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Holiday Gift Guide 2012

By December 5, 2012October 2nd, 201390 Comments

Welcome to Our Second Annual Family Holiday Gift Guide. And by that, we of course mean gifts for New Moms, New Dads, Seasoned Moms, Seasoned Dads, Little Ones, Big Ones, Babysitters, Carpool Helpers, School Teachers, Cello Teachers, Art Teachers, the Nice Guy Who Brews You a Badass Cup of Coffee Every Morningโ€ฆand even YOU! Read carefully and youโ€™ll see what we mean.

English Premier League Christmas Ornamentsย ($10 for 3-pack). You could never accuse this family of rooting for the underdog. Last year, after Chelsea won the UEFA championship โ€” establishing it as the best club team in Europe โ€” our resident diehard Manchester United fans began toโ€ฆ waver. Phoebe started wearing her Wayne Rooney jersey a little less proudly, Abby started asking to watch Drogba highlights on YouTube, and six months later, I guess you could say weโ€™re a full-on Chelsea household now. (Like the weather, this will change again soon.) Weโ€™re making the most of it while it lasts, though, and even bought a set of these for our pals Mike and Sara up in Portland, Maine, whose three kids are true blue Chelsea fans, through-and-through. Hang these with pride, my friends. โ€” Andy

French Pressย (Le Creuset, $60). When I showed this to Jenny the other day, she said, โ€œDo you want one?โ€ And the answer was, โ€œYes and no.โ€ Yes, I want one because itโ€™s so cool looking and I love Le Creuset and am an inveterate coffee addict; and no, I donโ€™t want one, because we have a French press already and I canโ€™t really justify spending money for another one. But I am going to buy it for a friend or relative who loves coffee and I am going to secretly look forward to the day when our current, perfectly functional โ€” functional: therein lies the problem โ€” french press, I donโ€™t know, maybe falls off the counter and shatters or is gravely wounded in the dishwasher. At which point: Yes. I want one. In cherry (pictured above). โ€”ย Andy

Animal Stacking Gameย (Haba, $20). When the girls were little, playing board games with them was always one of those milestones I was excited to hit. Until we hit itโ€ฆand I found myself spending long swaths of winter afternoons wandering through Gumdrop Mountains and Peppermint Forest, dying the slow painful death that is CandyLand. (Letโ€™s not even discuss Pretty Pretty Princess.) But when this stacking game came into my life, things changed. Though still simple enough for 3-year-olds (you take turns stacking animals until it tumbles over), I found it to be actually calming, plus it didnโ€™t take up an entire shelf in the toy โ€œclosetโ€ (read: floor), it exercised my kidsโ€™ (and my) as-yet-developed patience muscles, and was the game that promised brighter skies of Monopoly, Mancala, and Apples to Apples ahead. (PS: Andย this was a major hit with my puzzle-minded 5-year-old nephew.) โ€”Jenny

McEvoy Ranch Olive Oilย ($24 for 375 ml โ€” about 12 ounces)ย When I strike it rich with this blog that I write for free, no Porsches for me. Just garages filled with cases and cases of this olive oil, made in Petaluma, California and renowned for its bright, peppery finish.ย There is olive oil for browning your chicken breasts and tossing with your potatoes before roasting; there is olive oil that you use sparingly, to whisk into vinaigrettes or drizzle atop soups and pastas. And then there is McEvoy Ranch. Which is not only all that, but also the perfect ย gift for your party host or daughterโ€™s piano teacher or friend or person you like very much, who knows a little something about the finer things. Iโ€™ve only ever used the traditional blend, but I canโ€™t imagine you could go wrong with their Olio Nuovo, made from just-harvested olives, or anything else they sell for that matter. โ€”Jenny


Pure Komachi Chefโ€™s Knifeย ($10). We own a fleet of Wusthof knives that have served us well since we registered for them fifteen years ago. We have some wood-handled Forschners that our Uncle Mike gave us which, in a matter of seconds, can render a head of cabbage helpless. Last year, for Christmas I bought Andy a New West Knifeworks Fusionwood 8-incher, and when he first removed the thing from its red leather sheath, he looked like a Samurai warrior. In other words, we are pretty well-endowed in the blade department. Which is why itโ€™s all the more strange that when Iโ€™m about to embark on chop-heavy meal prep, I get thoroughly depressed if my six-and-a-half-inch Pure Komachi carbon stainless steel chefโ€™s knife, which we picked up a year ago as an impulse buy for TEN BUCKS, is in the dishwasher โ€” or, more likely, has been co-opted by Andy. The Komachi โ€” light, sharp, and seemingly molded to the exact specifications of my right hand โ€” came in fun colors like pink, so we thought it might be a fun First Knife to give Phoebe on her 10th birthday. The only problem is that now, when she wants to use it, we have to tell her to get in line. ย โ€“Jenny

Nike Mercurial Indoor Shoesย ($50)ย Our dainty little flower, Abby, will soon be wearing these ย to school every day. โ€œAbby, Iโ€™m not sure theyโ€™re going to match too many of your outfits,โ€ I told her. โ€œDad,โ€ she responded, โ€œthatโ€™s not theย point.โ€ โ€œOkay, whatย isย the point, then?โ€ โ€œThe point is that theyโ€™re awesome and rocking and cool. Duh.โ€ And sheโ€™s right. The truth is,ย I kind of want a pair, too. Having grown up in the 80s, I canโ€™t tell you how happy I am to see that neon is back. (Her sister has a pair in neon, as well: a color she describes as โ€œreddish-pinkish-orange.โ€) Abby has been ogling these things on soccer.com for weeks now, and her agonizing wait will soon be over. โ€”ย Andy

Malleyโ€™s Chocolatesย ย ($1-$3 each)ย I went back to Ohio, the great Chrissy Hynde once sang. But my city was goneโ€ฆ all my favorite places/ My city had been pulled down, reduced to parking spaces. A, O, way to go, Ohio.ย All I know is, our Cleveland-living friends (and DALS contributors) Dan and Jen sent us a care package while our power was out after Hurricane Sandy โ€” a big box of candy bars from Malleyโ€™s, which has been making the stuff (in Ohio, mind you) since 1935. Everything about this was good, starting with the dark chocolate-pretzel bar and the super-reasonable prices and the beautiful, retro packaging (awesome, off-kilter, hand-drawn fonts and cheerful color combinations and a general look that says, โ€œThis is not another coroporate product.โ€) Think of it as a new twist on an old stocking stuffer, and it happens to taste good, too. Way to go, Ohio. โ€” Andy

A book for dad: Tears in the Darknessย by Michael and Elizabeth Norman ($18). Did you read Unbroken? I did. Unbroken speaks for itself; you donโ€™t need me to tell you how good it is. I might have likedย Tears in the Darkness more, though. This book is the unbelievable, harrowing, and ultimately uplifting story of one man โ€” a young cowboy with a poetโ€™s soul from Montana named Ben Steele โ€” who somehow survived the Bataan Death March in World War II. This book took twelve years to research and it shows. I read it three years ago and still think about it all the time, still think about how one person can endure this kind of hardship and not be ruined by it. Iโ€™ve been hand-selling it ever since, and havenโ€™t heard a single negative report back. Iโ€™d read one of these a week, if I could. โ€” Andy

A book for Junior:ย The Daydreamerย by Ian McEwan ($13). I knew I loved Abbyโ€™s fourth grade teacher when Abby came home from school and said, โ€œDad, weโ€™re reading the best book in school, about a kid who has these crazy daydreams. Itโ€™s by Ian McEwan.โ€ Ian McEwan? I wasnโ€™t even really aware heโ€™d written childrenโ€™s books, but he has, and when Abby was done with this one, I read it for myself. This will not be a newsflash, but: Ian McEwan is a good writer. And this teacher had good taste. Hereโ€™s just one little example of what I mean: โ€œAs for being on his own, grown-ups didnโ€™t much like that either. They donโ€™t even like other grown-ups being on their own. When you join in, people can see what youโ€™re up to. Youโ€™re up to what theyโ€™re up to. You have to join in, or youโ€™ll spoil it for everyone else. Peter had different ideas. Joining in was all very fine, in its place. But far too much of it went on. In fact, he thought, if people spent less time joining in and making others join in, and spent a little time each day alone remembering who they were or who they might be, then the world would be a happier place and wars might never happen.โ€ โ€”ย Andy

A book for anyone:ย Tenth of Decemberย by George Saunders ($26). If youโ€™ve been reading this blog for the past few years, you are probably SICK TO THE FREAKINโ€™ PITS OF YOUR SOUL of hearing me talk about George Saunders, but I am not done yet. In the first week of January โ€” itโ€™s the perfect thing to load onto that new reading device you got over the holidays โ€” he is publishing his first new collection of stories in six years. I am deeply, irrevocably biased, but man, itโ€™s amazing. If you love writing, this is for you. A sample:ย โ€œOh, no, you donโ€™t, she said with that smoky laugh and guided him into a house. A house on the park. Heโ€™d seen it a million times. And now was in it. It smelled of man-sweat and spaghetti sauce and old books. Like a library where sweaty men went to cook spaghetti. She sat him in front of a woodstove, brought him a brown blanket that smelled of medicine. Didnโ€™t talk but in directives: โ€˜Drink this, let me take that, wrap up, whatโ€™s your name, whatโ€™s your number?โ€™ What a thing! To go from dying in your underwear in the snow to this! Warmth, colors, antlers on the walls, an old-time crank phone like you saw in silent movies. It was something. Every second was something.โ€ โ€” Andy

Emily Green Placemats ($10, each). There was a three-year stretch in our lives when these laminated, animal-themed washable mats never left the kitchen table โ€“we used them at meals but also for play-doh marathons, cookie baking and pie-dough-rolling. Sweet as this era was (and sweet as the mats are), I have to admit Iโ€™m happy to usher in the new era of placemats, an era that looks likeโ€ฆ

โ€ฆ.theseย ($14/each) from Shop Fog Linens. Unlike the bright, poppy colors of the old guard, theseย are sold in the muted colors of grown-up land that kids will say are boring. Which is, of course, how I know theyโ€™re perfect! Lucky for all of us, Shop Fog Linen has offered four of the placemats you see above as a giveaway to a lucky commenter chosen at random below*. (Winner will be announced in a few days and must live in the 48 contiguous states.) Good luck! โ€”Jenny

Ella Wishes You a Swinging Christmasย ($10). You know you can sing when you take a song like โ€œJingle Bellsโ€ โ€“ or good lord, โ€œFrosty the Snowmanโ€ โ€” and somehow make it your own. Somehow make it into a beautiful song. Somehow make it listenable after a month of incessant, moldering holiday songs piped into every Duane Reade and Gap on earth. Everything on this album is so smooth and effortless and peppy, and this recently remastered version contains a bunch of alternate takes that are a lot of fun for the kids to hear, as Ella Fitzgerald tried out different voices, different rhythms, etc. Good with a glass of wine. Good, period. โ€” Andy

Nike Girl Power Shirts ($18-$25) My friend Yolandaโ€™s 9-year-old daughter recently came to my house wearing cute shorts over tights with little flats that I couldโ€™ve sworn I saw on a 25-year-old in Williamsburgโ€ฆand that I instantly coveted. My friend Marcieโ€™s daughter showed up to her cello lesson today wearing a gray jersey dress over striped tights and pink patent Mary Janes that seemed to say โ€œIโ€™m more punk than priss.โ€ My daughters? They favor Club Team jerseys and leggings and neon soccer shoes and steering clear of anything resembling a ruffle or a trim or a pleat or detail that might remind passers-by that they are girls. Every morning after Andy and I put our ragtag little jocks on the bus, he turns to me and says the same thing: โ€œYouโ€™ve gotta take control of the clothes situation in this house.โ€ My answer to that? These Nike empowerment Ts with the coolest fonts Iโ€™ve ever seen. For now at least.

Frog Hollow Preservesย ($9/jar; gift boxes $25-$90). When we were out in San Francisco last summer, we spent a couple of mornings at the Ferry Building, eating, exploring, and eating. We hit the Farmerโ€™s Market, took down some insane homemade hot dogs, and tried โ€” and failed โ€” to endure the line at Blue Bottle Coffee. But the place we really loved was Frog Hollow Farm, which sold their own fruit โ€“ some of the best produce on the planet, according to people who know this stuff, with a particular genius for stone fruit โ€” as well as a crushingly tasty selection of jams and preserves. We must have sampled fifteen of them before settling on Plum Blueberry, which the kids decided was best, but really: They were all the best. They were all incredible, ย all examples of little things you think donโ€™t really matter until you taste them and realize (a) how happy that one little bite just made you and (b) how dedicated and talented the people must be who make them. Turns out, this stuff matters. โ€”Andy

ย 

Large Serving Bowl (Heath Ceramics, $115). I canโ€™t believe Andy just wrote 200 words about the Ferry Building and didnโ€™t mention Heath Ceramics. Iโ€™m going to take this to mean that he actually bought me something from the Sausalito-based pottery company and is trying really hard to keep it a secret. More likely heโ€™s trying to block out the memory of the place, because, yes, prices are high (you know youโ€™re in trouble when the word โ€œheirloomโ€ is thrown around on their website) but also because whenever we were wandering around the Ferry Building, I donโ€™t know what God of Beautiful Things was possessing me, but I would always, always find myself right in front of this bowlย you see above, just staring. Phoebe would have to practically grab a cane to pull me from the place. โ€œMooooom, are you there AGAIN? Come ON!โ€ Yes I was, but just look at that bowl. Itโ€™s the simple, sculptural beauty, but itโ€™s also the colors: rich, deep, and so many brilliant combinations to choose from. If you need help, Andy, just ask. ย โ€”Jenny

Wolffer Estate Red Letter Table Wineย ($17/bottle)ย Jenny and I spent three days out in Long Island in October for our anniversary, just the two of us, eating and wandering and reading books on the beach and visiting a few of the seemingly endless wineries that have sprung up out there in recent years. Itโ€™s a gorgeous part of the world, with some extremely tasty wines, and this one may be our favorite. Itโ€™s seventeen bucks, not too big and high in alcohol, and โ€” for us, at least โ€” itโ€™s local, which is not something we say a lot about wine. Also, the label is awesome and weโ€™re not too proud to admit that that counts for a lot. A perfect house-warming gift. Also a good wine to stock for any holiday party you may be hosting. People will leave happy. โ€”ย Andy

Robert Griffin III. (There is not enough money in the world.) Super Bowl 2013! โ€” Andy

*Update: Kendra is the winner of the placemats. Thanks for playing everyone!

90 Comments

  • Jenny Jenny says:

    Elizabeth โ€“ Abby, my 9-year-old, is with me (as you can see above!) and she says that she still loves to play that stacking game. She would also like to add that Elizabeth is her best friendโ€™s name.

  • Caitlin says:

    I just had to pipe in to second the recommendation of โ€œTears in the Darkness.โ€ Itโ€™s a really, really wonderful bookโ€”the kind that sticks with you. Great list!

  • Avatar CathyT says:

    The bowl, totally beautiful and functional. The placemats โ€“ something that would be used every day as we use placemats and mine are looking worn. Thanks for the list!

  • Avatar Brooke says:

    love these ideas! thanks.

  • Avatar natalie says:

    love this thank you โ€“ iโ€™ve already added to both my shopping list & my wish list

  • Avatar jen says:

    Do you have a good source for Mancala games? My son is at just the right age, I think, and I just loved this game as a kid. Iโ€™d like to find one that is attractive & handcrafted if possible.

  • Avatar Alyssa says:

    Marvelous gift suggestions and even better descriptions!

  • Avatar rachel says:

    So much to ooh over but that french press and the placemats take the cake!

  • Avatar bridgit says:

    Soooo many great gift ideas. Ornaments for my husbandโ€™s buddies, the animal game for my kiddos. Thanks for making like a little easier.

  • Avatar Rachael Starke says:

    Iโ€™m about a week away from getting my kitchen back after a remodel, and that Le Creuset French Press is just the perfect thing to sit on my new work desk. But not a be a downer โ€“ one reviewer says itโ€™s made in China and maybe not up to Le Creusetโ€™s usual standards? For that price, that would be disappointing if true.

    But the game is totally going on my list for my daughters. Almost every game we have for them is from Europe it seems.

  • Avatar Alexi Wright says:

    This is an amazing list! I must confess that I loved the links and promptly ordered half of itโ€“reference a great Lily Tomlinโ€™s impulse shopping SNL skit. Thank you. Must check out last yearโ€™s list. Fingers crossed for place mats!

    alexiwright@gmail.com

  • Kim at Cook with 2 Chicks says:

    Great gift ideas! I loved that Malleyโ€™s made your list. I live in Lakewood(right down the street from Malleyโ€™s). Our stockings are full of delicious Malleyโ€™ treats every year.

  • Hannah says:

    Frog Hollow Farm! And Heath Ceramics! You guys are speaking my language. Jenny I hope you get the bowl. We have a few Heath pieces and without fail I smile when I see them. And your family has never failed me with a book recommendation yet.

    (Also, I have the biggest smile picturing those rough-and-tumble beauties heading for the bus in their neon shoes and cool-font t shirts. )

  • Avatar --anu says:

    Thank you for the list! I now know what to get my husband โ€“ the french press, of course. He has been saying how he wants to have โ€œregularโ€ coffee rather than espresso (we only have stovetop espresso maker and no other gadgets).

    And I am off to check out those place mats. My daughter is just getting out of the โ€œoilcloth on the kitchen tableโ€ phase ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar Lucy Mitchell says:

    Chelsea? Check out Wayne Rooneyโ€™s Street Striker (a series he did a few years ago, sort of an x factor for kids who play street soccer), maybe that will tempt you back to Man U. Can my name be in the pot for the giveaway even if Iโ€™m not U.S. based? Iโ€™d like the mats!

  • Avatar Trina says:

    I love Ella! And now I have to look into more of Ian McEwanโ€™s works.

  • Avatar Jennifer says:

    I love that sentence about Candyland! I will be chuckling to myself all day, especially as I play Candyland with my 5 yro daughter.

  • Avatar Meredith says:

    I love this gift guide! Itโ€™s just too bad it wasnโ€™t posted a week ago โ€” I just finished my Christmas shopping today!

  • Avatar angela says:

    i was hoping you would post a gift giving idea list! woo too โ€“ hope i win the placemats โ€“ love them!

    i loved your painful game playing comment โ€“ right to the heart of it!

  • Avatar Amanda says:

    Youโ€™ve convinced meโ€ฆ Iโ€™m going to try George Saunders. Iโ€™m looking for something to really get lost it!

  • Avatar Amber says:

    Love, love, love, everything on this list. Dear husband, please take note. ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Emily says:

    Such a thoughtful list! Now Iโ€™m rolling with great gift ideas and suggestions.

    I have to say, the placemats are definitely my favoriteโ€ฆ Thanks for the chance to win them! (Fingers tightly crossed!)

  • Avatar Sharon says:

    The placemats look great.

  • Avatar Evie says:

    Thanks for sharing. Your list gave me some much needed ideas.

  • Wylie says:

    I would love to win these beautiful placemats! Mine are tired and old!

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