Recipes from Charleston Restaurants –
Charleston based Recipes from Recipe Websites –
Recipes from Charleston Restaurants –
Charleston based Recipes from Recipe Websites –
U.S. News and Reports’s Travel Guide says,
‘Now that the wedding is out of the way, you and your partner can focus on your new life together, starting with an oh-so-romantic honeymoon. To help you kick-start your marriage (without the added stress of international travel), we’ve gathered together a list of the best honeymoon destinations found within our own borders. All of these places offer a little something special to make your trip as unique as the love you share.’
Sixteen cities were cited including these cities that ranked lower than Charleston…
- Santa Barbara
- Lanai
- Lake Tahoe
- Martha’s Vineyard
- Vail
- Cape Cod
- Nantucket
- Stowe, Vt.
As for Charleston the article said…
‘Why Go: Start your marriage off with a taste of authentic Hollywood romance (Gone with the Wind-style) in Charleston. This low-key South Carolina city pours on the Southern charm like gravy on biscuits: Gas lamp-lined cobblestone streets and antebellum architecture set the scene, while gourmet cuisine followed by a horse-drawn carriage ride will set the mood.’
Read the article to find out what seven cities ranked higher than Charleston and to find out what they say are the ‘Top Things to Do in Charleston’.
http://travel.usnews.com/Rankings/Best_Honeymoon_Destinations_in_the_US/
The editors and experts of Southern Living magazine held a summit in their test kitchens and and narrowed down their list of the ‘Tastiest Town in the South’ down to 10. Really? Is there really a contest? Here are five of the other nominees:
Before you look at the other five do you have a prediction?
Here is the complete list – http://www.southernliving.com/travel/souths-tastiest-towns-00417000076768/?iid=magazine-january-2012
VOTING BEGINS FRIDAY, DEC. 23rd (2011)
The ‘fire destroyed more than a third of the Holy City’. http://bit.ly/sP7Ohe
The Historic Charleston Foundation has published a new book for its guides, ‘The City of Charleston Tour Guide Training Manual’. The book is 492 pages long and is available in a spiral bound format or in a CD format. Read more about it in the article on Post and Courier.com entitled, ‘Rewriting History: After nearly three decades, Charleston updates its notes for tour guides’.
The introduction of the Tour Guide Training Manual on the Historic Charleston Foundation Website- http://www.historiccharleston.org/news_events/newsroom.html?id=169.
‘Charleston’s planned International African American Museum could draw more attention by creating a plaza called “Arrival Square” marking where thousands of slaves set foot into North America.
The square, suggested for near Calhoun and Concord streets, would expand the appeal and marketability of the museum, officials said, including by highlighting a former Cooper River wharf where hundreds of slaves ships are reported to have tied up.’
http://www.postandcourier.com/news/2011/dec/05/arrival-square-pushed-for-museum/
(for updates visit the International African American Museum page of CharlestonShines.com)
‘Middleton Place will offer 60% OFF general admission to all Charleston tri-county area residents every weekend in January (adults $10, students $6 and children $4). Explore America’s Oldest Landscaped Gardens with overview tours given on the hour from 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. and the Plantation Stableyards where craft artisans demonstrating the working life of many slave men and women. The Middleton Place Restaurant, Garden Market & Nursery and Museum Shop will also be open to welcome visitors. The House Museum will be closed from January 17 – 28th. Winter weekends are an exceptionally beautiful time of year to visit Middleton Place with many Camellias and other flowers in bloom.’
‘CHARLESTON, S.C. — The oldest library in the South — and the third-oldest in the nation — announced Friday a multi-year effort to catalog and restore thousands of rare books, many of which have survived for centuries through earthquake, war and the relentless heat and humidity of Southern summers.’
http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/e5175b369fd0424db999d008bd8dd964/SC–Historic-Book-Restoration/