Thursday, April 3, 2008

History Lesson #1 - The River Thames

Hello.

With the March Promotion finally over at my sister blog Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes, I am finally able to get back to some of my other blogs. It was a lot of fun giving away new Copycat Recipes everyday and 31 different cookbooks to download for free (all of which are still available if you would like them) but A LOT of work. I have backed off to a 3 times a week schedule and can start updating my other blogs and sites.

Visit the My Everyday Life Homepage to see all my sites and more.

I don't have a personal post ready for today but I do have an interesting article about the history of London's River Thames. This relates to the area we are up to in the book if you are playing along.

Next time I switch back to my personal quest and have a history of Bourbon.

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The River Thames - London's Ancient Highway
By Janette Vince

Most of the important figures in England's history lived and died by the River Thames. London's historic river served as a highway, an enduring landmark, and a long thread connecting contemporary England with its ancient past.

The Thames is old-far older than Stonehenge, Glastonbury, or the most ancient Irish passage graves. Thirty million years ago, before Britain was an island, the Thames was a tributary to the Rhine. Ten thousand years ago, during the end of the last Ice Age, it was fed by a torrent of glacial meltwater and grew to ten times its present size. An immense, fast-moving juggernaut, the Thames shifted position and forced its way through the Chiltern Hills.

Eventually the torrent slowed, and the Thames settled into its familiar, meandering bed. Geologists believe that it has followed its present route for over three thousand years.

Scientists believe that the Thames Valley has been inhabited for a staggering 400,000 years. There were certainly settlements along the Thames around the time Stonehenge was built. During the Bronze Age, people began using the river as a way to access the continent for trade, and the Thames Valley became an important trade center.

The Romans founded the town of Londinium along the Thames in the year 43 AD, and it grew to become the city of London-the heart of England's history. Today, if you travel the Thames in the London area, you can still see traces of earlier times. Here are some of the fascinating sights you'll see along the River Thames.

London Bridge. Today, London Bridge doesn't look particularly historic. But there has been a bridge on this site for about two thousand years-the Romans built the first one out of wood around AD 60. In the following centuries, London Bridge was destroyed by neglect, fire, tornadoes, and kings-and rebuilt each time. In the Middle Ages, shops, homes, and even a church were built on the bridge. It was the only bridge spanning the Thames until 1750.

Traitor's Gate. This gate provides river access to the Tower of London, and was built by Edward I-known as "Longshanks"-in 1279. Its original purpose was to allow the king to get to St. Thomas' Tower, where he and his family lived, by water. But over the years royals began to use the Tower of London less as royal accommodations and more as a place to house prisoners.

Beginning in the early 1700's, prisoners were transported by barge along the Thames to the Tower, entering through Edward I's old gate. High-profile prisoners who entered the Tower through Traitor's Gate included Anne Boleyn, Catherine Howard, Sir Thomas More, and Elizabeth I.

The Mayflower. In 1620, Captain Christopher Jones moored his ship, the Mayflower, off the docks by a pub called the Shippe before setting sail for America. A year later, he and his crew returned to the area, and he was buried nearby. The Shippe was rebuilt and renamed the Mayflower in the years afterward, in recognition of its connection with the historic ship.

Westminster Abbey. Built by Edward the Confessor and consecrated in 1065, this church is one of the most significant in England. It soon became the coronation site for nearly every monarch in English history, beginning with William the Conqueror. Most Kings and Queens of England were buried here as well. Other luminaries buried in Westminster Abbey include Geoffrey Chaucer, Charles Dickens, Dr. Samuel Johnson, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Sir Isaac Newton.

Magna Carta Island. A hundred years or more after the reign of William the Conqueror, feudal lords felt that the king had too much power-and taxed them too heavily. In 1215, a group of nobles forced King John to sign the Magna Carta protecting their rights under the law. The spot they chose for the signing was an island in the Thames by Runnymede.

Signing agreements and treaties on small islands is an ancient practice in Britain. An island location made it impossible for one side or the other to stage an ambush during the signing, as everyone present could see any approaching armies from a long ways off.

The Thames is more than a river. It's an ancient landmark and a constant in the changing tides of Britain's history. It's the center around which the city of London was built, and it's been a major highway for English trade for thousands of years. When you take a trip on the Thames, you're truly following an ancient road.

Janette Vince is director of the Ecommerce experience days company http://www.thanksdarling.com/ For a wide range of days and nights out in London and other UK cities visit http://www.thanksdarling.com/categories/nights-out.htm

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Friday, March 7, 2008

PeNToMinoes - The Bourbon Trail and Bardstown, KY




On my all too brief trip to Bourbon Country and Bardstown, KY, I had time to complete the goal that I had set out but I saw so much more that I would love to experience. Luckily for me I live only about 40 miles away so I can go back and do these later.

Here are 5 "PeNToMinoes" not in the 1000 Places book that you should consider if you get to Bourbon Country.

1. This is the one I did get to do -- Visit The Old Talbott Tavern (Official Site). I had lunch at this historic inn and travern that sets smack on the Courthouse Square. It now operates as a restaurant, hotel and bed & breakfast. It has a very colorful past. Here is a clip from their website:



The old stone reminder of Bardstown's beginnings still welcomes visitors to
the bustling downtown area. Since the late 1700s, the Old Talbott Tavern on
Court Square has provided shelter, food and drink to Kentucky travelers.

Talbott Tavern is said to be the oldest western stagecoach stop in
America as the westward expansion brought explorers from the east into
Kentucky.

According to legend, figures straight from the history books sought
lodging here during their travels; as a young boy Abraham Lincoln and his family
stayed here, Gen. George Rogers Clark, Daniel Boone, and exiled French King
Louis Phillipe and his entourage stayed here, even painting murals on the
upstairs walls. There are noticeable bullet holes in the now faded paintings and
Jesse James is said to be responsible for them.


Riiiiight. Hey, it's possible. Jesse James mother lived in my hometown of Brandenburg and I have slept in her bedroom. She wasn't there at the time. ;) But that's a story for another time.

Anyway, if you go to the Old Talbott Tavern, go for the history because the food is just average. Nothing wrong with it but it would definitely not make it onto my Roadfood Blog of the best places to eat on the road.

Oh, one more thing -- it's said to be haunted. Maybe it's Jesse.

2. Walk the Courthouse Square (Bardstown Official Site) Bardstown is proud of its history and it have reason to be. It is Kentucky's second oldest city and has one of the largest collections of late 18th and early 19th century buildings in the Southern United States. There is even a recreation of a frontier village right on the Courthouse Square. This is the other PeNToMino I had time for and I am glad. I love reading those little history plaques they put on old buildings.

Across from the Old Talbott Tavern there is a drugstore that still has an authentic lunch counter. If the noon crowd is any indication this would have been a much better choice for lunch though I would have probably had to wait until 3 or 4 pm to get a seat. Next time.

3. Visit a Distillery or Two. I know, this is in the book and I did it, but it is still worth mentioning and doing. I visited Heaven Hill, the closest to downtown, but there are dozens more distilleries within minutes of Bardstown including the world famous Jim Beam and Maker's Mark Distilleries.

4. Kentucky Railway Museum (Official Site) See a wealth of old engines and cars from a time when trains ruled the west at Kentucky's official railway museum. Take a ride through the scenic Rolling Fork River Valley on the dinner train.

5. Abbey of Gethsemani (Official Site -- Check out this address -- http://www.monks.org/) The center offers displays and a video presentation about monastery life as well as a gift shop with Gethsemani Farms products. The Abbey, founded in 1848 by the Order of Trappist Cistercians, is home today to Trappist monks who open doors to spiritual seekers from all over the world.

There is so much to do in and around Bardstown that it may be best just to make a weekend of it. There are several B&B's listed on the official site that look good and I saw at least two right downtown on the square. Who wants to drive home after all that bourbon sampling anyway.

Mark


Not sure when this photo was taken but the two corner buildings are still there. The one on the left is where the lunch counter is.

Monday, March 3, 2008

PeNToMinoes

I have set out to see all the places and things in 1000 places to see before you die, or as many as I can anyway.

The idea is not to fill up a list. The list is just a road map.

The idea behind my quest (and the writting of the book, no doubt) is to live life to the fullest. Do and see as much as you can because soon you will die and then you can't (as far as we know.)

With that in mind, I started this blog. To share my experiences and to (hopefully) hear about the experiences of others.

But, if you think about it, you quickly realize that there are FAR, FAR more than 1000 worthwhile places and things to see and do in the world. Patricia even talks about it in the introduction to the book. 1000 is just a starting point.

Heck, I can think of a dozen around my home, 100's in Chicago and 1000's in other places right off the top of my head she could have included.

So I have decided to start including other Places Not To Miss. And being the geek that I am, I have decided to call them PeNToMinoes.

Pentominoes are one of the worlds best and most popular mechanical puzzles, but unless you are a puzzle nut, like me, or a mathmatician you have probably never heard of them.

There are 12 ways that 5 (Penta) squares (Ominoes) can be put together with the sides fully touching. Wikipedia explains them really well and has some good pictures and diagrams if you are interested.

If anyone is interested in talking mechanical puzzles, write to me. I am ALWAYS interested in talking about puzzles.

So even though it's a geeky name, PeNToMinoes are going to be really cool places, sites and things to do that aren't in the book.

But I don't want it to just be me that contributes to the PeNToMinoes. Up until now this blog has pretty much been just an electronic copy of the book (except for my visit to Bardstown), but this PeNToMinoes are what can set it apart and make it truly useful and a must read.

Help me out. You know some places everyone should visit. Let us know about them. Leave a comment. It doesn't need to be relevant to the post. If it's long enough, I'll make a post out of it. Or combine several.

Or you can email me. Here's an address I check frequently - myeverdaylife (at) gmail (dot) com. Replace the (at) with @ and the (dot) with .

Thank you and I look forward to hearing from many of you.

Mark

Friday, February 29, 2008

Annoucing MyEverydayLife.net's First Customer Appreciation Promotion

Dear Friends,

We want to thank you.

We at MyEverydayLife have been overwhelmed by the amount of interest in our websites. We've had a great beginning and now we just want to say Thank You to all of our readers.

So starting tomorrow and continuing for EVERY SINGLE DAY in March The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes Blog will be running our "March to Recipes Celebration".

Okay, that's a hokey name but it's really a great celebration.

Every single day in March The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes Blog will feature at least one new restaurant recipe (many days more than one) and also give away a FREE downloadable cookbook to EVERYONE that visits.

Everyday -- All Month -- 31+ Restaurant Recipes -- 31 FREE Downloadable Cookbooks

If you've enjoyed The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes Blog so far, you are going to love it when we go to a daily schedule. We will now be bringing you the best make-at-home restaurant favorites (including those you requested by your comments and our poll) EVERYDAY!
And in addition to the great tasting dishes from Olive Garden, Applebee's, Red Lobster and More, for 31 days you can download a new cookbook every single day.

31 FREE Downloadable Cookbooks

Now, to be honest, it wasn't possible for us to put together 31 Copycat Restaurant Recipes Cookbooks (we wish we could have done that for you) but these are some very nice cookbooks with some delicious recipes. Many of them have 100+ pages and 100's of recipes. They are the same ones selling all over the internet for up to $19, $29 even $49+! And they are your's completely free just because you have the good taste to read The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes Blog.

We are very excited about this and just to get you a little bit more excited here are just a few of the titles that will be yours for free next month:
  • Starbucks Recipes
  • Recipes from South of the Border (247 pages!)
  • Camping & Outdoor Recipes
  • Sandwich Recipes (439 pages!)
  • Pizzeria Recipes
  • The Ultimate Chicken Wing Cookbook
  • Coffee Recipes
  • Blue Ribbon Winning Recipes (505 pages!)
  • The Appetizer Collection
  • ...and 24 more.
And don't forget -- It all starts tomorrow over at The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes.

And if you're not interested in the cookbooks, you can still get the best in Copycat Restaurant Recipes everyday in March.

Visit The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes Blog tomorrow, follow the instructions and get your free cookbook. Not to mention all of the best in restaurant favorites that you have come to expect from The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes Blog.

Mark

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Book Place 22 - 32 London & Introducing Everyday Lists









Introducing a brand new member of the My Everyday Life Family of Websites --

Everyday Lists is up and running and ready for visitors.

Check it out at http://myeverydaylife.net/lists/

“Just what is an Everyday List?”

It’s a little hard to explain exactly what an everyday list is but once you “get it” you’re gonna love this site and wonder how you ever got along without it.

An everyday list is one of those small lists you make to help you get through the day or remember something important to you. The most popular is the grocery list. But other examples include party lists, vacation lists and many more.

But with Everyday Lists we will go beyond the simple lists — way beyond. You will soon find forms and record keeping books. Forms for moving and studying, business and pleasure and more. Record keeping books include restaurants, beers, barbeque sauces (from our friends at The Weekend Grillers), travel and many more.

In the future we hope to include many forms requested by readers.

“But just why do I need Everyday Lists (the website)”

Because, again, we’ve gone beyond the simple lists — way beyond. You will find lists here for everything from Hot Sauces to Record Albums. From Moving Boxes to Books You’ve Read. We’ve got list here (or on the way) for so many parts of your life you’ll wonder how you ever got along without them (and us!). We’ve got lists you didn’t even know you needed.

All the forms are FREE and in easily downloadable and printable PDF format. Download any form you want and print it out or save it to a disc or thumbdrive and take it Kinko’s and have them do it for you.

I know all this sounds very strange and a bit unusual — but just give us a chance and look around a bit. We think you’ll get the picture and fall in love with Everyday Lists and the time they will save you and enjoyment they will give you.

People who love good food (you know who you are) are gonna love this first one --

List #1 - EVERYDAY GROCERY LIST

Let’s get this started with the most universal of all lists - the Grocery List. It’s quite possible that every person in the world has made one of these at least once in their life.

We make them on notepads, post-it notes, backs of envelopes and anything else we can find. Not anymore.

With the Everyday Grocery List you can see at a glance exactly what you need and never forget something important again.

The list is arranged in alphabetical order (for the most part) and is very comprehensive. We have tried to include everything that you go to the grocery for on an everyday basis. However, if we have forgotten anything, please let us know. We’ll fix it immediately.

Download the Everyday Grocery List, print some out and tack one to the Refrigerator. Keep adding to it as you see something you need and then take it to the grocery.

One last thing — do us a favor and leave all your lists in the baskets as you finish. Let the next person know about Everyday List so they too can enjoy the convenience and fun.

Go to Everyday Lists now and check it out. Download the Grocery List and leave us a comment. Request a list or form if you like.



If you're a fan of travel you probably have several lists, forms and record books you use on a regular basis. Let us know about them.

Book Place 22 - 32 London



I have made it to London and I am presented with a new problem for my blogging. In the book 1000 Places to See Before You Die, London is one entry -- but it has numerous entries include within. It looks like she has started with a Top Ten Sights, goes on to Other Must Do's, includes Where to Stay and Finishes with Where to Eat.

Quick Look -- I see she has done other major cities this way, too. Paris, New York, Venice (Venice?)

I have several questions about this -- none of which matter a hill of beans but I wonder nonetheless.



  • Are all of the entries included in the 1000 places?

  • ...Or it is just the Top Ten that I must do?

  • ...Or is London (and the other cities) just one entry? (Been there -- Check. Nahh, can't see it that way.)

As I said, none of this really matters -- when I make it to London or New York or Venice (Venice?) I am going to try and do all the good and fun things that I can, anyway, whether it's on the list or not.

With that in mind let's number EACH one. After all you can make a case for all of them.


  • The Top Ten Sights are -- well, the Top Ten.
  • The Other Must Do's -- There must be more than ten great things to do in London, New York or Venice (Venice??)
  • The Hotels and Restaurants? Well she has included plenty of other hotels and restaurants so far so they must deserve inclusion, right.

It's funny, I won't know for several weeks or even months whether this is the "correct" stategy to arrive at the magic 1000 number or not (since I am NOT going to count ahead), provided, of cource, that Patricia Schultz doesn't write in. But in the end, I really don't think it will matter.

(VENICE???)

Now the Numbers:

Place #22 - London (page #20) - I'm going to include the city itself here because just seeing London has got to be a marvel.

Place #23 - The British Museum (page #20) (Official Site)

Place #24 - Buckingham Palace (page #21) (Official Site of the British Monarchy. Admit it: You didn't know they had an official website, did you? Go look -- That's what it says!)


To the right is a picture of Buckingham Palace. Help me out here -- I believe, though I could be wrong -- I believe that is the courtyard where Homer Simpson ran into the freakin' Queen! Am I right?


Place #25 - Hampton Court (page #21)

Place #26 - Hyde Park/Kensington Gardens (page #21 and in the photo of the famous maze at the left)





Place #27 - National Gallery (page #21) (Official Site - This one is REALLY COOL)

Place #28 - St. Paul's Cathedral (page #21) (Official Site)

Place #29 - Tate Gallery (page #21) (Official Site)

Place #30 - Tower of London (page #21)

Place #31 - Victoria & Albert Museum (page #21) (Official Site)

Place #32 - Westminster Abbey (page #21) - Who else has the Roger "King of the Road" Miller song "England Swings" going through her head for two days everytime she hears "Westminster Abbey"?


Is it just me?


Okay, that's the Top Ten. We'll start with the Other Must Do's next post.

Friday, February 22, 2008

BIG NEWS for 1000 Places to See Blog

BIG NEWS!

At least it's big to me...

1000 Places to See Blog is now part of the MyEverydayLife.net Family of websites.

It has been my hope since I started working on the web to build sites that people can use. Sites that would make their lives better in some small way. MyEverydayLife is my attempt to pull these websites together in one place so that we can learn from each other. Everyone involved hopes to offer tips and tricks, advice and commentary to help make our normal days easier and more fun.

So far I have included several of my sites as well as the sites of some other talented individuals on the home site and I have several more that may join us in the near future.

1000 Places to See Blog for FREE, my sites include:

Everyday Internet Marketing - A blog of my journey as I try to learn the internet marketing game.
The Best Copycat Restaurant Recipes - Clones of you favorite restaurants like Applebees, Outback Steakhouse and Red Lobster that you can make at home.
Internet Marketing for FREE - The best resources on the web of free information, reports, audio and ebooks about internet marketing. Trust me, you'll be surprised at the amount and quality of the free information available.
The Roadfood Blog - A blog about the best places to eat on the road.

Along with BBQ Master, Jamie Clark of Derby City Sauces I have:

The Weekend Grillers - A site dedicated to bringing the Tips and Tricks of the BBQ and Grilling Masters to the Weekend Griller in all of us.

We have more sites devoted to health, travel, music and other everyday things. And more will be added everyweek.

Check out MyEverydayLife.net today!

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Completed Place #1 - The Bourbon Trail

I got up fairly early Friday morning to make the 45 mile drive down to Bardstown. Early enough that the road was busy with people heading to work. It occurred to me that while they were heading toward misery, I was heading to drink bourbon. Life is suddenly good.


Pulling into Bardstown it hit me that I really didn't know where to go. So I stopped at the town square and located a map of the distilleries around Bardstown. Reading the map I learned that there are more than 50 in Nelson County. I just looked for the closest distillery, which proved to be Heaven Hill, and headed over.



The first thing I saw at Heaven Hill made me laugh. On the door was a sticker announcing that Heaven Hill was featured in "1000 Places to See Before You Die." What a great way to start my quest! (I took a picture of the door but unfortunately it didn't turn out. I will try again next time.)



I arrived at Heaven Hill at quarter to ten and learned that a tour would start at ten. I signed up and looked around the exhibit room until time.



The first event on the tour was a 13 minute film featuring the history of bourbon and Heaven Hill and the operation of the distillery today. We then headed across the street to one of the storage buildings and walked among the barrels.

We weren't allowed to make any pictures for fear of the cameras sparking and starting another fire. They are understandably afraid of fire having had one of the worst fires in the history of the industry on November 7, 1996. The production plant was almost completely destroyed and several of the company's warehouses were completely destroyed. Over 90,000 gallons of alcohol were lost.

I remember watching the fire on TV at the time. The most vivid memory I have is of watching the flaming whisky pour down a hill and ignite yet another warehouse.


To the left is a photo from their brochure that shows what the inside of the warehouses look like. There are about 20 of these huge warehouses, they are all 7 stories high and stacked end to end, side to side and top to bottom with barrels of whisky.



We ended the tour with a bourbon tasting in a room shaped like a barrel. We tried two bourbons, a 10 year old Evan Williams and an 18 year old Elijah Craig. Now I'm not a big drinker of bourbon but you could definately tell at difference between the two. The older bourbon was much smoother and easier on the throat.





After leaving Heaven Hill I walked around the downtown streets of Bardstown and grabbed a bite to eat at the Old Talbott Tavern (see my next post for more about this) before heading back to the real world.




I can easily mark this entry completed but I want to go back and tour some other distilleries and maybe take a friend or two. I probably will.


The Woodford Reserve Culinary Cocktail Tour : a Journey with Bourbon




Here are some interesting facts and figures I learned:
  • Heaven Hill Bourbon is aged for a minimum of 4 years in new charred white Oak barrels.
  • Elijah Craig Bourbon is available in 12 year or 18 year variants.
  • The longer Bourbon is aged, the more flavour it takes from the wood.
  • Charring caramelizes sugars in the wood, which slowly dissolve into the resting Whiskey.
  • Heaven Hill Distilleries charcoal filter all of their bourbon prior to bottling; this process purifies the product and “mellows” the flavour making Heaven Hill Bourbons uniquely easy to drink either straight or with your favourite mixer.


In December 2002 Heaven Hill Distilleries USA filled its 4.5 millionth new-charred white Oak barrel with fine Kentucky Bourbon. For a better idea what that volume of Bourbon represents, consider the following:

  • 2,400 miles of White Oak Barrels.
  • 385,000 acres of corn.
  • 38.5 million bushels of harvested corn.
  • 12.8 million bushels of grains such as rye and malt.
  • 385 million gallons of Bourbon.
  • 160.5 million cases of Bourbon.
  • 1.9 billion bottles of Bourbon.





Interesting Trivia that they didn't tell me but I learned from Wikipedia:


All of the Master Distillers at Heaven Hill since its founding have been members of the Beam family. The original Master Distiller was Joseph L. Beam, Jim Beam's first cousin. He was followed by his son, Harry, who was followed by Earl Beam, the son of Jim Beam's brother, Park. Earl Beam was succeeded by the current Master Distillers, Parker Beam and his son, Craig Beam.

Mark