Saturday, September 28, 2019

10 Tips for Tailgating in Cold Weather

While the beginning of football season boasts perfect weather for tailgating and cheering on your favorite team, the weather for game-time is going to turn really cold really fast. Let’s not forget that football season stretches well into the winter months, and that can mean a ton of snow (I know my fellow Packers fans out there can relate).

If you’re a huge fan, I totally get that you still want to tailgate and cheer on your favorite team well into the season—and that’s more than fine! But with hypothermia being a real risk of spending extended periods of time in the cold (at the very least, it can be very unpleasant), you should follow these tailgating tips to ensure your experience is safe, fun, and full of good food and drinks.

Related Reading: Kick Off Football Season with These 14 Great & Greasy Pub Grub Recipes

1. Trap Your Heat

Most of your body heat escapes through your head, face, hands, and feet. While you should definitely be covered from head to toe, you want to be doubly sure you’re not letting any body heat escape from those particular areas, so you should be wearing heavy gloves, a hat, scarves, and thick socks and boots (as a former softball player, I have a ton of thick softball socks that work great).

Luckily, most teams understand that their crazy fans are going to root them on even in freezing temperatures, so you’ll easily be able to find winter gear that bears the logo of your favorite team. Check out all the team merchandise at the CBS Sports Shop for starters.

Additionally, you should definitely stock up on disposable hand and toe warmers. I use the HotHands brand when I play outdoor volleyball in the fall and winter months; they’re great and last a long time! You can get them on Amazon and stuff them in your gloves and socks for instant warmth.

HotHands Hand & Toe Warmers, $22.97 on Amazon

The grill shouldn't be your only source of tailgating warmth.
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2. There’s No Such Thing as Too Many Layers

Seriously, layer up. Yeah, it’ll make going to the bathroom slightly inconvenient, but you won’t have hypothermia. We’ve already covered outerwear such as gloves and scarves, but you should definitely be wearing Under Armor and tight “long johns” before you even think about putting on clothes. Your rule of thumb should be, “It’s easier to subtract layers than add them.”

Thomas Barwick/Getty Images

I find that sweatpants will trap heat better than jeans, especially if you have another pair of pants on underneath. On top, you could wear Under Armor, a T-shirt, a sweatshirt, and then a jacket. If that’s still not enough (no judgement here; I’m freezing once the temperature dips below 70), then you should invest in a fleece blanket. My sister got me a sweatshirt blanket like this one on Amazon for Christmas because she was sick of me complaining about being cold, and I think it’d be perfect for cold weather tailgating because it will absolutely fit over all your layers!

The Comfy, $39.99 on Amazon

This blanket and sweatshirt hybrid is great for warmth and Instagram.
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3. Butt Don’t Forget…

There is nothing worse than the shock your body receives when you sit down on a cold stadium seat. You’ve done all that hard work to stay warm before the game only to immediately start freezing to death at kickoff. This one is a real game changer. Turns out they make heated seat pads for stadium seating! If you buy this one on Amazon, it also comes with a little blanket to wrap around yourself during the game. From this day on, our butts will never again freeze to a seat.

4. Watch the Forecast

You don’t want to shade yourself from the sun if you’re lucky enough to see any, but if there is even so much as a chance of rain, snow, or harsh wind, you want to make sure you’re prepared. It’s one thing to be cold, but being cold and wet will put a huge damper on your day (pun 100 percent intended). Make sure you pack a collapsible tent like this one to ensure your protection from the weather.

Caravan Canopy, $70.93 on Amazon

Protect yourself (and your food) from inclement weather.
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5. Put Me In, Coach!

What’s the fastest and easiest way to warm up? By getting up and moving! Football, cornhole, and Kan-Jam are popular games to play during a tailgate, so start a catch or play a game with your neighbors and you’ll suddenly forget how cold you really are.

Kan Jam, $37.56 on Amazon

Before the big game participate in your own competition.
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6. Drink Smarter, Not Harder

I’ve actually heard a lot of people say that they were planning to drink beers until they could no longer feel the cold. While this may be true, it’s problematic for a number of reasons. Just because you, in your intoxicated state, may not be able to feel yourself freezing, that doesn’t mean you’re not still freezing. And while a cold beer sounds great any time of year, it’s probably not the best thing to be drinking on a freezing Sunday morning before your team takes the field.

If you absolutely must drink beer or anything out of a can, you should invest in cozies or other holders so that your hands won’t freeze to a cold piece of aluminum. Like outerwear, your favorite teams most likely sell cozies, so you can rep your team while holding your beer.

NFL Can Cooler, 2-Pack $8.99 on Amazon

Keep your beverage cool while supporting your team.
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But my suggestion to you would be to embrace fall and winter flavors and drinks, and prepare a warm spiked drink that all your friends can enjoy. There are tons of recipes for mulled wines and ciders (you may even have your own favorite recipes), but I wrote this article last fall listing some unusual but delicious spiked warm drinks. You won’t regret trying them! And if you have a few non-drinkers in the bunch, a box of coffee or hot chocolate goes a long way.

Stainless Steel Thermos, $22.99 on Amazon

The perfect way to keep your cider and hot chocolate at the ideal temperature.
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7. Eat with Your Hands in Mind

jerk turkey chili recipe

Chowhound’s Jerk Turkey Chili

The first thing I told you to do was prioritize your hands. Once they start to freeze, it’s all over for you. So, when considering food, you may not want to bring too many finger foods where you’d have to expose your hands to the nippy air. Nachos, for example, are probably not the best food for a winter tailgate. Additionally, like I said with the drinks, you should want foods that will keep you warm!

Enter: Our Jerk Turkey Chili (or any chili, really), which will keep you warm inside, and you can eat it while still wearing gloves, so it’s a win-win. The same goes for neater burgers and sliders, like this beer-braised Pulled Pork Slider recipe. If you want something messier like a fresh taco or Sloppy Joe, I totally understand and do not expect you to get your gloves dirty. Luckily, the warmth of the fresh-cooked sandwich in your hands will keep you plenty warm until you’re done eating and can pop them back on.

8. Kebabs Do the Job

Remember how I said non-messy foods would be great for cold weather tailgating because you can eat them with your gloves on? That same rule applies here. For some reason, when we think of the perfect tailgate foods, we never think of kebabs. We think of ribs, wings, burgers, and hot dogs, but we leave out another staple grilled food that shouldn’t be forgotten as summer fades.

Kebabs are perfect for a cold tailgate because they only take a minute or so to grill up (so you can spend more time drinking and less time doing the hard work at the grill), they’re the easiest thing in the world to eat, and they always taste great. This Pineapple Shrimp Skewer recipe, for example, is a quick fix and a delicious pregame snack.

9. S’More Warmth

If you have a grill or a lidded fire pit available, you should definitely angle your chairs around it and huddle up for extra warmth. You don’t want to be just sitting in the cold if you can avoid it. The reason I bring up s’mores is that I cannot sit down by a fire without instantly craving a s’more. I think I have a problem. But s’mores are fun to make and their simplicity and quick prep time makes them a perfect tailgating dessert, so if you’re already around a fire you may as well toast a marshmallow!

Stuffed Puffs Chocolate Filled Marshmallows, $3.98 at Walmart

Make next level s’mores with chocolate-stuffed marshmallows.
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10. Eat, Drink, and Be Merry!

What I’m trying to say here is, “Don’t be a party pooper.” Everyone at the stadium will be well aware that it’s freezing cold. Trust me, literally everyone will know. So there is no point in complaining about how cold you are every ten seconds. You’ll just annoy people and odds are you won’t be invited to the next tailgate.

If you’re not a cold weather person (like me), there’s absolutely nothing wrong with declining a tailgating invitation in favor of watching the game at home in your favorite fuzzy pajamas either! But if you do brave the weather, there are plenty of ways you can keep warm and many of them involve eating and drinking. So pig out, indulge for once, and enjoy yourself! Here’s to a great season.

Keep Reading: 10 Tasty Ways to Reuse Your Football Party Leftovers



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Forbidden Fruit: An Exploration of the Apple in Historical and Popular Culture

Confession: There’s no way for this essay not to end with “how do you like them apples?” so in order to at least attempt to flip the script, here it is at the beginning. Furthermore, the impulse to begin with a confession for an exposition of apple significance feels equally sage, since the most consistent theme among pomacious metaphors and parables throughout history seems to be the threshold between innocence and guile. And speaking of sage, I want to point out that it happens to be an excellent flavor companion for apples, as is evidenced in numerous recipes for Thanksgiving stuffing.

The original metaphor. The “a ha!” moment. The pivotal turning point. The ultimate gift, but perhaps one not to be trusted. The highest expression of a thing. Apples. Not only for snacking, picking, and cooking, you know, as they have never failed as a literary device or as a point of historical interest. So, how ‘bout them?

The Bible

Not only a Christian metaphor, apples appear in many religious origin stories in a similar “awakening” moment. Human is simple and pure. Human is tempted. Human eats apple. Now human is flawed but knowledgeable. There is much semantic argument as to the use of the word “apple” in translation, as it can stand in for a number of probable tree fruits, but in any case it’s only after Adam and Eve’s inaugural apple pick that we all collectively realized we needed to find the requisite outfit for the occasion.

Bragg Organic Raw Apple Cider Vinegar, 16oz bottle for $7.49 on Amazon

And along with knowing everything, the tree of knowledge also taught us we were supposed to be drinking this stuff straight up for gut health.
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William Tell

William Tell was a 14th Century Swiss revolutionary who inspired a 19th Century Italian operatic composer to write an overture that would be forever co-opted for the portrayal of 20th Century American Southwestern folklore in film and television. You may recognize the music as the theme to the Lone Ranger or as something being played by a Looney Tunes orchestra, but the real story behind those galloping violins is one that tells of a skilled archer earning his freedom from a cruel tyrant by successfully shooting an apple in two off of the head of his own son.

Sir Isaac Newton

If ever there’s a moment in science where the apple is found to be the marker between innocence and guile, it’s this one: Maybe it never actually fell on his head, but there is evidence to suggest that at least the witnessing of an apple falling from a tree by Sir Isaac Newton caused him to theorize about, and eventually develop a law for, universal gravitation. Now, the official scientific measurement for weight, which is that of force, is the Newton. So if you’ve ever felt guile from your bathroom scale about its reported number, you can blame an apple for giving Newton the idea that it all could be measured in the first place. The end of innocence indeed.

Johnny Appleseed

If we have Adam and Eve to thank for the impulse to harvest tree fruits for pleasure, we have Johnny Appleseed (born John Chapman) for the abundance of orchards in the U.S. from which to harvest. The wandering botanist is not merely a character from folksong, but a genuine American eccentric and local hero who is responsible for introducing apples to Pennsylvania and its surrounding states in the late 1700s and early 1800s. He was more than simply a quirky scatterer of seeds, but a cultivator of nurseries. 200 years later, amidst a frenzy for apple picking and a multitude of recipes with which to celebrate the harvest, he is definitely still worth singing about.

An Apple for the Teacher

Fruitful EducationA Breakdown of Apples You’ve Probably Never Heard OfSince an apple is often synonymous with knowledge, this would be a tidy assumption to draw in terms of where the practice of gifting one’s educator with one comes from. But alas, the practice has a decidedly un-tidy origin story. There’s an element of public relations, whereby the poor apple needed a reputation upgrade to not be thought of as just a vehicle for hard cider. There’s a measure of education reform, referencing a moment in American history when children first began being required to obtain at least an elementary education. And there’s a matter of finance and timing—teachers were often paid in sustenance by their pupils, and since the school year began after the majority of harvest was complete, right at the moment that apple harvest comes into play, the practice was born that U.S. school teachers were definitely going to get more than their share of one a day.

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

In this 19th Century German fairy tale, Snow White succumbs to a near-eternal slumber care of a poisoned apple given by her disguised stepmother. A gentle reminder that not all seemingly innocent gifts are actually innocent, and a mirroring of the original biblical function of the fruit. Teachers, beware.

Apple Inc./Macintosh

Steve Jobs and brethren founded Apple, Inc. in 1976, a fitting trademark for a technological company whose function was machines that could increase the speed and capacity of human knowledge. Once consumed, those Apples would never allow us to go back to what we were before, as anyone with the fever for the latest I-product can attest. Cupertino, Cali. is basically the Garden of Eden all over again.

Iconic: A Photographic Tribute to Apple Innovation, $50.09 on Amazon

A different sort of apple-based coffee table book.
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“Good Will Hunting”

In 1997 all previous expressions and metaphors involving apples were officially usurped when a rowdy and victorious Matt Damon held up the digits-inscribed napkin to the diner window to needle the preppy intellectual:

“Hey! Do you like apples?”

You know the rest. And more to the point, we do like them. We really like them.



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This Rosh Hashana Honey Cake Makes for a Sweet Start to the New Year

The Jewish New Year—Rosh Hashana—is celebrated without a lot of pomp and circumstance. Often a simple gathering of friends and family to eat, drink and ring in a new year with hopes of happiness and good fortune ahead. Oh, and maybe a few screechy blows on a dusty shofar (ram’s horn) with varying degrees of success.
New Year Noshing7 Ways to Make Brisket Better Than Your Bubbe'sRosh Hashana foods don’t take center stage quite as they do during Passover or Hannukah, but there are some symbolic food staples you can expect to find. Fruit jams and compotes will dot most Rosh Hashanah spreads along with fluffy Challah bread, and ever-polarizing gefilte fish. Brisket too, because where there are hungry jews there is likely some brisket not far behind.
But most notably, and perhaps most symbolically, honey is served and eaten as a representation of our hope for a sweet year to come. Apple slices—another high symbolic food for followers of the Old Testament—are often the vessel for honey at Rosh Hashana, but there are plenty of other ways to deliver it, including a traditional honey cake or honey loaf.

Zaro’s Family Bakery

One family who has been making a Rosh Hashanah honey cake for generations is the Zaro family—of Zaro’s Bakery—a fourth-generation Jewish bakery founded in 1927 now with ten brick & mortar locations in New York. Throughout the year, Zaro’s sells more than 1.5 million bagels to hungry New Yorkers, but during Rosh Hashanah, it’s all about that honey loaf cake, and they generously shared their recipe for this sweet, moist, and celebratory cake to make at home.

Zaro’s Honey Loaf Cake

Michael Zaro, who runs the company with his family tells us that the recipe has been in the Zaro family for generations and that it’s very special. “To know our great grandfather [Joeseph Zaro] created these recipes, and we get to continue to share them with New York, makes all of us so happy.” Serve this honey loaf cake at Rosh Hashana (or any other time) with coffee for a light, honey-sweet dessert.

Zaro's Honey Loaf Cake

Ingredients
  • 2 2⁄3 cup honey
  • 3 eggs
  • 11 egg yolks
  • 1 1⁄3 cup vegetable oil
  • 3⁄4 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tbsp orange marmalade
  • 3⁄4 cup coffee - brewed and cooled
  • 4 cup rye flour
  • 3⁄4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1⁄2 cup lightly packed light brown sugar
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 5⁄8 tsp baking soda
  • 1⁄8 tsp cinnamon
  • Pinch of salt
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 300F. Grease two 9’x5” pans.
  2. Combine all dry ingredients in a bowl and whisk together thoroughly.
  3. In a separate bowl, combine all wet ingredients and whisk together thoroughly. Create a well in the center of the dry ingredients, and slowly add the mixture of wet ingredients.
  4. Whisk as you go, adding little by little, until a homogenous mixture forms.
  5. Divide batter between both pans and place on a baking sheet.
  6. Bake for 1 hour and 15 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean.

Bee Harmony Clover Honey, $10.99 on Amazon

Don't skimp on the honey, it's the lifeblood of this cake and a good clover honey will work perfectly.
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Simply Recipes 2019 Meal Plan: September Week 5

Fall is officially here and this meal plan is all about recipes you can double so you can enjoy quality time with friends and family. Chicken Gumbo, Air Fryer Falafel, Beef Stew, and Turkey Sloppy Joes are sure to please any crowd!

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Instant Pot Chicken Wing Ramen

Got wings left over from a night out, game day party, or midnight snack? Make luscious, chicken wing ramen with a perfect jammy egg—all in your Instant Pot!

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