Aussie Favourite – Vacations & Travel

Vacations & Travel, July-Sep 2010

Vacations & Travel, July-Sep 2010

It’s already Australia’s ‘favourite travel magazine’ and the latest, quarterly issue of Vacations & Travel offers real value for money.

In the July-September issue, the magazine includes a packed 180-page Annual Holiday Planner. This features more than 80 hotels, resorts, apartments and cruise lines in Australia, New Zealand, and around the world.

That’s in addition to the regular 220-pages of Vacations & Travel, with its great destinations, stunning photography and incisive writing.

In the Antipodes’ winter issue, you’ll find romantic and adventurous tropical destinations, from the rainforest of Sabah to the holiday islands of Mauritius, the Cook Islands and French Polynesia.

There are also features on California, Patagonia, Vietnam and South Africa, plus skiing in Japan, Austria and Canada.

If you’re planning a holiday across the Tasman, the 68-page New Zealand luxury supplement is a must have, listing the very best vacation spots in the land of the great white cloud.

From Auckland to Dunedin, they swear to give you the perfect place to stay, whether it’s for a short break or a longer vacation.

One lucky subscriber to Vacations & Travel will win a five-night vacation for two in Japan, courtesy of Japan Airlines, the b akaska (sic) hotel and Japan National Tourism.

To enter, please click here.

A Moroccan Ratatouille

Okra fruits used as a vegetableOkra or Ladies Fingers

(Originally published on singlesfood.com)

Rituals often relate to the preparation of food as part of some other event but not many people seem to use cooking itself as a ritual.

When I’m getting ready for some serious work, though, that’s exactly what goes on. I have to know there’s enough food prepared for two or three days before I can settle down to the job. And the job today is editing a book about gems.

However, an uninvited ‘gem’ caught up with me today. I found myself cooking not only breakfast (mushrooms on toast with sour plum and shiso sauce, as it happens) but also preparing a South American gumbo (fresh corn, tomatoes, okra, spring onions, and peppers).

As if that wasn’t enough, I then moved on to a kind of Moroccan ratatouille (more peppers and tomato, this time with eggplant and courgettes, marinated in Tagine paste and olive oil and chucked in a bitch oven for a couple of hours).

Finally, I threw some avocado, watercress and cucumber together, drifting some favourite Japanese Furikake (seed and herb mixture) over it as a light lunch.

OK, I did get to the computer, and dealt with some urgent business, as well as dobbing myself in for more work in discussion with a journalist colleague.

The idea is to set up a friendly network of people around the world who can jump into action for disaster relief, i.e. a volcano blowing up Canada, or an illegal underground blast setting off a chain of earthquakes down the St Andreas fault line.

PS, I’ve changed my mind. I’m having chicken and rice for dinner… Sometimes a gal feels like something simple.