LA Grub nothing fancy yet, but we r on a junk food binge of course

Spinach Frittata via Hawaiian Air

Del Taco Beef Taco these are $0.99

Crinkle fries, my weakness. Also a great hangover helper in my book. However not needed in that fashion today.

My aunt cher's home baked chocolate chip cookies. Something so special about these. Perfectly chewy and crisp. they have a nice salt burst here and there with a caramel flavor on the baked edges.

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The Ultimate Small Business Website for Today's Social Surfer : Marketing :: American Express OPEN Forum

The Ultimate Small Business Website for Today's Social Surfer

The Ultimate Small Business Website for Today's Social Surfer

Sep 14, 2010 -

Websites have evolved significantly over the past few years and the expectations of both surfers and spiders is driving much of what it takes to make a site work for your business today.

 

In fact, while content is still what gets people to your site, and long term, what it takes to draw links and return visits, it is heightened functionality that kicks off the process of engagement – the new must-have metric.

 

It’s not enough for your content to simply lay there, flat and uninviting. It has to stand up and practically beg people to interact with it. Your website must be more web app-like than browser-like.

 

But what does this mean for the typical site owner and builder you ask?

 

Use blog software as the engine.

 

Blog software, such as WordPress, is essentially content management software with SEO, community and syndication built in. While most associate blogging software with the journal style feature so frequently used by bloggers, the software is built to run almost any type of page you can imagine building, such as contact, product and even a static looking home page.

 

By using today’s themes such as Headway and Builder, you can use the WordPress foundation to create multiple page themes with plugins and widgets that allow you to perform most of the things I plan to explore in the rest of this article.

 

I can think of very few instances where it would not make sense for a small business to use a tool like WordPress to run their entire site. If setting up a self-hosted version of WordPress seems like it’s above you technically, you can try out one of the hosting service providers like Page.ly that offer one button installs with themes and support built in for a monthly fee.

 

Get feedback. 

 

People are getting used to sites that allow them to offer ratings and reviews. This type of functionality is easy to offer and can show social reassurance – if the reviews are good – to visitors considering your company. Using tools like JSKit enables you to install simple javascript that make it very easy for visitors to rate content and products.

 

Using third party survey tools like Survey.io, 4Q and GetSatisfaction allows your visitors to help mold your site and make it more user friendly.

 

Don’t forget the use of polls as a device to create engagement. Routinely adding simple polls by using a WordPress plugin or SurveyGizmo for WordPress can add an inviting layer of content and give users a reason to return.

 

And, it’s always a good idea to test conversion on pages by using split testing scripts such as Google Website Optimizer or unbounce.

 

Beef up the forms of content.

 

In terms of traffic, Google is the number one search engine, but YouTube is number two. Adding video and audio content has become a must, as visitors expect it and consume it in ways that keep them on your site much longer than sites that feature only static text.

 

Video allows you to tell a story with emotion and lets the visitor connect with the person telling the story. Research by SearchEngineWatch shows video increases landing page conversion by over 300 percent.

 

The use of video and audio is also a great way to reinforce a message and help visitors understand what to do next or what to expect.

 

Integrate social.

 

Adding Facebook Like buttons that allow visitors to share your content with their friends is an effective way to allow Facebook visitors to interact with your site. Using plugins like Sociable make it very easy for people to share, subscribe and bookmark content found on your web pages.

 

Bringing your social media participation on sites like Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook to your site with tools such as a Facebook Fanbox or Twitter Tools Widget is a great way to create interaction with your social profiles from your site and create a viral effect when visitors share or like something on your site.

 

Amplify for awareness.

 

A final important aspect is to find ways to amplify your content so that people can interact with it. This includes promoting your site and all the online ways people can find more in your offline communication. Adding your social profiles to business cards and printed literature is a good place to start.

 

Make your advertising much more about creating awareness for your online content and ways that people can interact and less about selling.

 

Image credit: Richard Mason

 

John Jantsch is a marketing coach, award winning social media publisher, and author of Duct Tape Marketing and The Referral Engine. 

Tags: google, wordpress, john jantsch, twitter, website, duct tape marketing, facebook, linkedin, social media

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Social Surfer? That is so cute. Thank you Open Forum!

Crabby cocktails - @mauiunderground's posterous-hey @jenrusso is making @stgermaindrinks with fresh lilikoi and maui rum #eatlocalHi

Jen Russo crafted St. Germain elderflower cocktails with the combos of fresh lilikoi, gingerale, citrus vodka, maui rum and something called "okolehau" needless to say the sugar hangover was worth Ms. Russo's abilities. Chef Metcalfe killed it with his baked oysters 2 ways--- smoked black forest ham with spinach and sriacha mole (no joke) and an italiana three cheese. After two pots of king crab legs, corn on the cob and two buckets of drawn butter the evening was complete. Isnt this how aloha Friday should always be celebrated? Chef Metcalfe dubbed the group "The too much fun club" named after Hunter S. Thompson's clan in Aspen.

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I used Lilikoi in two ways, muddled and strained. When you muddle with lilikoi you get the seeds, which are edible and can add a crunch. If you are shaking and straining the cocktail the seeds can get in the shaker and clog things up, so i used a separate container to strain the lilikoi juice from the meat. I am betting cheesecloth would work well here if you had more time. I will try that next.

Am-Ex Study: Affluent Eating More Fast Food : NPR; Food for Thought as we work on Eating Local

Copyright © 2010 National Public Radio®. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

ARI SHAPIRO, host:

And today's last word in business is gold finger-licking good.

A new study by American Express found that ultra-affluent consumers have spent nearly 25 percent more on fast food this year compared to last. The company defines ultra-affluent as those who charge more than $7,000 a month on their credit card. So converting that to Chicken McNuggets, these are people who could've charged about 20,000 Chicken McNuggets a month on their card.

American Express says even the wealthy are trying to cut back these days, just not on calories. It also found that spending was up on fine dinning, but not by nearly as much.

And that's the business news on MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Ari Shapiro.

STEVE INSKEEP, host:

And I'm Steve Inskeep.

Copyright © 2010 National Public Radio®. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

via npr.org

Its counter intuitive! for those of us who spend more than $7 K a month average on our amex, their spending increases on fast food numbers. That means they take their voting dollars to the big box and that is money not spent in locally owned small businesses or on locally sourced produce and veggies in their markets.

Bartender Karl Kozel: It's Getting Better All The Time via HuffPo, talks about bar trends for the better

The other night a gentleman came in, sat down and ordered a Sex On The Beach. I had to stop for a moment to recall the recipe, because I hadn't made it in a very long time. I faintly heard an old Flock of Seagulls song as I reached for the peach schnapps and it made me think of all the drinks that used to be very popular, and now have all but disappeared from the modern repertoire. Drinks like clothing or music rise and fall out of fashion, but I think underneath much of what has slid to the bottom of the list of favorites is a smoking gun. That smoking gun is what planted the seeds of the new age of mixology.

If there was a Dark Ages in cocktails, it was perhaps the 1980s and the 1990s. There was an introduction into the liquor world of things like Peach Schnapps, Butternut Schnapps, Midori, Goldschlagger, not to mention all the "flavored" Vodkas and Rums. It created a whole new list of drinks that spoke to what people wanted then, and it clearly shows us why present-day mixology developed. Like the culinary world, the world of mixology has come a very long way in a relatively short period of time. To understand how good we have it now, we have to examine the drinks that have lost their appeal and then understand why it happened.

As I stated in a previous post, the boomer generation did not grow up with a deep appreciation for classic cocktails. During the 1960s and '70s, the mind-altering choices were of the drug kind, and drinking, although popular, was relegated to beer and very cheap wine, or maybe the odd Black Russian, or Margarita, but there was scant attention to cocktails and how they were being made. The WWII generation and those before it were paying attention, but they had their own limitations. Most of them had grown up after prohibition, and therefore had no recollection of the amazing eras that their parents and grandparents imbibed in. After the war, the era of Sour Mixes, or Lemon X began. As Americans were filling their cupboards with processed foods and powdered juices like Tang, bars were changing to accommodate Americans desire for "quick and easy" and rather than using fresh juices for cocktails, most drinking establishments began using sour mixes which were made even more convenient by being added to soda guns.

Things got progressively worse. Untrained bartenders who were making sours, or collins, or margaritas, often built them right into the glass and didn't even bother to shake them, so if you ordered say a whiskey sour, they would fill a glass with ice, and pour in the whiskey and sour mix, and hand it to you. It's safe to say that those drinks fell further out of favor.

Then, the blender era came in. By the early to mid '80s, every bar offered the obligatory frozen drink of which the strawberry daiquiri was king. Pina Coladas, Margaritas, and Daquiris of all sorts were served out of a blender. To capitalize on the trend, the Margarita machine became hugely popular and of course highly profitable. You could put the cheapest tequila, and the cheapest sour mix into the machine and people would line up around the block to partake. Drinks were also becoming sweeter by the year it seemed. These were dark days in cocktail history to be sure. All respect for cocktails were relegated to those old standby joints that still did it the old way. But things were about to change.

Many theories have been offered as to what created that change. Many of them are correct: The rise in the quality of food and menu choices, the quest for more natural ingredients, etc., but I think that when the boomers reached their 30s and were having kids and basically becoming adults, they wanted something more sophisticated when they chose to go out. The days of standing and drinking beer or cheap wine didn't cut it anymore. Wine was becoming more popular by the year, and people's knowledge of food was increasing as were their pocketbooks. They began to experiment with cocktails and began to listen to music of their parent's generation like Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Edith Piaf, to name a few. Jazz made a comeback of sorts although a lot of it was "smooth jazz" which was to jazz what the blender was to classic cocktails.

In the '90s, I worked at an establishment in San Francisco called Bix, named after the famous saxophonist Bix Beiderbecke who was a relative of the owner. It had a speakeasy vibe, i.e., down an alleyway; 1930s décor; three-piece jazz band with a singer, and a big bowl right in the middle of the bar which was filled with crushed ice and chilled martini glasses. It held a huge variety of liquor on its shelves, had a premium well, and had well-trained bartenders who knew what was in those bottles, and knew how to make classic cocktails. It boasted fresh juices as well as bottle service instead of soda guns. It opened in the late '80s and captured the desire people had for sophistication. It was packed nightly, and it highlighted clearly what the public wanted, and it gave it to them. Like many things, the trend started in the west and came east.

We now have "speakeasy"-type establishments all over the country. They have mostly been opened and operated by Gen Xers and Gen Yers who continued the trend, and with the help of all the available information on the internet and all the social applications that helped transmit information faster, they have moved the ball still further ahead. These bars are temples for making and celebrating the art of The American Cocktail. You can have expertly made cocktails from some amazing young men and women who have forever changed the way things were, and have restored our American cocktail culture to its rightful place. It doesn't mean there aren't still places out there that are making bad cocktails, but if you look hard enough, you can find a great libation now. At some point soon, I will blog about some of these places that deserve to be recognized.

Listed below are cocktails that for the sake of this subject, are here to show what has fallen out of fashion. Some have slipped for the obvious reasons, but some of them need to make a comeback. I'll let you decide which of those do. Below that, I've listed some cocktails that are coming back or never completely left us.

Meanwhile, I'll see you when I see you.

Cocktails or products or juices that have fallen out of favor:

Anything Frozen

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Anything Frozen
The Strawberry Daquiri
Pina Colada
Midori
Melonball
Pearl Harbor
Peach Schnapps
Woo Woo
Fuzzy Navel
Hairy Navel
Sex On The Beach
Tequila Sunrise
Cranberry Juice
Cosmopolitan
Harvey Wallbanger
Sloe Gin Fizz
Whiskey Sour
Slow Comfortable Screw
Between The Sheets
Planter's Punch
Smith & Kearn's
Stinger
Rusty Nail
Grasshopper
Pink Squirrel
Golden Cadillac
B-52
Black Russian
Velvet Hammer
Brandy Alexander
Singapore Sling
French Martini
Godmother
Godfather


Drinks That Have Come Back Or Have Staying Power:


Martini

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Martini
Manhattan
Sidecar
Old-Fashioned
The Sazerac
Bloody Mary
Margarita
Cobblers
Sours
Negroni
Mojito
Southside
Bee's Knees
Kir
Kir Royale
Champagne Cocktail
French 75

Karl Kozel, thank you for this thoughtful article on where mixology is going and how it got there. The fantastic list of cocktails at the end of the article is a great resource.

Fall style @wingshawaii looks refined, ethnic prints, island boho, and neutral organic cotton staples, on sale now in the baldwin ave paia shop

Me likey several key peices here. Love the color palate they have going. Check wingshawaii.com

The best leather belts i have seen this season!

Hair at the fashion show was done by Jeffie Harris of Paragon. Soft cascading curls. Gorgeous.

These photos here were done by sean michael hower photography, from the program. Seanmhower.posterous.com.

Makeup by beautybytrishamaui.com

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Chef Jayson Kanekoa Wins "The Great Waikoloa Poke Contest"! | Marriott Hawaii

Manfred, Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort & Spa

Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort & Spa Sous Chef Jayson Kanekoa was named the winner of "The Great Waikoloa Poke Contest" held on September 4th on the Big Island of Hawaii! He masterfully prepared six pounds of poke (pronounced po-kay), fresh Hawaiian fish cut into cubes mixed with tasty seasonings and local ingredients, competing amongst the island's best hotel and restaurant chefs. He was declared the overall winner after taking first place in five of six categories.

Jayson Kanekoa

Chef Kanekoa is a local boy who lives in lush Waipio Valley. On weekends and for special luau events he prepares an imu, an underground oven, perfect for cooking kalua pork, fish and other meats.

Jayson Kanekoa

Here's Chef's recipe for the Soy Sauce Poke:

5 lb Sashimi Grade Ahi (med cube)

2 cup Maui Onion

1 cup Green Onion

1 lb Ho'i'o (fern shoots - tips only)

1/4 cup Garlic

1/3 cup Cotton Seed oil

1/4 cup Yamasa Soy Sauce

4 Tbsp Sake

2 pc Chili Pepper 

Brown garlic with cotton seed oil, and remove when golden brown. Remove half of the oil from the pan and add sake. Simmer for a couple minutes, add soy sauce and simmer for 5 minutes. Place in refrigerator till cool. Combine remainder of ingredients with soy sake mixture including garlic and mix well. Add Hawaiian salt to taste. Enjoy!

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Chef Kanekoa's recipe for 6 pounds of poke features sake and garic. Sounds so yum. I would have to cut the recipe down to a 1 pound recipe.

I just discovered: Scientists can Turn Tequila into Diamonds

Scientists Turn Tequila into Diamonds

November 7, 2008 by Lisa Zyga --> Tequilas

Various tequila bottles in sunlight. Image credit: Aaron Sherman (c) 2005.

(PhysOrg.com) -- Whoever thought that science was a dry subject might change their mind after learning about a new discovery in which tequila is turned into diamonds. A team of Mexican scientists found that the heated vapor from 80-proof (40% alcohol) tequila blanco, when deposited on a silicon or stainless steel substrate, can form diamond films.

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The key to the surprising discovery is tequila's ratio of hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon, which lies within the "diamond growth region." The resulting diamond films could have inexpensive commercial applications as electrical insulators, say researchers Javier Morales, Luis Miguel Apátiga, and Víctor Manuel Castaño from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (Morales is also with Nuevo León´s Autonomous University).

Originally, the scientists were experimenting with creating diamonds from organic solutions such as acetone, ethanol, and methanol. They found that diluting ethanol in water resulted in high quality diamond films. The scientists then noticed that the ideal compound of 40 percent ethanol and 60 percent water was similar to the proportion used in tequila.

"To dissipate any doubts, one morning on the way to the lab I bought a pocket-size bottle of cheap white tequila and we did some tests," Apátiga said. "We were in doubt over whether the great amount of chemicals present in tequila, other than water and ethanol, would contaminate or obstruct the process, it turned out to be not so. The results were amazing, same as with the ethanol and water compound, we obtained almost spherical shaped diamonds of nanometric size. There is no doubt; tequila has the exact proportion of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms necessary to form diamonds."

In their experiments, the scientists grew the diamond films using "pulsed liquid injection chemical vapor deposition techniques." In a specially made device, they heated the liquid tequila to 280 ºC (536 ºF) to transform it into a gas. In a reaction chamber, they heated the gas to 800 ºC (1470 ºF) to break down its molecular structure, resulting in solid diamond crystals of about 100-400 nm. The crystals fell onto silicon or stainless steel trays, accumulating in a thin, uniform film. The high temperatures removed all of the tequila´s carbon impurities to result in pure diamonds.

The final diamond film was hard and heat-resistant - properties that could make the diamond useful as coatings for cutting tools, high-power semiconductors, radiation detectors and optical-electronic devices, the scientists explained. They plan to begin industrial-scale applications around 2011, and hope to interest a tequila producer in widening its market beyond the traditional beverage.

For now, the scientists are continuing to test different tequilas´ abilities to produce diamonds. They´re also working on creating doped diamonds, which contain impurities, to serve as semiconductors.

More information: "Growth of Diamond Films from Tequila"

© 2009 PhysOrg.com


Rate this story - 4.5 /5 (233 votes)

Move the slider to adjust rank threshold, so that you can hide some of the comments.


Display comments: newest first

  • TJ_alberta - Nov 07, 2008
    • Rank: 4.5 / 5 (17)
    I have to ask: is this with or without the worm?
  • DGBEACH - Nov 07, 2008
    • Rank: 4.3 / 5 (3)
    Good one TJ :)
  • Greimel - Nov 07, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (7)
    40% abv is what vodka, tequila, rum, whisk(e)y, and some gins typically are. It seems odd that they would leave out the other options.
    It turns out this was done in Mexico, where tequila is readily available; so that makes sense. But I imagine vodka would be a better option since it contains less impurities.
  • D666 - Nov 07, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
    I've checked my calendar 3 times. It's definitely not April 1st. Nevertheless, I just have this feeling...
  • tas - Nov 07, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (4)
    Ah! One more reason to keep drinking...diamond-lined kidneys! This is really big for the computer industry and replacing silicon conductors--Moore's Law continues.
  • bobwinners - Nov 08, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
    Hmm.. Tequila costs more than pure alcohol so what's the advantage?
    Does make for a good story, though... told over shots of .. you guessed it...
    Hey, if you use Mescal with a worm, do you get green diamonds???
  • NOM - Nov 09, 2008
    • Rank: 1 / 5 (1)

    Hey, if you use Mescal with a worm, do you get green diamonds???
    No, you need lime for that.

    I wonder if they have tried adding salt.

  • Quantum_Conundrum - Nov 09, 2008
    • Rank: 2.3 / 5 (3)
    The only good use for this garbage...
  • Phase_9 - Nov 10, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
    What I want to know is what possessed them to connect diamonds with tequila.
  • la7dfa - Nov 11, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
    What I want to know is what possessed them to connect diamonds with tequila.

    Probably tequila ;)
  • Roach - Nov 12, 2008
    • Rank: 3 / 5 (2)
    There not even making good diamonds? Just industrial films? Oh the humanity!!!!

    If they touch my Jack Daniels we'll have some issues.

    If they just want to make diamond films there are other sources grind up the Hope diamond or something less important than my various grain alcohols.

  • SongDog - Nov 12, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
    Ah, women have been turning booze into gems forever. Think Monroe, Channing and Mansfield.
  • trigeiablog - Nov 17, 2008
    • Rank: 1 / 5 (2)
    Do these Diamonds have any worth? I guess that is a Question not a Comment? LOL

    Trigeia Twinz

    http://TrigeiaBlog.com

    What's Your Passion ?

  • mlnease - Nov 19, 2008
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Ah, women have been turning booze into gems forever. Think Monroe, Channing and Mansfield.

    Brilliant, SongDog...

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Well, its not the kind that can put a ring on it, but still a very interesting note for tequila. These kind of artificial diamonds can be used in industrial production or semi conductors. Tequila, so versatile. The conquistadors had no idea back in the day what they were creating.