Showing posts with label cheap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheap. Show all posts

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Chocolate!!!

In case you needed another reason to save the rain forest, here’s something that may pique your interest: chocolate. The cacao plant is incredibly sensitive to climate and the rain forest is one of the few places it flourishes.

Don’t worry, this isn’t a guilt trip. It is only one of the many things I learned while I drooled over the Chocolate exhibit at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of History. A mix of information about chocolate conservation and the history of the decadent treat drew a large crowd on Sunday.

Beautiful illustrations of the origins of the cacao (ka- kaow) plant and its early place in society lined the entrance. Each room thereafter took a step forward in time, showing the evolution of the value and purpose of chocolate. Interactive displays explained the use of the cacao beans as money and encouraged children to plan dinner based on the price of each ingredient they’d need. Other rooms contained global chocolate artifacts such as Spanish chocolate-stirring sticks (molinillo) and chocolate serving pots from Europe.

The weirdest thing I learned was that early chocolate-lovers went to “chocolate houses” the way we hang out in coffee shops today. I thought Starbucks was expensive but going to the chocolate house was only afforded by the wealthy and *dramatic pause* usually only men were permitted. Our “delicate constitution” or general "inferiority" probably had something to do with it. If women weren’t allowed in, when and, more importantly, how did it become such a vital part of our lives? I know, maybe, one female who doesn’t feel seduced by chocolate. It must be a repressed thing. Perhaps if they’d just given up the goods back then, we wouldn’t be so crazy today.

Of course, after you’ve wandered your way out of the exhibit, you are obligated to go to the gift shop (which you can smell when you walk by) to check out their purchasable exhibit of chocolate paraphernalia from around the world. I picked up chocolate-covered wine grapes and you’d better believe I will be tasting wine with them. ;)

Visit the Chocolate Exhibit at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of History in Norman, OK Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. or Sunday 1 to 5 p.m until the exhibit leaves September 12th. Students get in free and adults are just $5.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Roadtrip, anyone?

Fall football is at its best and on beautiful weekends such as this, going to an away-game is a fantastic escape from the stress of midterms. This weekend, in particular, thousands of Sooners and Longhorns fans stampeded Dallas to watch the Red River Rivalry game. Tickets went on sale for $95 officially, and then were resold to desperate souls for up to $1,000. Hopefully, you got first shot at OU/TX tickets or have benevolent friends.

The ticket, however, is only a very small part of the experience. Crowded hotel rooms, Dallas traffic, Dick’s Last Stand and trash talking at West End are all very important to a successful weekend. But you’ll need at the very least, money to return home. Because you are stingy (in the best sense,) you may even crave a positive balance in your checking account. The great news is, you can have an away-game weekend and stay on good terms with your bank. You just have to plan ahead.

Where to Stay: The beauty of college is that people are almost universally poor. If you have a friend/roommate/roommate’s friend’s uncle who lives in the Dallas area, you may not have to spend a single cent besides dinner. When you score that, you have every right to gloat and spend the money on souvenirs.

If your connections aren’t in the away-game region, don’t panic. With a little digging on the university website, you can find the “official game hotel” that offers special prices for college students. The hotel that hosted us this year offered 4-person rooms for $100 per person for the weekend, three days and two nights. That’s approximately $33 per day. Nice!

That doesn’t mean you can’t use the booming number of budget travel sites for even better deals either. Travelocity.com and Expedia.com are two that will help you compare multiple hotel prices side by side.

Transportation: Before you check in, though, you have to get there. I need you to pay very close attention to the next sentence. DO NOT DRIVE IN DALLAS UNLESS YOU ARE A NATIVE. Got it? Good. Even if you’re used to the angry drivers that aren’t afraid to die as long as they get there first, gas will end up equaling half your weekend bill. I understand sometimes it cannot be avoided but if you can help it, don’t drive. Carpool legally (no friends in the trunk, they will be cranky by the time you get there) at the very least.

My favorite new ride is the train. For $40, you have roundtrip transportation to Dallas from Norman. I can’t get a full tank of gas for $40. Plus, the party-bus atmosphere is way too much fun to pass up.

Riding the train doesn't mean you won't have downtown transportation either. If you choose to stay at the student-catered hotel, there is a monorail system right across the street that will take you to West End (a.k.a. the largest social gathering of OU/TX fans EVER.) and a bus ride to the game. Even if you aren’t going to OU/TX, public transportation is abundant in college towns so there won’t be any problems. Hotel areas are almost always located in an entertainment district with food and fun within walking distance. Worst-case scenario, you and your friends have to split cab fare. It’s still better than an evaporating college-fund.

Food: A college kid has to eat every few hours. The best way to combat the munchies on a shoestring budget is to buy a cooler and pack cereal for breakfast and a weekend’s worth of sandwiches, fruit and water bottles for lunch. Split this with your carpool gang for minimum –ouch!- factor.

Dinner is different. The reason you scrimped on breakfast and lunch was so you could splurge on the unique (or just really good) dining options at night. You will only have two dinners there anyway. So go ahead, give yourself a budget for great food and a few drinks afterwards. My favorite for Dallas is Dick’s Last Stand. The food is alright but the entertaining wait staff and atmosphere is completely worth it. The game is only half the excitement. The nightlife is just as important. Have fun!