Iced Coffee Day Today At Dunkin Donuts!

News & Events No Comments »

Would you like to receive a sample of where my subscribers get their items from to sell on eBay, including myself? Take a peek, it’s f-r-e-e for a week. Sign up HERE

Stop by your local U.S. Dunkin’ Donuts on Tuesday April 21, 2009 and turn 50¢ into refreshment you can feel good about. You Kin’ Do It. For each small Iced Coffee you buy on Iced Coffee Day, 10% of the purchase price will go to The Dunkin’ Brands Community Foundation to support Homes for Our Troops.** Learn more about the event and Homes For Our Troops: https://www.DunkinDonuts.com/IcedCoffeeDay

Ways to Show Your Support:
DONATE YOUR STATUS and show your support. http://apps.facebook.com/icedcoffeedaystatus

Show us how you celebrated Iced Coffee Day. Upload your pictures to our Flickr group: http://www.flickr.com/groups/icedcoffee/

Want more ways to volunteer? Learn how you can help here: http://www.homesforourtroops.org/volunteer

*Offer valid all day. Price and participation may vary. Limited time offer. ©2009. DD IP Holder LLC. All rights reserved.
**Guaranteed minimum donation $100,000. For information about the Foundation, visit http://www.DunkinBrands.com/Foundation.

10 Reasons to Have Family Meals More Often

News & Events No Comments »

10 Reasons to Have Family Meals More Often

When was the last time your family had a meal together? I
don’t mean sitting in the car munching on burgers from the
drive-through. I mean sitting down at the table and sharing
a home-cooked meal.

If you can’t remember when you last enjoyed a family dinner,
make plans to have them more often. Experts have found – and
continue to discover – plenty of benefits for both children
and adults when families have dinner together at least three
times a week.

I know…I know, it’s not always easy, so
click here if you need help with meal planning and
grocery shopping
.

Here are 10 reasons why you should have family meals more
often:

Good For The Body

1. When families eat together, everyone tends to eat
healthier. People who have frequent family meals consume
more calcium, fiber, iron, and vitamins B6, B12, C and E. It
could be because home-cooked meals are healthier than fast
food and restaurant meals. (Source: Archives of Family
Medicine)

2. Children tend to eat more fruits and vegetables when they
frequently have dinner with their families. They also tend
to eat fewer snack foods. (Source: American Dietetic
Association)

3. Children in families who eat dinner together are less
likely to be overweight (Source: Archives of Pediatrics &
Adolescent Medicine). This makes sense, given the findings
in #1 and #2 above.

Good For The Brain

4. Children from families who eat meals together get better
grades than their peers who don’t have lots of family meal
times (Source: Lou Harris-Reader’s Digest National Poll).
So family dinners are not only good for the body; they’re
also good for the brain.

5. When families eat together frequently, children have
better language skills compared to kids from families who
don’t have family mealtimes often. (Source: Harvard
University)

Good For Emotional Health

6. Children of families who eat together report feeling
happier and are more optimistic about the future, than their
peers who have infrequent family meals. (Source: Lou Harris-
Reader’s Digest National Poll)

7. Teenagers are less likely to use drugs, smoke, and drink
alcoholic drinks, when their families eat together
regularly. (Source: Columbia University)

8. It may come as a surprise, but among Moms who work
outside the home, those who have family mealtimes reported
feeling less stress than those who had family dinners less
often. (Source: Family and Consumer Sciences Research
Journal)

9. The more often teen girls had meals with their families,
the less likely they were to have symptoms of depression and
suicidal behaviors. (Source: University of Minnesota)

Good For Family Bonding

10. Eating together gives family members the chance to
communicate and build relationships, something that both
adults and children appreciate very much. (Source: Nutrition
Education Network of Washington & Oprah Winfrey’s “Family
Dinner Experiment”)

I hope these reasons motivate you and your family to try and
eat together more often. We’re all busy – even children have
plenty of after-school activities. But as the list above
shows, family meals are worth every effort we put into them.
It helps to plan ahead so that we’re not scrambling to get
dinner ready or panicking because we don’t have all the
ingredients we need.

To make it easier to get the family around the table with a
home-cooked meal, check out Dine
Without Whine’s menu planning
service
. It cost just a penny to try it out!

9 Simple Ways to Get Your Kids to Eat More Veggies

News & Events No Comments »

9 Simple Ways to Get Your Kids to Eat More Veggies

More Help Can Be Found At Dine Without Whine

It seems like a never-ending battle with the kids. Although you and I know veggies are delicious and they’re also good for you, they act like vegetables are a plague they want to avoid at all costs.

If you need creative ways to get your kids to eat more vegetables, here are 9 ideas to incorporate into your daily meals right away:

1. Make healthy choices readily available and put the sugary and greasy snacks away. This doesn’t mean totally deprive yourselves of these delightful treats, but making healthy eating a normal part of your day goes a long way to helping kids develop better eating habits.

2. Add veggies like carrots or even asparagus to smoothies. Kids love fruit smoothies and they’ll never know you put in a little of those dreaded vegetables in.

3. Sneak vegetables into other foods. For example: Add grated carrots into spaghetti sauce or make a zucchini chocolate cake.

4. Try dip. You know kids love to dip everything. Just make sure they know they have to eat the dip stick and not just lick it!

5. Take your kids shopping with you. Let your child pick out a new vegetable in the grocery store that they’ve never tried. Then prepare the vegetable together.

6. Be patient and consistent. Avoid having a tantrum yourself when your child has a tantrum about vegetables on their plate. Sometimes it will take several times of serving the same food before your child is even willing to try it.

7. Make it artistic and fun. Place veggies into a smiley face on your child’s plate or decorate a pizza with them.

8. Let them choose: raw or cooked. Some children may have a definite preference as to whether their veggies are cooked or raw.

9. Plan your meals. Sometimes it’s easy to forget the veggies when you don’t have a plan…allowing your kids to get into the habit of veggie-free meals. Plan your meals and grocery lists in advance, so you won’t come up short on the greenery.

To make your meal planning a whole lot easier, sign up for you 1 ¢ no-risk trial at Dine Without Whine. They put together your weekly dinner plan and even make a quick and easy printable grocery list for you. Click here to get started

FREE Quick ‘N’ Easy Easter Ideas!

News & Events No Comments »

Hey there!! 

I’ve been MIA for a while.  I am on the road to recovery after giving birth to our wonderful new little girl!  Amanda Nicole was born on March 18th.  8 lbs, 3 oz. 21 inches.  She’s our 2nd girl, and she’s just gorgeous!  Her big sister is on cloud nine, and just loves her little sister to death. 

I’ve also been making plans for Easter dinner.  My oldest will be 6 on Easter Sunday this year!  So, we’re making it an extra special holiday. 

Our friends over at Dine Without Whine have put together some really great ideas for Easter – Be sure to check them out, and make life a little less complicated!

Cramming for Easter Sunday? Grab these Free Quick ‘n’ Easy Easter Ideas!
Dine Without Whine

WP Theme