Archive for June, 2010
Use Less and Live Big
June 29th, 2010 | 1 Comment
Tags: budget, Environment, Food & Spirits, green, Health & Fitness, savings
Our official mantra “less is more” makes us good green queens. While there’s little good to have come out of this recession, we count our blessings that the go-go days of consuming everything in our path are in the past. After all, nothing is less attractive than a bloated bitch.
Here’s a short list of ways to edit your life so that more becomes less:
Recycle everything. It is not only chic but also sexy. Think about it, how often in life do you get to go both ways? (Spring semester junior year was a long time ago). Take out the middleman for maximum satisfaction. Think consignment stores, backyard sales, flea markets, listings on Craig’s List, e-Bay — all are AC/DC fests extraordinaire.
Plastic surgery is out. Facial rejevunation is in. Think tiny tweaks, nips and jabs. No big jobs; they’re the equivalent of buying a Hummer when a Prius will get you around.
Be a bitch on wheels. Lobby your pols for dedicated bike lanes. Nothing is hipper than rolling to work on a vintage cruiser or zipping around town on an adorable red Vespa.
Go to museums and libraries. Do you need to own things to appreciate them? Do you need to spend hard earned cash to have pleasure? Absolutely not.
While we are tongue in cheek about most things (we wrote Bitches on a Budget — need we say more?) we never kid around when it comes to good food. Stay local, buy local, eat organic. Tiny carbon footprints to market result in fresher, more interesting, and better tasting foods.
Apply our “less is more” rule to almost everything you do. Lighten your load, your look, and make all the other B’s green with envy.
Every Kid Needs Chocolate Chip Cookies
June 28th, 2010 | Comments
Tags: bargain, budget, chocolate chip cookies, Food & Spirits, Health & Fitness, kids, mamas, parenting
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We’ve been wondering what triggers warm memories of feeling safe at home?
The sweetest of all our childhood memories is coming home from school to freshly made cakes, muffins and chocolate chip cookies.

Just this morning we read the results of a chocolate chip taste test done by one of our favorite food blogs- Serious Eats.
The winner? Chocolate chips from Trader Joe’s. Yes, that delighted our little budget heart. We love TJ’s for so many things: nuts, dried fruits, organic Valencia peanut butter–now we’re adding chocolate chips to the list.
Share your favorite chocolate chip cookie recipe with us and we’ll send one lucky B’ a copy of Bitches on a Budget.
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A Vodka Worth Trying
June 25th, 2010 | Comments
Tags: Food & Spirits, martini, vodka
It’s the perfect summer weekend where we live and we’re heading out to the docks to pick up fish from one of the day boat fishermen. Usually, we can score a whole fish for five bucks. We’ll stuff it with herbs and throw it on the grill! Then off to the local farm to pick up early season vegetables to augment the salad we’ll gather from the garden.
As yummy as it all sounds, what we can hardly wait for is our Ciroc vodka martini. Unlike the usual distilled grain or potato vodkas, Ciroc is made in France from grapes. In fact, the primary grape used in production (the Ugni Blanc) is the same grape variety used in Cognac. This vodka is subtle, smooth and distinct.
Remember our mantra: save to splurge. While Ciroc is in the same price range as other ‘designer’ vodkas, it is pricier than the old Smirnoff standby. But , hey, we’re saving so much on our fresh fish and home grown salad, we’re feeling pretty relaxed. And, we haven’t even begun drinking!
Searching for Interior Space Ideas? Free Peeking
June 22nd, 2010 | 1 Comment
Tags: Decorating, home design, interior, Shopping, women's
What woman in her heart of hearts isn’t a secret voyeur?
It’s nighttime. You’re strolling down the street, past rows of homes, curtained window after window. Tell us, are you not drawn to the one room not entirely hidden from sight? To that one apartment where the curtains aren’t sealed, where a stream of light leaks out, revealing a fractured glimpse of the home within? Do you not slow your pace, crane your neck, try oh-so-casually to catch a glimpse of the life beyond the window? Don’t you pause, half-hidden by the shrubbery, to sneak a look at the art on the walls, the rumpled sofa… and, oh, is that Marimekko fabric on the side chair? What paint color is that amazing accent wall? And what on earth is that odd assemblage on top on the bookshelf? A collection of birds’ nests? Or just crumpled tissues?
People are fascinating. Their stuff is too. Other people’s collections and clutter and curiosities excite us. We love how a home reflects the spirit and soul of its inhabits— whether the inhabitants are aware of it or not.
Nope, we won’t lie: we love to spy.
But how? The homes in glossy magazines—so overstyled and trim and tidy—they don’t cut it. Fun, but they don’t send shivers. Too self-conscious. Design porn isn’t the real thing.
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Stop Shopping, Try Swapping
June 19th, 2010 | Comments
Tags: budget, green, Shopping, simple pleasures
Sentimental B’s have cornucopias of junk. Plastic containers, bags, shoe boxes all overloaded with gadgets and gizmos of all shape and size. Belts, watches, candle holders, mirrors, bracelets, keychains, wing-dings, do-hickies, whatchamacallits. And yet everyone invests in these same objects again and again. All the B’s on your street are buying the same stuff. Why not organize a swap? An overbought, underused objects of desire library?
The allure of a new treasure vanishes after a little while… give it a couple weeks, a month, and the glow of the buying rush fades; soon that cherished chia pet is growing dreadlocks in a corner. Share him! Make some other B’s day.
Invite trustworthy friends to join. Label objects. Rotate in and out monthly.
Swapping: It’s green, thrifty, and keeps life fresh.
The One Must Have Herb in Your Garden: Lemon Verbena
June 16th, 2010 | 1 Comment
Tags: Food & Spirits, Gardening, Health & Fitness, Herbs
While tarragon, lovage and lavender are major players in our huge herb garden (along with the ‘usual’ basil, oregano, rosemary and thyme), this summer we’ve cornered the local market on lemon verbena.
 Lemon Verbena
Many years ago, we were introduced to the delicious pleasure of this herb during a visit to a friend’s farm. The very first night of our visit, after roasting a farm raised chicken in the outdoor oven we baked local peaches drizzled with lavender honey for dessert. Then, tipsy from too much local wine, we went into the garden with razor sharp shears to harvest fragrant herbs for tea.
Spearmint, bee balm, marjoram -whatever we could clip in the dark night ended up in the teapot. The hands down stand out from that nightly harvest was lemon verbena. We were hooked.
There is no better herbal tea after a lovely dinner than fresh from the garden lemon verbena. No more delicious ice cream, pannacotta or crème brulee than one made with a lemon verbena infusion. Salads, baked goods, vodkas all sing from the subtle lemon buttery addition—it’s simply sublime.
Clipped and dried its essence lasts for an entire winter.
The one essential herb that every garden must have: lemon verbena.
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Five Stylish Father’s Day Gift Ideas from The Best Dressed Man in America
June 15th, 2010 | Comments
Tags: Father's Day 2010 Gifts, Shopping
At Bitches on a Budget we’re invested in finding the best in glam style for every pocketbook. This Father’s Day we’ve teamed up with Dan Trepanier, The Styleblogger and Esquire’s Best Dressed Real Man in America, to come up with five smart and stylish gift ideas to suit every budget.
1. Lightweight cotton/cashmere cardigan from J. Crew. This isn’t Mr. Rogers’ sweater; it’s a modern, sleeker version. Any man, whether he loves or hates fashion, will look great in this sweater and find it easy to pair with other items in his wardrobe. It’s practical and fashionable. Get one in a neutral color like navy or grey and you will see dad wearing it over and over again, whether its over a t-shirt for those chilly summer nights or layered with a washed shirt and blazer for the fall. Worth the splurge. (jcrew.com $149-$218)

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Scoring a Hotel Bargain
June 14th, 2010 | Comments
Tags: bargain, california wine, Food & Spirits, hotels, Travel & Entertainment

Remember our trip to wine country and all the free wines we got to taste in the Anderson Valley? Our original plan was to spend a few nights in Mendocino and completely pass on Napa and Sonoma. Not because we don’t love Napa and Sonoma, but we wanted to break out of the same route rut (and we were on that California Pinot hunt).
It was a gorgeous ride up from San Fran, during which we nurtured hardcore fantasies of hitting our hotel, sliding into the bath, gazing out on a setting Pacific sunset, and… we’ll leave the rest to your imagination. To our dismay, we arrived in Mendocino to dense, deep, dark fog. We decided that one night in Mendocino would be just terrific and two, well, a tad too gray. We needed to move.
You’ll find a whole section in our book on scoping out great hotel deals. We look for hotels that are ’soft’ opening or very recently opened. Hotels with promise, snagged before the way-cooler-than-us set moves in and glitterati pricing makes them unaffordable. We are expert. Way, way back, we stayed at the Montalembert in Paris during opening week (the original Parisian Boutique Hotel with Christian Liagre designing furnishings—it still rocks). Recently in NYC (a ghastly expensive hotel destination for anyone, let alone a bitch on a budget) we stayed at the Thompson LES during soft opening. Paid a quarter of the current ask! Of course, one day the elevator didn’t work, another the hot water—although with a little sweet bitching they comped part of our stay (we’re working up a post on how to write ‘loving’ mail to get what you deserve).
One way to stay on top of what’s ‘new’ in town is to read the local mags. Hotel public relations machines are in overdrive during opening, and we’d read something in San Francisco Magazine about the Bardessono in Yountville.
Sitting in the dark confines of our Mendocino room we remembered the article. Back and forth, to stay or not to stay, became the question. Then we fell back on our motto—life is short, time is a non-renewable resource, and this trip was all about our being more flexible b’s. We called and found they had one room left at the happy price of $199 dollars. (It was just meant to be.)
Yountville. Ring a bell? The town was put on the foodie capital of the world map by Thomas Keller. French Laundry is his original Yountville place, and it’s harder to score a reservation at this restaurant than to be elected President—well, almost. We’ll leave a detailed discussion of French Laundry for another day, but we do think his new-ish fixed price, fixed menu restaurant Ad Hoc rocks; and we salivate over his Bouchon Bakery’s Cheese Danish’y thing. (OMG! –although if you’re a NYC bitch—or just passing through—you can go to the Time Warner Center and get one at his bakery there.)
We digress. We’ve been to Yountville many times, but it never seemed the place to stay. Just the place to eat. That’s all 100% completely changed because of the Bardessono.
A gorgeous hotel. So cool. So fun. So modern and big and spacious and they were so nice we wished we could have stayed a week. A magnificent rooftop pool, bicycles to borrow, all for free. A lovely spa. They told us you could even come just for lunch and hang out at the pool all day. Anyways, this hipster place is within walking distance of so many great places to eat and a short drive by car, or flat ride by bike (hello, it’s Napa Valley), to some of the greatest wineries in America.
To be perfectly honest, our scampering was a little hasty. The day we left Mendocino turned out clear and magnificent. The town was to-die-for cute and charming and hippie-ish. We took a long walk along the ocean and watched people diving for sea urchins (fresh, one of our faves) and wandered into one of the best independent bookstores we’ve ever been into, The Main Street Book Shop.
Still, we don’t feel too bad. The way we see it: the drive to Mendocino on that magnificent coastline was stunning. We drank great California Pinots in the Anderson Valley. We found what could become one of our go-to hotels in Napa. We snarfed down those warm cheese pastries first thing in the morning on our way to the airport. And all because we were so flexible!
B’s Give Back: Teaching the Next Generation
June 12th, 2010 | Comments
Tags: B's Give Back, Community, Shopping, Volunteer
On Saturday we bring you examples of women who find creative, meaningful ways to give to others. This week we’re featuring Michele S. and her five year old son. Given events in the Gulf, we can’t think of a more timely message of giving back, not only to her community and her family, but to the future of our planet.
Michele wrote to us about how she donates clothing to shelters, teaches art to underserved children and serves as a role model to teach her son about reusing and recycling clothing, materials and plants. We were intrigued so we asked her to share more about how she and her son reuse what is around them. (more…)
“More Ideas than Bergdorf’s has Snobs”
June 7th, 2010 | Comments
Tags: Beauty & Grooming, Books, budget, Food & Spirits, Health & Fitness, Shopping, Travel & Entertainment
Yesterday, The Star-Ledger of New Jersey, wrote a glowing review of Bitches on a Budget. Obviously, whenever anyone says something nice about our message we feel happy, but when someone who is a terrific writer says something nice about our writing, we positively shine.
Some snippets of what they had to say in yesterday’s paper:
“With a prose style that clickety-clacks across the page like stiletto heels on a marble floor, Rosalyn Hoffman gives pointers, tips, guidance and ploys for you to maintain, or attain, the glam of a glossy fashion mag. Clothes, home furnishing, vacationing, dining and, yes, plastic surgery, this book covers it all.”
“Some tips: The clothing at Walmart can be as stylish as at Neiman Marcus, and pleasure in a museum as seductive and romantic as a European spa. Dining out? Lunch at that expensive new restaurant everyone is talking about is cheaper than dinner.”
Best of all, they finish the review by saying “...this book has more ideas than Bergdorf’s has snobs. Buy it!”
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