Holiday Gifts Food in Baskets, Bottles and Boxes
Gifts of food, whether home made or store bought are always
appreciated. You can buy decorative boxes, all sizes and shapes
of baskets, or use bottles ranging from empty liquor bottles to
the standard Mason jar. Visit your local resale shops or check
on-line auction sites for great deals on baskets, bottles and
boxes. For those of you who love to bake, whipping up
a couple dozen of five or six different types of cookies
and boxing them with a pretty bow make a delicious
holiday gift for friends, family or even your child's
teacher. Kick the gift up a notch by adding some homemade
candies.
Need a gift for people who love being outdoors, pick up a
nice inexpensive picnic basket and add a bottle of wine, some
cheeses and crackers with a small cheese cutting board and a
couple of pretty wine glasses for a classic gift. They'll
remember you for years to come each time they use it.
Empty liquor bottles that have been cleaned are perfect for
making a gift of flavored oils. Drop any combination of things
like herbs, garlic, and hot peppers into the bottle; add oil
and cap it with a cork or a pourer. A pretty bow around the
bottle is all the gift-wrap you need. Most kitchen stores sell
bottles of different shapes and sizes filled with all sorts of
things, beans, peppers, herbs, pastas and oil that are strictly
decorative for tables or countertops. You can quite easily make your own. A
pretty gift bottle filled with colorful food items will
add a decorative touch to their tables long after the
holidays.
Has a friend or family member ever told you how much they
love a particular recipe of yours? Find a nice basket, fill it
with all the ingredients necessary to make the recipe, type the
recipe out on a recipe card (they come plain and decorated),
you can even find wire flower or butterfly shaped standing
recipe card holders that you can add. Or you can add candles
and holders to use for a romantic dinner. You can layer mason
jars with the dry ingredients for a favorite soup (the beans,
rice, pasta, seasonings etc) everything except the meat and the
water. Again, you type up the cooking instructions, tie the jar
with a bow and you're ready to go. A small square of gingham
cloth placed on the jar opening before closing the lid adds a
pretty touch.

For an even more personal touch (makes a
wonderful anniversary gift for a couple you care about)
you can use your computer to make a gift certificate (or
you can make it by hand) entitling the recipient of your
gift to a meal cooked, served and cleaned up after, in
their own home. You go to their house with everything you
need, cook the meal, serve it, clean up after yourself and
leave while they enjoy a relaxing romantic dinner (or for
someone you know well breakfast in bed served on trays
complete with a rose in a bud vase and the morning
paper).
If you don't care for the do it yourself approach, there are
websites where for around $100 you can have the fixings for a
romantic steak and lobster dinner for two delivered and that
includes the pot! Everyone loves gifts of food.

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