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Entertaining Notions Sections:
A little theme can make a simple get together special and thoughtful.

In The Pink Party

Break out the Boursin® and invite your friends to be in the pink and support the fight against breast cancer. Start with pink invitations and place cards, then don your best pink outfits and enjoy pink lemonade and an assortment of Boursin appetizers . Dress the table in roses, gerber daisies and carnations – all in pink of course. You may even want to greet your guests with a pink ribbon pin as a gift to wear at the party, and on any occasion she wants to build more awareness.

For an extra special touch, line your driveway with pink luminaries. Simple pink paper bags often found at party shops will work perfectly. As each guest arrives, give her a bag and a pink marker to write the names of any women that have fought or are fighting the breast cancer battle. Fill the bag with about two inches of sand. (If you want to go really pink, you can often find pink sand in aquarium shops.) Set a pink tealight candle in the sand, bring the luminary outside and light the candle. The beautiful pink glow is a lovely reminder of those you love and the need to keep up the fight.

Celebrate with a Purpose

What better reason for getting together with the girls then a purpose everyone can relate to. Prevention is the best intervention, so make a pact with your “girl pals” to do your yearly mammogram check-up during the same month each year. At the end of the month get everyone together, open a bottle of your favorite beverages, create a spread of crackers, crusty breads with delicious Boursin® and make a toast to yourselves and to life. You’ll feel great and so will your friends.

Or perhaps you have a friend who is currently winning the battle against breast cancer. Having a special get together in her honor is a perfect reason to celebrate. Have each attendee make a toast to the guest of honor pledging an activity that they will do together when she is fully well. What are you waiting for? Our invitations make it easy to get you started and celebrate the moment with Boursin®!

Progressive Dinner

Not a new idea, but a great "old" idea that's come back into fashion: serving each course at a different house (everyone "progresses" from one house to the next). Here's how it works:

  • Choose a group of friends, colleagues, neighbors, or acquaintances. Neighborhood progressive dinners tend to work best, since each course is probably within walking distance.
  • Decide who will prepare what. Each "host house" serves a course - an appetizer course, an entrée course, a dessert course, and so on. If the group is large, you might want to divide entrée preparation between several "host houses."
  • Send out invitations. Explain which course will be served at each house, and consider including specific times, so that latecomers will be able to find you!
  • Enjoy!
* A progressive dinner is great as a fund-raising event, as well!

Hosting a Cause-Related Dinner

Celebrities have made this a popular idea, but you don't have to be rich or famous to do it yourself! Here's the idea:
  • You host a dinner party in support of your favorite charity.
  • Your guests are charged a per-plate donation to attend, with the proceeds going to the chosen charity.
  • Your donation is your time, effort, and any out-of-pocket expenses for food, drinks, etc. (A portion of which may be tax-deductible!)
The donation you charge your guests usually depends upon what you serve. For example, $25.00 a person might be appropriate for pizza and beer, but a lavish buffet might justify a $75.00 donation. Make sure your guests understand that 100% of their donation goes to the charity, that you are not recovering your costs! Some charitable organizations can even provide insert cards for your invitations, describing their work and making your efforts seem more "official."

Wine-Tasting Party

It's been said that the best way to learn about wine is to drink it! So, if you and your friends want to sharpen your skills as wine connoisseurs, get out the glasses.

Here's how to make your wine-tasting party a success:
  • Ask all your guests to bring a bottle of wine that interests them. Or, pre-select wines at a local wine shop and ask each guest to bring a bottle from the list.
  • As your guests arrive, open the reds to allow breathing time. Keep the whites and blush wines chilled in the refrigerator, but pre-opened. Set out one red and one white wine glass per guest.
  • Be sure to provide room-temperature drinking water for rinsing glasses and palates, and crackers or bread for tasting between wines. Lastly, tradition requires a spittoon of some sort, since most tasters do not actually drink the wines they're tasting. The best spittoon is opaque and tall - like a vase.
After the tasting, let everyone enjoy a glass! Be sure to have some appetizers or a cheese board with Boursin® and French bread to complement your newly discovered favorite wines.

Tasting the Wine
  • With your eyes:
    Note the color, clear or cloudy. Look at the wine against a white napkin, the first indication of quality is the intensity and shade of the color. Purple and blue indicate youth and richness. Orange and deep red speak to maturity and subtleness.

  • With your nose:
    Swirl the wine and smell and inhale deeply. Look for familiar aromas like fruits, herbs, spices, and flowers.

  • With your mouth:
    Sip then push the wine to the front of your mouth. Let it cover your tongue. Let the primary and secondary flavors appear and be noted. Now spit the wine into the spittoon. Can you taste what you saw and smelled?

Between wines, rinse your palate and glass with water. Take a bit of unsalted cracker or bread. Dry your glass with your napkin and begin again. Remember to
serve responsibly!

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