Categories
Lifestyle

8 Fun Ways To Make Your Cup of Coffee Way More Interesting

A beloved drink around the world

Come rain or shine, the only thing getting some people out of the bed in the morning is the promise of a sweet cup of coffee. A beloved drink around the world, it’s not just the enticing aroma but the delicious taste and the caffeine jolt that is needed to help us perform normal, everyday tasks with precision. However, if you’ve been drinking coffee for a long time and have gotten pretty used to your ways, no matter if you drink it black or with milk and sugar, it’s never a bad idea to switch things up and alter your coffee a bit.

 

We’ll give you some great ideas that will definitely give your coffee a new twist and let you enjoy it all over again. Here are some ways to make your cup of coffee far more exciting. In all the fun of trying new types of coffee, just make sure you know some good cleaning tips in case you spill your cup and have to act fast to remove coffee stains from the floor!

 

Cinnamon

 

For a slightly sweeter taste without the calories (and with immune-boosting properties), cinnamon is a fantastic spice for your coffee that is a flavor sensation. Sprinkle some powdered cinnamon on top or even stir your coffee with a cinnamon stick for a fun way to upgrade your hot beverage. You can also use nutmeg or even honey if you want something similar yet different.

 

Cardamom

 

One of the most exotic tastes coming from the Middle East, throwing in a few cardamom pods or a pinch of ground cardamom really hits you full in the face with zest. People might look at you weird when you first try it, but once they taste the drink, they’ll also hop on board the cardamom bandwagon!

 

Cocoa powder

 

Perfect for bad winter weather, a steaming, hot coffee with a pinch of cocoa powder is just the boost you’ll need for a great day ahead. Keep this one as a special occasion option so you don’t end up going over your daily chocolate quota!

 

Vanilla extract

 

You’ll need just a few drops of this extract because it can be quite sweet, but the taste is far more richer and interesting than plain old sugar. You could also try a bit of hazelnut or almond extract for something along the same lines.

 

Ginger

 

We know it’s a bit unusual, but some ginger slices or in powdered form is a fantastic idea for your coffee around Christmas time, as it provides a delightful gingerbread-like quality that will get you in the mood for singing carols and decorating your home with stars and tinsel.

 

Irish Coffee

 

Add a dash of Jameson or Baileys to your coffee if it’s a Saturday night and you really want to feel awake and celebrate! The liqueur and coffee will combine beautifully and send your taste buds to another world.

 

Butter

 

Unsalted butter rather than milk or cream is a coffee hack that is starting to gain far more popularity lately. It might seem too weird at first, but in the end it’s actually not that different in taste than other dairy products you put into your coffee!

 

Try a DIY latte

 

For a quick and easy latte, simply put some milk and a dash of sugar into a coffee cup, warm it up in the microwave for 30 seconds, then use a milk frother to create a foamy mixture. Add your coffee and you’ve got a very tasty and fast latte!

 

Want to really get into coffee trends? Start using a moka pot to brew your coffee for a new taste that’s actually incredibly simple to make.

 

Categories
Featured News NYC

Saying Goodbye to Century 21

THE STORE THAT EMBODIED THE NEW YORK HUSTLE

 

Six months after the September 11 attacks, Downtown’s discount department store Century 21 finally cleared out all the physical and psychological trauma from the collapse of the nearby Twin Towers and reopened.

Customers streamed back into the store in droves while cheering and applauding, and the executives of the family-owned chain clapped right back at them.

New Yorkers won’t get the luxury of crowding so close to each other to say goodbye during the pandemic: In September, the company announced it was shutting all 13 of its stores, including the flagship Lower Manhattan location at 21 Dey Street. Like many retailers, the COVID-19 pandemic sapped the store of its customers, including its key tourist clientele, and said its insurers wouldn’t pay out to keep it afloat. No official final date has been announced, but the New York Post reports the stores will shut by November 22.

 

Saying Goodbye to Century 21

 

New Yorkers are fiercely loyal to their brands while also becoming accustomed to a loss in recent years, as the forces of gentrification and online retail tear up brick-and-mortar shopping habits. But the Century 21 news hits different because the store embodied the very essence of making it in New York: the hustle.

Shopping at the flagship in the Financial District felt like a microcosm of city living: jostling for buried treasures like seats on the subway and hunting for deals like that back-alley dumpling place no one else knows about. The deep discounts on Gucci bags or Moschino pants were plenty, but the environment still sparkled with New York glamour. This was no strip mall bargain bin: The four-story, 150,000-square-foot Downtown location was ostentatious in the Old New York way — filling an art deco former bank building with deals up to its vaulted ceilings, as shoppers traversed marble floors or up a majestic staircase under mahogany wall fixtures and gold-lined light fixtures.

 

Saying Goodbye to Century 21

Maria Sherman of Jezebel said it was the melting pot of all types of New Yorkers on the hunt for shortcuts to the luxury of city living:

“At Century 21 — particularly the Financial District flagship — middle-class shoppers and stylish tourists sorted through the racks for luxury brands at a highly discounted price in a venue with a much more specifically brash New Yawk ambiance than a suburban Marshalls, TJ Maxx, Ross and Burlington Coat Factory. Somebody might yell at you! You might yell at somebody else!

For some New Yorkers, the store (dating back to its original Bay Ridge location, opened in 1961 by Al and Sonny Gindi of Flatbush, Brooklyn, whose family still controls it) Century 21 was their introduction to fashion. The Cut’s Xochitl Gonzalez wrote about growing up in working-class Brooklyn and dreaming of being a city “working girl”:

“I hadn’t bought a Vogue yet, but I had touched Chanel suits, seen Donna Karan dresses and Norma Kamali coats. My fashion sense wasn’t formed from staged photo shoots on glossy pages or, in today’s variant, lewks on the ’gram, but by watching the real women of New York, from all walks of life, tailoring their unique styles in the Century 21 dressing rooms, one garment at a time.”

She later became an expert at shopping “Centuries.”

 

Saying Goodbye to Century 21

“A good purchase there was more than a bargain; it was a signifier. It implied aspiration, it implied a knowledge of fashion, it implied your innate ability to spot the needle in the fashion haystack. How fly, how dope, how hot was your taste? Your Centuries finds said it all.”

This is how many folks will remember the store: a place that punctured the outsider notion that New York was only a playground for the rich; you just had to know where to look. Century 21 still calls itself New York’s best-kept secret on its website, but the secret is long out, especially as hordes of foreign tourists made it a fulcrum of their shopping plans.

In Curbed, Christopher Bonanos and Caroline Spivack noted that label-hunting was key to the struggle of making it in New York:

“These places, and especially Century 21, were hardly secrets — they were big businesses with large retail footprints — yet they were also, curiously, kind of a secret handshake. One quality particular to striving New Yorkers is knowing how to experience the city while presenting as a well-off and stylish person without being rich — to fake it till, or while, you make it. 
If you were a certain kind of devoted shopper, you’d treat the stores as part of your daily commute: On the way to the train two or three evenings a week, you’d do a quick walkthrough, stalking the new stuff, watching the racks, deciding whether to pounce on that Prada blazer at 50 percent off or take a chance on the possibility that the price would drop another hundred bucks by Friday. It also became a huge tourist destination, one where Italians could go to buy Italian fashion for much less than it would cost them at home, then wear it back to Italy.”

The store got famously blessed by one of the city’s most famous fictional shoppers, Carrie Bradshaw of “Sex and the City.” In one episode’s voiceover, she declared: “The next day the verdict was in. Century 21, the Downtown discount store, was the best part of jury duty.” More recently it helped outfit another iconic New York character, Adam Sandler’s Howard Ratner of “Uncut Gems,” whose iconic polo was sourced from Century 21.

 

https://www.facebook.com/century21stores/posts/before-she-was-on-sex-and-the-city-carrie-bradshaw-knew-c21-was-the-place-to-sho/537682062918383/

 

It was an entry point for aspiring Carrie Bradshaws, too, especially millennials who entered the workforce and realized they’d never get to survive in New York City on a weekly columnist’s salary.

In Vogue, Liana Satenstein explains why it was her only store of choice:

I didn’t step foot into Barneys’ colossal Madison Avenue building until it was closing, to check it off my bucket list. They all seemed inaccessible. But Century 21? It was a store for the people, specifically those who want a piece of the fashion pie but don’t want to shell out for the whole thing. When I was working my dead-end sales job and writing about nail polish for the website of a women’s magazine, I wanted to feel connected to an industry I desperately desired to break into.

 

Downtown Alliance 

 

Categories
Entertainment Events Featured

Glamour and Girls: An Ode to The NY Playboy Club

The world-famous womanizer and business mogul Hugh Hefner and the Playboy empire that he built from scratch are still guaranteed to draw a wide range of strong opinions even today. Regardless of what people think about his ventures, few can deny the impact his notorious Playboy Clubs have had on fashion, pop culture and nightlife in general. 

 

The most famous of these now mostly defunct spaces was the New York City Playboy Club, a gargantuan building which took up a considerable portion of the neon Babylon that was 59th Street. The NYC club first opened up in 1962, a few years before the party-focused ’70s, which has marked people’s impressions of the neighborhood ever since. This Playboy Club was all about sophistication and glamour, where successful young men could go to feel doted on and entertained by beautiful young women. The cost of a membership key was $25 per year, and many of the “bunnies” later went on to become celebrities in their own right. Here’s how the New York Playboy Club dominated the downtown scene of the ’60s and ’70s and helped define nightlife in the Warhol era.

So what can we learn from its trailblazing success?

A key part of the Club’s appeal with the denizens of Downtown Manhattan was the promise of high-class partying with a touch of luxury in every corner. The location of the club was a stone’s throw away from the iconic Madison Avenue, where the famous depictions of the “Mad Men” who ran the world of advertising spent most of their days. This very strategic location was a stroke of genius for Hefner, who knew the Club would be ideally placed for the stressed out and wealthy professionals of the neighborhood to escape and relax after a crazy day at the office. The club focused on high-quality classic cocktails, sumptuous furnishings from celebrated designers, and over-the-top luxury service to make the members feel at home. This over-the-top style was a precursor to come of the other high-class clubs which later came to own the New York scene, such as Studio 54 and Nell’s. Playboy was a trailblazer.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=sdiUzyiE66A

The Playboy Club (especially in NYC) operated by an almost Byzantine set of standards and rules for those aspiring to be members, but once you made it through the golden gated entrance, many of the rules of the outside world simply did not apply. That mixture of exclusivity and permissiveness is difficult to get right but has been the essence of iconic nightlife venues, especially in New York, with the Continental Baths and of course The Limelight being key examples of clubs who followed the formula first established by Playboy and went on to dominate the scene. The gorgeous bunnies were on hand to encourage a bit of debauchery and keep the atmosphere light, which was a key part of their purpose at the Clubs.

 

Playboy Today

Although the NYC Playboy Club may be gone, for now, it is indeed making a comeback, with the reincarnated Club set to open on East 42nd Street sometime next year. The Playboy brand has bounced back in many ways since the heady days of the ’60s, with the iconic bunny image firmly making a mark on fashion, with jewelry, dresses, and underwear all baring this trendy logo. Beyond the magazine which initially launched the brand, Playboy has made some seriously impressive strides into the entertainment industry, with a Playboy: the Mansion video game by HIP Interactive which became an instant hit a few years back.

An officially licensed online slot called Playboy Gold is available on Betway casino, and their recently-launched streaming platform Playboy TV now is the place to go for beautiful women and even thought-provoking documentaries on relationships and more. The sleek and stylish bunny logo is now a 21st-century fashion icon for men and women alike, and you don’t have to look far to see people on the dancefloor rocking a bestselling Playboy Party Dress, or even sipping on a glass of increasingly-vaunted Playboy wine. It’s no secret that Playboy’s enduring effect on culture and nightlife is still strongly felt today.

So the Playboy Club came and went, and took with it a unique moment in the history of New York City nightlife, just before the dirt and liveliness of the ’70s scene took over, to be followed by the bubblegum pop culture of ’80s Manhattan.

Luckily, we have another incarnation to look forward to – so, hopefully, see you in the bunny lounge!

 

Categories
Business

How to Market Your Small Company in a Big City

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Photo: Courtesy of Pixabay.com

Marketing your small business anywhere can be tough, but marketing your small business in a big city can be truly overwhelming. The advantage to doing business in a big city is that you have a huge pool of people that may need your services. The disadvantage is that you’re also competing with thousands of other businesses that offer the same services.

Businesses that can’t stay above the fold inevitably crumble in large cities. This is why it’s important to create a great product that stands out above your competitors’. Once you feel that your product is the best it can possibly be, it’s time to market your services. Ensure that people are being exposed to your brand by following a few tips.

1. Local Bloggers
Just like businesses, bloggers must stay above the fold. Once your product has been perfected, reach out to a few local bloggers and ask them to try it out. If they like your services, they’ll share them with their readers and other bloggers.

2. Review Websites
Sites like Yelp and TripAdvisor are huge in big cities. Residents have thousands of options to choose from when it comes to local businesses. To ensure they get the best service without doing too much research, most people turn to a review website. This way, they can filter out the lower-rated options and get a sense of other customers’ experiences. Ask your customers to rate their experience with your business if they enjoyed your service.

Improving your website or creating your own website is also one good way to market your product,  click for a google api search, this will help you in optimizing your website.

3. Search Marketing
Most customers will start their research by entering a term in a search engine like “Movers NYC,” You should make sure your business shows up on the first page by purchasing ad campaigns with Google and other search engines. You can also incorporate a blog into your website and include keyword search terms, so your customers can find your services more easily through an internet search.

4. Point of Difference
Your business needs to stand out above all the other businesses in the city, so you’ll need to express why customers should visit your business and not someone else’s. You can’t do the exact same thing as everyone else in the city and expect customers to visit. Do some research to find out what other businesses like yours offer. What makes your service stand out? Make sure these differences are advertised.

5. People to People Apps
The shared economy has changed the way consumers do business. Apps like Uber, Seamless and Minibar allow businesses to expand their customer base by making their services more easily accessible. Residents of big cities not only expect to be able to find everything they want at the push of a button, but they also expect the business to deliver the product at a competitive price and offer referral bonuses. These apps can help you expand your customer base; after using the app, the customer might reach out to you directly.

6. Advertise in “Local” Papers
“Local” papers in big cities are actually pretty sizable. Many local papers in New York City have hundreds of thousands of readers. If you advertise in “Edible Manhattan” or “Edible Brooklyn,” you’ll actually be reaching a huge number of readers without paying the huge prices to advertise in “New York Magazine” or other larger publications. Many of these periodicals also have huge email subscriber lists that they can email on your behalf.

7. Groupon and LivingSocial
If you’re really struggling for the first 100 customers, turn to daily deal sites like Groupon and LivingSocial. Ask your customers to rate your business on a review site like Yelp or TripAdvisor and offer them a discount to return to your business.

8. Word of Mouth
Word of mouth can also be a great way market your small business in a big city. It’s important to make sure that your business has a solid reputation in the area. Most big cities are divided into smaller neighborhoods; your business can get a lot of word of mouth advertising just from local neighbors sharing your awesome services with friends and family.

-by Cary Teller