Your summer is about to get that much better. Even though some serious vaycay time is still a month or so away, Costco is getting ready for the season with boozy wine-infused ice pops!

The perfect-for-summer pops were first spotted by Instagrammer @thecostcoconnoisseur at a Washington D.C. Costco. We can only hope the warehouse retailer brings the goodness to stores nationwide.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bw6_6H6hjFi/

This isn’t the first time Costco has treated us to adult-flavored frozen treats. Last summer’s Slim Chillers pops were a hit that’s making a rumored return this year. Unlike these vodka-based pops, Claffey’s Frozen Cocktails are pops made with wine.

The pops come in 12-count boxes and include apple, cherry, lemonade, blue raspberry, mango and grape flavors. The slushy summer treat is six percent alcohol by volume, making them about as strong as an average beer.

According to the recent IG post, Costco is selling the pops for $17.99. But, as of now, the delish summer treats aren’t available at all stores. If your Costco doesn’t sell the wine pops, visit Claffey’s Frozen Cocktails website for more buying info.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Claffey’s Cocktails via Instagram

 

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“Do you guys know what you’re looking for?” the man’s scratchy voice croaked from behind the counter. His round, friendly face was peppered with a short, white beard. Like Santa after a night of vodka tonics in a black t-shirt with a five o’clock shadow.

“I have no idea what I’m doing but he does.” I nodded at my eight-year-old son. His face was serious as he scanned the stacks of Pokemon cards and comic books behind the counter. The walls that surrounded us were covered from floor to ceiling with more comics and graphic novels.

I’m a writer. I’m an author. And surrounded by the walls of endless reading materials, I’d never felt more out of my element. I never got into comics as a child and graphic novels didn’t enter my vocabulary until I was an adult. To be honest for a hot second I thought they were referring to porn. A quick google search, years ago, dispelled that misconception.

My eight-year-old, though, he confidently moved through the maze. Inspecting each section, meticulously planning what items he wanted to get, even counting up the totals in his head. How many Pokecards and comic books could he get? And at a reasonable price.

I watched him navigate this world the way I navigated the YA section of the library. Enamored with the shelves of novels that held new adventures and worlds and heartache and joy, all just for me. I’d meticulously choose my books based on the max you could check out. I was watching him operate the same way, just with a different writing medium. I was keenly aware of what I was a witness to. History repeating itself in a weird new dimension.

This boy had struggled to learn to read in kindergarten and first grade. Oh the tears he shed trying to figure it out. And the careful words I let escape my lips, trying to be encouraging and non-pressuring, while just wishing I could wave one of the wands from a story we’d read and fix this all for him. In second grade, though, things changed; something clicked. And now as the second grade was winding down, we were standing in a store filled with reading materials that shouted at him from the shelves.

My son isn’t the only boy that faced reading struggles. In 2016 Scholastic conducted a survey of 2,000 children ages 6-17, 52% of boys and 73% of girls said they liked reading books over the summer. Twenty-seven percent of boys and 37% of girls said they read books for fun five days a week. These statistics were nothing new to me. Because I’m in the writing world and reading was so crucial to my happiness, I’d been keenly aware of the reading stigma around boys. I knew when my boys were born, I’d do all I could to encourage them to love books and stories and reading. I’ve been reading to them at bedtime (and more) since they were newborns.

And after all of that foundational building, I still watched my first-born son struggle. I felt his passion for books slipping from my parenting grasp, little wisps fighting to fade away. And that was terrifying to me. Soul crushing. How could my son not love books? My son! I was the girl who climbed trees in the summer with a book in her hand and sat up there reading all by herself, enjoying nature and a good story.

As we often learn as parents, I was wrong. I was afraid for nothing. He needed to do this on his own time. Watching him operate in this neighborhood comic book store proved me wrong. It’s about the type of reading material. He needed to find his niche, the genres that make him feel the way I felt brushing my hands along the spines of shelved books in a tiny neighborhood library, the smell of paper dancing up my nostrils, carrying a calm.

As he added up the totals of his items, yet again, I cut him off. “You can get whatever you want. I’ll buy you Pokemon cards and comics, don’t worry about it. Pick out whatever you want to read.”

He did. One graphic novel and three comics. The third comic, a Hulk one, he shyly brought over to the counter as I was checking out. His shoulders were pulled up in his ears as he grinned and slowly tip-toed over. I held out my arm, and he quickly handed it over, the grin morphing into an ear-to-ear smile.

The next morning, he woke up and excitedly told me, “Hey mom. I’m already on page 20 in the Skylanders book!” My eight-year-old who struggled to learn to read proudly bragged about how he stayed up late reading 20 pages of his brand-new book. For fun. Take that, statistics and stigmas and mom-guilt! He’s a recreational male reader. Boom!

I still don’t get comic books though.

Nicole is boy mom to two small dudes that never stop moving or eating. She is a Pilates instructor and all around fitness junkie. She's a Chicagoan through and through. She loves reading, writing, philanthropy and using a good dose of aromatherapy in a hot bath to unwind.

Nothing will try your patience like a trip to a theme park with kids, so that’s why Disney’s Dole Whips just for grownups make us so happy. The limited-edition drink pairs the classic Pineapple Dole Whip with Moscato wine and vodka for the perfect parental pick-me-up.

The Froscato is just one of several new Dole Whip varieties Disney Parks has been whipping up these days, and like the other varieties, you can only get them in one place. So where can you find this elusive beverage?

https://www.instagram.com/p/BvVV42tD8KN/

You can find the Dole Whip Froscato only at Wine Bar George at Disney Springs in Orlando, Florida. Head to the quick service window called The Basket, hand over your $13 with gusto and prepare to enjoy.

If vodka isn’t your thing, you can substitute Prosecco for a sparkling mimosa-inspired take. Can you say, “brunch?”

––Karly Wood

 

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Cocktails at the push of a button? Um, sign us up. K-Cups for cocktails are an actual thing, making us all mixologist moms.

Drinkworks by Keurig works just like the coffee pod drink maker you already know and love—but, of course, the major difference is that instead of making caffeinated goodness, these machines brew up batches of your fave cocktails!

So how exactly does the Drinkworks drinkmaker work? Let’s say you’re not exactly Tom Cruise in Cocktail when it comes to making mixed drinks. Just pop one of the Keurig pods into the machine, add water and that’s it! The pods include the alcohol and the ingredients while the machine carbonates and chills your mixed drink of choice.

Make the most of this mixologist-like gadget. Drinkworks also comes with a an app, providing you with info on unboxing and setting up your machine, ordering pods, making drinks and monitoring the drinkmaker’s cleaning status.

The current menu of Drinkworks pods includes Cosmopolitan, Daiquiri, Gin and Tonic, Lime Vodka Soda, Margarita, Strawberry Margarita, Mojito, Moscow Mule, Old Fashioned, Red Sangria, White Russian, White Wine Peach Sangria and Mai Tai. The pods also come in British classic flights, Beck’s classic flights and Stella Artois cidre.

Visit the Drinkworks website for product availability.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Rawpixel via Pexels

 

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So you’re finally pregnant and wham – it’s the holiday season. You’re not ready to tell your boss, friends or even family the news yet. But every week on the calendar has a cocktail party in it. Your workplace bash is just one of the many gatherings designed to trip up your carefully planned unveiling of baby news. Here’s how to keep the bump under wraps.

photo: AI404 via Flickr

1. Swap drinks with a friend. This is an easy one and almost all pregnant women cop to it after the fact. Switch your full glass for your husband’s half full one when no one is paying attention. Occasionally, pretend to take sips. Once everyone else gets tipsy, you can pour what’s left in the nearest planter.

2. Get in cahoots with the bartender. Arrive to the fiesta early and explain your situation to whoever is making drinks. Then, when you order a vodka soda, he’ll know to pour a seltzer on ice. Make sure to specify the proper vessel! We had one mom report the jig was up when the bartender served her fake cocktail in a water glass.

3. Avoid the empire waistline. This is the easiest way to look pregnant even when you’re not, so don’t go there unless you’re looking to score a seat on the bus.

4. The baggier the better, to a point. If your belly is growing, look for clothing that’s made to fit loosely so you can hide your bump without looking like you’re wearing everything too big.

5. Keep wearing the same pants. If people start suspecting you’re pregnant, a change in wardrobe might give you away. As your belly grows, keep your pants up with a hair tie looped through a buttonhole and hooked to the button. And since it’s the holidays, your pants getting tighter is par for the course.

photo: Simon LeLoup via Flickr

6. Talk up last night’s party. We’re not saying you should lie, but if people know you were at your husband’s best friend’s birthday over the weekend, say things like, “It was a crazy party! I was sooo tired Sunday!” Everyone knows “tired” is adult code for “hungover.” That’s how your coworkers and acquaintances will understand it, and it’s probably the truth (for different reasons) anyway.

7. In the same vein, if you’re not up for the drink switch or bartender fake-out, just claim to be hungover. “I couldn’t possibly drink again after last night! Ugh! Just the smell makes me want to barf!” Probably also true.

8. Or speaking of claims, claim to be on antibiotics. Women have admitted faking UTIs and infected gums to lend credence to their reports of antibiotic-use.

photo: Alain Bachellier via Flickr

9. Talk about trips or activities that would be off limits if you were pregnant. Tell people you are thinking about skiing soon or how you can’t wait to relax in a hot tub. Tell people about plans for a girls’ weekend in Vegas. It’s all about throwing them off the scent.

10. And when all else fails, dodge. You can get out of a sticky situation by changing the subject or faking a phone call. Sure, it looks suspicious, but when next time you see the person you go on and on about how you can’t wait to party at your friend’s bachelorette in New Orleans, she’ll be confused enough to let it go.

How did you hide your pregnancy before you were ready to spread the news? Tell us in a comment.

— Anna Knoebel

featured photo: Pepe Pont via flickr

Kids are back in school, so reward yourself for a summer well done by scheduling much-needed adulting time with you favorite crew. Looking for a place to host your next MNO (Mom’s Night Out) or book club meeting? Read on for our roundup of perfect spots for a bit of girl time!

Morton’s Steakhouse
You hang with a meat and potatoes kind of crowd? If you’re looking for an unobtrusive locale that provides an environment that enables great tête-à-tête interaction, consider Morton’s Steakhouse — the king of the steak and seafood market. There are several locations to choose from, making your ladies get-together a cinch: two locations in Chicago, Naperville, Rosemont, Schaumburg and Northbrook. Bonus: Your server will take a professional photograph of your group for you to take home.

Morton’s Steakhouse
Various locations throughout Chicagoland
Online: mortons.com

Kings Bowl Lincoln Park
photo: NEWCITY Kings Bowl

Lincoln Park’s NEWCITY has loads of entertainment and dining options, including two really great restaurants that offer a fun atmosphere for an ideal MNO: Earls Kitchen + Bar and Kings Lincoln Park.

Earls Kitchen + Bar
Open since fall of 2015, their menu focuses on fresh, in-season ingredients and innovative worldwide inspired meals. Earls has a large outdoor three-season patio with fire pits and cushioned couches, where you’ll enjoy live music and handcrafted drinks.

Kings Bowl Lincoln Park
is a giant retro-inspired space that includes swanky bowling, American dining and cocktails. The soy-glazed salmon is delicious and for something to talk about, order the “Savage”, which features citrus vodka, St. Germaine strawberry puree, fresh lemon juice topped with Sprite and a glass rimmed with Pop Rocks. Note: during the day, kids are welcome and invited to hang, play and dine.

NEWCITY Lincoln Park
1457 N. Halsted St.
Lincoln Park
Online: experiencenewcity.com

Arami Chicago
photo: Arami

Arami
This light-drenched restaurant in West Town is the place to go for authentic Japanese options with several unique twists on classic American fare. Arami recently launched a Sunday brunch, which may be ideal for your mom’s group outing. Be sure to check their website for fun happenings like Noodle Night, Sushi Class or Japanese Whiskey Tasting, all of which would make for a fun night out with your mom pals.

Arami
1829 W. Chicago Ave.
West Town
Online: aramichicago.com

The Gwen Chicago
Photo: Upstairs at the Gwen

Upstairs at The Gwen
Located at The Gwen Hotel Chicago, a Luxury Collection Hotel, is a lovely and private rooftop terrace with an Art Deco design, which makes for a perfect meeting spot for interesting and delicious cocktails and sharable plates. You’ll love the Prosecco Popsicles and personal bar carts!

Upstairs at The Gwen
521 N. Rush St.
Near North Side

The Terrace at Trump
Another great rooftop terrace, with one of the very best views of Chicago, is The Terrace at Trump. When you gaze upon the Wrigley Building’s clock tower, you’ll think you’re staring at a green screen—it’s that magical. And, of course, the menu options are incredible—sharable or individual. Here you can also order a Chilled Shellfish Tower, Flatbreads or a Terrace Picnic, which includes a sharable picnic basket for up to four people.

The Terrace at Trump
401 N. Wabash Ave.
Near North Side
Online: trumphotelcollection.com

Where’s your favorite spot to connect with your mom squad? Chat with us about it in the Comments!

—Wendy Altschuler

When it comes to getting a meal on the table for a hungry family in New York City, takeout (or, let’s be honest) delivery, can be a godsend. Likewise, cooking up a pasta and red sauce dinner for the kids is a quick, cheap and easy dinner solution. But it’s hard to imagine why one would order in an Italian staple like spaghetti and meatballs. Here’s why: It’s way better than your Ragu and Ronzoni and you even get to keep the cute pot it comes in. Mangia!

photo: Paul Wagtouvicz/Maroni Hot Pots

A Long Island Tradition Comes to the Upper East Side
The Maroni Family has been serving up classic and delicious Italian fare like Pop’s Pizza Bread and Spaghetti and White Clam Sauce at Maroni Cuisine outside of Northport, Long Island since 2001. (Their sauce is so popular that you can pick up a jar at most Fairway locations.)

Now, the clan is serving the Upper East Side and beyond at the first Maroni satellite operation.

photo: Paul Wagtouvicz/Maroni Hot Pots

If You Dine In
This E. 77th Street spot is about as family-friendly as you can imagine. Arriving with a stroller? No problem. It can be quickly parked in the takeout area, and the music playing (usually The Beatles, a favorite of co-owner Michael Maroni) is just loud enough to drown out any fussing or ‘outside’ voices.

Open Tuesday through Sunday from noon to nine, there are ample opportunities to tuck into a pan of Chicken Milanese or Chicken Parmesan but, frankly, the hearty, gooey Gagootz (Zucchini) Parmesan is what we’ll come back to savor next time we’re in the neighborhood. Then again, we’d also advise diners to save room for the cannolis—from the cookie itself to the chocolate-chip studded filling, it’s the real thing.

However, with just 14 seats, Maroni Hot Pots is small, which gives you the perfect excuse to order one of its tasty and cute red enamel pots right to your door. (The restaurant proudly proclaims: “Our pot is legal.”)

photo: Paul Wagtouvicz/Maroni Hot Pots

Red Hot Hot Pot
Live on the Upper East Side? You’re in the zone for delivery! (Specifically: Free delivery is offered between E. 66th and E. 86th, and Fifth Ave. and the East River; delivery to the West Side for a fee may be added soon.)

Ordering is simple: choose your pot size (small, medium or large) and how many of Grandma Maroni’s Meatballs you want — you can also order just the meatballs if you like. Prices range from $30 for the small, to $65 for a large; the Maroni’s say that not only do you get to keep the handsome enamel pots, the cookware does keep the food hotter than the typical plastic takeout ware. 

If classic spaghetti isn’t your family’s thing, you can choose from many other dishes crafted using the Maroni’s 100-year-old recipes, such as penne ala vodka, fresh ricotta ravioli, or cacio e pepper, or a variety of pan dishes such as the Chicken Milanese  and Parmesan and others.

Maroni Hot Pots
307 East 77th St/ (at 2nd Ave.)
Upper East Side
212-535-2866
Online: maronihotpots.com

Have you tried Maroni Hot Pots? Let us know in the comments below! 

—Lambeth Hochwald

If you’re looking for something to spice up your weekend nights with family and friends, Elizabethan Desserts has a fun and wholesome way to do it. This Encinitas bakery, known for their gorgeous cakes and perfectly coiffed desserts, is turning back the hand of time every Friday and Saturday evening and hosting their own signature Vintage Game Nights.

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The 1940’s-50’s style bakery, reminiscent of grandma’s house with a fireplace, Queen Anne chairs and mint green and white doily covered floors, is the perfect setting to get you nostalgic and hungry at the same time. Test your skills at old school games like Yahtzee, Connect Four and Battleship while noshing on classic desserts like housemade Twinkies, Jell-o cake and Hostess-style black and white cupcakes. Kids will love the treats while experiencing an evening of non-electronic games that mom and dad played when they were wee ones.

Hostess cupcakes

Sweet Treats for Parents
Everyone loves a glass of milk with their cupcake, but sometimes mom needs something a bit more fun. On any given Friday or Saturday night, you’ll sit alongside other families or groups of girlfriends enjoying classic cupcakes or cocktail-inspired cupcakes for the 21+ crowd. The cocktail-inspired cupcakes are offered at a special happy hour price of $3.25/cupcake and are ONLY available during vintage game nights or by special order.

Favorite flavors include:

  • White Russian: white chocolate coffee Kahlua cake with Kahlua-vodka buttercream
  • Fuzzy Navel: orange cake, with bits of yellow peaches, finished with orange and peach schnapps infused buttercream and a slice of fresh peach
  • Mojito: lime cupcake with fresh mint and tangy limey-white rum buttercream, and a fresh mint garnish
  • The Hurricane: coconut rum cake, passion fruit icing topped with a maraschino cherry and a paper umbrella

Elizabethan Desserts
114 N. El Camino Real
Encinitas, Ca  92024
760-230-6780
Online: elizabethandesserts.com

Parents, what are your favorite childhood games? Do you have any memories that you love bringing to life with your family today?

– Aimee Della Bitta

Photos courtesy of Elizabethan Desserts

For those of us who have long since been in college, spring break means little more than hordes of coeds, swarming sunny beaches with mixed drinks as colorful as their language. Isn’t it time the grownups take spring break back? We at Red Tricycle would like to believe that hard work deserves reward, so shouldn’t you be able to enjoy a relaxing cocktail while the weather gets toasty? Our good friends at Seattle Magazine agree, that’s why they put together a list of 5 cocktails that’ll get you in the mood for a spring break of your own.

Melissa Punch at Seattle Magazine writes:

Spring Break, for many, conjures up visions of snockered college kids carrying around drinks with names that could make a sailor blush and, worse, taste of gasoline mixed with bad perfume. And while we might make fun of these scantily-clad, sandy revelers, I’ll bet many readers feel a twinge of sadness when spring break starts and southern beaches around the country begin to fill.

I mean, it’s probable that you don’t want to join that boozy scene, but doesn’t taking a day off just as the sun is starting to shine more regularly sound like a fantastic idea?Especially if that day is accompanied by a well-made spring-and-summery cocktail that does not resemble a humongous plastic cup filled with vodka and Kool-Aid? Come on, the office will survive without you for a day or two.

To help spur you on, I’ve selected a few cocktails that would be ideal companions for more refined, but still awfully fun, late March or early April holidays.

To read more from Seattle Magazine‘s 5 Sophisticated Spring Break Cocktails, click here.

This is our weekly guest post from our friends at Seattle Magazine, which keeps readers on the pulse of restaurants, personalities, arts, entertainment and culture that reflect the tapestry of our dynamic landscape. We’ve teamed up for an exciting partnership to bring you a weekly dose of fantastic Date Night ideas throughout greater Seattle.

 

Pink or Blue? One Line or Two? Cup or stream? What woman hasn’t spent countless hours sweating it out over an innocuous white plastic stick otherwise known as a home pregnancy test (whether trying to conceive or not). Not to mention the small fortune spent on multiple drug store trips to buy more tests (just in case the first one was wrong). Even the cheap dollar store tests add up pretty quickly after a few months of trying to conceive.

With the recent launch of iPeed, those high costs and frequent pharmacy trips are a thing of the past, as the new home pregnancy test iphone application offers 99% accuracy 2 days before your first missed period. Created by a pharmacist mom and her computer developer husband, the iPeed is hoping to revolutionize the $50 million-dollar-a-year home pregnancy test market. And at $2.99 a download for unlimited use, it may do just that.

After downloading the application, you simply aim your urine stream at the bullseye in the center of the screen. A complex algorithm analyzes the level of HCG (pregnancy hormone) in your urine. Sensitivity is > 12.5 mIU/mL, comparable to most tests available at the supermarket. If the test is positive, an image of a cooing baby appears (above, right). If the test is negative, an image of a martini appears.

If things go as planned, your future pharmacy trips may be limited to diapers and formula. Or vodka.

iPeed
http://www.ipeedapp.com/