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Archives for February 2016

What’s the Right Way to Work Out?

February 23, 2016 By Jason Harrison

One of the most difficult things for fitness consumers to do is identify the difference between objective best practices and the subjective preferences of various coaches.

I’ve used this space to argue before that it is an objective fact that everyone would benefit from doing progressively overloaded weight-bearing exercise. Everyone.

But hopefully I’ve also made clear that “progressively overloaded weight-bearing exercise” can take on many forms.

photo-1453211213953-4e0e80986071

Crossfit. Powerlifting. Weightlifting. General strength and conditioning. Pilates. Yoga.

Everything on this short list contains pros and cons. But they all involve some sort of weight-bearing aspect. The question, then, isn’t “which one is best?”
The question is, “which one is best for you?” based on your schedule, preferences, background, experience, likes, and dislikes. Fitness for busy professionals involves a balance between what we want out of our bodies and how much time we’re willing to spend on achieving those things.

Once you weigh all of those variables, generally the best option for you will emerge. But people confuse this notion with there being a best option for everyone.

I know dogmatic yoga people who tell everyone who will listen that yoga is the best—no, the only—way to achieve balance between mind and body.

I know strength and conditioning professionals who declare in no uncertain terms that if you’re not lifting weights then you’re a (what would Donald Trump call a political rival?)

photo-1454532256047-6f79947885b9

Don’t believe this con game. There’s no right way. There’s only the best way for you.

Now, this doesn’t give you carte blanche to do whatever the hell you want without regard for science or basic common sense. If you want a lean, more mobile body then Zumba classes aren’t going to do you much good for very long. That is an objective fact. If you’re new to fitness at some point you’re going to have to get comfortable being uncomfortable. Understand the difference between there being no one right way of exercise and the fact that there are some basic truths when it comes to fitness. Let me give you some concrete examples.

There’s no one right way to lift weights.

But there are generally accepted principles around how to do a barbell back squat.

There’s no one way to learn yoga.

But there are generally accepted principles around how to properly execute a downward facing dog.

There is no one right way to eat.

But there are generally accepted principles—on which both ardent Paleo enthusiasts and Prius-driving vegans can agree—that govern what the body does with macronutrients like protein, fat, and carbohydrates. (And almost everyone can agree that we all should be eating more vegetables.)

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There’s no right way to do cardiovascular exercise.

But there are generally accepted principles behind how aerobic exercise affects one’s body.

The dirty secret is that fitness isn’t all that complicated. While we’re learning new things every day, chances are the kettlebell guru you see on Facebook hasn’t discovered the best path to strength any more than the yoga expert has developed a system that works for everyone.

All of us fitness types try to bat 1.000. But none of us do. The best way for you to distinguish between a fitness pro who is secure and open-minded and an insecure dogmatic charlatan lies in the answer to this question: are they willing to tell you they’re not the best option for you?

They ought to be wiling to tell you you’d be better off going to a yoga studio.

They ought to be willing to tell you that you ought to go to a powerlifting gym.

They ought to be willing to tell you that you ought to spend your money on a nutritionist instead of personal training.

They ought to be willing to tell you that you’d be better off going to a physical therapist.

There’s no right way. There’s only the right way for you. It’s simple advice, I know. But more people like me need to be giving it.

Filed Under: Active Living Tagged With: Jason Harrison, presenttensefitness.com

WHITESNAKE Wants You To ‘COME AN’ GET IT’ At Rose Music Center

February 23, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

38cb245977974fb1cef6cec5d832b52b-2Mega platinum WHITESNAKE, the legendary rock’n’roll band founded and formed by DEEP PURPLE singer David Coverdale are proud to announce their 2016 “THE GREATEST HITS TOUR” which will feature their biggest hits & songs from SLIDE IT IN, WHITESNAKE (1987) AND SLIP OF THE TONGUE. The tour will include a stop in Huber Heights, OH at Rose Music Center on Wednesday, June 15.

Tickets for the Huber Heights show, $53.00*, $43.00*, $33.00*, and $23.50* will go on sale to the public beginning 11:00am on Friday, February 26th at www.Ticketmaster.com, www.Rosemusiccenter.com, the Rose Music Center box office and all Ticketmaster outlets.  Charge by phone at 1.800.745.3000.  The Rose Music Center box office is open for limited hours during the winter: Wednesdays and Fridays from 11:00am-5:30pm. *Ticket prices include parking and are subject to applicable Ticketmaster fees.  Dates, times and artists subject to change without notice.

Blowing audiences away with their stunning, energetic live performances, Whitesnake have just completed a comprehensive world tour in 2015, including a Sell Out Arena tour in the UK & Ireland with Def Leppard, whilst promoting their most recent studio offering, THE PURPLE ALBUM.

After leaving DEEP PURPLE in 1976 Coverdale formed the original WHITESNAKE in 1978, and began a journey that has taken him from the early heavy blues rock of the late ‘70s with albums like ‘TROUBLE’, ‘LOVEHUNTER ‘READY AND WILLING’ and ‘COME AN’ GET IT’ through to the explosive hard rock of the revamped ‘SNAKE sound with the multi-platinum ‘SLIDE IT IN’ & 1987’s self-titled mega-million-selling smash-hit album, ‘WHITESNAKE’.

David Coverdale…Whitesnake Lead Singer “We are truly excited & looking forward to playing at Rose Music Center in 2016 on what will be our ‘Greatest Hits World Tour’ & most likely my personal ‘Farewell to Arena Rock’ after over 40 years of writing & performing rock music.

As I write this we are finishing our incredibly successful touring cycle of 2015, following the release of our tribute to Deep Purple Mark 3 & 4, Whitesnake ‘The PURPLE Album’.

I am honored to have toured this incredible world we share for over 40 years, celebrating & enjoying unforgettable moments with millions of people…All of whom have shared this amazing journey with me…I truly love the shared experience & simply love my job & always will…Over 4 Decades Of FUN…Thank YOU!!.

David Coverdale – vocals
Reb Beach – guitars
Joel Hoekstra – guitars
Michael Devin – bass
Tommy Aldridge – drums
Michele Luppi – Keys

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: David Coverdale, Rose Music Center, WHITESNAKE

“Weird Al” Yankovic to Appear at Rose Music Center

February 23, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

latestFollowing his wildly successful 2015 tour, four-time Grammy-winning artist “Weird Al” Yankovic has announced the continuation of his Mandatory World Tour in 2016.  Yankovic will bring his high-energy comedy rock show to Huber Heights, OH at Rose Music Center on Sunday, August 28.

Tickets for the Huber Heights show, $51.00*, $37.00*, $33.00*, and $23.50* will go on sale to the public beginning 11:00am on Friday, February 26th at www.Ticketmaster.com, www.Rosemusiccenter.com, the Rose Music Center box office and all Ticketmaster outlets.  Charge by phone at 1.800.745.3000.  The Rose Music Center box office is open for limited hours during the winter: Wednesdays and Fridays from 11:00am-5:30pm. *Ticket prices include parking and are subject to applicable Ticketmaster fees.  Dates, times and artists subject to change without notice.

According to Al: “I’ve decided to do the Mandatory World Tour for one more year, after learning that some people didn’t make it out to the show this last time around.  Apparently, they don’t know the meaning of the word ‘mandatory’!!”

The tour follows Yankovic’s Grammy-winning Mandatory Fun, which was the first comedy album in over fifty years to hit #1 on the Billboard charts and the first comedy album in history to debut at the top spot.

“Weird Al” Yankovic is the biggest-selling comedy recording artist in history, earning four Grammys and fifteen career nominations.  He is best known for his hilariously irreverent parodies of hit songs by the biggest stars in the musical universe over the past three decades, including “Eat It,” “Like A Surgeon,” “Smells Like Nirvana,” “Amish Paradise,”  “White & Nerdy,” and “Tacky.” In 2015, Yankovic released his 14th studio album, the Grammy Award-winning Best Comedy Album Mandatory Fun making history as the first comedy album to debut at #1 on the Billboard Top 200 album chart and the first time a comedy album has reached the top of the chart in over 50 years.  The single “Word Crimes” debuted in the Billboard Top 40, making Al one of only three people to have had Top 40 singles in each of the last four decades (the other two are Michael Jackson and Madonna).  Yankovic has found success in multiple entertainment formats including the film world with his cult classic UHF, his CBS TV series The Weird Al Show, online with The Nerdist Channel with his faux celebrity interview web series Face 2 Face with “Weird Al” Yankovic, and the publishing world with Weird Al: The Book (an illustrated hardcover on Al’s life and career) and his children’s books, including the New York Times bestseller When I Grow Up.  Weird Al has performed more than 1500 dates over the course of his career and continues to direct videos and be an innovator in the entertainment community.

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Al Yankovic, Rose Music Center, Weird Al

‘Kinky Boots,’ ‘Motown,’ ‘Dirty Dancing’ headline Victoria season

February 23, 2016 By Russell Florence, Jr.

seasonBox office and pop-friendly titles, familiar and new, are on the horizon from the Victoria Theatre Association for its 2016-2017 season.

 
The VTA’s Premier Health Broadway Series, Projects Unlimited Star Attractions, Morris Company Family Series, National Geographic Live! Series, and Frank M. Tait Foundation Discovery Series were announced Monday, Feb. 22 in the Wintergarden of the Schuster Center. Emceed by Meteorologist Tara Hastings of WDTN, the ceremony was attended by more than 400 people and incorporated business/community leaders, media personalities, and Victoria subscribers, donors and friends.

 
The nostalgia-driven, six-show Broadway Series, to be held solely at the Schuster Center, consists of the return engagements of “42nd Street” (last seen at the Victoria Theatre over a decade ago) and “Jersey Boys” (last seen in 2012) along with the local premieres of “Dirty Dancing” (based on the 1987 film of the same name), “Motown the Musical”(one of the most highly entertaining musicals conceived in recent years), the 2013 Tony Award-winning Best Musical “Kinky Boots” (featuring a terrific score by Cyndi Lauper), and the in-development magic/puppetry spectacular “Circus 1903” (from the creators of “The Illusionists” and “War Horse”). The local premiere of the family-friendly “Elf the Musical,” based on the 2003 film of the same name and the only production announced thus far on the Star Attractions slate, will arrive Thanksgiving week at the Schuster Center.

KINKY BOOTS

The cast of “Kinky Boots” (contributed photo)

“Broadway is very good at balancing the traditional with the new,” said VTA President and CEO Ken Neufeld who humorously wore a pair of kinky boots during the event’s climax to accent his enthusiasm for the hit musical. “I think our season offers a balance that will appeal to everyone. ‘Circus 1903’ is a particular leap of faith for us because it is still being developed in Australia, but we are fortunate to be among only about a dozen organizations in America to have the chance to present it.”

 
Additionally, musical selections were notably offered by the Deron Bell Band, Gina Handy of Magnolia Theatre Company, and students from Wright State University’s musical theater department.


Premier Health Broadway Series
(all shows at Schuster Center) 

Jersey Boys (Oct. 18-23, 2016)

42nd Street (Jan. 10-15, 2017)

Dirty Dancing (March 14-19, 2017)

Motown the Musical (April 11-16, 2017)

Kinky Boots (May 23-28, 2017)

Circus 1903 (June 13-18, 2017)

CIRCUS

Projects Unlimited Star Attractions

Elf the Musical (Nov. 22-27, 2016 – Schuster Center)


Frank M. Tait Foundation Discovery Series
(all shows at Victoria Theatre)

We the People (Nov. 7, 2016)

The Wright Brothers
(Nov. 15-16, 2016)

Edward Tulane (Nov. 17, 2016)

Brown Bear, Brown Bear (Feb. 1, 2017)

I Have A Dream
(Feb. 16, 2017)

The Lightning Thief (Feb. 28, 2017)

Anne of Green Gables (April 4, 2017)

The Cat in the Hat (April 7, 2017)

Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters (April 21, 2017)

The Mayhem Poets (May 1, 2017)
Morris Furniture Company Family Series
(all shows at Victoria Theatre)

 Muts Gone Nuts (Oct. 29, 2016)

A Year with Frog and Toad (Jan. 21, 2017)

Pinkalicious The Musical (Feb. 25, 2017)

The Cat in the Hat (April 8-9, 2017)

Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters (April 22, 2017)

 

National Geographic Live! Series
(all lectures at Victoria Theatre)

Hilaree O’Neill, mountaineer: Down to Nothing (Jan. 31, 2017)

Steve Winter, wildlife photojournalist: On the Trail of Big Cats (March 6, 2017)

Pete McBride, adventurer/photographer: Chasing Rivers (April 24, 2017)

 

Season tickets are on sale for the Premier Health Broadway Series. New season ticket holders will be seated once current season ticket holders’ renewals are fulfilled. Renewal packets for all current Premier Health Broadway Series season ticket holders were mailed the morning of Feb. 22. The deadline for current season ticket holders to request changes to Broadway Season ticket packages is March 14. The deadline to renew 2016-2017 Broadway Season ticket packages is March 28.  Season ticket sales for the Morris Furniture Company Family Series and National Geographic Live! Series begin later in the spring, as well as new packages for the Projects Unlimited Star Attractions. Additional Star Attractions will be announced at a later date. For more information, call Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630 or visit www.ticketcenterstage.com or www.victoriaheatre.com

 

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews, The Featured Articles

Boston’s 40th Anniversary Tour Comes To Rose Music Center

February 22, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

Legendary rock band BOSTON is proud to announce their 40th Anniversary Tour. The tour will kick off in Hollywood, FL and include a stop in Huber Heights, OH at Rose Music Center on Wednesday, May 25.

boston
Tickets for the Huber Heights show, $69.00*, $59.00*, $49.00*, and $24.50* will go on sale to the public beginning 11:00am on Friday, February 26th at www.Ticketmaster.com, www.Rosemusiccenter.com, the Rose Music Center box office and all Ticketmaster outlets.  Charge by phone at 1.800.745.3000.  The Rose Music Center box office is open for limited hours during the winter: Wednesdays and Fridays from 11:00am-5:30pm. *Ticket prices include parking and are subject to applicable Ticketmaster fees.  Dates, times and artists subject to change without notice.

As Tom Scholz wrote in the rock anthem on the BOSTON album Don’t Look Back, “It’s a Party, Party, Party!”  Indeed, the 40th anniversary BOSTON tour promises to be a celebration honoring the group’s loyal fans. Many of them have supported BOSTON since 1976 when the debut album, Boston first hit the airwaves and took rock radio by storm, so it’s not surprising to see concert audiences that span generations.

Always a huge crowd pleaser with their high-energy stage show, out-of-this-world sound, and remarkable musicianship and singing, BOSTON prides itself on performing a totally live show without the use of prerecorded music or technical enhancements, delivering the extraordinary sound that is faithful to their studio recordings.

BOSTON became an iconic classic rock fixture when they joined the music scene with their self-titled album in 1976.  With over 17 million copies sold, Boston generated hits such as “More Than a Feeling,” “Peace of Mind,” and “Smokin’,” rock radio staples that are still in heavy rotation today. Their second album, Don’t Look Back was another chart-topper that confirmed their place in rock history, followed by Third Stage, which hit #1 on the charts, with the top single of 1986, “Amanda.” With over 31 million albums sold to date, BOSTON has stood the test of time.

Fans can expect to hear all the classic songs they have grown to love, and will be treated to wild Hammond organ work, soaring harmony guitars, and exceptional vocal arrangements, as well as BOSTON’s unique visual stage presentation and plenty of extra-terrestrial sounds heard nowhere else on earth.

Filed Under: Dayton Music, The Featured Articles Tagged With: boston, Rose Music Center

Mystery Monday – February 22, 2016

February 22, 2016 By Tom Gilliam

DMM Mystery Monday-3

Remains of a street car in the Argonne Forest at Possum Creek MetroPark – January 6, 2016

Welcome to Week 4 of Mystery Mondays.  The answer to Week Three’s Mystery Photo is: The remains of a street car in the Argonne Forest at Possum Creek MetroPark in Dayton.

Streetcars from the 1920s once sat in Argonne Forest Park

Streetcars from the 1920s once sat in Argonne Forest Park

Unfortunately, there wasn’t one person that answered correctly. The Rapid Fired Pizza certificates will have to stay put until next week. I took this photo on January 6, 2016 during an impromptu Winter hike.

Here are some interesting facts about the old Argonne Forest Park from history.metroparks.org.

Argonne Forest Park was founded in 1930 by Daytonian Null Hodapp, who returned from WWI and had a successful career as a judge in the area. Null purchased nearly 400 acres of wooded land along Germantown Pike and named the property Argonne Forest Park in honor of the Unit he served in during the war. Development of the park began with the construction of a veteran’s clubhouse. Behind the clubhouse, to the south, was a carnival-like midway. Development of the clubhouse area was followed by other additions. These included a swimming hole and diving platform, baseball diamond, shooting range, dance hall, pony and horse tracks, and a figure-eight auto race track.

It was not until World War II and gas rationing that crowds began to dwindle and the demise of Argonne Forest Park soon followed. After Hodapp’s death in 1945, some small parcels of land were sold off. In 1966, the park district bought the remaining land.

A part of the area today, still called Argonne Forest, is located in the northwest portion of the park. Dominated by tall beech trees, it is not unusual to hear the hoot of a great horned owl or see deer while walking the trails here. The close observer can still find hints of the original park. A low L-shaped wall, once part of the swimming pool, can still be seen and remains of three street cars are hidden on the forest floor. A large cement square, which may have been part of the dance floor, also remains. Most of the figure-eight auto track is now under a lake built by the Park District in 1979, but a hiking trail still follows portions of the old track. The building that was once the veterans’ clubhouse still stands on the southeast corner of Germantown Pike and Frytown Road. Behind it, some of the buildings that were part of the carnival midway remain.

I’d like to give special thanks to Amy Forsthoefel, Marketing Research Manager with Five Rivers MetroParks for providing me with research resources for this article.

We challenge you to tell us where in the Dayton area this photo was taken by filling out the form below.  We’ll do a random drawing from all those with a correct answer and the winner will get 2 pizzas from Rapid Fired Pizza.

Enter here:

http://goo.gl/forms/dyU55fzc48

We’ll post the winner next Monday with details about the photo as well as a new photo to challenge your knowledge of the Dayton area.

Thanks for playing and good luck!

Here’s our Mystery Photo for Week Four:

DMM Mystery Monday-4

Photo by Tom Gilliam of DaytonGram & Tom Gilliam Photography.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Dayton, Dayton Ohio, daytongram, daytonmostmetro, mystery mondays, photo contest, Photography, Rapid Fired Pizza, Tom Gilliam

Rosewood Gallery Call for Entries for The View Juried Landscape Exhibition

February 21, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

Gallery_VIEW_2-1024x682Rosewood Gallery in Kettering, Ohio announces a call for entries for the 22nd annual The View, a juried exhibition for Ohio artists presenting landscape or land imagery, environmental themes and world issues. Entries must be original works in any media (2-D or 3-D), completed within the last four years, and not exceeding 60 inches in width. Jury will take place from digital images. Work previously exhibited at Rosewood is not eligible. Completed entries (entry form, digital images, and non-refundable entry fee of $20.00 for up to 3 works), will be accepted through April 9, 2016. The exhibit runs from May 31 through July 8, 2016. There will be an opening reception on Thursday, June 2, 2016, from 6-8pm with a juror awards presentation at 7pm. Both the exhibition and reception are free and open to the public. Details and prospectus can be found on our website: playkettering.org/gallery.
Juror Katherine Ryckman Siegwarth is the Kettering Exhibition Coordinator and Curatorial Associate at The Dayton Art Institute. Prior to The DAI, Siegwarth served as Assistant Director to Zhulong Gallery (Dallas, TX) and was the Luce Curatorial Fellow for the photography department at the Amon Carter Museum of American Art (Fort Worth, TX). She has also worked at the Center for Creative Photography (Tucson, AZ) and the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art. Siegwarth received a Master of Arts in Art History at The University of Arizona, specializing in the history of photography and museum studies.

 

Hours for the exhibition are Monday through Thursday, 9am – 9pm; Friday, 9am – 6pm; and Saturday, 9am – 3pm. Rosewood Gallery is sponsored by the City of Kettering Parks, Recreation and Cultural Arts Department, with support from the Kettering Arts Council and the Ohio Arts Council. The Gallery is located in the Rosewood Arts Centre, 2655 Olson Drive in Kettering. For more information, call (937) 296-0294 or visit playkettering.org/gallery.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment Tagged With: landscape art, Rosewood Gallery

Viva Margarita!

February 21, 2016 By Brian Petro Leave a Comment

Elsa's Bad Juan

The drink that launched a thousand drunken texts…

Each year on February 22 we take some time to celebrate National Margarita Day. We all love a good margarita. They are a staple drink at any Mexican restaurant, and for the most part the only tequila based drink most people can name. Blended with ice or on the rocks, they come in all flavors in a margarita glass, usually with a salted (or in some cases, sugared) rim. If you are a Dayton native, you know that Elsa’s and their Bad Juans are THE margaritas to drink. You may also know that if you live in or near Tampa, Florida. There is an Elsa’s there, and Bad Juans are served in the Tampa Bay Times Forum Arena, home of the Tampa Bay Lightning. The margarita is a drink that every bartender, amateur and professional, knows how to make. It is one of the basics.

What no bartender knows is where the margarita originally came from. In fact, no one knows. But the stories that hover around the origins of the drink are pretty incredible. One of the most told ones is that a wealthy socialite from Texas names Margaret “Margarita” Sames created the drink in 1948 at a party she was throwing at her vacation home in Acapulco. She stepped behind the bar and started to experiment, and had her guests judge the results. The most popular one was the one that went on to bear her name. It is a great story, but it also ignores the fact that in 1945, Jose Cuervo had an advertisement with the phrase “Margarita: it’s more than a girl’s name”. A story that would fit that timeline is the one where it is created in the 1930’s for a woman named Marjorie King by a bartender named Carlos “Danny” Herrera. She was supposedly allergic to all forms of alcohol…except for tequila. This was made as her drink. Or, maybe a rock star bartender named Enrique Bastante Gutierrez made it for a little known actress named Margarita Cansino. Some bartenders think it was not named for a woman at all, but it is a variation of a classic drink named a Daisy, which in Spanish is margarita. The Daisy was a much more complex drink with a brandy base, and added simple syrup and soda water.

The margarita is a cocktail that comes from a much simpler background, probably relating a little closer to the sours popular in the late 19th century. When we go out, we look to get pitchers, fishbowls, 55 gallon drums, any large container full of a slightly sour, greenish/yellowish beverage. The original recipe is a little closer to this:

Margarita

1.5 oz. tequila (I am a fan of El Espalon Reposado lately)
1 oz. orange liqueur (Triple sec, Grand Marnier, etc.)
.75 oz. lime juice

Combine the ingredients into a mixing glass over ice. Shake well, and then strain into a margarita glass with a salted rim.

To salt a rim, take a lime wedge and run it around the edge of the glass to add moisture. Then dip the edge into a plate with kosher salt covering it, pressing the salt into the edge. Lift the glass and tap the edge gently, knocking off any excess salt. You want the salt to be on the outside and edge of the glass, not the inside where salt may slide into and contaminate the drink.

Strawberry Margarita

So simple to change the flavor of your margarita to your personal taste.

The original margarita recipe is very simple. Just three ingredients and you have a delicious cocktail ready to go. Such simplicity has inspired a wide variety of creativity in the margarita realm, much like it has in the martini realm. The core of the drink sill revolves around the tequila, and adding something sweet to it. Some of the variations are very subtle, like the Blue Margarita, Mango Margarita, or a Sour Apple Margarita. Some of them are a little more complicated:

Spicy Cucumber Margarita (via Examiner)

Half a cucumber, peeled and cubed
1 slice jalapeno pepper, minced, no seeds
1 oz. reposado tequila
.5 oz. lime juice (about half a medium lime)
.5 oz. orange liqueur

Muddle the cucumber and jalapeno in the bottom of a shaker, and then add ice. Pour all of the liquid ingredients into the shaker, and then shake. You want to shake it about ten or so times. Strain the drink into the margarita glass, filled with ice and rimmed with salt. You can mix some pepper flakes in the salt as well for some extra kick.

Catalina Margarita (via About.com)

1.5 oz. silver tequila
1 oz. peach schnapps
1 oz. blue curacao
.5 oz. sour mix

Add ice into a shaker. Pour all of the liquid ingredients into the shaker, and shake well. Pour into a margarita glass, rimmed with sugar and filled with ice. For fruitier or sweeter margaritas, a sugar rim is recommended.

Margarita mixed in a washing machine Baha Margarita (via The Beer Lady Speaks)

1.5 oz. silver tequila
1 oz. coconut rum (Malibu is an excellent choice)
1.5 oz. lime juice
1 tbsp. simple syrup (optional)

Add ice into a shaker. Pour all of the liquid ingredients into the shaker, and shake well. Pour into a margarita glass, rimmed with salt and filled with ice. The interesting thing here is the use of coconut rum as the sweet element, which marries well with the lime juice.

As mentioned earlier, Elsa’s is the undisputed champion of the margarita in Dayton. However, that is not to say there is not competition for the crown. Pepito’s in Kettering has been known to serve a delicious margarita or two. El Toro can also throw its hat in the ring, offering a wide variety of tequilas as well as variations on classic. El Meson will be celebrating the day with tapas specials as well as Meson Margaritas. Abuelo’s will also be celebrating the day with specials on their premium margaritas. There are plenty of places to go to celebrate National Margarita Day. Just remember this article if you have to work the next day. Cheers!

 

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Abuelo's, El Meson, El Toro, Margarita, National Margarita Day, Pepito's

Music of the Mad Men Era with Dayton Philharmonic

February 20, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

mad-men-logoTonight, February 21, you have one more chance to catch the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra’s Music of the Mad Men Era concert–and by ordering online with promo code DMM, you’ll receive 50% off your tickets!

Fans of AMC’s swank, swinging masterpiece set in the boardrooms and bedrooms of 1960s New York will love this weekend’s offering, the fourth concert in the 2015-2016 Kettering Health Network SuperPops Series, featuring 1950s and ’60s pop and jazz hits like “Fly Me to the Moon,” “Feeling Good,” “Moondance,” “Sway,” and of course, the Mad Men theme. From Tom Jones and Nancy Sinatra to Mancini, Bacharach, and Esquivel, prepare to be immersed in the rapturous sounds of a bygone time.

This concert is a triumphant homecoming for guest conductor Stephen Reinke, currently serving as music director and conductor of the New York Pops at Carnegie Hall, Principal Pops Conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and Principal Pops Conductor of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Reinke, a Tipp City native, is also a graduate of Miami University of Ohio and the Dayton Philharmonic Youth Orchestra.

Reineke and the DPO are joined by accomplished guest vocalists Janet Dacal and Ryan Silverman. Both seasoned Broadway performers as well as recording artists, Dacal has starred in In the Heights and recorded with many chart-topping singers, and Silverman is currently starring as Billy Flynn in the Broadway production of Chicago.

Tickets for Music of the Mad Men Era range from $27 to $78 and are available at Ticket Center Stage (937) 228-3630 or online at www.daytonperformingarts.org. Senior, teacher and student discounts are available at the box office. And, don’t forget, with your Dayton Most Metro discount code DMM, you’ll receive 50% off!

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra's Music, MadMen

Airport Announces Parking Incentives

February 18, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

dayton-airport-parking-map-1Economy lot parking at Dayton International Airport is now even more affordable. Through April 4, 2016, airport visitors may use the economy parking lot for a daily rate of $4.75 ($28.50 weekly), a savings of more than 20 percent.

To take advantage of the special rate, go to flydayton.com and follow the coupon printing instructions (the coupon must be presented to the economy lot cashier upon exiting).

Members of DAYperks, the airport’s new parking loyalty program, receive the special rate automatically during the promotional period. To sign up for DAYperks and receive even more advantages, register at flydayton.com/dayperks. Members save time with automated entry and exit, save money by earning points redeemable for free parking, and can easily manage their secure online DAYperks account. DAYperks membership is free.

Additional parking information for Dayton International Airport:

Reserved premium parking:  Parking spaces may be reserved on the second floor of the airport garage, just steps away from the elevators. To reserve a space, go to flydayton.com and look for “Your Spot is Waiting for You.” After paying a $3 per day fee, a premium parking reservation flier can be printed for placing on a vehicle dashboard. Reserved premium parkers are responsible for ordinary parking rates by pulling a ticket when entering the garage and paying the posted rate upon exiting.

New garage rates:  The second and third floors of the airport garage are just steps away from the terminal entrance and have a new rate of $18 per day. Visitors can enjoy the convenience of the covered walkway to the terminal.

Valet parking:  On-airport valet parking is available curbside at the terminal, with a new rate of $20 per day. Periodic customer appreciation specials will take place throughout the year.

Handicap parking:  Designated handicap parking is available at the lowest posted hourly/daily rate in the garage, the short-term lot and near shuttle pick-up in the economy lot. The DAYrider courtesy shuttles are lift-equipped.

Additional amenities include a free, Wi-Fi-enabled cell phone lot, where drivers can monitor flight information while waiting for calls from arriving passengers.

The short-term lot, adjacent to the terminal entrance, offers the first 30 minutes of parking free. All airport lots have a 10-minute grace period for customers who pull into the wrong lot or who are dropping off someone at a vehicle.

For additional parking information, call 937-898-1555. For more information about the Dayton International Airport visit www.flydayton.com.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: airport parking, DAYperks, flydayton.com

Big Mouths – Qualifying Event at Submarine House

February 17, 2016 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

16 inches of Heaven

 

Hey big eaters, we need you.  It is time to put your money where your mouth is.  The Submarine House  is teaming up with Food Adventures for one hell of a night.  Can you eat a 16 inch sub in 16 minutes?

We are hosting a “Qualifying Event” for the Super Duper Cheesesteak Challenge on March 2nd.  Proceeds of this extravaganza will be going to Children’s Hospital charities.  We have 11 participant spots left, but you must signup quickly before they are gone.

Bring us your hungry and huddled masses!

Friends and family are welcome to come support this one night only showdown on North Dixie Drive.  And guess what, our own food blogger, the BIG RAGU has tossed his hat in the ring as one of the participants.  He is throwing down the gauntlet and challenging all Miami Valley area foodies.  Come one, come all…. to The Submarine House!

Will someone get a time good enough to qualify for the store championship?  Could they be on the road to the Super Duper Cheesesteak Championship in April?

Calling all big mouths with big appetites !

 

HERE’S THE SKINNY:

Don’t Sing it … Bring it

WHAT: 15 participants (only 11 spots are left, so signup soon) will try to eat a 16inch Super Duper Cheesesteak in 16 minutes or less.  This sandwich is triple the cheese, triple the meat and must be eaten as is with the works toppings!

HOW: You pay for the cheesesteak up front ($22), but if you eat it in under 16 minutes, you get your money refunded and you get a free t-shirt.  You can keep the leftovers if you fail.

WHEN: Wednesday, March 2nd, 5:30pm with a shotgun start to begin the eating at 6pm sharp

WHERE: SUBMARINE HOUSE, 8807 N Dixie Dr, Dayton, OH 45414

WHY:  Proceeds from the challenge are donated by Submarine House to Dayton Children’s Hospital Charities

WHO: Spectators, family and friends are welcome to come watch the contest and cheer on their favorites

So far we have the following participants, and only 11 more spots are open, first come first serve:

  1. Steve “The Big Ragu” Milano
  2. “The Garlic Champ”  Kevin Sorice
  3. Kelly “The Compactor” Moore
  4. Bryan “Baby Blues” Suddith

For Charity

Special guest Judges/Referees will be Chef House and Hungry Jax from the Food Adventures Crew.

SIGNUP:  SIGN UP FOR FREE, by emailing us at [email protected] or calling 937-380-6723

We would love to see some ladies enter the contest and shame these boys….

Admission to this event is free for spectators and the restaurant will have their regular food/drink menu available. Come eat, drink and laugh with us!

 

FACEBOOK EVENT PAGE IS HERE–>click this

There will be door prizes, T-shirt giveaways, HouseMade Sauce prizes, and FOOD ADVENTURES may give away some drinks/food!

Please signup for our qualifier and take on the 16 inch super duper challenge!

The 8807 North Dixie Dr. location on March 2

Follow Food Adventures on Facebook by clicking HERE, so you wont miss a moment of Dayton food happenings!

Check out photos below of past Super Duper Cheesesteak Challenges and the delicious Cheesesteaks at Submarine House!

 

 

16 inch Super Duper Cheesesteak means triple everything

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Big Ragu wants to beat “You” in this challenge

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Past Store Champions

Event Summary

Steak Grill

Big Ragu on the right, is ready to take the challenge !

Can you do it in 16 minutes???

Ragu chomps into a cheesesteak

Past champ Kris Mick

So… much… cheese

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Last Years overall challenge champion

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bring friends and family to watch

Last Years Store Champions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, Food Adventures, The Featured Articles Tagged With: 16 inches, Big Ragu, challenge, charity, cheesesteak, cheesesteaks, chef house, dayton childrens, DaytonDining, duper, Food Adventure, Food Adventures, hospital, hungry jax, submarine House, subs

Focus: From Your Toes to your Nose

February 17, 2016 By Jason Harrison

How many of our problems could we solve, from bad sex to bad cooking to bad relationships, if we just paid attention?

A lot of them. A lot of them is the answer you’re looking for.

feetMy own training space has yet to open, but I’m able to train my clients in a few different generous facilities in the area. For the places that have televisions, I’ve noticed that people spend an inordinate amount of time watching cable when they ought to be paying attention to what they’re doing.

A really good gym, in other words, like a really good bar, doesn’t have televisions. (Perhaps here it would be wise to make a distinction between say, a watering hole, and a Bar with a capital B. A watering hole is a place you go after work to knock a couple back and joke about Jim in Accounting’s propensity to fart silently in his cubicle. A Bar on the other hand, is a place you go to create, build upon, or re-establish intimacy. There are no televisions because you’re paying attention to the quality in your glass and the presence of your company.)

I’ve watched people all week walk into various health clubs and zone out in between sets, or worse, watch television while performing some sort of exercise. Sometimes you’ll even see a little television mounted on the treadmill, elliptical machine, or other cardio equipment.

photo-1447452001602-7090c7ab2db3

What’s wrong with watching a little television at the gym? After all, if I’m someone who hates going to the gym, why can’t I check out a home-flipping show on HGTV while I’m doing lunges?

The television-at-the-gym attitude stems from the old idea that you’re there to burn calories or lose weight. As long as I’m burning calories (and thus losing weight), the thinking goes, then I’m fine, television or not.

 

But that attitude misses at least half the reason why we ought to be going to the gym, which is learning how to operate our own bodies.

Yes, get stronger.

Yes, change your metabolism.

Yes, build stronger bones.

Yes, set and exceed personal bests for various lifts.

But don’t forget to learn how to MOVE.

Don’t forget to learn how to tilt your pelvis this way, or retract your shoulders that way, fight hyperextension in your spine another way.

Don’t forget to learn what it feels like just short of exhaustion.

Don’t forget to learn what it feels like to use your butt to squat.

Because that connection between brain to muscle is what will keep you injury-free and moving well as you age. If you’ve spent all of your time sitting on a machine and scrolling through Kanye West’s Instagram feed or watching Sportcenter in between sets you’re missing something.

During one of the most stressful years of my life, I would wake up occasionally from anxiety about having to face the day ahead of me. Somewhere along the line I learned about a meditation technique that never failed to put me back to sleep, and it had everything to do with listening to my body. I still use the technique to this day.

When I wake up in the middle of the night because of anxiety, I think about my body starting down at my toes. I feel the way the sheets and covers feel against my feet. And I don’t move up to my shins until I am sure I am really feeling my toes and feet. Once I internalize all of the senses involved in one body part, I move to the next.

This type of meditative technique works for two reasons. One, it gets me thinking about something other than what I’m worried about—which is almost certainly something about which I can do nothing in the middle of the night anyway.

Second, it reminds me of my body. Focusing on my body, my breath, and my aliveness all serve as reminders that I’m living and breathing and okay. I’m okay.

This is just one example of how tightening the connection between our minds and bodies can have a dramatically positive effect on our lives. What better place to begin closing that gap than at the gym?

photo-1438109519352-a52c41243c1a

If you’re already working out, I implore you to turn away from the television set, away from your phone, and toward your body. Rest for that 90 seconds in between sets, and think about how your body feels. You’re alive. You are alive. And you are okay.

For extra credit, incorporate the same technique the next time you’re with someone you love or someone with whom you think love might be a possibility. Look into their eyes. Don’t be creepy about it, but watch their bodies, the way they tilt their head when you ask them a question, the way they talk with their hands, and the way they smile when they talk about their hobbies. Human beings can’t help but reciprocate this kind of connectivity. And I promise you that what follows will be more interesting and infinitely more gratifying than anything you’re likely to see on your phone or on T.V.

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jason Harrison, Present

Creating Youth Leaders through Growing, Sharing, and Selling Food

February 16, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

logo_citybeetsTeens and their families can learn about growing their own food by participating in our community gardening program, attending a gardening class, and visiting a garden park and Possum Creek MetroPark, where they can grow vegetables in the demonstration gardens. Dedicated City Beets volunteers are invited to stop by the farm at Possum Creek to talk with staff about the new gardens, help build beds and find out what other volunteer opportunities are available this summer.

In this summer program, youth ages 12-15 years old:

  • Grow vegetables in the demonstration garden at Possum Creek MetroPark Farm
  • Learn leadership & job skills
  • Sell food at the Saturday 2nd Street Market
  • Take local volunteer field trips
  • Learn about where food comes from and food systems
  • Prepare & eat snacks from harvested food
  • Make new friends

When does City Beets happen?
Youth Managers will attend pre-summer training sessions through May. During the summer, all City Beets youth meet for eight weeks. Youth are expected to attend all sessions.

Summer sessions are typically as follows:

  • Optional: Monday evening Family Garden Time
  • Wednesdays: 9:00am-12:30pm
  • Fridays: 9:00am-12:30 pm
  • Saturdays: Several shifts at the 2nd Street Market are required. Times may vary.

Who should apply for City Beets?citybeets1
Youth ages 12-15 years old who:

  • Enjoy being outside
  • Have an interest in gardening or business
  • Can commit to attend all sessions
  • Want a unique summer experience!

What are the benefits?
Youth will learn valuable skills in business, communication, leadership, problem-solving, nutrition, and cooperation. City Beets participants also receive gift cards totaling $100 for satisfactory participation. Youth Managers will recieve $200 in gift cards.

Adults, get involved!
Would you like to get involved with City Beets? We are always seeking City Beets Mentors. Mentors work in the garden, help with nutrition and cooking classes, attend field trips, or a mixture of all three! Please contact Kevin Kepler at (937) 275-7275 or [email protected].

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: City Beets, community gardening, MetroParks

Last Call For Grandma Moses and the Handicraft Tradition

February 16, 2016 By Bryan Suddith

checkered_house_web800Handicrafts and fine art don’t normally go together in my mind. My grandmother was a great quilter, yet I have never associated her traditional needlework as fine art. If you are like me in this thinking, think again.

The Dayton Art Institute is closing a months long exhibition centered on Grandma Moses. American Sampler: Grandma Moses and the Handicraft Tradition closes on February 21 and you don’t want to miss it.

Grandma Moses, Anna Mary Robertson Moses (1860–1961), was a lifelong professional seamstress until she begin creating works of art late in life at age 78. A sample of more than 50 of her pieces are on display. Her work covers a variety of mediums including paintings, embroideries, a quilt and other handmade items.

The entire exhibit pays homage to other artists and handicraft works. A tapesty sampler from England that dates to 1675 makes the modest fee worth it. Just feet away hangs a Grandma Moses quilt that was reminiscent of my own grandma’s quilting style.

Grandma Moses and Woldemer Neufelds paintings of rolling hills beyond small midwestern towns tell a story. The paintings are a view into American life 60, 70 or 80 years ago. I found myself moving back and forth between the two comparing styles. Both Moses and Neufeld lend their brush to depicting rural Ohio.

Checkered House is one of her paintings on display. Grandma Moses shares personal stories about this home that has been part of her family in New York for more than 200 years. The personal nature of her work and its approachability makes this art exhibition one appealing to the entire family.

Organized by The Dayton Art Institute and curated by Dr. Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, Chief Curator, Curator of European Art, American Sampler is on until February 21, 2016.

Exhibition Admission
Museum Members: Free
Adults: $14
Seniors (60+): $11
Students (18+ w/ID): $11
Active Military: $11
Groups (10 or more): $11
Youth (ages 7-17): $6
Children (6 & under): Free

Advance tickets can be purchased at etix.com

Prices include admission to the exhibition and the museum’s permanent collection.

Filed Under: Visual Arts Tagged With: Anna Mary Robertson Moses, Grandma Moses, The Dayton Art Institute

Dive Bar Tuesday – Sure Shots

February 16, 2016 By Brian Petro

Sure Shots Exterior

Welcome to Sure Shots!

We love to get excited about things becoming bigger and better. We watch the places that follow all the trends, trying desperately to either keep up with them or get ahead of what they are doing. More craft beers, larger cocktail menus, more and more food options. All of it in the name of trying to attract more customers. That may be the expected thing to do when you own a bar or restaurant, but it is not always the right thing. Occasionally the right thing is to be the solid rock in a sea of changing tastes. Sure Shots has been following this path for as long as I have been stopping in, and they must be doing something right. Approaching the bar from the outside, you can tell this is a no frills place where people just come for a good time and a cold beer.

The first thing that is going to strike you when you open the door to Sure Shots is a whiff of cigarette smoke. As long as it has been since the smoking ban settled on the state of Ohio, there are still bars out there where that oddly comforting aroma still lingers. The second thing that struck me is the lack of light. This is a bar where, once you are in, hours can fly by and you would not know it. The main source of lighting was focused on the pool tables and dart boards, and a few large television screens around the perimeter. There is also a nice selection of music on the juke box, and the soft glow of a Jägermeister machine and a drink mixing machine preparing Apple Pie Shots for the unsuspecting masses. A few portions of the wall are also well lit that show off their community outreach by supporting local teams, or dart and pool league champions.

Sure Shots pool table

Time for some beers and some pool. Not in that order.

Sure Shots is a nuts-and-bolts bar. Minus the Jaeger machine, nothing is on tap, all the beer is by the can or bottle. They like to support locals in their drink selection when they can, offering Warped Wing favorites behind the bar and some Belle of Dayton for all your vodka sipping needs. They carry a few nice liquor choices, like Hennessy and Johnny Walker Black, but there are no rarities or odd flavors that beg to try something new. The Everclear may give you a few dirty looks, but that is really what Everclear does. Every night there is a different drink special, from $5 Root Beer Floats on Mondays to $3.50 Caramel Apples on Wednesday and Saturday. The food menu, like the bar, is also no frills. Come on in for a pizza or a soft pretzel, but that is all you are going to be able to find. That being said, is there anything better to soak up drinks like pizza and pretzels? No, no there isn’t.

The best part of every place we visit are the surprises. Are you a third shift worker? You can swing by Sue Shots when you get off of your shift, since they are one of the few local bars that are open at 5:30 AM. In the area early on a Friday, Saturday, or Sunday morning? You can enjoy a little breakfast while you are there. Eggs, bacon, biscuits, gravy, all of the basics one would expect for a morning meal.  This is also the official Home of the Apple Pie Shot. It has an impact similar to a Bad Juan; you do not feel it at first, but it is something that packs a punch. Apples and rum pair very well together, but one would think that 151 would make its presence more known than it does. Slide in a little of that shifty Everclear, and you have a shot that will definitely grabs your attention.

Many of my friends have stumbled out of this bar in the wee hours of the morning after a long night at work. Every time I have been there the atmosphere has been cheerful, if not fairly boisterous from time to time. There is always a pool game in the corner, and the bar staff is hustling hard to make sure beers everyone has a drink and is having a great time. What more do you want from a local watering hole? Cheers!

Sure Shots is located at 3121 E Dorothy Ln, Dayton, OH 45420. They are open daily from 5:30 AM to 2:30 AM. You can like them on their Facebook page to stay up to date on their specials and other events. 

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, Dayton On Tap, Happy Hour, Hidden Gems, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Belle of Dayton, Dayton, Dayton Ohio, DaytonDining, Dive Bar Tuesday, Kettering, Sure Shots, Things to Do, Warped Wing Brewing Company

Beer & Brewing with A Taste of Aullwood

February 15, 2016 By Dayton Most Metro

 

Join us at Aullwood’s Charity A. Krueger Farm Discovery Center, 9101 Frederick Pike, for Beer & Brewing with A Taste of Aullwood! This event happens on February 20th, 2016 from 6:30-9:00 PM. Enjoy a relaxing and fun atmosphere along with delicious samples from local restaurants and caterers who will provide tastes of their favorite recipes. Drink amazing beers and take part in informative beer tasting sessions with knowledgeable staff. Hairless Hair, Fifth Street Brewpub and beers from Bonbright will be available for tasting. Learn about home brewing from the brewers themselves!
Beer & Brewing with A Taste of Aullwood Logo

Sugar Grove Bluegrass will delight with great music. Patrick Turnbull and Kirk Nichols, home brewers for over eleven years, will demonstrate the beer making process using locally grown ingredients. Sample their latest batch of freshly brewed ale and taste scrumptious culinary delights from these fine participants:

  • Amber Rose
  • Bernstein’s Fine Catering
  • Brock Masterson’s Catering and Events
  • Christopher’s Restaurant & Catering
  • Company 7 BBQ
  • Graeter’s Ice Cream
  • Jerri’s Catering
  • Mrs. B’s Catering
  • Ray’s Wine Spirits Grill
Grand Patron attendance is $50 per person, and Patron attendance is $35 per person. Reservations for this event are limited to 175 people, so make plans today! See the Beer & Brewing with A Taste of Aullwood brochure for a registration form and more details. RSVP by February 15, 2016 or reserve by phone at (937) 890-7360.

Beer & Brewing with A Taste of Aullwood participant     Sugar Grove Bluegrass

Filed Under: Dayton On Tap, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Aullwood, beer tasting, fundraiser

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