St. Regis Bora Bora Couples Retreat Package

October 12th, 2009

Couples Retreat, the new Vince Vaughn – Jon Favreau comedy that’s big at the box office, stars a number of talented actors but they had to work hard not to be upstaged by the beautiful location – the St. Regis Bora Bora in the South Pacific.

St. Regis Bora Bora offers couples package.

St. Regis Bora Bora offers couples package.

The lush resort, a favorite celebrity getaway since it opened in 2006 – Nicole Kidman and Keith honeymooned there while Eva Longoria and Tony Parker and others have enjoyed its tropical splendors – is offering an exclusive Couples Retreat package celebrating the film’s opening and continuing through May 31, 2010.

The package offers guests a four or five night stay in a Premiere Overwater Villa where Vaughn, Favreau, Malin Akerman, Kristen Davis, Jason Bateman and Kristen Bell’s characters stay in the movie, as well as other experiences seen on the big screen including couples yoga on the lush 44-acre property’s pristine beaches, massages at its world class Spa Miri Miri, outrigger canoe lessons, a jet ski tour in the lagoon’s pristine crystal waters, and dinner at Lagoon, the St. Regis Bora Bora’s Jean-Georges Vongerichten restaurant.

Air Travel Tips

October 9th, 2009

A little planning and a little charm can make your air travel experience a bit less painful.

  • Plan to get to the airport at least an hour early, or two during holidays and other busy times; this will pay off with a major reduction of stress. If all goes well, you will have time to relax, shop for last-minute items, or have a leisurely meal before the flight. If all doesn’t go well, you will have a buffer against unexpected delays due to traffic, long lines, or last-minute emergencies, and you’ll still be able to catch your flight in plenty of time.
  • Don’t hesitate to use the curbside baggage check service if it’s still available. The usual tip of $1 per bag will save you a great deal of aggravation; you can avoid the long lines at the front desk and go straight to your gate to check in. This is especially valuable when the airport is unusually crowded, when your bags are heavy, or if you are in a hurry to catch your flight.
  • If you fly often, join an airline airport club. This will provide you with a more comfortable place to wait than the lobby. They also often provide complimentary beverages and snacks.
  • Be nice to ticketing and gate agents; they have great authority over enforcing rules and making exceptions. You are more likely to get what you need if you calmly ask for their help.

Flight Delays

  • Find out why your flight is delayed. Call the toll-free number. Find out if other airlines are experiencing similar delays.
  • If you believe the delay is due to something other than weather or air traffic problems, then mention your suspicion and ask the airline agent to book you on the next available flight, either on the same airline or a competing one. This is called “Rule 240″, and all airlines are required to conform to it. Use the lingo; ask, “Can you 240 me?” when speaking with an agent. They will know what you mean.

Flight Cancellations

  • If your flight is canceled, then make a reservation on the next flight to your destination. Usually, airline personnel will try to book everyone on their next flight out. Often they will put you on a competitor’s next flight only if you request it.
  • If on-time arrival is important to you, when you check flights through our reservation system you can rate your options based on their on-time arrival records. Be sure to also check the weather conditions, as they often affect flight schedules.

Getting Bumped

  • To avoid getting bumped, you must be at the loading gate at least 10 minutes prior to scheduled departure for a U.S. flight, 20 minutes to/from Bahamas, Canada, and Mexico and 30 to/from all other international points. You must be at the loading gate, not the airport entrance.
  • If you get bumped, be sure to ask for a free confirmed round-trip ticket and check that you are booked on the next flight out. If you are a frequent flyer member, then get a travel voucher instead of a free ticket. You will receive frequent flyer points for tickets bought with a travel voucher, but not for a free bump coupon.
  • If you ever get involuntarily bumped (after checking in promptly), you can ask to be rebooked or 240ed on another airline. If this flight gets you between one and two hours later than the originally scheduled arrival time, you are entitled to an amount equal to the price of your one-way fare, up to $200. If you are more than two hours late, you are entitled to twice the value of your one-way ticket, up to $400. Often you can also keep your original ticket for a refund or future use.

Lost Bags

  • Airlines may reimburse you for out-of-pocket expenses associated with baggage delays. These things include toiletries, some articles of clothing, or some petty cash to buy them. However, you must ask.
  • If your bags are lost or damaged and you are asked to estimate the value of your luggage, err on the high side. U.S. regulations require airlines to reimburse you a maximum of $1,250 for the value of the declared content on domestic flights. Airlines will typically depreciate your claim by 30%. International travelers are reimbursed a maximum of approximately $635 per piece of checked baggage, not to exceed two pieces.

Ireland`s Finest Pub Tour from $579

October 7th, 2009

Brian Moore International Tours is offering quite the special –Buy One Pub Tour Get One 50% Off!

Guinness Storehouse in Dublin, Ireland.

Guinness Storehouse in Dublin, Ireland.

Experience the magic, mystery, and mayhem of Ireland’s lively pubs this winter with a very special tour from go-today.com.

This escorted adventure includes 4-night hotel accommodation, breakfast daily, 2 dinners, entrance to Guinness Storehouse and Middleton Distillery, and much more. Plus, with our buy one get one 50% offer the savings will leave you doing a jig! *

* Offer based on 2 people sharing.

Air France Auctioning Off Seats On Its First A380 Flights

October 6th, 2009

Are you one of the tragically hip that must be the first on the biggest and best the world has to offer?   If so, set your sights on being the first to fly on Air France’s cool new Airbus A380, which is the world’s biggest passenger plane.  But here’s the catch:  You have to bid for a seat.

As of right now, Air France is auctioning off  seats on the jet’s two inaugural flights from Paris to New York on Nov. 20 and from New York to Paris on Nov. 21.

The auction is being held on eBay through Oct. 21.

Air France said the opening bid “in most cases” will be $380 for Voyageur (economy) class and $1,380 in Affaires

Air France auctions off seats on innaugaural A380 flights.

Air France auctions off seats on innaugaural A380 flights.

(business) class, but that it may change during the auction.  (The auction includes a return ticket on a regular Air France flight.)  Proceeds go to charities in France, India and South Africa.

For full details and links to the auction, which will involve 380 seats on each flight, visit the airline’s A380 mini-site.   Also, if your French is up to par you can track the auction on Twitter, @AFEncheresA380.

Air France A380s will begin regular commercial operation on the Paris-New York route on Nov. 23. Routes to open later include Paris-Dubai and Paris-Tokyo. The airline has ordered 12 of the giant jets, each able to carry up to 538 passengers (449 economy, 80 business, 9 first class) over a maximum distance of 8,078 miles.

Register for the A Year In The Air Sweepstakes

October 5th, 2009

You could get the VIP treatment with two tickets to the premier of Up In The Air, arriving in theaters this December, along with a year’s worth of First Class air travel on American Airlines to anywhere in the continental U.S. and Canada.

American Airlines offers Up In The Air contest.

American Airlines offers Up In The Air contest.

Plus, 20 First Prize winners will receive an Up In The Air movie poster and soundtrack.

Simply register and purchase a flight on AA.com by October 31, 2009, and you’ll be entered for your chance to win. And receive an additional entry when you invite a friend to participate in the sweepstakes.

Get signed up at this link.


Comté Cheese Stays On The Menu In Arbois France

October 2nd, 2009

The French can talk about cheese until the cows come home. If you doubt that, take a tour in the Franche-Comté region with local farmer Jean-Francois Marmier, who goes by the nickname Taz.

Comte Cheese

Comte' Cheese

“We need hours, days, months, years to talk about Comté [cheese],” said Taz, whose passion for cheese is surpassed only by his fascination with the Australian island of Tasmania, which he once visited.And Taz is right that the fruity and nutty Comté is a cheese worth talking about. It’s firm yet creamy and is among the most popular cheeses in France, a nation where more than 600 varieties of cheese are produced.

Comté is very much a part of the culture of the Jura Mountains, near the Swiss border and a place of green hills and valleys, where you can easily tap into unspoiled France.

The cheese has been made here for 1,000 years using milk from Montbeliarde cows that graze in the lush pastures. Tourists can visit farms with cows, cheese dairies where the cheese is created using traditional methods, and cellars where the rounds of cheese are aged. The regional tourism department has even created the Comté cheese trail with a suggested driving route.

Arbois France.

Arbois France.

Taz, who sometimes gives tours of the local co-op dairy in the little town of Bouverans, enthusiastically explains the cheese-making process. The cows are milked twice a day and the warm milk goes to the dairy, where the cheese makers do magic by adding rennet, an enzyme that comes from a calf’s stomach, creating a curd that in expert hands results in a light yellow cheese.

The Bouverans dairy produces up to 20 88-pound rounds of Comté per day. That’s a lot of cheese. And the Bouverans facility is just one of 170 co-op cheese dairies in the region. (Taz is only one of 3,200 farmers contributing milk.)

After the rounds are salted and firmed at the dairy for two to three weeks, they go to one of 20 regional cellars to age. The most popular Comté, and the variety usually seen in the U.S., is 12 months old. It has a nice tang somewhat akin to Gruyere, although more aged Comté (carried by some gourmet shops) has an appealing, sharper taste foodies may prefer.

See the impressive sight of 65,000 wheels of cheese aging at the 1882 Fort Saint-Antoine in Malbuisson, now home to aging cellar Marcel Petite (www.comte-petite.com). Here again, a tour features a guide with a passion for cheese. See how aficionados test quality of cheese as carefully as wine. They peer at it, sniff it, press it between their fingers, even listen to it and finally spend as long chewing as possible but, unlike wine, they don’t spit it out.

Beyond cheese education, the Franche-Comté region serves up quaint towns and mountain views (from the taller mountains you can see Switzerland), lakes filled with trout, deep forests and historic attractions.

A good base for exploration is Arbois, the sleepy little town where Louis Pasteur, inventor of the rabies vaccine, did a number of his experiments. Visit his house where rooms, including his laboratory, are furnished as they were at the time of his death in 1895 (Maison Pasteur, 83, rue Courcelles, Arbois; www.academie-sciences.fr /pasteur.htm). There’s also a Pasteur museum about 40 minutes away in Dole, in the house where he was born (www.musee-pasteur.com).

Arbois has a little downtown with small shops under the arches of an 18th-century arcade. Here you can grab a casual lunch at Les 4 heures du Cremier, a cheese shop with a little table nook in the back. The delicious sandwiches, salads and omelets feature cheese ($7 to $11; 44 Grande Rue, Arbois).

Make sure to also stop a few doors down at Hirsinger chocolates. This is no ordinary small-town chocolatier, but rather one of the top chocolate shops in France, opened in 1900 and run by the same family since then.

This generation’s chocolate master is Edouard Hirsinger, 44, whose innovations include chocolates with tomato and basil and white wine and curry. The shop has a small basement museum with antique chocolate- making tools (38 place de la Liberte, Arbois; 011-33-384-66-06-97; www.chocolat-hirsinger.com). Tours, which include tastings, are Thursday evenings and by arrangement through the tourist office (www.arbois.com).

To pass the time, sit in one of Hirsinger’s outside cafe chairs with a view of the town’s 19th-century fountain and have a coffee and petit chocolate tasting for about $4.

There is wine in the Franche-Comté picture, too, with a wine trail (www.franche-comte.org; search “Jura wines route”) taking visitors past market towns and historic wine-growing villages. Arbois also has a regional wine museum.

The key local product is vin jaune, which may not be to everyone’s taste – it’s a sherrylike yellow wine made from the Savagnin grape – but it goes very well with Comté cheese.

Fran Golden is a writer in Massachusetts.

When you go

Getting there

The high-speed train from Paris (www.raileurope.com) will get you to Dole in about two hours. There, you need to rent a car to get around. Or, include the region in a driving tour. It’s an easy day trip from Burgundy and a good stop on the road from Alsace to the south of France. Contact: www.franche-comte.org or www.comte.com

Where to stay

•Hotel des Messageries, 2, rue de Courcelles, Arbois; 011-33-384-66-15-45; www.hoteldesmessageries.com. More comfortable than fancy. Ivy-covered outside, old-fashioned bar and a cheery breakfast room inside. From $90 per night for two.•Residence Sander, 26 rue de la Republique, in the small spa town of Salin-les-Bains; 011-33-384-73-36-40; www.residencesander.com. Rooms big by French standards, nicely furnished and with kitchenettes. From $99 for two in summer high season.

•If you prefer a city stay, in downtown Dole, near the main shopping street, is Hotel de la Cloche, 1 Place Grevy; 011-33-384-82 06-06; www.la-cloche.fr. Rates at the three-star hotel are $100 to $129 for two.

Details

•In the countryside, French language skills are helpful.•Comté cheese is a good source of calcium. A 3-ounce serving has 30 percent of the recommended daily intake for adults. The cheese is rich in vitamins A and C and a good source of protein. It’s made without additives, artificial coloring or chemicals. Comté is nice on a cheese plate and particularly good melted in fondue or grilled cheese sandwiches, or mixed in with eggs. Thin slices also make a nice salad topper.

BMIT Announces 2010 Escorted Tours to Ireland

October 1st, 2009

Southern Highlights from $1299*

8 Days Exploring the Southern Region of Ireland

BMIT Announces 2010 Escorted Tours to Ireland

BMIT Announces 2010 Escorted Tours to Ireland

Spend a week discovering Ireland’s beautiful scenery and warmth of its people. Visit the Guinness Storehouse in Dublin where you can enjoy a pint and then travel to the exciting horse country of Kildare to see the National Stud. After 2 nights stay in an Irish Farmhouse, you will surely begin to feel like a native of the Emerald Isle. From escorted tours and famous sights, there’s no better way to visit Ireland! *

* package does not inlcude airfare

Airline Food – Then and Now

September 30th, 2009

If you were a TWA first-class passenger traveling from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco, California, in October 1970, your menu read more like a feast for the Sun King than a precooked meal heated in a convection oven.

Airline food - the way it used to be.

Airline food - the way it used to be.

You might have started out with crêpe farcie aux fruits de mer, with lobster, shrimp, crabmeat, and scallops in a sauce of cream, butter, and sherry, followed by veal Orloff “studded with truffles.” After that, there were cheeses, Grand Marnier gâteau, fruits laced with kirsch, and after-dinner cocktails. TWA hoped the experience would be so memorable it even provided a special envelope for you to mail your menu to the folks back home.

Yes, those were the days. Passengers often adjourned to separate dining rooms, tables were set with crisp linens, and we could be trusted with cutlery. Cuisine remained a signature airline amenity, and was not yet the domain of (literal) bean counters. (Never mind that an economy-class ticket in 1970 cost about $300 round-trip, or $1,650 adjusted for inflation.)

In 1978 that all changed. De-regulation hit and the Civil Aeronautics Board ceded control over setting airfares. For the first time, airlines had to compete for passengers with lower prices and loyalty programs. Competition trimmed profit margins, putting a squeeze on carriers that continued unabated until the terrorist attacks of 2001 turned trouble into crisis.

Suffering from heavy financial losses and scrambling for further cuts, airlines began targeting food. Shortly after 9/11, American Airlines and TWA stopped serving meals in their main cabins on domestic flights, followed by nearly every other U.S. carrier. According to the logic, it was a flight’s schedule and price that sold tickets — not its food.

Today, among the five so-called U.S. legacy carriers, only Continental still serves complimentary in-flight meals on domestic routes, an anachronism the airline has built an entire advertising campaign around.

But there’s a new dynamic in the skies today. As passengers demand more for their money (especially in this economy), the race is on to capture the elusive paying customer in first and business class by stepping things up in the front of the plane.

A sample of airline food.

A sample of airline food.

Lauri Curtis, vice president of onboard services at American Airlines, says of domestic flights, “We’re using the few dollars that we have to invest in the premium cabin. In the main cabin, we look at convenience.”

In fact, although struggling U.S. carriers cut their spending on food from $5.92 in 1992 to $3.39 per passenger (across all cabins) in 2006, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, they’re shifting priorities again. The legacy carriers actually increased spending on food by four percent from 2007 to 2008 — even as they were struggling to cut costs in the face of rising fuel prices.

To appeal to increasingly discerning palates, more and more domestic airlines are taking cues from international carriers, which have famously enlisted the help of boldface names to plan meals.

For years American has relied on Southwestern cuisine chef Stephan Pyles and his Dallas colleague Dean Fearing to plan its in-flight menus. More recently, United began working with Charlie Trotter to devise healthy meals with an international twist, like wild mushroom risotto and herb-rubbed chicken. Delta, meanwhile, has tapped the skills of Michelle Bernstein, owner of Michy and Sra. Martinez restaurants in Miami, with nightlife entrepreneur Rande Gerber consulting on cocktails and master sommelier Andrea Robinson picking the wine.

That’s not to suggest that Trotter’s in the galley making your risotto. These celebrity chefs collaborate with companies like Gate Gourmet — whose kitchens crank out the food for 200 million passengers a year across most of the world’s major airlines — to translate their visions into something that works at 30,000 feet. That’s no small feat, considering that the food will travel through a blast chiller and assembly lines, across a tarmac, and into at least two ovens before it gets to your seat.

Meanwhile, space considerations in the onboard ovens and on the tray tables pose another problem. (Pyles’s famous Cowboy bone-in rib eye, for instance, had to be adjusted down to a fillet.)

Add to these technical difficulties the fact that by some estimations, says Bob Rosar, executive chef of Gate Gourmet North America, “you could lose 18 percent of your flavor profile, or sense of taste, in a pressurized cabin.” But after decades of food science and trial and error, he says, compensating for the loss no longer means adding 18 percent more salt and pepper to meals. “We’re using herbs and flavored vinegars to build the flavors at every level. Instead of baking your chicken, we’ll sear it or grill it.”

Of course, few U.S. carriers can provide meals on the same scale as international airlines, which haven’t faced comparable financial difficulties. Some carriers, such as Austrian Airlines and Gulf Air, actually place chefs on board to prepare meals in the premium classes, and many airlines, including Austrian and Singapore, train flight attendants as sommeliers.

International carriers also often showcase the cuisines of their country of origin: Abu Dhabi carrier Etihad Airways serves tiramisu laced with Arabic coffee. Lufthansa features regional German produce such as Filder-Spitzkraut cabbage and Bamberger Hörnla potatoes. And Japan Airlines pulls out all the stops, preparing traditional cuisine in special onboard rice cookers.

Even as domestic airlines reinvent menus for front-of-the-plane passengers, those in the back are witnessing the advent of creative buy-on-board menus. What started with the sale of basic snack boxes has ballooned into a virtual arms race among airlines to provide fresh, healthy sandwiches and salads to domestic passengers. United recently added items such as a turkey and asparagus wrap and an Asian chicken salad, $9 each, and American’s new partnership with Boston Market includes a Chicken Carver and an Italian chopped salad, among others (all items are $10), on select routes.

Chef Todd English, meanwhile, has developed a menu of dishes such as a goat cheese and vegetable salad ($8) for Delta’s main cabin. JetBlue, which famously gives out free snacks, has even been investigating the possibility of selling food on its flights; it tested a buy-on-board program earlier this year.

According to airlines’ studies, passengers are actually happier paying for something they want to eat rather than getting free food they don’t. Virgin America points to research that revealed that economy passengers are willing to spend up to $21 on onboard services (including food and entertainment), but that the food needs to be fresh and cocktails high quality.

Though airlines insist their buy-on-board programs are primarily intended to offer passengers a better in-flight experience, they are also part of a larger effort to build up non-airfare revenue. (Of U.S.-based carriers, only Virgin America would discuss the base cost of its snack boxes-about half the $6 purchase price — and confirm the profitability of its food program.)

But reaching a balance isn’t easy; some airlines are finding out the hard way when they’ve taken à la carte too far. Last year, United dropped plans to test buy-on-board on transatlantic flights only weeks after announcing the program, because of passenger protests. And US Airways had to reverse its policy of charging for soft drinks and bottled water on domestic flights after only seven months.

For all their teams of accountants and high-powered consultants, reams of research, and celebrity chefs, the airlines say their ultimate goal is to find that sweet spot where passengers in premium enjoy the service enough to pay extra, passengers in coach feel satisfied (and maybe even happy) with their experience, and carriers can stay solvent. If they get it right? Here’s hoping domestic airline food will one day again be good enough to write home about.

Las Vegas Specials On Yapta.com

September 25th, 2009

If you need an excuse to travel to Las Vegas, look no further than the travel deals on Yapta.com. In addition to helping you

Yapta.com offers travel specials to Las Vegas.

Yapta.com offers travel specials to Las Vegas.

find bargain flights and hotels to Las Vegas, they’re now offering exclusive deals on Las Vegas entertainment, restaurants and resorts.

Yapta even has access to insider information on all Las Vegas has to offer – including something for every taste and budget.

Find your perfect excuse to get to Vegas. Check out Yapta today.

Luxuriate in Literary London

September 24th, 2009

London is definitely one of the great literary cities of the world — just check out this London Literary Trail map — and now

Literary adventures in London.

Literary adventures in London.

the bookish fun doesn’t have to stop when you return to your hotel at night. The Radisson Edwardian Bloomsbury Street Hotel , which completed renovations earlier this year, has launched a Book of the Month club — read the book while you’re in the hotel, or take it home with you.

September’s book?

The Tales of Hans Christian Andersen, Walker Classics Edition.

All right, so it ain’t Virgina Woolf but I’ve always been a sucker for rather twisted fairy tales. Book one of the hotel’s suites, which come equipped with a bathtub at the foot of the bed for convenient reading, as well as an egg-shaped swing — and float away in many ways.