and you’re ready for a change, it’s easy to bring all kinds of global flavors to your groaning board. You can search out specialties from various countries and simply add them to the mix, or you can tweak the tried-and-true, from the bird and all its classic sides, on through the dessert course, to have more interesting flavors than what you may be used to. Here are some basic ideas to give you a little inspiration:

Turkey and Gravy

Changing up the star of the show is a cinch; just switch out the rosemary, sage, and other fall herbs for spice blends like berbere, za’atar, Indian curry powder, or Chinese five spice, or slather the bird with harissa, mole, or Thai curry paste (in which case, stuff the cavity with ginger and lemongrass too), and cook it as you normally would. Use the drippings to make a matching gravy, and if you’ll need extra (because honestly, there’s no such thing as too much gravy), make a batch ahead of time. Using a judicious hand, sub in the spices you’ll use on the whole bird instead of the thyme in the recipe, and if the white wine will clash, substitute more turkey stock instead. Of course, if it makes more sense for your chosen flavors (and if your family will tolerate it), ladle mole, spiced yogurt, or a coconut milk curry sauce over your turkey instead of gravy. And if your meal is meatless, you can do the same basic spice swapping with your homemade tofurkey or protein of choice.

Stuffing

This, too, can simply be seasoned with different spice blends for an easy fresh take, but you can also play around with the base ingredients. Replace bread cubes with rice (whether sticky, long grain, wild, etc.), or quinoa, couscous, and other grains, and mix in nuts and dried fruits for texture instead of plain old celery and apples. Look to the dim sum classic sticky rice with Chinese sausage, Persian jeweled rice, and Moroccan tagines for inspiration. Try rice and beans with a Cuban-spiced bird. Or take a cue from tamales and make a masa stuffing for a mole turkey.

Bread and Rolls

Your bread basket can still include perfect Parker House rolls and buttermilk biscuits, but why not also add pumpkin naan, black pepper lavash, rosemary focaccia, or cheesy gougères?

Mashed Potatoes

While creamy whipped potatoes and gravy are a surefire crowd pleaser, there are lots of other vegetables that make equally great mashes or purées, and that can be adapted to countless tastes. Butternut squash puréed with Middle Eastern spices and a little pomegranate molasses is a fabulous option to consider, as are Mexican-spiced mashed sweet potatoes (cumin, chipotle, lime), or miso-sesame turnip mash, or garlicky mashed yuca

Other Vegetable Side Dishes

These can be borrowed wholesale from various cuisines—tempura squash, caponata, fried plantains—or you can just toss your usual roasted brussels sprouts, carrots, and other root veggies in a blend of spices that’s a bit more exciting than simple salt and pepper. Add soy, miso, or tahini too for another depth of flavor, as long it harmonizes with your chosen seasonings. Not all cuisines complement each other, but many flavor profiles overlap or can be successfully mixed and matched. Try Korean seasonings on your spinach or braised greens. If you’re a fan of green bean casserole, think about making it with coconut milk (which is also good for vegan guests) and perhaps curry-dusted panko bread crumbs on top instead of or in addition to the onions.

Cranberry Sauce

Although you can’t forget the perfectly piquant fruit in some form (whether you like it chunky or jellied), you can make it a little more exciting with different seasonings—five spice is nice, or add a little chipotle for a smoky kick—or change the format up entirely and make a cranberry salsa instead. Add other fruits like mango or figs to make more of a chutney. Or get a little tricky and make vinegret, a ruby-red Russian salad of beets, potatoes, and pickles, which not only looks similar to cranberry relish, but fulfills the same sweet-tart role at the table. (But maybe also keep a can of the classic stuff on hand in case of revolt.)

Dessert

To cap off the big meal, die-hard traditionalists simply cannot do without a pumpkin pie, and some of them will accept no modifications (like, not even a relatively conventional eggnog pumpkin pie, let alone one with walnut streusel and Sichuan peppercorn). But for more flexible families, you might try a pumpkin flan instead, or an ube pie (call it purple yam or sweet potato if that helps win hearts and minds). If you’re apple pie people, our Spiked Apple Galette recipe makes a fine French alternative.

Above all, don’t be afraid to get creative in the kitchen this Thanksgiving, and play around with palates from various parts of the globe. But if you’d like some firmer guidelines, check out these multicultural, holiday-appropriate recipes to get you started.

Adobo Butter Turkey

adobo butter roast turkey for southwest or mexican thanksgiving

Nutmeg Nanny

This gorgeously burnished bird could be called Latin American, Mexican, or Southwestern, but it is most definitely delicious thanks to dried pasilla, ancho, and chipotle chiles, garlic, spices, vinegar, and citrus. Mashed sweet potatoes would play particularly well off the vibrant, complex flavors of the adobo butter. Get the recipe.

Tandoori Turkey

Indian tandoori turkey

Mayra Beltran for The Houston Chronicle

Indian spices like coriander, garam masala, fenugreek, and cardamom in the brine, the marinade, and the stuffing make this richly flavored turkey taste as stunning as it looks. The yogurt-based marinade, similar to that used in tandoori chicken, turns out to be a fine Thanksgiving trick (also used to great effect in this Turkish-spiced turkey). The Cognac and heavy cream enriched gravy may not be Indian, but it sure is tasty, and fitting for the decadent bird. Get the recipe.

Roasted Turkey with Thai Aromatic Paste

Thai roast turkey

She Simmers

There are numerous options for Asian-flavored turkeys in general, like Chinese five spice, a Peking-style lacquer, or a soy-miso glaze, but this relatively simple bird boasts an aromatic Thai seasoning paste of garlic, cilantro, white peppercorns, palm sugar, and oyster sauce rubbed under the skin. Soy butter is brushed on top for a golden-brown glaze. Consider a sticky rice stuffing (though it’s safest to make it outside of the bird itself). Get the recipe.

Pan Seared Radishes with Miso Butter

pan seared radishes with miso butter

Chowhound

Miso adds a salty umami depth to anything it touches (for instance, this miso caramel apple pie). Here, it’s mixed with togarashi and butter for a spicy, rich medium in which to roast radishes. It’s definitely worth trying radishes this way, but the seasoning and cooking method will also work just as well for pretty much any root vegetable, and will be just uncommon enough to pique interest while still marrying beautifully with more traditional Thanksgiving flavors. Get our Pan Seared Radishes with Miso Butter recipe.

Tamale Stuffing

Mexican Thanksgiving tamale stuffing

Sweet Life

Tamales are generally soft, steamy, and fragrant, just like bread stuffing, so why not make one giant tamale to go with your Thanksgiving spread, particularly if you go with a Mexican or South American flavor for the bird? The soft masa, poblano peppers, chorizo, and mushrooms are steamed in banana leaves to imbue extra earthiness. Get the recipe.

Toasted Israeli Couscous Pilaf with Dates, Almonds, Cinnamon, and Parsley

toasted Israeli couscous pilaf with dates and almonds

Chowhound

Chewy, nutty pearls of toasted Israeli couscous make another great stuffing alternative, especially if you make a Moroccan or Turkish turkey. The dates and almonds lend additional flavor and texture, and the cinnamon is perfect for fall. If you need a gluten-free option, the same flavors would be a natural fit for quinoa too. Get our Toasted Israeli Couscous Pilaf with Dates, Almonds, Cinnamon, and Parsley recipe.

Zimbabwean Peanut Butter & Butternut Mash (Nhopi)

nhopi, zimbabwean pumpkin peanut mash

Global Table Adventure

It may sound strange at first glance, but peanut butter adds a great depth and extra creaminess to mashed butternut squash, in the same way sesame paste works in tahini whipped sweet potatoes—and both are vegan. You’ll find a couple more squash recipes from Zimbabwe at the link, but scroll down the page for the nhopi. Get the recipe.

Cinnamon Roasted Pumpkin with Tahini Yogurt and Hazelnut Dukkah

Cinnamon Roasted Pumpkin with Tahini Yogurt and Hazelnut Dukkah

Happy Hearted Kitchen

Plenty of pumpkin is the autumnal order of the season, and here it’s roasted with cinnamon and black pepper, then garnished with honey-tahini yogurt and dukkah, the Egyptian hazelnut, sesame seed, and spice blend. If you’re sick of squash by now, try making this with carrots, parsnips, turnips, rutabagas, or brussels sprouts instead. Get the recipe.

Purple Sweet Potato Pie with Gingerbread Crust and Pecan Streusel

ube purple sweet potato pie with gingerbread crust and pecan streusel

Wife Mama Foodie

Ube is the Filipino ingredient du jour, and it makes a spectacular showing with its rich purple hue. Although the color is uncommonly lovely, this dessert will taste familiar to anyone used to pumpkin and sweet potato pies. For a more traditional Filipino recipe, this Filipino egg pie is simple, custardy, and sweet, but if you want the warm spices of fall with a few new bells and whistles, this purple pie is perfect. Get the recipe.

Vegan Chai Spice Poached Pear Cake

vegan Chair spiced poached pear cake

Fair Isle

Indian chai spices (cinnamon, ginger, cloves, cardamom, nutmeg, and black pepper) work beautifully with lots of fall ingredients; add chai masala to your pumpkin pie for a subtly different spice, bake a chai spice apple pie, or make this whimsical yet elegant poached pear dessert. The tender fruit helps the spicy cake stay moist, and a dusting of powdered sugar adds just enough extra sweetness, but some caramel drizzled on top of each slice, or even some caramel ice cream, certainly wouldn’t be amiss. Get the recipe.

Maple Pecan Baklava

maple pecan baklava

Bakeaholic Mama

Greeks are often associated with baklava, but many countries that were part of the Ottoman Empire lay claim to the dessert. This version is solidly North American with its gooey maple syrup in place of honey, and pecans instead of pistachios or walnuts. The sweet, crunchy little bites evoke classic pecan pie with an extra-flaky, crispy crust. Get the recipe.

Bring that extra flair to your table with this beautiful Moroccan Tile Dinner Plates Set.

For more Thanksgiving tips, hacks, and recipes, check out our Ultimate Thanksgiving Guide.​

Related video: How to Fix a Dried-Out Thanksgiving Turkey Breast



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7 Unusual Fall Vegetables to Serve at Thanksgiving

Mediterranean braised chard

Whether you have a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) membership, find produce at your local farmer’s market, or opt for what’s most in-season at the grocery store, you’re probably encountering more unfamiliar root vegetables and darker, leafier greens. Although these veggies may not immediately spring to mind when planning your Thanksgiving dinner menu, they might just make for an unexpected-yet-perfect side dish to accompany your traditional main courses.

And just because they’re side dishes doesn’t mean they are less important. Make them stand out by serving them in a beautiful wood serving bowl.

Kohlrabi

crisply kohlrabi rapple salad

Cookie And Kate

I’ll start with my favorite of the unusual fall vegetables: kohlrabi! Part of the cabbage family, kohlrabi is crunchy like a radish with just a hint of sweetness; it might remind you of an apple. For this reason, it complements honeycrisp apples perfectly in a crispy salad. When you’ve got the turkey and the mashed potatoes but realize you’re missing the ‘crunch,’ kohlrabi might be your answer. Get this Crispy Apple and Kohlrabi Salad recipe.

Swiss Chard

Mediterranean braised chard

Chowhound

Loaded with vitamins but less bitter than kale, Swiss chard can provide the base for that sautéed greens dish you’re trying to figure out. Since it’s as versatile as spinach, you can experiment with a more creative side involving salty capers and sweet golden raisins. Or, you make a simpler version using only olive oil, garlic, salt, and pepper. Either way, Swiss chard can be added seamlessly to this year’s Thanksgiving meal. Get our Mediterranean Braised Chard recipe.

Beet Greens

beet greens with honey and pecans

Mele Cotte

Akin to chard but but with way less street cred, you might be surprised to find that beet greens are similarly mild and, indeed, edible! You’ll have more success encountering beet greens if you belong to a CSA or if you frequent a farmer’s market, and if you do, then know you one more leafy green available for use in your holiday side dishes. Try a recipe that incorporates a touch of sweetness, and if you haven’t come across beet greens yet, you can easily substitute chard or spinach. Get this Honey Beet Greens with Pecans recipe.

Japanese Turnips

Japenese turnips with miso

Dishing Up The Dirt

Thanksgiving sides often involve sweet (like in the previous recipes) or roasted flavors. For the best of both worlds, give roasted Japanese turnips a shot. A little sweeter than regular turnips, try enhancing this difference with the addition of maple syrup. And bonus: If your guests are picky, you can double, triple, or quadruple the syrup—heck let’s just have candy for dinner, it’s not like we’re grown-ups or anything! Get this Miso Turnips recipe.

Leeks

braised leeks

Chowhound

If your guests are adult people who occasionally eat a vegetable, they might be pleasantly surprised to find that leeks can be a side dish all on their own. Try serving a braised leeks dish and see how well this vegetable, often relegated to the role of ‘extra’ or ‘supporting actor,’ actually shines on its own. Get our Braised Leeks recipe.

Carrot Tops

grilled cheese with carrot top pesto

Happy Yolks

Shifting gears back to the theme of ‘you can eat that vegetable top,’ it turns out carrot tops are edible, and even more unexpected, make for an excellent pesto. Though you can go full ‘grilled cheese’ as the following recipe dictates, I recommend you try serving just the carrots-with-pesto part as an elevated version of your typical roasted-carrots side dish. Having bites of carrot accompanied with a little carrot-top pesto is an interesting and nice way to use the whole carrot, avoiding unnecessary food waste. Get this Grilled Cheese with Roasted Carrots and Carrot Green Pesto recipe.

Brussels Sprout Tops

spicy stir-fried brussels sprout trops

Kitchenist

Finally, if you’re looking for something truly different, give brussels sprout tops a shot. These, like the beet greens, are more likely to make an appearance in a CSA box than at the grocery store. A spicy dish using brussels sprout greens, with the addition of chili and ginger, is anything but traditional—and if your guests haven’t yet declared you a Thanksgiving heretic for eschewing the green bean casserole, you might realize you’ve found delicious harmony in blending tradition with inventive use of these seasonal veggies. Get this Spicy Stir-fried Sprout Tops recipe.

Related video: Our Favorite Vegetable-Based Thanksgiving Recipes



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How World War II Inspired Club Med, One of the World’s Biggest Travel Brands

“Here too, everything is possible,” wrote socialist Marceau Pivert in a 1936 opinion piece as a workers’ revolution was cresting in France. Overwrought with classism, unchecked capitalism, and hurtling toward plutocracy, the French Popular Front Movement, led by Pivert and others, ushered in workers’ rights and benefits. Pivert’s op-ed, much like his movement, sought to liberate the French from undignified overwork, earning scraps while the bourgeois class alone enjoyed the rewards of a healthy economy. Among the demands was a full two weeks of paid vacation, which was met, much to the delight of working class people. But where to go?

Club Med history

Club Med

All these social gains were halted temporarily but harshly in 1940 during the invasion and subsequent occupation of Paris by Germany during World War II. Four years later, after Paris was freed from the Nazis, the country, like much of the world, was fundamentally changed. Gérard Blitz, a Belgian living in France and future founder of Club Med, was among those whose philosophical core had been permanently altered.

Born in Antwerp, Blitz had joined the French Resistance against the invading Nazi Party and like his comrades, saw and read about unimaginable atrocities. At age 36, Blitz, who was a celebrated athlete and water polo star, began dreaming up a seaside utopia where men and women of all creeds, religions, and nationalities, including victims of concentration camps, would come come together to enjoy sun and leisure, practice sport, and heal from the ravages of the war.

Settling on a sandy strip of beach in Alcudia, on the northern tip of Mallorca, Club Méditerranée was established in 1950. Blitz’s mission would be embraced almost instantly by droves of people seeking to escape and unwind in the wake of a towering tragedy. The simple idea was summarized in rudimentary marketing leaflets emblazoned with Blitz’s simple, poignant credo and passed out by hand: “The aim in life is to be happy. The place to be happy is here. And the time to be happy is now.”

Club Med history

Club Med

Club Méditerranée was a far cry from what the global resort brand has become over the last seven decades. The original not-for-profit compound housed guests in simple tents, leftover from the war, on a beach with no running water and very few amenities. Club Med was certainly more Swiss Family Robinson than St. Regis at the time, but it didn’t change the fact that Blitz had tapped into something. The energy at Club Méditerranée was new and exciting and proved highly attractive to young singles concerned less with social and economic status and more with enjoying the thrill of sport, relaxation, community, and other earthly pleasures.

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Key to Blitz’s proposition were the energetic social directors or GOs (“gracious organizers”) who, in addition to teaching scuba, surfing, and water skiing, fostered a highly communal atmosphere ensuring guests connected both with the club’s beautiful surroundings and vibrant staff, but also each other.  The club was an instant hit and Blitz was forced to reject thousands of prospective guests that first year due to lack of space and resources. What started as a small summer beach commune, quickly manifested into a movement laced with a distinctly hedonistic undercurrent.

Club Med history

Club Med

By the second summer the tents had been replaced with villas and Blitz and his growing team began opening for-profit clubs all around the Mediterranean to meet demand. By the summer of 1957, Club Med had registered 10,000 guests. By 1959 there were over 20 clubs, mostly in Europe but some as far as Tahiti.

Another industry “first” propagated by Club Med was known simply as the “bar necklace,” and came about in 1955. Just as it sounds, the beaded necklaces were purchased and worn by Club Med guests replacing money as currency for food and drink. Guests would pop a bead off to pay for victuals, solving for logistics but also signaling a sort of rejection of mainstream society and old financial structures, even if just illusory. The necklace was a precursor to another one of Club Med’s impactful industry innovations—the all-inclusive model, which would be fully realized in the 1980s and replicated many times over.

1956 brought the first slopeside club in the mountain village of Leysin, Switzerland as Blitz and his team capitalized on opportunities away from the sand and surf. The 1960s and 1970s brought a blossoming sexual revolution coupled with relatively affordable air travel which catapulted the brand, earning it hordes of patrons and widespread recognition as the purveyor of hot parties, attracting the same young, wistful singles seeking adventure and pleasures of mind, body, and soul. Eventually, Club Med reached nearly every corner of the globe, including ski and beach clubs in Asia, Africa, and the Americas, even building an airport in Punta Cana to service their own resort. As the business grew, so did its legend and during the 70s and 80s, Club Med was not only wildly popular but as synonymous with carnal pleasures as the Playboy Mansion.

Club Med history

Club Med

At 69, Club Med has gone through several ownership teams, phases, and identity shifts. Still, its growth has continued and much of Blitz’s spirit lives on. With well over seventy destinations worldwide, many now cater to the wealthy or family audiences, and there are plans to open several more clubs in the next couple years. Club Med Miches in the Dominican Republic is in the process of being built and a recently opened ski resort in the French Alps is thriving.

Each Club Med is curated to offer its own energy, activities, and even architectural aesthetic. And the food and beverage program has likewise evolved over the years. Largely credited with popularizing the all-you-can-eat buffet in the 1960s and underscoring the brand’s insistence on indulgence, Club Med has more recently refined their offerings with signature a la carte restaurants, highlighting local ingredients and its Michelin level talent in the kitchen.

Club Med food

Club Med

About a decade ago, I stayed one sunny week at Club Med in Cancun, Mexico. Like clockwork each night, a dance party would form, led by those convivial GOs pouring cocktails and pulling men and women out to dance as a deep drum and bass pulsed through the dense Caribbean air. By the third evening, I realized nothing about these parties was spontaneous and for a moment felt duped at how orchestrated it was to make me feel like I was having the time of my life. A second thought quickly replaced it, however. “I was having the time of my life and why shouldn’t someone orchestrate that for me?!” There is much to be said for true spontaneity in travel, but another argument can be made for the guarantee of a good time during those most precious of vacation days.

Club Med history

Club Med

Related Video: How to Make a Vanilla-Rum Malted Milkshake



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What Is the Difference Between Natural and Organic Wine?

No shame if you normally pick your favorite wine like most people (which is purely based on the label, obviously). Words like tannins, legs, and “mouth feel” are enough to kill your buzz before it ever starts. And don’t even get us started on complicated pairings. Which brings us to another hot—and yet thoroughly confusing—topic in the wine world: organic wines versus natural wines.

If you’re struggling to understand the difference between the two, you’re not alone. Let’s start with organic. Much like all other organic foods, an organic wine comes from grapes that have been grown in a vineyard without any synthetic chemicals, like fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides or fungicides, says GuildSomm, a nonprofit international organization for sommeliers and wine professionals. Taking chemicals out of the equation early on means there’s only good stuff left in the soil: worms, insects and bacteria, which means healthier grapes. But that’s kind of where the happy news ends. Even if grapes were grown organically, once they’re picked, a winemaker can still manipulate the wine in the cellar and use all sorts of additives, filtration, or preservatives, like sulfur dioxide.

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For all your festive occassions
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But then there’s natural wines, which have been the buzz of the wine world lately and are served up at hipster havens like Contra in Manhattan’s Lower East Side and Bar Crenn in San Francisco. Natural is kinda of an umbrella term for a vino that’s made from organically-farmed grapes and doesn’t have additives or sulfates. (That means that all natural wines are organic, but not all organic wines are natural.) If we’re getting technical here, you could say that natural wine would more accurately be called non-interventionist or lightly interventionist wine because the winemaker is only making small additions or subtractions in the cellar during the winemaking process. And almost all winemakers agree that natural wine is made without fermented yeast, additives, or sulfites. That said, there’s no real regulating board of natural wines, so you’ve pretty much got to take the winemaker’s word for it when they say it’s natural.

glass of rose wine (how is rose wine made?)

Shutterstock

So, can you taste the difference?

Sometimes! Organic wines are pretty similar to most traditional wines out there, but natural wines tend to be more funky-tasting, even veering into sour beer or kombucha territory. And beyond that yeasty kick, some even look different. Orange wine, for example, is a natural white wine that’s made like a red, meaning the skin and seeds stay in contact with the juice during fermentation, giving it that amber glow.

Do I have to store natural wines differently than organic ones?

Because natural wines are less stable than typical wines, make sure you keep the bottles in a cool place away from light (like a wine fridge) and you drink them within a year of purchasing. Once you’ve opened a bottle, seal it with a cork up before putting it back in the fridge.

My wine store guy used the word Pét-nat. What does that mean?

That’s a term used in the natural wine world. These wines are bottled before the fermenting is totally finished, which means you’re going to get a bit of fizz. Not like champagne bubbles, but definitely a pop.

Related Video: How to Judge Wine by the Cork



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What to Bring to Friendsgiving That’s Not Wine

Thanksgiving and Friendsgiving host and hostess gifts

You’re not thinking of stopping by a wine store on the way to Friendsgiving, are you? Anyone can run to the nearest neighborhood shop and grab a bottle, but your Friendsgiving host will be so much more impressed with your gift-giving skills if you up your game and bring any one (or a few) of these life-savers to the table.

Jacobsen Salt Sampler ($30.29)

Jacobsen Salt Sampler Gourmet Salt Gift Set

Amazon

This six-vial sampler, which includes Smoked Ghost Chili and Vanilla Bean versions, is a favorite of chefs everywhere. You can pretty much guarantee your host won’t be able to wait to sprinkle them on everything, from popcorn to pork chops. Plus, the packaging is so spot-on that they can double as table decor.See It

What Do You Meme? Party Game ($29.97)

What Do You Meme? Party Game

Amazon

Coming to Friendsgiving with a game in hand means you’ve just relieved your host—and guests who don’t know each other yet—from making small talk. Plus, this hysterical game is a breeze to learn (think Apples to Apples, but with memes). It basically requires zero talent or skills, which is good news after a few glasses of wine.See It

Twill Kitchen Towels, Set of 3 ($15.00)

striped twill kitchen towels

Sur La Table

These striped kitchen towels aren’t just good-looking—they’re the unsung heroes of the kitchen. You can fold them up to use them as oven mitts, put them on the table as trivets, use them as napkins, and even put one underneath a cutting board to keep it from sliding around on the counter while you chop.See It

Bloody Mary Kit ($63.50)

Gourmet Bloody Mary Cocktail Kit

Mouth.com

Okay, so your host probably isn’t going to dip into a Bloody Mary during Friendsgiving (well, who really knows what’s going on in the kitchen), but gifting a next-day-hair-of-the-dog cocktail kit is a nice way to give them a built-in brunch plan the following morning once all the guests have gone. Plus, they probably won’t feel like cooking anyway.See It

Bourbon Pecan Caramel Sauce ($7.95)

Stonewall Kitchen Bourbon Pecan Caramel Sauce

Stonewall Kitchen

The best way to add a kick to store-bought pecan pie? This dreamy sauce, which can be drizzled right on top—or over vanilla ice cream and sticky buns.See It

Compostable Garbage Bags ($5.49)

compostable garbage bags

Thrive Market

Though garbage bags aren’t the sexiest of gifts to bring to a friend’s house, think how happy your host will be when you’re cleaning off plates and tossing the green bean casserole nobody ate. Sometimes the practical stuff becomes the hero gifts!See It

Hand Soap ($28.00)

Savon Liquide French white tea hand soap

Amazon

Sure, you could spring for that other brand of expensive soap (ahem, you know the one), but this one is slightly cheaper and totally chic enough to work with anyone’s bathroom decor.See It

Boylan’s Classic Seltzer ($1.48 – $2.04)

Boylan's Classic Seltzer

Webstaurantstore

Bubbly water is great for mixing cocktails, and you can never have enough at dinner parties. It can also be your go-to for the night if you’ve offered to be the one to drive people home.See It

Polaroid Camera ($57.43)

Instax mini Polaroid Camera

Amazon

Take on the role of designated documentarian with an instant camera that’s a good ice breaker for a big group—and a way to remember the party when the details get fuzzy later on in the night.See It

Stroopwafel Holiday Box ($5.49)

holiday stroopwafel box

World Market

There’s no such thing as too much dessert. Slip a stroopwafel on top of everyone’s coffee mug once the joe has been poured, and the heat from the bevvie will melt the caramel that’s nestled between the two thin waffle wafers. And yes, it’s as heavenly as it sounds.See It

Votive Candles ($8.29)

unscented votive candles

Target

Help set the mood at the table—without causing a stink—with handfuls of inexpensive unscented candles. Because everyone looks better in candlelight, an important detail when you’re all stuffing your faces.See It

Related Video: Delicious Vegan Friendsgiving Cookies with CBD



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