If you want to personalize a wedding gift for your favorite couple, skip the monogrammed towels and focus instead on the things that would appeal to them most. If they always seem to be slammed for time, perhaps you could provide them with a service that would eliminate at least one major item on their list of to-dos. Do they love surprises? Giving them a gift subscription that changes monthly is a delightful way to keep them guessing and racing to the door to claim their prize. From gourmet goods to keeping the house looking grand, our guide to the best food, drink, and home-related subscriptions to give as wedding gifts has got you covered. Eat the World Universal Yums International Snack Delivery Subscription, $165 and up Universal Yums One of the best ways to get to know a new travel destination is to head to the market and pick up some local sweet and savory snack foods. For the couple that wants to explore the world but may not have the time for a grand tour, bring it...
Welcome to Chow with Me , where Chowhound’s executive editor Hana Asbrink shares all of the irresistible things she’s cooking, eating, reading, buying, and more. Today: Mother’s Day gifts she’d never return or re-gift. Ever since I was little, I’d ask my mother what gifts she’d want for any of the big occasions— Mother’s Day , her birthday, Christmas —and she’d invariably answer the same way: “I don’t need anything.” If pressed? “Make me a card.” As a new-ish mom myself, I find myself relating to her more than I ever have (on this and other matters). Getting a beautiful present is always nice, of course, but more than anything, my taste leans more practical: Is it a product that will help save me precious time that I could otherwise spend kicking back with my little family? (Bonus if it’s something that doesn’t add too much to the clutter that I’m constantly trying to minimize in our N.Y.C. apartment.) Whether it’s a sweet little plant that will guarantee to b...
At Catholic Charities Opportunity Center in downtown St. Paul, Senior Clinical Manager Stacie Joncas works with some of the people who’ve been hardest hit by the many crises that have befallen the Twin Cities over the last few months. “These are people who are really having a rough time right now,” she said. “With the murder of George Floyd, the riots and COVID, what we’re finding is a huge increase in mental health and substance use problems among our client population.” A day center for people experiencing homelessness and for members of other vulnerable communities, the Opportunity Center provides a safe place for people to spend time, eat a hot meal and get help with a variety of issues, including looking for a job, finding affordable housing and getting support for mental health and addiction concerns. When COVID-10 hit Minnesota this spring, most health care providers made the shift to telehealth as a way to safely see their patients without risk of spreading the virus. While...
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