What to do, where to go, who to see over the holidays? Find it all in our Nov./Dec. 2019 Issue of Northeast Ohio Boomer & Beyond Magazine.

This festive issue is your go-to guide for traditional and offbeat places to go and things to do as family and friends gather together for the holidays. You’ll also be inspired by our Volunteer Salute to ordinary people in our midst who do extraordinary things with their gifts of time and talent for others. Lively articles about food, films, photographs, Boomer lingo, grandparenting, health, finances and more will make great conversation starters, as well.

https://issuu.com/northeastohioparent/docs/boomernovdec2019

November/December 2019

November/December 2019

How “A Christmas Story” Became More Than a Movie

Almost no movie is more aligned with Cleveland than "A Christmas Story." Take a few minutes to read about this iconic film and how it continues to live in the hearts and minds of Northeast Ohio residents. ...
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Offbeat Alternatives Add a Twist to the Holidays

Before the holidays become a blur of gift lists and obligations, make a plan to make them special. While long-held traditions like watching live performances of “The Nutcracker” or “A Christmas Carol” certainly hold their place, why not break the mold and start a few offbeat holiday traditions with your friends and loved ones? Northeast Ohio has plenty of fun and entertaining options from Thanksgiving through the New Year. ...
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Tech Talk: Include the Gift of Time with Gadget Gifts

Nothing is more valuable than the gift of tutelage. Spending time to explain the features and functions while showing older adults how to use the gadget you give is good for everyone. Trust me on this. I’ve heard more than once about well-meaning givers’ gifts that were never opened because the recipient didn’t know what to do with them. ...
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Gifts with Good Taste; Try Keeping It Local for Holiday Giving

If you want to keep your gift-giving local this season, Northeast Ohio has plenty of options. Even better news: You don't have to drive to buy most of these foodie favorites; most are available online, too. ...
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Magical and Memorable Christmas Outings with the Grandkids

If your grandkids come from across the street or across the country, our Grammy on the Go columnist has suggestions for making holiday memories with the little ones. ...
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Charitable Donations: Give with Your Heart & Head

When you give money to a charity, does it go where you want it to? How can you know if your donation is getting in the right hands? Our legal expert has advice to help direct your charitable giving. ...
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Holiday Cranberries: Tart, Healthy and Yes, Sometimes Canned

Many people say this is their favorite time of year. The weather gets cooler, the trees change from greens to autumn hues, then winter bareness. It’s also the return of pumpkin spice; coffee, muffins, candles… pumpkin spice everything. And it’s the time to celebrate with our families around the dinner table, a feast of warm and savory seasonal foods.

There’s an ingredient that you can add to your menu that will add zip to your recipes, and I’m not talking about pumpkin spice. Cranberries can brighten every part of your holiday menu. Cranberries come in several forms; they’re readily available and easy to use. 

A Berry Good Addition

You may already enjoy cranberry juice on a regular basis; it’s also a great ingredient for holiday cocktails. Dried cranberries are available year-round. They are a  healthy snack, often found in the better-quality trail mixes They also make a great addition to a salad, especially with toasted nuts and blue cheese. 

Fresh cranberries are too tart to be eaten on their own. Cooking them with something sweet like sugar or maple syrup helps balance the tartness. A homemade cranberry sauce can be a great addition to your Thanksgiving menu. Making it with fresh ginger and orange juice creates a condiment that goes well with turkey and stuffing but here’s a tip about homemade cranberry sauce that most people don’t realize: it’s even better on pumpkin pie. Topping your pie with whipped cream and homemade cranberry relish makes an often ho-hum dessert extra special.

Canned is Okay, Too

Store-bought canned cranberry jelly is usually served in a perfect cylinder with imprinted ribbed lines from the can still intact. There’s a very good chance you know someone who loves this stuff; my father-in-law certainly does. I make a blowout Thanksgiving feast with homemade everything. Even the cream of mushroom soup for the green bean casserole is homemade, but someone still sneaks in canned cranberry sauce for the family patriarch. 

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Do Boomers Speak a Different Language?

 

 

Years ago, my wife, Janice, and I took in our three nephews while their mother recovered from a car accident. They’re in their 20s and early 30s now but all were under school age when we had them.  

I told the 3-year-old to sit on the hassock so I could tie his shoes. “What’s that? My butt?” I realized that many of the common words that were used by our pre-Boomer parents were part of a different language.

When we visited my grandmother, she told us to hang our coats in the chifferobe and have a seat on the davenport. You scrubbed pans with a “chore boy” and canned foods were kept in the basement in the fruit bin, usually a room that was converted into a pantry that used to store coal. 

We drank out of garden hoses, babies sat on their mom’s lap during car rides with no seat belts and we ran around with sparklers on the Fourth of July. If the weather was “close” (humid) you suffered through it because who had air conditioning? And that brings me to modern conveniences.

 

Say What?

I made the mistake of mentioning to a classroom of college kids that where I live, we aren’t allowed to hang clothes outside. “Why would you do that? Is your dryer broke?” No, they smell better! 

Mistake number two: I mentioned that a lot of old houses had home incinerators in the basement. “Wait a minute! You burned trash in your house? You built a fire in your basement!?” No, it was a controlled fire in a container. The concept was foreign to them.

Then there was the party line. “You’d have a party on the phone? Why don’t you just invite them over?” This comes from a generation that has never actually dialed a phone or has heard a dial tone.

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