Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Food of the Gods Land Here in Miramar Beach

Close your eyes and you can picture yourself sitting on the deck of a ferry as it glides through the deep Azure Blue waters of the Aegean Sea on its way to Santorini, or Naxos, or Crete.
Ok so how about the next best thing, dinner at the newly opened Aegean Greek Restaurant in Miramar Beach! 
If you are looking for traditional Greek cuisine just like Yia Yia used to make, the Aegean is the place for you! Along with the wonderful ambience and Greek style influenced decor, the service provided by Chris Rakas and his staff is first class. And of course there is the food...the wonderful Greek food. From the popular Tzatziki sauce served with pita to Spanakopita (spinach and feta cheese filling baked filo pies) to my favorite Dolamdes (grape leaves stuffed with rice and beef) the Aegean appetzier choices start the meal of right.
Now its time to jump into the main course...from the ever popular Gyro to traditional dishes such as Pasticho (baked Zita and beef in a Bechamel sauce) and of course Mousaka (baked stacked eggplant, potatoes, ground beef and Bechamel sauce...a Greek Lasagna) the menu here will transport you from Athens to Thira and beyond. Throw in a few Mediterranean and American dishes and you have the makings of a great night of dining for you, your friends and family.
The Aegean is opened for breakfast and lunch as well!
For a true taste of Greece, head on over the the Aegean Greek Restaurant in Miramar Beach.


Aegean Restaurant
11225 US HWY 98, 
Miramar Beach, FL 32550
(850) 460-2728     MAP

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

VPS and Vision Airlines Connect The Emerald Coast!

VPS and VisionsAirline held court today at the Emerald Grande Harborwalk Village. With Gov. Rick Scott in attendance along with local and regional business owners and politicians, Vision Airlines, a charter service based in Atlanta, announced that it plans to launch scheduled service from Northwest Florida Regional Airport to 18 new markets.

Along with the new destinations, Vision also announced Introductory Fares will start at $49 each way, if booked by Jan. 23.
"Vision Airlines is excited to offer these new flight services to the community of Destin-Fort Walton Beach in a confident effort to bring visitors back to the destination," said David Meers the airline's chief operating officer of commercial operations.
Most of the new routes are short-haul flights from the Panhandle to cities in the Southeast, including Atlanta, Little Rock, Ark., and Asheville, N.C.
This news also comes with the projection of 4200 additional local jobs that will be coming to the area.

Definately a great way to start the New Year!.
 www.destinwave.com

Monday, January 17, 2011

NW FL Regional Airport (VPS) & Vision Airlines Connects the Emerald Coast!

Vision Airlines said on Monday that it is adding to its commercial passenger service in the Eastern U.S. with flights beginning March 25.
The small carrier has mostly been a charter operator, handling flights for the military as well as for tourists. On Monday it said it would add flights between Northwest Florida Regional Airport and cities including Asheville, N.C., Atlanta, Miami, the Orlando area, and other cities in Florida and the South.
According to the Tucson Citizen, "Vision says fares, some initially as low as $49 one way, will go on sale Tuesday for trips between the beach communities of northwest Florida and such cities as Baton Rouge, Knoxville, Tenn., and Little Rock starting March 25."
“The communities that they’re going to be flying to are difficult to get to via hub connections,” says Donovan, who adds that fares on larger carriers such as Delta and US Airways are often more than vacationers want to pay. “I think it’s going to bring back many people we’ve lost to driving,” Donovan told the Citizen.
Vision is set to announce the expansion at Destin's Emerald Grande Tuesday at 3 p.m.
Last month it added twice-a-day flights between Louisville, Ky. and Atlanta, and from Niagara Falls International Airport in New York to cities in Florida. Some of Vision's routes will compete with those flown by other carriers, such as Southwest Airlines Co.'s flights out of Buffalo, N.Y., which is near Niagara Falls.
Vision's fleet includes six Boeing Co. 767s and nine 737s.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Brownie Holi-Pops – Just About the Cutest Recipe I’ve Ever Seen




The reason I chose this recipe is the “cookies” are just about the cutest cookies I have ever seen.  They are so adorable they can be used to make a darling centerpiece just like in the photo above.   They are also a recipe that your kids can help make and it can be done in steps over a couple of days if your hours are filled with other holiday related activities like shopping and wrapping.
The first step which can easily be done a day or two ahead is to make a pan of brownies.  Start by heating your oven to 350ºF.  In a 2-quart saucepan combine ½ cup butter and 2 ounces of unsweetened baking chocolate.  Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly so the chocolate doesn’t burn, until melted.

Remove from the heat and stir in the sugar, flour, eggs, vanilla and salt.

Make sure everything is mixed well.

Spread the batter evenly into a greased 8-inch square baking pan.

Bake for 23 to 27 minutes or until the brownies just begin to pull away from the sides of the pan.

Cool completely.  Making brownies is that simple.  If you are making this recipe over a couple of days you can cover the brownies at this point and continue the next day.
If you are ready to keep going the next step is to crumble the cooled brownies into a large bowl.  This is definitely something your kids will enjoy helping with.  I just broke the brownies into pieces over the bowl and kept rubbing the chunks of brownie between my fingers until coarse crumbs were formed.

Next melt the remaining ¼ cup butter and 1 ounce chocolate in a small saucepan.  Add this mixture and the powdered sugar to the crumbled brownies and mix well.

Shape the mixture into 1-inch balls.  This is a step the kids can help with.

Place the balls onto a waxed paper-lined jelly-roll pan or tray.

Cover with plastic food wrap and refrigerate until firm (at least 2 hours or overnight).   It’s time to dip the balls in candy coating!  Melt vanilla and/or chocolate candy coating according to the package directions.  Working with about one-third of the balls at a time (keep the others in the refrigerator) insert a lollipop stick into each ball.  Push the lollipop stick into the ball so that the end is about in the center of the ball.  You can purchase lollipop sticks at craft stores and some grocery stores.

Dip the balls into the melted coating, swirling or tapping off excess coating.

I found it helpful to use a spoon to drizzle the coating over the ball to get the places that dipping didn’t quite reach.

Sprinkle with holiday nonpareils, jimmies and/or other decorator candies.  Push the lollipop stick into craft foam and let stand until the coating is set.  If you don’t have any craft foam you can place the balls onto waxed paper, they just won’t be quite as round-shaped because the coating may pool under the balls.

Aren’t these just the cutest cookies?  Have fun making a centerpiece with these as the stars!  Won’t your guests think it’s fun to eat the centerpiece?  Now, I will admit these are a little putsy to make but when made spread out over a couple of days it was not a big deal.  And, they really aren’t difficult to make at all.  I think the cute factor is worth the extra effort.  Oh, and by the way they taste good too!

Go out on a limb, take a risk and try something new along with all your traditional favorites this holiday season.  Give them as gifts...they will love them!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Fat Clemenza's does Mama Proud!

Mangia, Mangia - Fat Clemenza's does Mama Proud!

After enjoying the day in the 70° December Destin weather we were trying to decide where to go for dinner. We decided on Italian and after watching the Godfather movie this past week it seemed natural to try Fat Clemenza's in Destin. Do yourself a favor...get to Fat Clemenza's as soon as you can!

We walked into a very inviting, authentic Italian restaurant, complete with the red and white checkered tablecloths, old time B/W photos on the wall and perefct mood setting Michael Buble music as the soundtrack for our dinner. And what a wonderful dinner it was.
Being Italian and having enjoyed my share of classic Mediterranean cuisine, I scanned the menu and instantly felt at home with the endless choices of Italian favorites. After much deliberation my wife chose the Lasagna and I decided on the Cannelloni Florentine. 

 After enjoying some piping hot homemade bread with olive oil dipping sauce we were ready for our entrees. All I can say is that I swear I heard my Grandma telling me "mangia, mangia!" The food was amazing! I chose the house specialty Vodka Sauce to top off my meal and it was perfect. The Canelloni was prepared just right, stuffed with ricotta cheese, spinach and veal. My wife's lasagna was drenched in thick, tasty, tomato sauce, covered in layers of cheese and meat. The portions were such I had no room left for dessert!

If you desire a break from the numerous franchise type eatries in the area and want to be transported to the heart of Italy head straight over to Fat Clemenza's In Destin!

DestinWave.com



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Thursday, December 9, 2010

Top Christmas Movies

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Holiday films are an important American pastime. However, such a genre requires skill to execute. One must include all of the important ingredients, namely two cups of heart, a dash of fantastical whimsy and a good ole spoonful of yuletide rejuvenation, in order for a traditional holiday film to work. With that in mind, we  included within are personal favorites the films we all grew up watching during those festive afternoons when school was canceled due to winter storms, or during Thanksgiving or Christmas break. At their best, these films represent a merry tradition, one honored in most American households – these are the films we believe soundly capture the spirit of the holidays. They may not be the most critically acclaimed films but they provide the aforementioned ingredients plus one additional key element – nostalgia, or a remembrance of youth. A time and place when we believed Santa and his reindeer could fly; and that wishes could come true. Hit the jump to see the list.
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A Christmas Story (1983)
Say it with me: “I want an official Red Ryder carbine-action 200-shot range model air rifle with a compass in the stock, and this thing which tells time.” The quintessential Christmas movie if there ever was one, A Christmas Story remains a proverbial favorite in many a holiday household. Who doesn’t love little Ralphie Parker and his attempts to nab the ultimate Christmas gift – in this case a Red Ryder air rifle? Apparently most people upon their initial viewing – even my family didn’t think much of Bob Clark’s film the first time we saw it way back in the mid-80s (audiences and critics were divided upon its original release). The tone of the film takes some getting used to – part slapstick farce, part grungy (even edgy) 1970s comedy – but once you do, the results are ultimately rewarding.
Darren McGavin (Kolchak: The Night Stalker) steals the show as Ralphie’s “old man,” nabbing many of the film’s best lines (“Fruh-jill-ee – that must be Italian,” he says upon opening a box labeled “fragile”). Melinda Dillon (Close Encounters of the Third Kind) provides warmth and gravitas as the mother of the household. While ultimately standing in the way of her son’s Red Ryder (“You’ll shoot your eye out!”), she also casually demonstrates many of the same genial qualities that I’m sure many of us remember from our own mothers – a simple moment in which she flies to Ralphie’s aid, sparing him of his father’s “death sentence” after an incident with the local bully, remains heartwarming, simple and touching. And then there’s little Peter Billingsley, terrifically naive as Ralphie, a young boy with a dream, and little awareness to the world around him. He captures the innocence of youth, but also the eye opening experiences life sometimes unexpectedly affords.
TNT runs A Christmas Story 24/7 on Christmas day, and my family watches it all day long – if you haven’t discovered this gem yet, I urge you to take the time to do so as soon as possible. Just make sure you watch it twice.
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It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)
You can’t go through the holidays without experiencing George Bailey’s unexpected, even bizarre, holiday awakening. James Stewart plays Bailey, a down-on-his-luck denizen of small town Bedford Falls, a place he longs to escape, yet can’t quite get away from. That’s because, despite many an opportunity to leave, incidents ultimately force his hand to stay and save the town from the spider-like cruelty of evil business tycoon Mr. Potter (Lionel Barrymore). One Christmas Eve, circumstances prompt Bailey to attempt suicide, wishing that he had never been born. Much to his surprise, a happy-go-lucky angel (Henry Travers) arrives and grants Bailey’s wish, allowing him to see a world in which he never existed. This experience opens Bailey’s eyes and heart as he discovers the true value of life, and the importance and ultimately rewarding qualities of friendship.
Despite the presence of the lovely Donna Reed (as Bailey’s forever-patient wife), and solid direction from Frank Capra, It’s a Wonderful Life remains Stewart’s film – a stunning high-point in a remarkable career full of great performances. Largely ignored by audiences (and critics) when released back in 1946, Life has since become a perennial holiday favorite. Intriguingly, the most memorable part of the film doesn’t arrive until nearly 90-minutes into the production; yet, it’s worth the wait, providing an inspiring, heart-warming finale that remains one of the greatest Hollywood endings of all time.
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The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)
A holiday list must always include at least one adaptation of Charles Dickens’ immortal Christmas classic. Of all the big screen versions to grace the silver screen, none has been quite as charming as the Muppets’ take, featuring Michael Caine (The Dark Knight) as Scrooge, and Kermit the Frog as his lowly assistant Bob Cratchit. Some may balk, but Brian Henson’s adaptation remains the most accessible to mainstream audiences (especially children), one filled with wonderful sights and sounds, and memorable songs. Narrated by Gonzo and his assistant Rizzo the Rat, Dickens’ tale is told with panache and occasional bursts of gut-busting humor (Miss Piggy has never been better). The finale, involving a singing and dancing Caine, may be forgettable, but the remainder of The Muppet Christmas Carol is both warm-hearted and spirited.
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Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987)
I love this movie. Steve Martin and John Candy are brilliant as two travelers attempting to reach their homes for Thanksgiving. Predictably, chaos ensures a less than merry holiday for the pair. It doesn’t help that Candy plays a hapless buffoon (he sells shower curtain rings), one whose personality significantly contrasts against Martin’s uptight businessman. The results of their misadventures, including the complete annihilation of their car, an awkward hotel experience (“Those aren’t pillows!”), and a catastrophic freeway mishap involving semi-trucks and Candy’s brief transformation into Satan himself, provides the basis for the comedy. Yet, it’s the wry, often delicate, and sometimes even touching camaraderie between the two leads that makes Planes, Trains and Automobiles a winner. Of course it helps to have John Hughes in your corner, especially in the height of his career, on hand as both writer and director, supplying terrific one-liners and the type of hilarious situational comedy that has long since become a staple of holiday cinema.
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National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1989)
What’s Christmas without the Griswold? Chevy Chase is in fine form as the ever-relatable Clark Griswold, this time forced to spend the holidays with his in-laws. Chase does some of his finest work, but “Best in Show” belongs to Randy Quaid’s Cousin Eddie, a horrific redneck concoction if there ever was one (“I had to have [the metal plate] in my head replaced, because every time Catherine revved up the microwave, I’d piss my pants and forget who I was for about half an hour or so,” he casually tells Clark). Highlights include a ridiculous, over-the-top Christmas light display (which requires nuclear power to maintain); a sled-ride from Hell; and an intruding, terrifying squirrel incident. As in all the Vacation films, situations continually spiral out-of-control, mainly due to Clark’s sky high expectations: “We’re gonna have the hap, hap, happiest Christmas since Bing Crosby tapped dance with Danny fucking Kaye” – classic.
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The Polar Express (2004)
Creepy kids aside, it’s hard to deny Zemeckis a place on this list. The Polar Express remains a holiday favorite in the Ames household – primarily because, as one character in the film states: “It’s just so Christmas-y.” Indeed, Zemeckis outdoes himself here, adapting the equally gorgeous Chris Van Allsburg children’s book of the same name to amazing, sometimes stunning results. Tom Hanks (with the help of mo-cap technology) plays just about everybody in the film (even the main “Hero Boy”), but his presence never feels excessive; in fact, quite the opposite. His portrayal of Santa remains the film’s high point; a masterfully executed performance that perfectly embodies the spirit of St. Nick. The same could be said of the film, which captures the hypnotic, sometimes eerie essence of Christmas right down to the docile sounds of holiday tunes playing over the radio. Alan Silvestri’s terrific score, meanwhile, adds an extra dose of magic to the already spellbinding scenery.
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Home Alone (1990)
Another slapstick farce – you might say the one that started it all – Chris Columbus’ original Home Alone has heart, big laughs, and a yuletide John Williams score consistently driving it home. The oft-remembered sequence involving a pair of bumbling robbers (Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern) provides solid laughs, but it’s the build-up to that moment in which little Kevin McCallister (Macaulay Culkin), accidentally left behind by his family during the holiday rush, must fend for himself over the holidays, that catapults Home Alone into the echelon of near-classic status. Kevin undergoes a transformation of sorts: he learns to look past his fears and love the creepy neighbor (Roberts Blossom), wash dishes, and buy groceries at the local supermarket (alone!); he even watches Johnny Carson. Kevin’s adventure begins and ends long before the goofy slapstick comes into play.
Still, there’s no denying the presence of Pesci and Stern, who rise above the material and provide big laughs at the expense of themselves. Look for a brief cameo from John Candy (re-teaming with John Hughes, who scripted) as a meager Polka player who provides Kevin’s desperate mother (Catherine O’Hara) with the transportation she needs to get home. Three sequels have since followed Columbus’ megahit, each with diminishing box office returns (the fourth film went directly to TV). Home Alone 2: Lost in New York offers similar (if not better) laughs, but there’s no denying the original 1990 blockbuster is a holiday classic in the finest sense.
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Elf (2003)
Will Ferrell sings and dances his way through Jon Favreau’s goofy, even rambunctious comedy, as sugar-loving elf Buddy, who flees his North Pole sanctuary (where, at 6’3, he towers over the other elves) in an attempt to bond with his New York-based father (a very bored James Caan). Along the way he meets Jovie (Zooey Deschanel, lovely as ever), a jaded, yet quirky store employee with whom he instantly falls in love. The plot revolves around Buddy’s endeavors to save his dad from Santa’s naughty list, whilst integrating into a new, cynical society – one that frowns upon the good will carried at all times on Buddy’s sprightly shoulders.
A love of Ferrell is definitely required to enjoy Elf. The comedian has played insane before, but never to such a degree. Imagine, if you will, those SNL cheerleading sketches, only splashed with a gallon of sugar, with an extra kick of caffeine added for good measure. Like most of Ferrell’s work, the routine eventually grows tiresome, but not before ample amounts of laughter – most of which is quite side-splitting. You’ll walk away from Elf pleased, if not slightly exhausted. Still, it’s one of the better Christmas comedies out there, and the ginormous box office haul helped Favreau make a little film called Iron Man. The opening bits, featuring Bob Newhart as Buddy’s adoptive father, and those nods to the stop-motion Christmas classics of yesteryear, are terrific; as is the chemistry between Ferrell and Deschanel. The site of Ferrell adorned in a green suit with yellow tights never grows old; too bad the elf shtick doesn’t follow suit.
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Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
Another holiday favorite, Miracle on 34th Street stars the endearing Maureen O’Hara alongside a very young Natalie Wood, and Oscar-winner Edmund Gwenn, who won the award for his charming portrayal of Kris Kringle. The film follows the genial St. Nick and his dealings with Christmas outside the North Pole, where he encounters cynicism and disbelief. As one might expect, Kringle performs inspiring miracles – he installs good faith between feuding store owners (namely the heads of Macy’s and Gimbels), secures a romantic relationship between O’Hara’s feisty event director Doris Walker and her attorney/neighbor Fred Gailey (John Payne), and even has time to endure a court trial in an effort to prove himself the real Santa Clause. However, the heart of the story lies within his attempts to persuade the young Susan (Wood) of his identity, something he goes to great lengths to accomplish – Kringle creates/buys (I was never sure) a house for the young girl. If anything, Miracle steadfastly holds true to the tradition of Santa Clause, right down to his warm-hearted and honest nature. Contrived, to be sure, and slightly overrated – if you ask me – Miracle on 34th Street remains a must-watch holiday event.

Happy Holidays