CHECK OUT THE BUZZ THE DISH THE SCENE
MAGAZINE
January2011
THE
SPICE LIFE OF
Still
MAGAZIN E AD
OS ’S M T-RE LA
urc e: T he M 0 edia Audit 201
BULL-BUSTIN’ COMEDY
The Pulse OC A
BODY ODDITIES
ALL NEW!
!
SECRETS OF THE SUPER FIT
So
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W E P R O U D LY C A R R Y
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1920 SW 20th Place, Ste 201, Ocala Located in Cala Hills, next to Chandra Smiles
352.620.2566 www.AdvancedAestheticsOcala.com Financing available with little or no interest. Most credit cards accepted. Flexible payment options.
L-R: Kris Carroll, Beth Altenburger-Casse, RuthAnn Nettleton, Dr. Steve Tieche, Vanessa Woelfel
One. Just one. And only one.
Marion County’s MostPreferredHospital. Eight years in a row!
Munroe Regional is proud to have won the prestigious Consumer Choice Award as Marion County’s Most Preferred Hospital for Overall Quality and Image and Best Doctors and Nurses for the eighth consecutive year—one of only nine hospitals in Florida to win eight or more times consecutively.
Visit our new website
At Munroe Regional, the families of Marion County are our families. at’s why earning a recognition like the Consumer Choice Award is so important to us: because it comes from the very people we serve. What’s more, this is the eighth consecutive year that Munroe has been named “Marion County’s Most Preferred Hospital”— one of only nine hospitals in Florida to win eight or more times consecutively. ank you for choosing Munroe as “the best.”
Whether it’s life saving emergency care, nationally acclaimed heart care, comprehensive orthopedics and rehabilitation services, or an array of advanced surgical services, you don’t take chances with your family’s health. Count on Munroe Regional. Insist on your hospital. Because there’s only one. Find a physician close to home. Call Munroe’s Health Resource Line at 352-867-8181 or 800-575-3975.
We treat families like, well, family. www.MunroeRegional.com
www.MunroeRegional.com—now with 360 degree virtual tours, physician profiles and videos, an enhanced physician finder with a “compare” feature and lots of useful health information. You can even pay your hospital bill online, register online for Munroe events, including free tours of the medical center, and sign up for our new email newsletter.
Favorite Things 1. Helping others 2. Family 3. Working out 4. Staying positive! 5. My beautiful bright smile from Dr. Chandra! —Loni Pfeil Personal Trainer at Compass Fitness and National Fitness Competition Hopeful
cosmetic restorative zoom! whitening crown & bridges dentures sedation dentistry veneers periodontics digital smile makeovers cosmetic fillings implants botox & juvederm
call Sandy today for your smile evaluation
352.861.1500
Zoom Whitening by Dr. Tina Chandra
www.chandrasmiles.com Dr. Chandra
Make Varicose Veins
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Endovenous Laser Treatment (EVLT) for Varicose Veins Varicose Before
Varicose After
Our state-of-the-art Varicose Vein treatments use the most modern laser, ultrasound, and microphlebectomy techniques with proven results.
Combining compassion with the highest quality surgical care. Highly Effective | In-Office Procedures No Hospitalization | Quick Recovery Covered by Most Insurance & Medicare
Christian Oraedu, MD, FACS, FRCS, FRCSI Board Certified Surgeon Diplomate American Board of Surgery
Oakhurst Professional Park 1329 SE 25th Loop, Ste. 102 • Ocala, Florida
352 690 6000 www.OcalaSurgery.com
Recently, we asked a couple from Summerfield why they made the drive to Honda of Ocala to purchase their new Honda Accord and what makes their new vehicle so special. Here’s what they had to say...
love “
We are repeat customers and we
the way we are treated at Honda of Ocala in both sales and service.
”
—Pastor Marty and Ronda Shea Village View Community Church
Experience VIP treatment through our Internet department!
0.9%financing
available on all 2011 Honda Accords
• Tour our state-of-the-art, $10 million-dollar facility • Enjoy a complimentary lunch while you select your vehicle and we appraise your vehicle • Presentation of your new car in our air-conditioned delivery center • Exclusive pricing for all new and pre-owned vehicles • First year complimentary maintenance • Experience a new way of purchasing with our auto concierge department at hondaofocala.com
John Simms, Internet Director and On Site Honda Product Specialist
“It’s a great feeling knowing our family is
“We thoroughly enjoy the
comfortable and easy to use interior”
fully protected with front and side curtain airbags”
“The Variable Cylinder Management activates and deactivates the engine’s cylinders as needed to save fuel.”
Turn the page for our
1800 State Road 200 |
352.867.1900 | hondaofocala.com
service specials
Service.
redefined.
At Honda of Ocala, our highly qualified technicians are here to provide exceptional service in a timely manner. From oil changes to transmission replacements, we are dedicated to maintaining top-tier customer service, for both new and pre-owned car buyers! Allow our staff to demonstrate our commitment to excellence.
Ladies’ Day Specials
While you’re in for any service, get a FREE manicure and car wash. Mondays 8am-1pm. Must present coupon at time of service.
15.95 Oil Change & Car Wash
$
Monday-Friday. Hybrids & other models may be higher. Up to 5 quarts 5W20, Honda oil filter. Plus tax and shop supplies if applicable. Must present coupon at time of service.
Super Saver Discount
Spend up to $100, save 5%. $100-$250, save 7%. $251 & up, save 10%. Prices may vary by model. Plus taxes & fees where applicable. Must present coupon at time of service.
FREE Multi-Point Inspection
Service Hours: Monday-Friday 7am-7pm Saturday 8am-5pm | Sunday Closed
1800 State Road 200 | 888.874.5524 hondaofocala.com
S P E C I A L
A D V E R T I S I N G
F E A T U R E
Is Your Life Becoming
A R e a l Pa i n ? Outstanding Credentials of Dr. Zhou • Trained in Harvard Medical School • Board-certified in Pain Medicine and Neurology/Psychiatry • PhD in Psychology • Author of numerous books and journal articles on Pain Management • Former Director of Jackson Memorial Hospital Pain Clinic, U. of Miami • Winner of Physician Recognition Award, American Medical Assoc.; 2003 • Distinguished Physician Award, Florida Medical Assoc.; 2004, 2006
Suffering from chronic pain is no way to live your life. Fortunately for Ocalans, one of the world’s preeminent pain specialists has a large and growing practice right here in town to treat a wide variety of pain ailments. Dr. YiLi Zhou of the Florida Pain and Rehabilitation Center has helped thousands of locals finally make debilitating pain a thing of the past. Whether you suffer from back pain, joint ailments, sciatica or headaches, Dr. Zhou uses minimally invasive, non-surgical and effective treatments as a way to eliminate inflammation and pain. In fact, over the five years that his practice has been open, Dr. Zhou has personally administered more than 10,000 pain-relieving procedures to his patients with thousands of patients being pain-free after his treatment. Dr. Zhou follows a strict philosophy of “patient first, quality first,” and frequently extols the advantages of leaving surgery as an option of last resort, often in articles he pens for the pages of the world’s most prestigious medical journals. The results speak for themselves: the Florida Pain and Rehabilitation Center has never had a major complication such as nerve injury, infection, paralysis or respiratory depression in its five-year existence. This stellar record coupled with Dr. Zhou’s honest and compassionate approach to coupled pain management has made him one of the most popular practitioners in pain management the area. the area. The practice’s growth has been remarkable. In five short years, the The practice’s number of new patients who have sought treatment from Dr. Zhou has number of new increased nearly 10-fold: from 267 in 2005 to 2,573 last year. increased nearly Consult with Dr. Zhou today for an honest assessment of your pain Consult with problems and learn how you can begin to lead a pain-free life once again. problems and
Formerly Comprehensive Pain Management of North Florida
Florida Pain and Rehabilitation Center We’ve moved! Locations in Ocala, Gainesville, & Lake City 3220 SW 33rd Road, Ste. 200 | Ocala
352.629.7011 | cpmnf.com
your
for FARMS | HOMES | ACREAGE
ALBERT EINSTEIN SAID, “The only source of knowledge is experience,” and knowledge through experience is exactly what Greg and Carla Lord offer as realtors. The reason “The Lords Rein in Horse Country,” as their motto states, is because they bring to their profession a depth of knowledge of Marion County’s horse properties and of all sectors of the equine industry that is hard to equal.
VISIT US
ONLINE 352.732.3276 www.homestoranches.com
Change Your Life With Style! Hummingbird Hill - Executive Hilltop Estate on 10 Acres. This 4/3.5 pool home includes a gourmet kitchen & 2 bar areas, formal dining & living rooms, music room, library, 2 fireplaces, exercise room, summer kitchen & much more. Property features a custom-built barn with two stalls, tennis courts & formal gardens. Desirable location, close to the Greenway trails, Florida Horse Park, downtown Ocala & The Villages. Perfect for a large family or for anyone who loves to entertain! Offered at $1,229,000.
CARLTON ARMS of OCALA invites you to Meet Your New Neighbors
Mother Nature Loves Carlton Arms of Ocala 125 Acres of Woods and Water at Carlton Arms of Ocala is a partner with nature’s beauty which enhances our community.
Best Rental Apartment Value in Central Florida from just $492 per month.
• FREE Monthly Water Utility Bill • FREE Basic Cable TV Package • Huge Garden Patios • Washers/Dryers in Most Residences • Rapid Response Maintenance • Pet Friendly • Short Term Furnished Rentals
• FREE Valet Trash Removal • FREE Monthly Pest Control • 2 Large Pools (One Heated) • Fitness Center with Steam Showers • Lighted Tennis & Basketball Courts • Mini-Storage Units Available • Short Term Furnished Winter Rentals
For Virtual Tours, Model Apartments, Floorplans, Community Activities visit
CarltonArmsofOcala.com Call now to schedule a tour!
CARLTON ARMS OF OCALA
866.927.6819 5001 SW 20th St., Suite 100 Ocala, Florida 34474
Developed & Managed by
Efficiency/Studio from $492 • 1 Bedroom from $538 • 2 Bedroom from $730 • 2 or 3 Bedroom Townhome from $774
BUSINESS TECH & RECREATIONAL CLASSES ARE STARTING SOON! Expand
your horizons with computer training and recreational courses. Study applications including Windows Vista, QuickBooks Pro, and Word 2007, or explore your creative side with evening courses in ballroom dancing, pottery, basket weaving, cake decorating, and more. Contact us today for more information!
Live Your Dreams MARION C AREERTRAINING.COM | 352-671-7200 Follow us on Facebook — Facebook.com/MyCTAE Marion Count y Public Schools, An Equal Oppor tunit y School District
L E I S U R E A N D R E C R E AT I O N A L CO U R S E S C H E D U L E S REGISTER AT CTAE CAMPUS STARTING ON THE FIRST DAY OF CLASS – 1014 SW 7TH RD. • OCALA, FL 34471
*Yoga classes meet /register at Dunnellon Elementary School – 10235 SW 180th Avenue Rd., Dunnellon, FL COURSE
DAYS
TIMES
DAY/NIGHT
START/END
LOCATION/RM. #
LAB FEE
TUITION
Ballroom Dancing
Tuesday
6:30 pm - 8:00 pm
Night
1/11 - 3/08
CTAE Rm. 080P
None
$19
Beginning Spanish I
Monday
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Night
1/24 - 3/07
CTAE Rm. 083
$7
$31
Belly Dancing
Thursday
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Night
1/20 - 3/10
CTAE Rm. 080P
None
$26
Belly Dancing
Wednesday
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Night
1/26 - 3/09
CTAE Rm. 080P
None
$23
Cake Decorating
Wednesday
6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Night
1/26 - 3/09
CTAE Rm. 080T
None
$37
Photography
Thursday
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Night
1/20 - 3/10
TBA
None
$34
Pottery
Thursday
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Night
1/20 - 3/10
CTAE West Bay
$10
$51
Sewing and Design
Thursday
6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
Night
1/20 - 3/10
CTAE Rm. P055
None
$34
Sewing and Design
Tuesday
6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Night
1/25 - 3/08
CTAE Rm. P055
None
$37
Yoga
Thursday
4:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Night
1/20 - 3/10
Dunnellon Elementary*
None
$34
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY COURSE SCHEDULES R EGISTR ATION TAKES PL ACE JAN UARY 10 -13, AT C TAE C AM PUS – 1014 SW 7 TH R D. • OC AL A , F L 34 471
REGISTRATION HOURS: 8:30 am–5:30 pm COURSE
DAYS
TIMES
Computer Literacy 1
Tuesday
9:00 am - 12:00 noon
Keyboarding Lv. I
Tuesday
Quickbooks Pro 2009
DAY/NIGHT
START/END
LOCATION/RM. #
LAB FEE
TUITION
Day
1/25 - 3/08
CTAE Rm. 047
$10
$115
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Night
1/25 - 3/08
CTAE Rm. 047
$20
$77
Thursday
9:00 am - 11:30 am
Day
1/20 - 3/10
CTAE Rm. 047
$10
$110
Beginning Computers Lv. 2
Thursday
6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Night
1/20 - 3/10
CTAE Rm. 047
$10
$73
Beginning Computers Lv. 1
Wednesday
6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Night
1/26 - 3/09
CTAE Rm. 047
$10
$64
Word 2007 - Lv. I
Tuesday
6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Night
3/29 - 5/17
CTAE Rm. 047
$10
$110
Computer Literacy 2
Tuesday
9:00 am - 12:00 noon
Day
3/29 - 5/17
CTAE Rm. 047
$10
$132
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT • COSMETOLOGY • COMMERCIAL FOODS AND CULINARY ARTS • ELECTRICAL APPRENTICESHIP EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIAN • FACIALS SPECIALTY • FIREFIGHTING • LEGAL ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST • MASSAGE THERAPY MEDICAL ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST • MEDICAL ASSISTANT • MEDICAL CODER/BILLER • MEDICAL CLINICAL LABORATORY TECHNICIAN NAILS SPECIALTY • NURSING ASSISTANT • PATIENT CARE ASSISTANT • PHLEBOTOMY • RADIOGRAPHY • VETERINARY ASSISTING • WELDING
an ortho-doc
who’s not so orthodox
352.351.4405 www.drjonesortho.com 1500 se 17th street, bldg. 100 ocala, fl 34471
January2011
Vol13 No1
Features A Barrel Of Laughs p37 Very few people earn a living making other people laugh. For “Hollywood Harris” and “Boogerhead”— the father-son rodeo clown duo from Marion County— having the last laugh is what it’s all about. BY CYNTHIA MCFARLAND
p40
The Spice Of Life Sure, spices add flavor and flair to a variety of our favorite dishes, but they also help to promote healing and wellness. Maybe it’s time to start incorporating a bit of spice into your everyday cooking routine. We spoke to a few local experts to find out the easiest way to get started. BY CYNTHIA MCFARLAND
Secrets Of The Super Fit p59 Faster than a speeding bullet! More powerful than a locomotive! Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound! OK, well maybe these super athletes can’t perform those superhuman feats, but their athletic prowess will certainly impress and inspire you. Ocala Style recently visited with an elite group of local extreme competitors in hopes of snaring a few of their secrets to pass on to you. BY JOANN GUIDRY
jan’11
ocalastyle.com
13
January2011 Vol13 No1
Departments The Publisher p18
‘The Pulse’ on good health
The Buzz p21
The real people, places and events that shape our community BY KEVIN CHRISTIAN, KARIN FABRY-CUSHENBERY, KRISTINA KOLESA & BONNIE KRETCHIK
p22
p85
GREATOUTDOORS p22
Ocala’s first cyclocross is coming, plus marathoners are gearing up. CLASSACTS p26
The FBI comes to Ocala’s MTI, and Lake Weir High TV show wins big.
The Pulse p51
Ideas to keep you fit and healthy all year long
p98
FEELINGWELL p52
Learn about the HIIT workout and how to walk with a doc.
p26
LIVINGWELL p54
Patient drivers needed, and giving back creates a physical effect. EATINGWELL p56
Halt the salt, and eat more ‘see’food.
The Dish p85
p86
Our best recipes, restaurant news and culinary quick bites BY KARIN FABRY-CUSHENBERY, KRISTINA KOLESA, BONNIE KRETCHIK & CYNTHIA MCFARLAND
p108
QUICKBITES p87
Cooking classes offered at Dish, and Amrit Palace makes a move. DININGGUIDE p91
Our area’s finest dining establishments
Photos from our area’s most popular events
The View p118
14
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jan’11
Discover the healing powers of spices and how to incorporate them into your everyday diet.
Cover model: Local resident Seema Patel; Photographer: John Jernigan
MAGAZINE
January2011
THE
SPICE LIFE OF
SECRETS OF THE SUPER FIT BODY ODDITIES BULL-BUSTIN’ COMEDY
ALL NEW!
The Pulse OS ’S M T-RE LA
Still
MAGAZIN E AD
Pete Tesch rediscovers the American way.
On The Cover p40
OC A
THESOCIALSCENE p110
CHECK OUT THE BUZZ THE DISH THE SCENE
rce : Th e Med 10 ia Audit 20
BY KARIN FABRY-CUSHENBERY, KRISTINA KOLESA & BONNIE KRETCHIK
p56
!
The Scene p97
Attend a charity cookout and check out a wedding and prom extravaganza.
Sou
CADILLAC. THE NEW STANDARD OF THE WORLD.
2011
ESCALADE WHITE DIAMOND
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Come Experience the Difference.
Y E A R !
Sullivan C
A
D
I
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4040 SW COLLEGE ROAD OCALA, FL
352.732.4700
S U LLIVANC ADILL AC .COM Shot on location at Via Paradisus.
C
urc e: T he M 0 edia Audit 201
OC A
Still
MAGAZIN E AD
OS ’S M T-RE LA
!
So
January2011
Vol13 No1
ocalastyle.com
PUBLISHER CRC1330227
KATHY JOHNSON / kathy@ocalastyle.com
LLC
Remodeling - Bath & Kitchen Specialists Room Additions and Re-Roofing Fire, Water, Wind, Sinkhole and Tree Damage State Certified Mold Remediation
(352) 622-5277 • OCALA, FL 34474 www.OcalaRestoration.com
COMMITTED TO QUALITY & CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
1 4 T H
A N N U A L
Storytelling Festival CenterPoint Church, Ocala
Connie Regan-Blake has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people around the globe with her powerful performances. When Connie takes the stage she generates a brightness and warmth, drawing in listeners with her engaging humor and Southern charm. Her stories range from hilarious traditional Appalachian Mountain tales to poignant true-life drama.
Local tellers 4:30pm-5:45pm Grand Concert at 7pm Adults $10 Students $5 Family of four $25
GRAPHIC DESIGNER JOHN TRIPODI / johnt@ocalastyle.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS MARY ANN DESANTIS / maryann@ocalastyle.com JOANN GUIDRY / joann@ocalastyle.com CYNTHIA MCFARLAND / cmcfarland@ocalastyle.com KEVIN CHRISTIAN / kevin@ocalastyle.com PHOTOGRAPHERS JOE DEMARTINO / joe@ocalastyle.com JOHN JERNIGAN / jernigan@ocalastyle.com JUDY GREEN / judy@ocalastyle.com
SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES VICKI BAKER / vicki@ocalastyle.com LORI TANI / lori@ocalastyle.com Connie Regan-Blake
Quality Service Since 1992 352-347-9008 Custom Website Design Starting at
Mobile LED Video Screen Rentals
OFFICE/PRODUCTION MANAGER CYNTHIA BROWN / cynthia@ocalastyle.com
DIRECTOR OF SALES CRAIG M. GILLUM / craig@ocalastyle.com
For more information visit www.ocalastorytellingfestival.com
5827 SE Abshier Blvd Hwy 441, Belleview, Florida
MANAGING EDITOR KARIN FABRY-CUSHENBERY / karin@ocalastyle.com
CREATIVE DIRECTOR JASON FUGATE / jason@ocalastyle.com
O C A L A
Friday, April 29, 2011
EXECUTIVE EDITOR KRISTINA KOLESA / krissy@ocalastyle.com
399
$
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES MITZI WELCH / mitzi@ocalastyle.com SALLY LEWIS / sally@ocalastyle.com GREG MOSLEY / greg@ocalastyle.com SHARON MORGAN / sharon@ocalastyle.com EDITORIAL ASSISTANT BONNIE KRETCHIK / bonnie@ocalastyle.com ACCOUNTING DOREEN ROCKWELL / doreen@ocalastyle.com DISTRIBUTION DAVE ADAMS / dave@ocalastyle.com KATHLEEN ADAMS / kathleen@ocalastyle.com OFFICE PHONE 352.732.0073
Salvaging and Converting Old Movie Films, Video Tapes, Slides and Photos to DVD On-Site Event Video Taping Utilizing Mobile LED Video Screens. Editing and Duplication Services
Check out our website for Seasonal Specials www.VideoVaultProductions.com Hours : 10-6 M-F & 10-3 Sat • 352-347-9008 16
ocalastyle.com
jan’11
Ocala Style Magazine, January 2011. Published monthly by Ocala Publications Inc., 1007 E. Fort King Street, Ocala, FL 34471. All contents copyright 2011 by Ocala Publications Inc. All rights reserved. Nothing may be reprinted in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher. For back issues or advertising information, call (352) 732-0073. Return postage must accompany all unsolicited manuscripts and artwork if they are to be returned. Manuscripts are welcomed, but no responsibility can be assumed for unsolicited materials. “Promotional” and “Promotional Feature” denotes a paid advertising feature. Publisher is not responsible for claims and content of advertisements.
jan’11
ocalastyle.com
17
the
Publisher
KATHYJOHNSON
You a
Are
Get ‘The Pulse’ On Good Health J
anuary, perhaps more than any other month, gets us thinking about taking care of our bodies. After indulging in rich foods and long hours on the couch watching football over the past few months, we start to worry about the number on the scale and the outward changes in our appearance. So we focus our attention on weight loss and exercise. Psychologically, too, the New Year seems to trigger a desire for change and fresh beginnings. Most Americans have a well-laid plan—go on a diet, hop on that treadmill or sign up for a new gym membership. Unfortunately, it seems that most adults only stick with their newfound health commitment for a matter of weeks. Why is that? There are many reasons, but essentially we fall back into our old routine and lose our focus. The fact is, however, that the key to lasting good health is not waiting until there’s a crisis before you take action. It requires being proactive and then being committed. Some time ago, I heard a saying that struck me deeply, motivating me to make and stick with better lifestyle choices—“A healthy person has many wishes. A sick person has but one.” Sadly, we all know of friends and family that may be experiencing that very thing. The good news is that many of our ailments and illnesses can be improved if not prevented altogether by making simple changes in our daily lifestyle. There is a vast amount of knowledge and a virtually endless number of resources available to educate ourselves and get
The key to lasting good health is not waiting until there’s a crisis before you take action.
18
ocalastyle.com
jan’11
on a healthy track. The question is, will we see the importance and stay the course? It’s in that spirit that our team at Ocala Style is launching a new monthly department called “The Pulse.” It will focus entirely on health-related content designed to inform, educate, encourage and, yes, remind you to make your health a priority by keeping the subject front and center in each issue. In this inaugural publication of The Pulse, we share inspiring stories from local extreme athletes (“Secrets of the Super Fit”), suggestions on great walking areas around town (“Walk This Way”) and some insights as to why our bodies act the way they do (“Our Bizarre Bodies”). It’s our hope that this new department inspires you this month when ambitions are running high and then throughout the year when your dedication may wane. The pursuit of good health is truly endless, but then no endeavor is more important. Until next time,
FAN? WIN Cool Stuff!
Insider INVITES STYLE Parties SEE & BE SEEN In OCALA STYLE
Magazine!
We Want To KNOW!
Opinion Polls
Catch “The Buzz” FOLLOW US @ facebook.com/ocalastyle twitter.com/ocalastyle
Do You Know An Outstanding Local? Ocala Style is looking for people of excellence! We want to hear about the most accomplished, innovative person you know for an upcoming feature article on notable locals. The nominee must be proficient in his/her field—whether it’s a career or a hobby or a sport—and must be at least 18 years of age. Send a short e-mail (200 words or less) explaining why your nominee should be considered to feature@ocalastyle.com.
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Extreme Cycling
Cracking Cold Cases p24
Buzz
the
Ocala's first ever CycloCross event takes place Jan. 23 p22
FBI at MTI p26
The Doughnut Maker p28
The Sales Man p30
and more!
Hear Ye, Hear Ye! Come one, come all to the ALACHUA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS during the weekends of January 29–30 and February 4–6, and let your inner lord or lady loose for Gainesville’s Hoggetowne Medieval Faire. Gypsy dancers and minstrels will perform in the streets while artisans sell their finest medieval wares in the marketplace during this popular event now in its 25th year. So enjoy a turkey leg while knights battle it out on horseback and, keep your eyes open for an appearance by King Arthur himself. gvlculturalaffairs.org or (352) 393-8536.
More Medieval Madness KIWANIS MEDIEVAL FAIRE, FT. MYERS
January 15–23 weekends medieval-faire.com or (239) 839-8036 FLORIDA RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL, KEY BISCAYNE
January 15–23 (weekends) ren-fest.com or (954) 776-1642 GASPARILLA PIRATE FEST, TAMPA
January 29 gasparillapiratefest.com or (813) 251-8844 FLORIDA RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL, DEERFIELD BEACH
February 12–March 13 (weekends) ren-fest.com or 1-800-3-ren-fes BAY AREA RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL, TAMPA
February 26–April 10 (weekends) bayarearenaissancefest.com or (813) 983-0111
jan’11
ocalastyle.com
21
Buzz
the
GREATOUTDOORS
Jan
4,25
Take A Hike
Jan
Perhaps walking is more your speed. Try one of
22-23
Marathon Madness
MARION COUNTY PARKS AND RECREATION’s
Interpretive Outings and Day Hikes. January 4 will feature the Land Bridge Trail and January 25 will take participants to the Yearling Trail. The walks, led by a knowledgeable guide, give insight and history of the trail from start to finish. Though directed toward adults, children with an interest in history and nature are welcome. The walks are approximately three to four miles in length and can last up to three hours. The program is free and participants can choose to meet with group leaders at 8:30am at Brick City Avenue Park or directly at the trail. (352) 671-8560.
Think you’ve seen all of Marion County? Try seeing 26.2 miles of it on foot surrounded by over 700 other running enthusiasts. The 2011 OCALA MARATHON will take place on Sunday, January 23 beginning at the Boyd Marketplace on Southwest 19th Avenue Road. The race is known for being one of the most scenic in Florida. “‘Get out of town’ is our slogan,” says race director Chris Moling. “The course winds its way through scenic horse farms and over gently rolling hills.” Last year’s event drew over 600 participants with an additional 100 expected this year. A Boston Marathon qualifier, the Ocala Marathon attracts runners from over 26 different states and 12 countries. On January 22 an expo will take place from 10am to 6pm and will feature over 30 vendors. A limited number of tickets for a pasta dinner served at the Holiday Inn Conference Center from 6–8pm that night are also available for $15 each. Not up for the full 26.2? Not to worry. The weekend will begin with the 5 Points of Life kid’s marathon and the Ocala 5K run for adults. Then on Sunday, a half marathon will be run in conjunction with the full marathon. ocalamarathon.com or (352) 637-2475.
Jan
8
Be A CycloCross Boss
Cave In Get an inside view of Marion County. Literally! BRICK CITY ADVENTURE PARK hosts an underground experience like no other. The monthly guided tour allows adults and children ages 8 and up a chance to experience our area from a whole new perspective. For just $30, you can climb, crawl and slither your way through White Cliff Cave. The fee includes the use of a helmet as well as knee and elbow pads. Long pants, shoes and gloves are recommended. The next event is January 8. (352) 671-8560.
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If you feel like something a little more exciting and daring this 23 month, head out to the Santos Trails on January 23 for Ocala’s first-ever CycloCross event. CycloCross is the equivalent of an obstacle course on a bike—a one-mile track that includes mud and sand pits and even spots where riders have to dismount and carry their bikes over the terrain. Participants have a set amount of time to complete as many laps as they can. This inaugural event is put on by GREENWAY BICYCLES, and the proceeds this year benefit the Florida Black Bear Scenic Byway. Jessica Kinnee, owner of Greenway Bicycles, can’t emphasize enough the fun nature of the event. “The course is doable for anyone,” says Jessica, who has a goal of 100 participants. “Novice and expert races will be held for men and women as well as a kids’ race, too. While more advanced riders will prefer to use a CycloCross bike, mountain bike riders are welcome and encouraged to participate.” Volunteers are needed to help set the course up on Saturday as well as help direct, park and register participants on Sunday. Because of the short nature of the course, it’s very spectator-friendly. So bring your support team to cheer you on as you take part in Ocala’s first CycloCross event! greenwaybikeshop.com or (352) 351-3475
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Make It Rain!
DIDYOUKNOW?
Your ‘Source’ For News & Talk Notice something different on the radio these days? Now news talk fans have another alternative to AM radio. On Nov. 20, WOCA began broadcasting on FM radio for the first time in the station’s 53-year history. With a dedication to local coverage, WOCA announced its new FM broadcast during November’s Light Up Ocala event. The station’s owners, Joe and Dan Martone, are committed to airing top quality news talk from both national and local hosts alike as well as continuing prime sports coverage. WOCA can now be heard on 1370AM and 96.7FM.
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OCALA CRIME STOPPERS is now offering a $1,000 reward for any information leading to the arrests in any of our area’s unsolved cases. While there has always been a monetary reward for information, Executive Director Bob Hauk felt it was time to step it up. “It was time to turn up the heat on some of these cases,” he explains. Currently, there are 28 featured cases, but more cases will be added in the spring. If you have information regarding any of the area’s unsolved crimes, contact ocalacrimestoppers.com or (352) 368-STOP (7867).
What A Doll! The world-famous BREYER HORSE
model horse family gained a new member last fall, and it’s a horse right from Ocala’s backyard. “Jamaica,” the 2008 United States Equestrian Federation’s Horse of the Year and a member of champion equestrian Chester Weber’s USEF National Four-In-Hand Combined Driving Championship team, was immortalized as a limited-run Breyer model and released during the 2010 FEI World Equestrian Games last September. “Jamaica is without a doubt a one-of-a-kind horse,” Weber said. “From what I have seen, they broke the mold after making him.” Not without making this model first, of course. Only 500 models of the beloved Dutch Warmblood were made, and Weber said he was thrilled that through the model, fans could enjoy Jamaica “without having to deal with his quirky personality!” Today, the still-spirited 20-year-old gelding can be found leading a peaceful life of retirement at Weber’s Live Oak Stud farm in Ocala.
January In History 1 1 3 10 12 14
of O
Cold Cases Revisited
Cit y
omg! u can txt 911 now
Source :
Yes, ladies and gentleman, the future is here. While 911 has been a life-saving tool for a couple of generations now, contacting 911 just became even more convenient, 21st-century style. Should you find yourself in a situation where you’re unable to communicate verbally, you can now text an urgent message to 911. By sending a text to (352) 351-9111 you will reach a qualified 911 dispatcher who will text back, allowing you to share important information, including your location and other details. If you haven’t programmed this life-saving number into your cell yet, do it now!
If 2011 turns out to be an average one for Ocala precipitation-wise, the city should receive about 52 inches of rain. ca
Buzz
the
Paul Revere born, 1735 New York’s Times Square ball drops for first time, 1908 Construction begins on the Brooklyn Bridge, 1870 First underground passenger railway opens in London, 1863 Batman debuts on TV, 1966 American Revolutionary War ends with a treaty, 1784
15 15 25 25 28 29
The Pentagon opens, 1943 Happy Days premieres on TV, 1974 First Winter Olympic Games held, 1924 The first Emmy Awards presented, 1949 Space Shuttle Challenger explodes, 1986 Baseball’s American League is founded, 1900 Source: holidayinsights.com
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Buzz
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CLASSACTS
FBI Makes Strong Case The FBI is in Ocala now… and they’re part of MTI (Marion Technical Institute). Students (l-r) Shamar Lindsey, Amanda Williams and Doris Smith helped kick off “FBI-Finding Business Initiatives” at a Chamber After Hours event a few weeks ago. The student-run business is compiling a directory of all student-run businesses county-wide and selling advertising space in the directory to pay printing costs. If you’re interested in lending a hand to this enterprise, contact MTI at (352) 236-0527.
Among Florida’s Best Five Andrew Cintron, a senior at WEST PORT HIGH, is the top band student in the state for Class 2A schools! For the honor, he won a $500 John Kersten Memorial Scholarship from the Florida Marching Band Championships. After graduating, Andrew plans to study music at the University of North Florida and become a band teacher. Congratulations, Andrew!
Making The Holidays Bright Dozens of cadets in FOREST HIGH’s Junior ROTC program spent time making the holidays much brighter for others. Students (l-r) Courtney Roper, Lindzi Johnson and Anne Mills were among those who donated, collected and distributed more than 3,257 pounds of food to 31 local families. Each year, the cadets accept the challenge to help others in our community as part of their pre-military program.
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Kudos For Larkin’s Card It was a great day at SOUTH OCALA ELEMENTARY thanks to fourth-grader
Sofia Larkin. Her design captured first place in the annual holiday card competition for Munroe Regional Medical Center. The hospital used her artwork on over 800 cards last month. To celebrate, MRMC’s Mike Robertson (pictured with Sofia) brought plenty of pizza for everyone in Sofia’s class. This is the third year for the contest, and the third year a South Ocala student’s design has finished first.
Hurricane Show ‘Best’ in Florida Storm Surge, the TV news program produced by these students at LAKE WEIR HIGH (pictured with CF News 13’s Allison Walker on far left), beat out every high school in Florida to help Lake Weir capture “Best of Show” honors at the annual Jim Harbin Student Media Festival in Orlando. With awards handed out during the FAME (Florida Association for Media in Education) conference, students from Dr. N.H. Jones and Dunnellon Middle also captured “Best of Show” honors, helping Marion County to a complete sweep of the BOS awards.
—Kevin Christian
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Buzz
the
ONTHEJOB
Allison Nile SCRAMBLES CAFÉ
Every day of the week from 7am to 2pm for the last 10 years, Allison Nile’s has been the smiling face patrons first see when they walk into Scrambles Café on Maricamp Road in Ocala. “We serve between 200 and 300 guests a day, and about 75 percent of them I know by sight,” says Allison, who co-owns the restaurant with her husband, Steve. “I know about their lives, their families, and many people say that’s what makes this place so special.”
Frank Reamer SUNTRAN
Randy Priem
If you’ve ever hitched a ride on a bus in town, you may have met Frank Reamer. He’s been a bus driver for Ocala’s public transportation system, SunTran, for seven years. His day begins at noon and finishes up at 8pm.
The delicious food here is, of course, another reason for the café’s popularity, which comes courtesy of Steve and his staff in the kitchen. “I prefer to be in the front,” Allison says with a smile. “I could never do what he does and vice versa. We’re a great team.” Allison is also quick to cite Scrambles’ wait staff for the restaurant’s success as well as the loyalty of the countless members of the community who patronize the restaurant. As a result, she stresses, Scrambles’ atmosphere feels like that of one big, close family. “When you come in to Scrambles, you’re likely going to see someone you know,” Allison says. “At the very least, you’ll know me!”
“We start at 5am, but that’s too early for me,” he says with a laugh. His route takes people everywhere from the Paddock Mall to the College of Central Florida and anywhere else within the city limits. The freedom and independence of the job are what Frank enjoys the most. “Even though I’m in a bus, I’m still outside driving all over town, meeting new people,” he says. “There’s no desk, no office, just me and the passengers.”
U.S. POSTAL SERVICE
No doubt you’ve seen him, walking up and down Fort King Street with his shoulder bag and wide-brimmed hat in place. And always wearing shorts, no matter the weather. “I haven’t worn long pants on the job for 15 years,” says mail carrier Randy Priem. Randy’s been walking his current route, the territory between Magnolia and 11th Avenue and Silver Springs Boulevard and 8th Street, for 20 years. If you do the math, that's between six and seven miles a day for a grand total of more than 25,000 miles of walking. So why walk his route? Because that’s the way Randy prefers it! “I like the exercise and I like getting out there to see and talk to the people,” he says. When he’s not working Randy gets involved in sports as often as possible. Ultimate Frisbee, softball, tennis, biking—you name it, he’ll take part. He and his wife, Linda, have three grown children and welcomed two new grandsons this past year.
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Jerry Blaznik
Today, Jerry takes great pride in the fact that Tas-T-O bakers still make everything by hand. TAS-T-O DONUTS “You won’t see any machines in the kitchen. If you’re an early riser, We do it all ourselves,” he says. That commitment to applying the same chances are you have stopped in to Tas-T-O traditional baking methods that Tas-T-O has Donuts at least once. Co-owner and baker Jerry always used can mean a lot of work, considering that on any given weekday Tas-T-O produces Blaznik has been baking what he refers to as between 75 and 80 dozen donuts and up to 175 “an Ocala tradition” since 2005, but Tas-T-O dozen by the weekend. Donuts has been feeding the morning crowd “You don’t get many opportunities to own since 1969. Jerry, who retired from the Marion County an iconic business,” says Jerry, adding that he especially enjoys when people who have moved Sheriff ’s Office after 19 years on the force, away come back for their favorite doughnut bought Tas-T-O along with Chris Hayworth when they're back in town. “I’ll see people I from George and Janice Eatmon. haven’t seen since high school." “George basically taught us everything he Though he insists all the doughnuts at knew,” Jerry says recalling his first experiences Tas-T-O are delicious, the favorite on Jerry’s list with baking. “We didn’t have a clue what we is the chocolate-covered raised doughnut. were doing!”
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Buzz
the
ONE-ON-ONE
The Industry Insider When it comes to reputation overhaul, few industries have such an uphill climb as the car-selling business. But not if Ted Lindsay has anything to do with it. Ocala Nissan’s mild-mannered general manager wrote The Encyclopedia of Selling Cars specifically to change the mindset of those selling cars and, in return, the people buying them.
Ted, you’ve been in the car business since 1972. Why did you choose this industry? The whole process of buying and selling a car has always been a fascination with me. I never really fit in, but I’ve always been a student of it. I've always put the emphasis on communicating with and serving people, and I’ve made a wonderful living in the business just treating people the way I’d like to be treated.
Which, strangely enough, can be a novel concept in some industries. Correct! It seems like everyone knows how the record plays. A perfectly normal person comes to a dealership and has expectations on the kind of treatment they will receive. I believe there is a tremendous opportunity there to teach our people to approach sales with a servant’s heart. Just about everyone detests the thought of having to buy a car. Even if you want a new car, you don’t want to go through it. If you’re dealing with a professional who knows what they’re talking about, has genuine concern for you and provides you with a transparent sales process without smoke and mirrors, then it’s just a simple choice. It’s kind of a frivolous act anyway—buying a new car, trading a perfectly good car for a perfectly good car and spending money doing it. It is a personal celebration, however, so why not enjoy it? It’s supposed to be simple because it is simple. If the agenda of the salesperson is to help people, nothing bad can come of it.
What A Pro
Knows
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How did the idea for the book come about? You know how you do something for a while, and someone says, “You ought to write a book!” I’ve never been one to leave not having done something. So I wrote a book of my thoughts and observations that I’ve learned from people a lot more intelligent and successful than I am. It always goes back to the same thing every time—customer service.
The book came out in 2007 and, especially for a self-published title, has done quite well. It has, yes. It was a top 10 business book on Amazon for over two years.
What was it like to see your name on the cover of a book? Not too eventful. I’m one of these people who could be a fly on the wall with no problem whatsoever. I do enjoy people, however— talking to and communicating with people.
What were your goals for the book? I love the car business. I hate the suspected culture. I can’t stand that. Perfectly normal people come to transact business with a car dealership, and I’m a perfectly normal person, too. Maybe it’s sort of a mission to clear the name of the car business because there are some great people in this business. I do understand the customer’s fears. I just want to get us and them conducting a genuine conversation to see how we can help. Let’s not be “the wary consumer” and “the sales devil.” Let’s see how we can be of service.
The Encyclopedia of Selling Cars by Ted Lindsay is available online at amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com, booksamillion.com
Formerly
Ocala’s Market Street at Heathbrook Behind Mimi’s
352.237.9771
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W Furn e’re Not iture Y Consour Ave ignm rage ent S tore
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If anyone can handle the loud, brash, no-holds-barred style of celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay, it just might be Christopher Gardner. Meet the retired Navy submarine cook who hopes to test his mettle on Ramsay’s newest TV show.
THE NEXT
MASTERCHEF? MASTER By Kristina Kolesa
C
hristopher Gardner knows about pressure— the kind that comes from working and sweating in cramped kitchen quarters, from having 100 hungry Navy men waiting on you for their next meal, from feeling the weight of an entire ocean pressing in on the massive nuclear submarine you call home. Yes, it’s safe to say that Christopher can handle the heat, and now the cook is hoping his 20 years as a Navy submariner will make him an ideal contestant on MasterChef, a competitive cooking show starring salty British chef Gordon Ramsay. “I think Ramsay would appreciate what the cooks on a submarine have to do,” says Christopher, who traveled to Orlando late last November for an in-person casting call and received a call-back. “It really is a one-man show in that kitchen to feed 100 guys every six hours, cooking every part of the meal.” If all goes according to plan, the 41-yearold will be able to display those unique stress management skills on national television. He says there was never any doubt that he wanted to make his living working in the galley of a U.S. Navy submarine. “I knew since my sophomore year in high school,” says the Long Island, New York, native who moved to Ocala two years ago. “I remember heading to New London, Connecticut, for a wrestling match and seeing the submarines being built at Electric Boat on the Thames River. I was so interested.” Soon thereafter, the 10th-grader secured a tour of the U.S.S. Houston. The father of one of his high school friends was the submarine’s Chief of the Boat
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(COB) and invited him onboard. Christopher was hooked. “When I saw the cook in the galley making a family-style meal for 100 men, it blew my mind,” he recalls. “I went to the recruiter’s office and told the guy exactly what I wanted to be.” He enlisted the July 4th weekend of 1989. By March 1990, he was deployed aboard the U.S.S. Gato. Though he personally relished the work, life aboard a submarine was far from glamorous. At his longest stretch, Christopher was under the surface for 108 days—that’s over three months without seeing sunlight—and away from home for 296 days. When he adds up all his underthe-ocean time over 20 years, —CHRISTOPHER GARDNER it comes out to about seven years. A true submariner, Christopher recalls these figures as readily as if they were his phone number. “A typical dinner aboard a sub might be catfish jambalaya, black-eyed peas and rice, green bean casserole, cornbread, cream of mushroom soup, a toasted garlic baguette, a garden salad and Dutch apple pie,” Christopher recites from memory. “The sailors just got off watch for six hours down in sonar—ear phones on, watching a screen. They want to come down and have a good meal.” Some days, they were a tough crowd, but Christopher welcomed all of the feedback—good, bad or otherwise. “Here’s what you need to know about being a chef,” he explains. “Eighty-five percent is cleaning, five percent is cooking and the other 10 percent is learning how to handle compliments and complaints. It’s all equally important because my ultimate goal is to make somebody smile when they’re eating my food. Christopher’s passion for cooking seems hereditary. In addition to working as a Navy cook aboard an aircraft carrier, Christopher’s father was a volunteer cook for the local fire department and the “recipe guru for just about any food-related event held in town.” His mother also worked as a waitress “down on the beach at the place where you got a burger and hot dog or at the bagel shop, you name it. She was also an incredible cook.”
“IT REALLY IS A ONE-MAN SHOW IN THAT KITCHEN TO FEED 100 GUYS EVERY SIX HOURS.”
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“We had a homemade dinner every night,” Christopher adds affectionately. “I’m lucky if I get to cook once a week for my kids.” Of course, Christopher does have quite a busy day job. Since October 2009, he’s worked as the nutrition coordinator for Marion County Senior Services, heading up three of the organization’s foods programs—congregate meals at 12 locations throughout the county; Meals on Wheels, which has 26 delivery routes county-wide; and Pets on Wheels, which provides pet food to dozens of pet dogs and cats in the area. Christopher loves the work, and it shows. “It’s not just a job for him,” says Sarah Stroh, executive director of MCSS. “He believes in our mission and is very passionate about what he does. That kind of enthusiasm is infectious, and since he’s been here, Christopher has ramped up everything and everyone. The seniors love him.” At home in his own kitchen, Christopher, pardon the pun, runs a tight ship. The retired military man, not surprisingly, keeps his kitchen neat and orderly. “To me, a meal isn’t done until the whole kitchen is clean. Then you can relax,” he explains. “You can always tell how good a restaurant is by looking at the floor when you walk in. If they can concentrate on the corners, they can definitely concentrate on the food. So leaving a dirty kitchen behind is not my style.” If the sentiment rings familiar to fans of Gordon Ramsay, that’s to be expected. The celebrity chef ’s take-no-prisoners approach with fellow chefs—down to their cleanliness in the kitchen—is right up Christopher’s alley. “I love his style,” Christopher says. “He can walk in somewhere and immediately know about the place by looking at the way people carry themselves or the way their refrigerator looks. His style of leadership is right on point. I think we’re on the same page.” Christopher jokingly admits that while he doesn’t know that he’d win the show, he’s certain he would “last the longest” under the famous Ramsay pressure. As of press time, he was still awaiting word on whether he made the cut for another round. He has already been selected as one of five from his group of 30. “I don’t know why they wouldn’t pick me,” he says with a booming laugh. “What can I say? I’m competitive. I think Chef Ramsay would appreciate that.”
THE FIRST SUPPER What was the first recipe Christopher ever wrote as a bubblehead, or submariner? No, it wasn’t a submarine sandwich. Check out his easy recipe for Mexican Lasagna, which he calls Bahasagna: 12
12-inch corn tortillas
2
large jars of preferred salsa
1
pound of ground beef
1
package of taco seasoning
2
cans of refried beans
1
onion, chopped
1
can of black olives
1
pound of shredded cheddar cheese Guacamole, sour cream, chopped tomato, jalapeños, black olives and cilantro sprig for garnish
1. Grill tortillas until crisp and firm. 2. Brown the ground beef with taco seasoning. Drain excess fat, and mix with refried beans. 3. In a casserole dish, layer as follows: salsa, tortillas, beef and beans mixture, cheese. Repeat and end with a layer of salsa on top. 4. Cover and bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Uncover for last five minutes and top with cheese. 5. Let rest for 10 minutes, and then enjoy!
MEET THE SUB COOK Visit the “Christopher Gardner For MasterChef Season 2” page on Facebook to view photos and videos of Christopher in action.
“It’s About the Quality of Life.” Dr. Ira Klimberg and his
staff have dedicated themselves to patient-focused urologic care. He has practiced in the same Ocala location since 1990.
Ira W. Klimberg, MD, FACS Certified by the American Board of Urology
A Passion for Innovation Distinctive Patient Experience
At the Urology Health Team our unique Urologic Facility and Surgery Center offers cutting-edge diagnosis and stateof-the-art surgical technology; delivered by an attentive medical staff whose mission is treating each and every patient with concern, respect, and compassion.
Paddock Park – 3201 SW 34th St., Ocala
352-237-6162
Opening 2012 The Villages – 1580 Santa Barbara Blvd., The Villages
352-237-6162
9 CHILDREN’s Exam Rooms famILy WaITING Room x-Ray aND TRIaGE Rooms NamING oppoRTuNITIEs avaILabLE CheCk Our website fOr upDAtes
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Now Accepting New Patients Dr. Delgado
Compassionate Family Care Our dedicated team of physicians and staff are always striving to meet our patients medical needs • Adult health issues • High blood pressure • Diabetes • Women’s health issues • Geriatrics
Dr. Fuentes
• Complete physicals • Arthritic problems • Lung problems • Heart problems • Podiatry Care
Juan C. Fuentes, M.D., FABFM, FAAFP University of Honduras School of Medicine Tegucigalpa, Honduras, 1996 Family Medicine, San Jacinto Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas
Marion Physicians Associates, P.A. 1040 S.W. 2nd Ave., Ocala, FL 34471
(352) 732-3005 .
S.W. Ocala Office 10230 S.W. 86th Circle, Ocala, FL 34481
(352) 861-6633
heroes aren’t born...
they volunteer! Join the Marion County Medical Reserve Corps. Rebuilding their dreams depends on you. MAGGIE “MICKI” MIDDLETON
352.629.0137
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Best Wishes & Thank You to All of our Friends and Customers.
352.629.5703 Nancy Porter
Graduate Gemologist (GIA)
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315 E SilvEr SpringS Blvd, ocala, fl www.ladyjEwElEr.com
T
Very few people earn a living making other people laugh. For “Hollywood Harris” and “Boogerhead”—the father-son rodeo clown duo from Marion County— having the last laugh is what it’s all about. By Cynthia McFarland | Photos by John Jernigan
exas native Clifton “Hollywood” Harris has been fascinated with rodeo clowns since early childhood when he met two cowboys who worked at his father’s feedlot in Waco, Texas, and who also moonlighted as bull riders and rodeo clowns. In 1970, the Harris family moved to Gainesville, Florida, where Cliff ’s father continued to work in the cattle business. Once Cliff started riding bucking horses in high school rodeo, he met a stock contractor who told him he could practice riding his bucking stock for free if he’d agree to fight the man’s bulls. Adventurous teenager that he was, Cliff quickly agreed. His father, however, didn’t want his son to be a “rodeo bum.” He didn’t know his boy was sneaking out at night to compete in local rodeos until he found riding gear hidden in Cliff ’s car. He burned it all in the yard, but while the incident may have put Cliff ’s rodeo dreams on hold, it never destroyed them. “It wasn’t until after my father passed away in 1984 that I felt I could really ‘be me’ and be a rodeo clown,” Cliff
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recalls. “I put everything in storage, tied a clown barrel to the back of a Firebird, packed up and moved back to Texas. I started clowning rodeos for $50 a night and worked my way up.” Cliff met his wife, Kelly, at a rodeo—where else?—and they married in Micanopy, Florida, on December 19, 1989. Together, they lived the gypsy life for 12 years, traveling from rodeo to rodeo. Their son, Brinson James, was born in 1993, but Cliff and Kelly stayed on the road for another six years before buying their current home in the Reddick area. “We had a blast,” Cliff grins, recalling those early days. “We lived in a trailer on the road with no address for 12 years. We had our retirement first; now I’ll have to work until I’m old.” Although many rodeo spectators assume all rodeo clowns are also bullfighters, that’s not necessarily the case. Bullfighters—or better said, “cowboy protectors”—jump in to distract the bull when a cowboy is thrown or jumps off. A rodeo clown entertains the crowd with antics and clever banter. The clown often uses a barrel—for safety and as part of his act—hence the reason some —BRINSON “BOOGERHEAD” HARRIS clowns are known as “barrel men.” Clowns typically provide entertainment between bulls and events. Of course, it helps to have some savvy about bulls because a clown never knows when he’ll find himself in a tight spot. Cliff actually worked as both clown and bullfighter for a number of years, but clowning was always his priority. “I was hired first to do comedy,” he says. “If you had good acts, you got good jobs. The acts were my forte. The bullfighting was secondary. Because I grew up in the cattle business, I knew the science of bulls and what they’ll do. When Brinson was born, I was still fighting bulls for about a year, but I was 30-something and slowing down.” Brinson’s first appearance in a rodeo arena actually took place when Kelly was pregnant with him and helping Cliff out with a magic act. Cliff officially put their son in the act when Brinson was just two years old, carrying him into the arena in a laundry sack where the toddler popped out and swung a trick rope. At age three, Brinson sang the national anthem at a rodeo in Rome, Georgia. His career was launched. Cliff was responsible for the nickname “Boogerhead,” using it in a silly song to make his young son laugh. The name stuck and rodeo announcers across the country have been introducing the pair as Hollywood Harris and Boogerhead ever since. The two have performed at every major rodeo and bull riding venue in the U.S., generating laughs and bringing smiles to countless fans. “I always wanted 10 kids,” Cliff says. “But instead I got one that was worth 10.” Wearing baggy pants, suspenders, white shirts, bowler hats and traditional clown “grease paint” on their faces, this father-son team never tires of hamming it up together. Their acts have evolved as Brinson has grown up, and his trick roping has become more refined. While they practice parts of their acts, both admit it’s often funnier if things “just happen.” “We’ll practice something new, like a few dance steps, but you really can’t mess up clowning,” says Brinson. “If you mess up, it’s just funnier.” “With my ADD, I would not be a good employee,” Cliff banters, “but I get paid to be silly and the sillier we are, the more we get paid.”
Making people laugh is my biggest joy in life.
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s a rodeo a p u w e r g u If yo inson Harrisot…her. r B e lik , id k n w clo ur m akeup than yo
m y. r at putting on of your work da • You’re bette a normal part is e ur rift an th m at ll s bu clothe • The smell of for your work op sh to d se as barr • You’re not em dwill stores. shops and Goo s. work weekend • You always room before in the dressing k or ew m ho • You do ts. the rodeo star here. just about anyw • You can sleep in a rest area bi your first ke e rid to d ne ar . • You le ed on the road because you liv t flier miles than en e more frequ at ul m cu ac u • Yo sinessmen. s and most adult bu to wear a dres s been known ha d da ur Yo • ork. bloomers to w
The only other character to join Hollywood Harris and Boogerhead in their acts is “Bravo,” an Australian Shepherd/ Dalmatian cross that Harris adopted as a puppy at a North Carolina rodeo eight years ago. Bravo’s main gig is pretending to be a bull that chases Boogerhead around the barrels and tears off his baggy pants before dashing out of the arena. When it comes time to travel, Bravo flies as a service dog in the cabin with his human partners. “The flight attendants love him,” says Brinson. Brinson attends Trilogy School in Gainesville. A number of the students there travel frequently because they perform like Brinson or participate in high-level sports. “This school is really flexible and very supportive of our travel,” he explains, noting that it’s similar to home schooling. “There’s lots of one-on-one and you work at your own pace. As long as the work gets done, it doesn’t matter if you travel.” Intelligent and articulate, the 17-year-old, who typically plays the “straight man” to his father’s “funny man,” is never shy once he’s in costume. “I think I’m better at physical stuff than talking,” he admits. “Sometimes my friends don’t believe this is what I do. The only drawback is that we’re always gone on the weekend, so I can’t do things with friends. But it’s a small price to pay.” “He’s not a normal kid,” says mom Kelly. “When Brinson is in the arena, he’s a natural. He comes by it right.” To his mother’s chagrin, Brinson wants to learn to fight bulls, just like his dad did years ago. “I want to learn so if I get stuck in the arena with a bull, I won’t freeze up. I’ll know what to do,” he says. “I can watch bull fighting videos on the Internet forever and still want to do it. I guess it’s the adrenaline.” In case you’re wondering, it’s possible to make a very good living as a rodeo clown.
“There are guys now making a good six-figure income. The top clown today recently signed a four-year, million dollar contract,” notes Cliff. “But you really have to want to not stay home, and I like to stay home.” “Staying home” is relative. Hollywood Harris and Boogerhead still work rodeos across the country year-round—from California to New York, Minnesota to Texas—but they usually fly to these weekend jobs. If the job is in Florida or Georgia and six hours or less away, they’ll drive. It’s not uncommon for them to be gone three, even four weekends a month. When they are home, both can often be found helping behind the counter at Coffee N Cream in Micanopy, a café Cliff and Kelly bought in 2002. “Every successful rodeo clown needs a wife at home with a good job,” laughs Kelly. Brinson, the self-proclaimed “malt-making king,” will also help dish up ice cream in a pinch. Located on historic Cholokka Boulevard, the cozy shop is open for breakfast and lunch seven days a week. Although Brinson will likely attend college to learn how to improve the business side of his career with marketing, promoting and accounting, he has no intention of doing anything else for a living. “There’s no way I can see myself not clowning. I’d rather do this job than anything,” he says. “Making people laugh is my biggest joy in life.” Cliff Harris has come a long way since his first paying rodeo clown job in Tishomingo, Oklahoma, in 1979 when he christened himself “Hollywood Harris.” The fact that his son is an integral part of his career may be unusual, but Cliff and Brinson can’t imagine working— or living—any other way. “We’ve been together 24/7, except for school, for Brinson’s whole life. We’re really close,” says Cliff. “He and I get to spend all this time together and get paid doing it. That’s what most fathers hope to do when they retire.”
Learn More hollywoodandboogerhead.com Catch Hollywood Harris and Boogerhead in person: Glen “Peewee” Mercer Benefit Bull Ride Saturday, February 5, 2011, 7pm Williston Horseman’s Park, Williston (352) 207-0070
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Sure, spices add flavor and flair to a variety of our favorite dishes, but they also help to promote healing and wellness. Maybe it’s time to start incorporating a bit of spice into your everyday cooking routine. We spoke to a few local experts to find out the easiest way to get started. By Cynthia McFarland Photos by John Jernigan
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he rich vanilla in hand-churned ice cream on a blistering August afternoon. The scent of a perfectly seasoned roast hot from the oven. The taste of warm gingerbread during the holidays. Ask anyone to name a special childhood memory and chances are food will play a role. Whether it’s a beloved family recipe, a favorite cookie or a classic holiday dish, spices are invariably one of the reasons we remember them with fondness. Yet spices are far more than just flavorful. From the earliest days of recorded history, spices have been used in trading and as signs of wealth and extravagance. At times, they were considered more valuable than silver or gold. The ancient Egyptians treated spices with such reverence that they buried them along with their pharaohs. The Romans used spices in cooking, but also as perfume. The
Emperor Nero ignited a controversy when he burned a great amount of cinnamon at his wife’s funeral, an act officials considered inexcusably wasteful because the spice was so valuable. But the history of spices dates back even further. “Before they were money, spices were medicines,” notes Dr. Bharat B. Aggarwal, PhD, author of the newly released Healing Spices: How to Use 50 Everyday and Exotic Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease and a professor of experimental therapeutics at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. “Turmeric, cloves, cinnamon, coriander, ginger and black peppercorns—healers all—are among the oldest spices, with their use dating back to the world’s first civilizations. “Spices contain an abundance of phytonutrients, plant compounds that bestow health and promote healing in a variety of ways,” Dr. Aggarwal adds. “Most of them are powerful antioxidants that
control and disarm ‘free radicals’ that can damage cells, causing illness and aging.” Phytonutrients are also natural antiinflammatories, which is crucial since lowgrade inflammation has been linked to such health problems as cardiovascular disease, cancer, type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease. “Most chronic diseases are caused by chronic inflammation and can be ‘dialed down’ by spices,” Dr. Aggarwal says. Unlike herbs, which are leaves, spices can be obtained from many parts of a plant, such as the seed, root, bark stem, bud, flower or fruit. And yes, some spices do come from the plant’s leaves.
A Growing
Trend “Contrary to popular belief,
spice is not a synonym for
hot’.”
’
— DR. BHARAT B. AGGARWAL, PHD
Turmeric adds color & aroma
Coriander acts as a thickener
Ginger enlivens taste & aids digestion
E
thnic cuisine is growing in popularity across America, thanks to Food Network and the proliferation of ethnic restaurants. Yet the same Americans who flock to these establishments tend not to cook spice-filled dishes at home. Dr. Aggarwal suspects this is simply because people are intimidated by unfamiliar spices, many of which aren’t readily available at the supermarket. “The secret to feeling comfortable with spices is understanding them,” he says. “Contrary to popular belief, spice is not a synonym for ‘hot.’ Most spices do not add fiery flavor to food. Rather, they are aromatic, which serves several culinary purposes. They may impart a characteristic flavor (be it sweet, tangy, sour or hot), serve as a natural tenderizer for meat, add body and texture, act as a thickener or binder, color the dish or assist the digestive process. All spices perform several of these tasks.”
For example, turmeric, which happens to be Dr. Aggarwal’s favorite spice, adds color and aroma. Coriander acts as a thickener, while also providing a nutty flavor, and ginger enlivens taste and aids digestion. For those uncertain where to start, Dr. Aggarwal says the easiest spices to incorporate into everyday cooking are turmeric, cumin, coriander, cloves, cardamom and ginger. Since not all American stores carry a large variety of spices, he recommends shopping for them at an Asian, Indian or Latin grocery store. “Many of these markets, particularly the Indian markets, sell spices in bulk, packaged in tins or plastic bags of 14 ounces or more,” he notes. “The cost of buying in bulk is much less than buying 2.5-ounce bottles of the same spice in a large chain supermarket.” If you buy in bulk, he advises removing the spices from their plastic wrappers and storing them in airtight glass containers to extend their shelf life. Expect whole spices to keep for two to three years, and ground spices to last roughly a year. If you open a bottle of ground spice, sniff and find little aroma, toss it. To test whole spices, rub gently between your fingers. If still fresh, they’ll release a small amount of volatile oil that you can readily detect.
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“You have to be
S
eema Patel and her husband, Mike, are local business owners from Ocala. An avid cook who creates Indian dishes daily, Seema encourages everyone to step out of their comfort zone and try something new. “I cook everyday,” she says. “My husband, myself and our son are vegetarians so we do a lot of vegetable and lentil dishes. Some of my favorite spices to incorporate into our dishes are chili powder, cinnamon, cloves and tumeric. “Tumeric is actually really good for you,” she continues. “It helps ward off colds and the flu, and it can help prevent Alzheimer’s.” Every Wednesday, Seema makes a trip to Sagar Indian Grocery on State Road 200 for fresh Indian vegetables and other Indian cuisine (including plenty of spices) that can’t be found in American grocery stores. “A lot of people think Spanish food is spicy because they’ve tasted hot chilies,” says Fatima Luzuriaga, who co-owns the Latin fusion restaurant Latinos Y Mas in Ocala along with her husband, Webster. “There’s a difference between Spanish food and Mexican food. Spanish food is subtle and it is the gentle hint of flavoring that makes Spanish food so special. We hardly use any chilies in Spanish food. Chilies are used mainly in Mexican food. We use chili guajillo, chili ancho, chili poblanos and jalapenos.” Fatima notes that some of the most commonly used spices in Spanish cooking include paprika, cayenne, garlic, saffron, tarragon, thyme, cumin, cloves, nutmeg and ginger. Originally from Ecuador, Fatima and her mother, Maria, are in charge of the kitchen and together create all the recipes and dishes featured at Latinos Y Mas, which has been located in Ocala since 1990. “We try to buy whole spices and then roast them or grind them fresh,” says Fatima. “They have a better taste and smell doing it this way. Even our black pepper is bought as whole peppercorns.” “Spices are so important. For example, paella without saffron is not the same. Just using a little bit of a spice can make a big
International
Flavor,
Local Appeal
willing to try them.”
difference,” Fatima — FATIMA LUZURIAGA adds. “When you’re cooking, you have to Common Spices Used In Spanish Dishes taste and try the dish, so don’t be afraid of Tarragon Cayenne Thyme using spices. With any cuisine, there are great spices, but you have to learn to appreciate them and in order to do that, you have to be willing to try them.” On a recent visit to Peru, Fatima was fascinated by the variety of different chilies and spices used in Peruvian cuisine. “Some dishes are spicy, but others are not, although they’re all delicious,” she says. “We’re making a few Peruvian dishes now, such as Ceviche de Pescado, which is one of my favorite appetizers now.” “Many people who haven’t tried Thai food think everything is spicy, but we have many dishes that aren’t,” says Paul Chanavorachai, one of the owners of local restaurant Ayuttaya Thai Cuisine. Named for a centuries-old capital city in Thailand, Ayuttaya opened in Ocala in January 2001 and celebrates its 10th anniversary this month. Of course, certain Thai dishes are spicy. Most of the time, entrées made with green curry are hotter than those with red curry, and that often surprises customers who assume “red” means “hot.” “You can make any dish mild. They don’t have to be spicy,” notes Chanavorachai, who is responsible for much of the cooking at Ayuttaya. He suggests starting with less spice and gradually adding more to taste. Among the spices most commonly used in Thai cuisine are hot chili peppers, ginger, garlic, white pepper and curry powder. If you’ve never tried Thai food, Chanavorachai recommends Pad Thai because it’s flavorful yet not overwhelming. Known as one of Thailand’s national dishes, Pad Thai features stir-fried rice noodles with eggs, fish sauce, tamarind juice and red chilli pepper. It can be vegetarian, with bean sprouts and/or tofu, or may include shrimp or chicken. Ground peanuts, coriander and lime are used to garnish the dish. Why not take the advice of these local experts and make a resolution to start incorporating more spices into your daily meals? You’ll not only reap the benefits of increased flavor and aroma, but you may just improve your health along the way.
Ancho Chili
Black Peppercorns
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Cardamon
Cinnamon
Turmeric
Allergies: ajowan, black cumin seed, galangal, mint, onion, turmeric Alzheimer’s Disease: black pepper, cocoa, coconut, curry leaf, fennel seed, marjoram, oregano, pomegranate, saffron, sage, sesame seed, sun-dried tomato, turmeric
Good for What Ails You Most Americans are accustomed to taking a pill to deal with health issues, yet spices have an abundance of natural healing properties. While in no way complete, here’s a partial listing of the many health concerns that spices can help treat and/or prevent, as taken from Dr. Aggarwal’s book, Healing Spices: How to Use 50 Everyday and Exotic Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease. To learn more and to find recipes incorporating these spices and others, pick up a copy of the book just released this month, and available wherever books are sold.
Arthritis (osteo-): bay leaf, celery seed, chile, galangal, ginger, fennel seed, juniper berry, pomegranate, rosemary, turmeric Asthma: ajowan, aniseed, black cumin seed, cardamom, ginger, turmeric, wasabi Bad breath: aniseed, cardamom, clove, parsley Blood clots: cardamom, chile, clove, garlic, marjoram, rosemary, sun-dried tomato, thyme, wasabi Cancer: amchur, asafoetida, basil, bay leaf, black cumin seed, black pepper, caraway, chile, cinnamon, clove, coconut, coriander, cumin, fennel seed, fenugreek seed, galangal, garlic, ginger, horseradish, juniper berry, kokum, lemongrass, marjoram, mint, mustard seed,
nutmeg, onion, oregano, parsley, pomegranate, rosemary, saffron, safe, sesame seed, star anise, sun-dried tomato, tamarind, thyme, turmeric, vanilla, wasabi Cholesterol problems: almond, basil, black cumin seed, caraway, celery seed, chile, cinnamon, cocoa, coriander, curry leaf, fenugreek seed, garlic, ginger, horseradish, lemongrass, mustard seed, nutmeg, onion, oregano, pumpkin seed, sesame seed, sun-dried tomato, tamarind, turmeric, wasabi Colds: garlic, juniper berry, thyme Depression: black pepper, nutmeg, rosemary, saffron Diabetes, Type 2: almond, amchur, basil, bay leaf, caraway, chile, cinnamon, cocoa, coriander, cumin, curry leaf, fenugreek seed, galangal, garlic, juniper berry, lemongrass, mustard seed, onion, parsley, pomegranate, rosemary, sage, turmeric Epilepsy: black cumin seed, cumin, lemongrass, nutmeg
Flu: asafoetida, garlic, horseradish, juniper berry, pomegranate, star anise, thyme Heart disease: almond, amchur, black cumin seed, black pepper, cardamom, chile, cinnamon, cocoa, fennel seed, garlic, marjoram, mustard seed, onion, oregano, parsley, pumpkin seed, rosemary, sage, sesame seed, sundried tomato, tamarind, turmeric High blood pressure: ajowan, allspice, almond, black cumin seed, black pepper, cardamom, celery seed, cinnamon, cocoa, coriander, fennel seed, garlic, juniper berry, onion, oregano, pomegranate, saffron, sesame seed, sundried tomato, tamarind, turmeric Menstrual cramps: celery seed, fennel seed, juniper berry, mint, saffron Stomachache: aniseed, cardamom, coriander Ulcer: aniseed, basil, bay leaf, black cumin seed, cardamom, celery seed, chile, cinnamon, clove, coriander, galangal, kokum, marjoram, oregano, parsley, rosemary, sage, thyme, wasabi
(This listing is not intended to diagnose or treat any disease. Consult with your physician if you are experiencing any changes in health or wellness.)
Ginger
Coriander
Saffron
Cloves
Cumin
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Ropa Vieja
Spice
Recipe courtesy of Latinos Y Mas
It Up Wanna make a few spice-filled recipes at home? Here’s a handful to get you started.
4
pounds skirt steak or flank steak
2
medium onions, coarsely chopped
2
onions, julienned
2
carrots, coarsely chopped
3
celery stalk, coarsely chopped
4
bay leaves
2
tablespoons olive oil
4
garlic cloves, minced
1
red pepper, julienned
1
green bell pepper, seeded and chopped
1
green pepper, julienned
1
tablespoon salt
10 fresh plum tomatoes, seeded and chopped or 2 tomatoes, julienned ½
spoon of tomato paste
½
cup red wine
2
tablespoons cup red vinegar to taste
¼
cup finely chopped parsley leaves
¼
cup finely chopped cilantro Coarse salt to taste
½
teaspoon black pepper
½
teaspoon paprika
1
teaspoon dried oregano
½
teaspoon ground cumin
1
packet of achote con cilantro Goya
1. In a large stock pot, put in the
meat, 2 chopped onions, 1 green bell pepper chopped, carrots, celery, achote con cilantro Goya, bay leaf and a tablespoon of salt. Cover with water by 2 inches. Bring to a simmer and cook, uncovered, for 1 ½ to 2 hours. 2. When meat is very tender, turn off heat and let meat cool in liquid for 20 minutes. Remove from broth. 3. Blend the broth with the vegetables and strain it through a sieve. Return broth to heat, and boil to reduce by half, about 20 to 30 minutes. When meat is cool, cut off any fat and pull into shreds about 2-inches wide.
Paul’s Spicy Basil Chicken Recipe courtesy of Ayuttaya Thai Cuisine
8
oz. boneless chicken breast, cut up
1
bunch fresh basil Chopped garlic to taste
1
teaspoon fish sauce
1
teaspoon soy sauce
1
teaspoon oyster sauce
¼
teaspoon sugar
1
teaspoon sweet chili paste Dash white pepper
3
tablespoons chicken broth (such as Knorr)
1
tablespoon vegetable oil
4. Stir in 3 cups reduced broth and tomatoes. Cook for 15 minutes over medium heat. Stir in shredded meat, tomato paste, red wine, vinegar, parsley, oregano, cumin, black pepper and paprika. Cook 10 minutes more. 5. While broth is reducing, heat oil in a large skillet and sauté the remaining julienne onions, julienne red and green pepper, the garlic and 1 tablespoon salt until softened, about 5 minutes. Combine everything and add salt to taste. 6. Serve with rice, beans and sweet plantains.
Vegetables: snow peas, white
onions, green bell peppers, zucchini, fresh chili peppers, finely chopped or dried chili pepper (start with ½ teaspoon and gradually add more according to taste) 1. Lightly coat pan with vegetable oil and a little chicken broth. 2. Add chicken to stir fry until almost done. 3. Add the rest of the ingredients, stirring constantly, cook chicken until done. Cook vegetables lightly in order to maintain crispness and vitamins. Fresh basil should be added last.
Paul’s Note: “It’s best to use a wok to make this but if you don’t have one, use the thinnest frying pan you can find.” The fresh chili peppers and chili paste are what make this dish spicy, so you can add as little or as much as you want. This recipe calls for medium spice.
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Ginger Carrot & Squash Soup
Recipe courtesy of Healing Spices: How to Use 50 Everyday and Exotic Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease
1½ teaspoons coriander seeds ½
teaspoon yellow mustard seeds
2
tablespoons canola or vegetable oil
2
cups diced onion
1
heaping teaspoon diced fresh ginger
½
teaspoon turmeric
½
teaspoon Madras Curry Power or commercial curry powder
1
pound carrots, peeled and coarsely chopped
1
acorn squash, peeled, seeded and coarsely chopped (1 pound)
Egg Curry
Recipe courtesy of Seema Patel
1
large onion
1
can tomato sauce
6
boiled eggs, halved
1
green pepper, diced
2
green chilies, crushed
4
cloves of garlic, crushed
½
cup heavy cream
¼
teaspoon chili powder (add more if preferred)
¼
teaspoon black pepper
2
pinches of cinnamon powder
2
pinches of clove powder
¼
teaspoon garam masala (optional) Ginger root, crushed Turmeric powder Salt Cooking oil
1
teaspoon lime zest
6
cups chicken stock
½
cup light cream
1
tablespoon fresh lime juice
½
cup fresh parsley
1. Dry roast the coriander and mustard seeds separately and cool.* Place both spices in a spice mill and grind to a fine powder. (Or you can use purchased coriander and mustard seeds that are already ground.) 2. Heat oil in a heavy-bottomed large Dutch oven and brown fry the onion for 10 minutes until golden brown. Add ginger, roasted ground seeds and curry powder, and stir for 1 minute. Add carrots, acorn squash and lime zest. Cover and cook for 5 minutes, stirring frequently.
1. Chop the onion finely, and in a
large pan add oil, then the onions. 2. Cook the onion until browned, and then add the crushed chili, garlic and ginger. 3. Reduce heat and add chili powder, cinnamon powder, clove powder, black pepper, turmeric and garam masala, and stir for 1 minute.
3. Add chicken broth and bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer for 30 minutes or until carrots and squash are soft. Cool slightly. 4. Working in batches, puree the soup in a blender or food processor until smooth. Return the soup to the pot. Stir in the cream and lime juice. Season with salt and pepper. Sprinkle with parsley. Makes 6 servings.
Spicy Vanilla Rice Pudding
*To dry roast whole spices, heat a small, heavy frying pan (preferably made of cast iron) over medium heat until hot, about 2 minutes. Add the spices. Use an oven mitt or potholder and hold the pan handle, shaking the spices and stirring with a wood spoon so they don’t burn. As the spices heat up they will start to smoke and release their aroma. Continue heating until they are deep brown. Transfer spices to a clean plate to cool before grinding.
4. Add the can of tomato sauce, diced green pepper and salt, and let cook for 10 minutes. 5. Add heavy cream and cook for 10 minutes. 6. Add boiled eggs. 7. Before serving with rice, add fresh chopped citrno as a garnish.
Recipe courtesy of Healing Spices: How to Use 50 Everyday and Exotic Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease
1
cup basmati rice
2
cups water
1
three-inch cinnamon stick
3
cups whole milk
1½ cups half and half 1
cup sugar
¼
teaspoon ground clove
1
teaspoon ground cardamom
1
vanilla bean, split lengthwise Freshly grated nutmeg
1. Rinse the basmati rice with cold water until water runs clear. (Put the rice in a bowl, cover with water and run it through a mesh strainer three times.) Put the water, rice, cinnamon stick and salt in a heavy saucepan over medium-high heat and bring to a simmer. Reduce the heat to low and cover. Simmer until the water is absorbed, about 10 minutes. 2. Add the milk, half and half, sugar, cloves and cardamom. Scrape in the seeds from the vanilla bean, then add the bean. Increase the heat to medium and cook, uncovered, stirring occasionally until the mixture thickens and becomes creamy, about 40 minutes. 3. Remove the pudding from the heat. Remove the cinnamon stick and the bean, and discard. Divide among four dessert bowls and grate fresh nutmeg over the top. Makes 4 servings.
Citrno (for garnish)
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PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
Is Bookwork Giving You A
Headache? W
With the trusted financial expertise of
Crippen, Trice, Ford, Torres, LLP, working for your company, you can focus your time and energy on what truly matters—building your business’ success.
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hen it comes to financial issues, it helps to have someone knowledgeable in your corner. “My wife, Carol, was handling all our business bookkeeping on top of her full-time work, and that added stress to our relationship,” recalls Stu Lewis, owner of Sandler Training, a local franchise that offers professional sales training and works with small business owners and their salespeople. “I met Mike Torres with Crippen, Trice, Ford, Torres at a Business Networking International meeting. He’s a QuickBooks specialist and has a very even-handed, very nurturing style with a tremendous amount of patience and excellent people skills,” says Lewis. “Bottom line, Mike made our lives easier and gave us back our weekends so we weren’t struggling
with our books and finances. He also helped streamline things by handling our paychecks. He’s always available for questions, but more importantly, he’s proactive with his thinking. It helps to have someone on my team who’s looking out for my best interests. He’s always looking at how he can help us and this, in turn, helps our business.” Lewis learned firsthand what many individuals and business owners have discovered: that in these tough economic times, it’s vital to have a team player backing you up. He found that partner in Crippen, Trice, Ford, Torres, LLP, a long-time CPA firm that provides a full array of financial, consulting, bookkeeping and tax services. It’s tough enough to juggle everything required in business without worrying about the often-confusing financial aspects. Lewis is just
The high quality and care we put into our work and provide for our clients are what set us apart. —MIKE TORRES
L-R: Jeff Crippen, Mike Torres, Bill Trice and Brenda Ford
one of many area business owners who rely on the experts at Crippen, Trice, Ford, Torres, LLP. Not only does the firm handle all aspects of tax preparation, but their bookkeeping department can put your mind at ease and free up your time by preparing your general ledger, payroll returns and financial statements. “Our firm acts as a team player in your short-term and long-term planning process,” explains Joyce Arthur, firm administrator. “We think of ourselves as a ‘one-stop shop’ because we’ve got our clients covered top to bottom. We can make your life easier by handling all your accounting needs, including everything from writing checks and paying bills to reconciling your statements and making sure all bookkeeping is in order.” “We can even train you in QuickBooks, and offer a course at the College of Central Florida, which is ideal for any small-business person,” Arthur adds. “Mike is the course administrator and also one of the instructors.” “The high quality and care we put into our work and provide for our clients are what set us apart,” notes Mike Torres, a lifelong Ocala
resident who became a partner in the firm this month. “Our firm also believes in investing dollars and time in continuing education on a regular basis to ensure that we are absolutely up-to-date on the ever-changing tax laws.” As a chamber ambassador for the Ocala/ Marion County Chamber of Commerce, Torres is highly involved with area events. Also a member of Business Networking International (BNI), Torres is well-connected with area business leaders in many different fields. Married with a two-year-old daughter, Torres is a devoted family man, but also finds time to play flag football on a local league and has coached youth baseball. In fact, this active community spirit is a driving force with every partner in the firm—Jeff Crippen, Bill Trice, Brenda Ford and Torres—involved in local charitable and fraternal organizations. Not only does this provide personal satisfaction, but it keeps them intimately aware of what area business owners are dealing with on a daily basis. “The relationships we establish with our clients are what keep them coming back. We want
to help you with your business needs and we’re happy to sit down with you in a free consultation,” says Torres. “We’re confident we can establish a working relationship that will make your life easier while saving you money and time. Call us today to set up an appointment.”
Crippen, Trice, Ford, Torres, LLP 1900 SE 18th Ave. Ocala, FL 34471 Phone: (352) 732-4260 Fax: (352) 732-1180 Spruce Creek Professional Center 10935 SE 177th Place, Ste. 205 Summerfield, FL 34491 Phone: (352) 307-0167 ocalacpa.com
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PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
‘The
Sinkhole Pros’ One of the most daunting sentences a Florida homeowner can ever hear is “You have a sinkhole problem.” Fortunately for Ocalans,
Foundation Services, one of the oldest and most trusted sinkhole repair companies in the state, is in the business of providing peace of mind through 20 years of experience and unmatched expertise.
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T
he Reillys’ shock was to be expected. It’s not every day that you wake up to find an 18-foot-long, 14-foot-wide, 15-foot-deep hole in your yard. “Joe and I were dumbfounded one morning when one of nature’s oddities, a sinkhole, showed up on our front lawn,” says Gail. “Almost immediately, Foundation Services was on the scene lending assistance—educating and advising us and stabilizing the void.” The Reillys’ choice of the esteemed 20-yearold sinkhole repair company was a smart one. Foundation Services is Central Florida’s leader in sinkhole remediation/cosmetic restoration as well as foundation repair and general contracting. Foundation Services of Central Florida, Inc. was formed in 1991 after the merger of longtime Ocala custom home building companies; Hardin Builders, owned by Bobby Hardin and Miroda Development, owned by Darryl Hampy; and local developer Keith Seyler, forming the partnership Hardin, Seyler, Hampy. The three companies together brought decades of experience to
the foundation and sinkhole repair business. Today, Foundation Services’ owners, Bobby Hardin, Keith Seyler, Darryl Hampy and Robert Stephenson, have over 150 years of combined experience in the construction industry. Recently, in response to the company’s tremendous growth, the owners built an expansive 11,500-square-foot facility to accommodate its six major divisions— sinkhole remediation, cosmetic restoration, general contracting, concrete, landscaping and Stable Soils, a recently established sister Company that incorporates a lightweight, structural polyurethane foam to lift concrete and solidify weak soils. Over its 20 years in business, the company has performed repair work at such well-known locales as Hammett Bowen Elementary, Vanguard High School and Booster Stadium in Ocala; the baseball stadium at the University of Florida; Gainesville’s Harn Museum; a NASA information building at Cape Canaveral; the Wal-Mart Distribution Center in Alachua and the new Moffitt Cancer Center in The Villages.
We do everything, from the initial sinkhole repair to cosmetic restoration and landscaping. —ROBERT STEPHENSON
“Unlike some other companies, we do not sub-contract out our work,” says co-owner Robert Stephenson. “We do everything, from the initial sinkhole repair to the finishing touches on the cosmetic restoration and landscaping. It is all handled by our crews.” There are several ways in which sinkholes can be treated. The Reillys required the most common repair method—Deep Compaction Grouting, a process used to stabilize unstable subsurface soils and seal the limestone surface. The process takes, on average, two weeks to complete, and conveniently, residents do not have to vacate the home during the repairs. “We were in awe of how smoothly the drilling and grout injection process went,” Gail says. “Even our neighbors commented on [the crew’s] courteousness, thoughtfulness and work ethic. At the conclusion of the job, the home site looked exactly as it did at the job’s inception.” The Reillys’ sentiments are far from unique. The praise from Foundation Services’ clientele is virtually endless, and frequently centers on the company’s commitment to educating clients about the problem and
available solutions, and explaining the procedure step by step. “Robert sat down with us in the beginning,” says Ocalan Dwayne Warren, “and explained the whole process while displaying pictures so that we could understand from a person’s view that knows nothing about this process.” The geotechnical engineer’s report—the thick stack of papers filled with scientific terminology, data and graphs that every homeowner receives after testing is performed— is enough to put anyone into a tailspin. That’s precisely what makes Foundation Services’ assistance in guiding clients through the process so exemplary. It’s a necessity and a welcomed relief for homeowners. “Robert took the time to thoroughly explain each step,” echoes James Joiner of Gainesville. “Mr. Stephenson and the crews should serve as models to other companies wishing to achieve outstanding customer relations.” What Foundation Services’ clients are recognizing every day and have recognized for the past 20 years is that experience matters. In the flash-in-the-pan business world that exists
today, it’s comforting to know one company in town has the knowledge, reputation and dedication to see homeowners through one of the most stressful times in their lives. “Experience is everything,” Robert stresses. “Over 20 years, we’ve completed over 2,000 jobs. There are companies that have seen less than 100 jobs. So we’ve seen a lot. It may be the homeowner’s first time experiencing these problems, but it’s not ours. We will be there to see them through and to make their home whole again.”
Foundation Services 4265 NW 44th Avenue Ocala, Florida 34482 (352) 622-9218 (866) 622-3723 sinkholepros.com
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Mother-Daughter Owners Lynn Domenech & Jocelyn Holt
Amazing Athletes
Pulse
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Health tips from the super fit. p59
Walk With A Doc p52
Halt The Salt p56
Odd Bods p68
Great Walks p74
and more!
Love Your Skin Luscious Lips With a soft washcloth or soft-bristled toothbrush, gently exfoliate your lips to remove dead skin cells. Once you’ve exfoliated, apply lip balm. These days, manufacturers are adding antioxidants like green tea and pomegranate, as well as walnut oil, rose oil and flaxseed oil, which contain essential fatty acids. Source: naturalsolutions.com
Go Red! 5 Tips For Healthy Skin 1. Sun Protection: Avoid the sun between 10am–4pm; wear sunscreen, protective clothing and a wide-brimmed hat. 2. Don’t Smoke: Toxins age you inside and out. 3. Be Gentle: Limit bath and shower times, avoid strong soaps, and pat dry and moisturize. 4. Healthy Diet: Eat plenty of fruits, veggies, grains and lean proteins. 5. Manage Stress: Set reasonable limits on your time, scale back on to-do lists and have fun. Source: mayoclinic.com
South African rooibos tea (a red tea) contains aspalathin, a powerful flavonoid that reportedly slows the aging process by preventing damage to DNA strands, which means less collagen breakdown. Source: Amazing Wellness magazine
Foods To Help You Glow Brazil Nuts: Excellent source of selenium and zinc. Selenium improves skin elasticity, fights skin infections and is necessary for glutathione production, which neutralizes free radicals that destroy collagen. Carrots: Provides beta-carotene and vitamin C, a combination that creates a natural sunscreen with an SPF factor of 2-4. Avocados: Contain lots of good, healthy mono-
unsaturated fats that keep skin plump.
Source: healthy-skincare.com
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Pulse
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FEELINGWELL
Walk With A Doc When cardiologist DR. JAMES LONDON read about the Walk With A
Step It Up According to the AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SPORTS MEDICINE, there are 2,000 steps to a mile and an adult should be walking 10,000 steps a day to be considered active. It breaks down like this: 4,999 steps or fewer is considered sedentary; 5,000–7,499 is low active; and 7,5009,999 is somewhat active. To achieve the active level, it takes 10,000 steps. Now don’t let that scare you. You don’t have to do it all at once. You can accumulate the steps throughout your day. In addition to taking actual walks, running errands—at least the ones on foot—count, too! It’s probably a good idea to get a pedometer to make sure you’re getting in those 10,000 steps! And why is all this walking so important? Well, according to a study published in a recent issue of Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, American adults walk less than adults in some other countries with lower obesity rates. The average American adult takes 5,117 steps compared to adults in Japan (7,168), Switzerland (9,650) and Australia (9,695). The American adult obesity rate is 34 percent compared to Japan (3%), Switzerland (8%) and Australia (16%).
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Doc program, which was founded five years ago in Columbus, Ohio, he wanted to bring it to Ocala. “There are about a dozen programs throughout the country,” says London, who is a physician with Ocala Family Medical Center. “The only other one in Florida is in Miami. A free program, walkers are invited to join Dr. London and other physicians and staff from Ocala Family Medical Center for a 1-2 mile walk every Saturday at 8:30am. Personal trainer Robert Moffett of Ocala Body Worx Fitness Training also joins in to help with warm-up exercises and fitness questions. Everyone meets at the Ocala Family Medical Center offices just off Easy Street and walks to and back from nearby Scott Springs Park and back. “The route is actually a mile and a half,” says London. “But we are flexible and if someone only wants to walk a mile
ASKTHE
EXPERT Dr. Thomas L. Johnson II, MD Allergy & Asthma Care of Florida
Q: How do I know if my runny nose is a cold or allergies? A: Runny nose, stuffy nose, post-nasal drip and sneezing are all common symptoms of allergies and infection as well as non-allergic rhinitis. The duration of the symptoms can be helpful in differentiating between infection and allergies since most of the time symptoms of infection start to get better within 7–10 days, whereas allergy symptoms tend to last longer. The best way to determine if the symptoms are allergy-related is for patients to have allergy testing.
or wants to walk two miles, we break up into different groups. Also if it’s really cold or rainy, we can just go right over to the Paddock Mall and walk indoors.” Walkers can bring friends, family and even their dogs. Water and granola bars are provided, as are pedometers to everyone who wants one. Also during the walk, participants can ask the doctors medical and healthy lifestyle questions at no charge! “Our hope is that if people take part in the Walk With A Doc program, it’ll encourage them to walk every day,” says London. Ocala Family Medical Center is located at 2230 SW 19th Avenue Road. (352) 237-4133
Q: What specifically do you test for with allergy testing? A: The typical allergy test evaluates for
allergy to trees, grasses, weeds, molds and indoor allergens such as dust mites, cats, dogs and cockroaches. This panel of allergens is used for patients that have nasal and/or eye symptoms. It is also an excellent panel to use for patients with asthma since up to 80 percent of asthma patients have allergy triggers. Allergy testing is also available for specific food allergens. Probably the one test that most people are not aware that allergists offer is venom testing. We can test patients who have had significant reactions to bee, wasp, hornet, yellow jacket and fire ant stings, and if the tests are positive, offer potentially life-saving allergy injections.
MEET DR.
PARAISO
Dr. Paraiso’s number one priority is patient care and he treats his patients with compassion, empathy, and knowledge. He takes pride in seeing his patients live active and enjoyable lives. Dr. Paraiso received his Bachelor of Science Degree from the University of Florida in Gainesville in 1995. He then obtained his medical degree from Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine in 1999. In 2004, Dr. Paraiso completed his internship and orthopaedic surgery residency at Michigan State University/Genesys Regional Medical Center in Grand Blanc, Michigan. He received further complex spine surgery training during a 12-month spine fellowship at the Florida Orthopaedic Institute’s Center for Spinal Disorders in Tampa, Florida. Dr. Paraiso now not only practices minimally invasive spine surgery, but also teaches other surgeons these tried and proven methods.
Specializing in Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery for • Spinal Stenosis • Failed Laser Spine Surgery • Herniated Discs
Board Certified & Fellowship Trained Spine Surgeon Published Author in Spine Surgery Textbook
Advanced Spine Surgery/Patient Focused Care
OCALA MEDICAL PARK
1500 SE Magnolia Extension • Suite 104 • Ocala, FL 34471
352-873-7770 • f 352-873-7704 www.centralfloridaspine.com jan’11
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Pulse
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LIVINGWELL
The Giving-Back High An important part of a balanced life is giving back to others. It’s a win-win situation for those who give and those who receive. Researchers have proven that there are amazing health benefits from being generous. Described as a “helper’s high” and a “warm glow,” it’s a physical response that makes people feel good about themselves and prompts them to want to give again. Researchers are finding out that people give for all kinds of reasons: altruistic, impulsive, habitual or ideological. And here are a few other interesting tidbits the research into generosity has uncovered: generosity helps you live longer; people who plan donations give more than those who don’t; people who have more money don’t necessarily give more. Source: USA Today/Sharing in the USA/Nov. 2010
Dogs, Sisters & Best Friends Having a dog, sister and best friend is good for our health. Nearly 40 percent of American households have a dog and for good reasons. Studies into animal-human connections show that dogs make us happy (they’re always happy to see us), healthier (we take them for walks) and friendlier (people tend to talk to someone who has a dog). A recent study in the Journal of Family Psychology, found that having a sister may help teens fight depression. Researchers think it’s because girls are more likely to take on a caregiver role and are better at talking about problems. But close, affectionate siblings, regardless of gender, have a positive influence on each other, teaching each other to be kind and generous. A University of Wisconsin study found that having good friends helps keep your immune system strong. Those with close friends showed lower levels of interleukin-6, a protein linked to cancer, osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, rheumatoid arthritis and Alzheimer’s disease. So get a dog, hug your sister and have a cup of coffee with your best friend!
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Wanted: Patient Drivers Lack of transportation to medical appointments can be a major problem for thousands of cancer patients. Many need daily or weekly treatments, often over the course of many months. Many are too ill to drive or don’t have a vehicle or someone to drive them to and from their life-saving treatment appointments. That’s why the AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY began its Road To Recovery program—to provide cancer patients with volunteer drivers. No special driving skill set or education is required—just a safe driving record, a valid driver’s license, current auto insurance, a vehicle in good working condition and most importantly, some free time and the desire to help someone. All training and transportation coordination between patients and drivers are handled by the American Cancer Society office. If you want to help by becoming a volunteer driver for a cancer patient, please call the ACS Ocala office at (352) 629-4727 or 1-800-ACS-2345.
Equipment Exchange As a physical therapist, Rick Shutes witnesses many patients doing without much-needed healthcare equipment, and recently he decided to do something about it. Shutes has founded SELFCAREEXCHANGE.COM, a website serving as a resource for people with disabilities and selfcare needs, as well as caregivers and healthcare professionals to find the equipment their patients need. On SelfCareExchange.com, people will be able to post free classified listings to donate or sell disability, medical, healthcare and mobility equipment. “It is staggering the number of people
today who need a simple piece of healthcare equipment,” says Shutes, who is the CEO of Ocala-based Strive! Physical Therapy Centers and GNR Health Systems. “Many patients need special equipment like an electric wheelchair or something as simple as a rolling walker that would make them more independent and improve their quality of life.” Shutes says that “it is tragic that so many go without when just what they need is collecting dust in a garage or back room.” SelfCareExchange.com is philanthropic in nature and designed to facilitate donations. For more information, check out SelfCareExchange.com or call (877) 300-4228.
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352.690.6300 2801 SE 1st Ave, Suite 101 • Ocala Most Insurances Accepted jan’11
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Pulse
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EATINGWELL
Mind Games When it comes to eating and exercise, our minds can play tricks on us. According to a recent study in Psychological Science, just looking at fastfood logos may be enough to affect our thought processes—and not for the better. People exposed to fast-food logos exhibited impatience and were less likely to defer gratification. In other words, it could make someone less likely to pass up that fast-food burger in favor of healthier eating choices. In a recent research study at the Cornell Food and Brand Lab in Ithaca, New York, participants were divided into two groups: Half watched TV exercise-related ads for running shoes and fitness centers; the other half viewed ads for washing machines and car insurance. Then all the participants were treated to a buffet lunch. The group who had watched the fitness ads ate 22 percent fewer calories than the participants who hadn’t.
Besides Halt The Salt the ubiquitous When it comes to the salt shaker, white foods to avoid, people get sugar gets a lot of the large doses of headlines. But its white sodium every cousin salt, a.k.a. sodium, day from processed deserves just as much attention and packaged foods, restaurant avoidance. While sugar gets most meals, fast foods, snacks, cereals, of the blame for obesity, salt plays soups and sodas. Read labels, paying a role as well. Too much salt in the particular attention to ‘per serving’ diet contributes to high blood pres- amounts of sodium. More and more sure. And this leads to thousands restaurants are including nutrition of early deaths attributed to heart information on their menus, so take disease and stroke. advantage of that as well or ask if the The Dietary Guidelines for information isn’t provided. Americans advisory committee Nutrition experts recommend consump- slowly cutting back on your salt recommends that sodium consump tion be limited to 1,500 milligrams a consumption, allowing your taste day. Most Americans consume more buds to adjust gradually. than twice that amount, an average Source: American Heart Association of 3,400 a day.
A Cereal Killer? Sure, kids love cereal for breakfast. But consider this: Most packaged cereals have 24 grams of refined sugar per serving! Here’s some good news, however: While most kids who were
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Eat More ‘See’food Diets rich in seafood, which provide omega-3 fatty acids, are showing promise in ensuring good eyesight as we age. Recent research focused on the effect of a fish and shellfish diet on preventing macular degeneration, a common cause of age-related blindness. The study participants were asked to report on their diet habits for a year. Those with macular degeneration and other eye problems consumed the least amount of fish and shellfish. Researchers believe that this suggests a fish-rich diet helps vision. Doctors advise against self-dosing with omega-3 supplements and recommend seeing an eye specialist as well as coordinating your diet with your regular doctor. Diet recommendations for foods rich in omega-3 fatty acids include: FISH: Salmon, herring, mackerel, sardines, albacore tuna SHELLFISH: Shrimp, crab, lobster OTHER FOODS: Walnuts, flaxseed, canola oil, soybeans Sources: American Heart Association; Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Wilmer Eye Institute; Ophthalmology magazine
given low-sugar cereal reached for the sugar bowl to sweeten it themselves, they were satisfied with a less sweetened cereal—about half as sweet as the packaged stuff! They also added more fruit to the cereal when given the choice. Major cereal manufacturer General Mills has announced that it is reducing the
sugar content of 11 of its cereals aimed at children. The company had earlier announced a goal of bringing the per-serving sugar levels of its kid cereals down to single digits. It just might be the perfect example of ‘less is more,’ so long live cereal! Source: healthkey.com
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Securing Your Tomorrow... Today In a world of constant change, one of your biggest concerns is providing a secure future for yourself and your family. Humana can help, with a variety of insurance products: • • • • •
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Secrets Of The Super Fit BY JOANN GUIDRY Faster than a speeding bullet! More powerful than a locomotive! Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound! OK, well maybe these super athletes can’t perform those superhuman feats, but their athletic prowess will certainly impress and inspire you. Ocala Style recently visited with an elite group of local extreme competitors in hopes of snaring a few of their secrets to pass on to you.
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Bodybuilder Erin Stern THE
B
odybuilding just for the sake of muscle bulk doesn’t interest Erin Stern. No, Erin, who captured the 2010 Miss Figure Olympia national title, prefers welding form with function. “What I do and promote is functional strength training,” says Erin, 30, who is a walking advertisement for what she preaches. “The focus is on balance and stabilization, building strength to apply to everyday movements and needs.” Naturally athletic and always competitive, Erin is an accomplished horsewoman and was a Jr. All-American high school high jumper. It was while she was a University of Florida track star that Erin first encountered strength training. “You need explosive strength for high jumping, so my coaches suggested I do some strength training in the gym to increase mine,” recalls Erin. “That’s when I first learned how important being strong was.” Having made that connection, there was no looking back for Erin. She parlayed her newfound strength into becoming the first Lady Gator to compete in the pentathlon, which consists of five track events. Erin also competed in the seven-event heptathlon, and she still has three outdoor high-jump performances on UF’s All-Time Top 10 lists. After graduating from UF with a degree in environmental “Make yourself policy and going accountable by into the real writing down your estate business, main fitness goal. Erin continued to Then share that with strength train. your personal trainer In 2007, she or a workout buddy. joined the U.S. Track It helps to break your and Field amateur main goal down into team and began high smaller attainable jumping again with goals to get you from point Ato point B.Take a goal of qualifying for the Olympic pictures at day 1,day Track & Field Trials. 14,day 30 to help Erin jumped 5 feetyou see how you’re 11 inches in 2010, progressing.” just missing the
Erin’s
Photos by John Jernigan
TOP TIP:
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Being fit, strong and healthy doesn’t have to be complicated. Olympic Trials by an inch. But she’s already back in training for the 2011 season with, pardon the pun, high hopes in the high jump. When Erin closed her Ocala-based Extra Mile Realty in mid-2008, gym friends suggested she go into competitive figure bodybuilding. Erin took to it like she was born with rock-hard six-pack abs. In only her third figure competition as an amateur, she won the 2008 National Physique Committee’s Nationals and earned her International Federation Body Building pro card in November of that year. “It was surreal how quickly everything happened,” says Erin, who signed with Fitness Management Group and was named the 2009 FLEX Rookie of the Year. “But I’m loving every minute of it.” Erin, who has been featured on the cover of Oxygen magazine, adheres to a consistent workout and nutrition regime. She strength
trains five to six days a week in hour-long sessions, using free weights and machines to focus on one body part a day. She also takes 45-minute brisk walks three times a week. During track season from January to July, Erin will add in sprint workouts. Four to six weeks prior to a figure competition, she’ll ramp up her gym work to two sessions a day. And good nutrition plays a key role in her fitness program. “My diet is based on whole natural foods. I pack a cooler every day of lean protein like grilled chicken or bison, as well as fresh fruits and veggies,” says Erin, who works out at Ocala’s All Pro Fitness. “I eat six meals a day of about 300 calories each. My snacks are fruit, hardboiled eggs and rice cakes. And I drink lots of water, at least a gallon a day. Being fit, strong and healthy doesn’t have to be complicated. It can be simple and fun, too.”
I love the competition & the camaraderie.
Cyclist Ryan Woodall
THE
the sport,” says Ryan, whose brother Regan is also a competitive pro division mountain biker. “But I want to compete at my best in every race, so I put in the hours of training that it takes. You have to have the dedication to do well.” For Ryan, off-season training involves gym work with a focus on leg exercises to primarily build quadriceps strength. He also does weight work to strengthen his forearms. “Because of the way you have to ride the bike, almost upright, you need to have strong quads and forearms,” says Ryan, who works at Brick City Bikes. “Strong legs keep you on the bike. Strong forearms help with the maneuvering up and down and around.” During the Florida fall racing season, it’s all about bike time. Ryan says he’s “on the bike almost every day either for one-hour easy rides or three-hour all-out ones.” While his focus is on mountain biking, he does do some road bike training and racing “to help with basic strength and speed.” Ryan has two mountain bikes and one road bike. The races held across the state can vary from 20-35 miles and sometimes there are more than one a weekend. Points are awarded according to the finish in each event leading to the season finale “Buy the best bike championships you can afford.You in respective can get a good divisions. mountain bike for Ryan, who around $500.Shop mentors young around at the local mountain bikers, bike shops,talk to does have an ultimate experienced riders goal in his sport. and get matched “I hope to upwith the best be picked up by a bike for you.Then go national pro biking out to the bike trails team,” he says. “It and start out on the would be great to be beginner’s trails.Most able to make a living of all,have fun!” doing what I love.”
Ryan’s
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Photos by John Jernigan
A
s far as champions go, Ryan Woodall is rather unassuming. Think Superman’s alter ego Clark Kent. Having acknowledged that he is indeed a five-time state mountain bike champion, Ryan modestly adds later that, oh, yeah, he’s also a two-time Southeastern regional champion. For the record, Ryan captured the USA Cycling Florida State Pro Men’s championship titles in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009 and 2010. In 2006 and 2009, Ryan claimed USA Cycling’s Southeastern Regional Pro Men’s championship title. USA Cycling is this country’s official governing body for all disciplines of competitive cycling, including road and mountain biking. In addition to the state and regional competitions during the fall season, USA Cycling also hosts the summer season’s Pro Mountain Bike Cross Country Tour. Ryan has competed in those national events as well, notching two Top 10 finishes in 2010. And all of this success began with Ryan, his brother Regan, and his father, Cullie, chasing each other through the woods. “My family was very competitive in motocross sports,” says Ryan, 25. “Then a friend told us about the mountain bike trails at Santos and we decided to check them out. I was 13 at the time and it just clicked with us right away. Next thing we knew we were on bikes, chasing each other through the woods.” Soon the chasing turned to competition and Ryan quickly excelled, snagging his first state championship in the Junior (ages 11-14) division in 1999. He moved seamlessly into the Pro Elite level, scoring in 2005 his first of five state championships to date. “I love the competition and the camaraderie within
Martial Artist Joanna Maxwell THE
I
f you need a good swift kick in the youknow-what to start a fitness program, Joanna Maxwell may just be the woman for the job. As a two-time songahm taekwondo world champion, Maxwell delivers a pretty potent kick. Need proof? In 2007 and 2009, Joanna won songahm taekwondo world championship titles in the women’s sparring 50-59 age division. In 2010, after winning the Florida state championship in sparring and weapons, she was the runner-up in a sudden victory match at the world championships. Governed by the American Taekwondo Association, the world championships are held every June in Little Rock, Arkansas. “As a martial arts, taekwondo is about more than just punching and kicking,” says Joanna, 56, who has been involved in the sport for a little more than a decade. “Songahm taekwondo is about the development of the mind and the body. You have to have both inner and outer strength to become a whole person.” Taekwondo traces back to an ancient Korean martial arts known as t’aekyon. The contemporary taekwondo term is a blending of Chinese and Korean words, which loosely translate to “The Way of the Hand and Foot.” The songahm form of taekwondo, which focuses on a non-aggressive and ethical system of selfdefense, only came into being two decades ago. In an ironic twist of fate, Joanna actually graduated from high school while living in “Songahm Korea. But she taekwondo involves admits she didn’t total commitment get introduced to to mind and the martial arts body fitness.And discipline there. if you make that “My father was commitment,you in the Air Force, will be rewarded by so we traveled a lot becoming a stronger and I grew up on whole person.” military bases,” says
Joanna’s
Photos by John Jernigan
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I’m proof that taekwondo is for anyone who makes the commitment. Joanna, who adds with a laugh, “but when I was in Korea, I wasn’t into taekwondo. I was into GIs.” Many years later after settling in Ocala, Joanna became involved with taekwondo through her brother Chuck Franz and his kids, who were taking classes. Then her son Alex also became interested and soon Joanna was spending a lot of time watching taekwondo. “I had been looking for something to get myself in better shape,” says Joanna, who has had multiple careers in horse farm management, security and mortgage lending. “I thought taekwondo was something I could do physically and I liked the mental discipline aspect of it, too.” In 2000 and at the age of 45, Joanna began her commitment to songahm taekwondo. She moved through the nine-levels of color belts, earning her black belt in 2002. In 2006, she became a nationally certified instructor and in 2008 opened ATA Martial Arts of Ocala.
“I’m proof that taekwondo is for anyone who makes the commitment,” says Joanna, who has been married to her husband, Barry, for 31 years. “We have students from four years old to 77, boys and girls, men and women. We had five state champions and seven championships in 2010 come from our gym.” Six days a week, Joanna incorporates training and teaching into her classes. The adult classes begin with “a boot camp-style, full-body warm-up.” Core strength is emphasized because “there is a lot of balance involved in taekwondo.” The three disciplines of form, sparring and weapons are taught. During the competition season, at least one tournament a month is entered with a focus on the Southeast region. Points are accumulated during the season, which culminates with the June world championships in Little Rock. “It’s a lot of work, but we don’t sell black belts,” says Joanna. “They have to be earned.”
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Speed Skater Joey Mantia THE
J
oey Mantia has a need for speed—the kind of speed that has earned him 28 gold medals from seven inline speed skating world championships. Add to that a substantial cache of silvers and bronzes and a long list of speedskating records. As a member of Team USA, Joey came away with two golds, two silvers and one bronze at the 2010 World Roller Speed Skating Championships in Colombia, South America. “Colombia is like the inline speed skating capital of the world,” says Joey, 24, who graduated from Vanguard High School. “Soccer is still the number-one sport there, but speed skating is right behind it. It’s always a great experience when I go to Colombia.” Joey doesn’t remember a time he wasn’t crazy about speed skating. His father, Joe Mantia, signed him up for speed skating classes at Ocala’s Skate Mania when he was just nine. In short order, Joey was winning competitions at state, national, international and world levels. Thanks to his sport, Joey has traveled the globe with stops in such places as Germany, Korea, Holland, Belgium, China, “The great thing Italy and Venezuela. about inline skating And he was always is that you can do it taking home some almost anywhere.It’s a relatively low-impact precious metal and numerous sport,so that makes it titles wherever he one of the healthiest, competed. too.You can buy a These days decent pair of roller when he isn’t skates at any sports traveling, Joey lives store for $150-$200 on the U.S. Olympic and,of course,for Training Center safety you should also campus in Colorado get a good helmet.” Springs, Colorado.
Joey’s
Photos by Ron Baltazar
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Endurance is the hardest to get & the first to go. He also rents a house in Salt Lake City, Utah, to take advantage of the ice tracks training facility there in anticipation of soon switching to that surface. “It’s wonderful to be able to use the great facilities at the U.S. Training Center,” says Joey. “It has one of only three banked speed skating tracks in the country.” The inline speed skating season is nearly a year-round affair and to get through it, Joey has to be in superb physical condition. When he isn’t skating, he does some road biking for crosstraining and “to cool down and stretch my legs.” Another component of his fitness program incorporates what Joey describes as “dry lands work.” This involves plyometric and isometric exercises “to build the explosive power that speed skaters need.” Joey says that “endurance is the hardest to get and the first to go,” which is why there are many more sprinters than long-distance skaters in the sport. After becoming lactose intolerant a few years ago, Joey was advised by a doctor to eliminate dairy from his diet and try a simpler way of eating. “I starting eating a clean diet of no dairy and no processed foods,” he says. “I focused on
fruits, vegetables and lean meats. Within three months, I felt much better and I’ve stuck to that way of eating.” Having achieved so much in the sport that he is passionate about, Joey is now giving back. He puts on two-day skating camps for beginners to advanced skaters. He’s also involved with the National Speedskating Circuit, which was founded by multiple national inline speed skating champion Miguel Jose. The NSC, which hosted its first season in 2010, was created to bring inline speed skating into the professional mainstream of American sports. “I think it’s so important to give back to the sport,” says Joey. “I’m very grateful that when I was coming up in the sport, the more experienced skaters mentored me. So now it’s my turn to give back.” Joey’s plans for the future include competing for one more year in inline skating and collecting more world championship gold. Then he’s going to turn his attention to speed skating on the ice with a major goal in mind—the 2012 Winter Olympics. “I feel like I’ve accomplished just about everything I can in inline speed skating,” says Joey. “Competing in the Olympics is my next challenge.”
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Swimmer Brian Kuhn THE
A
t 42, Brian Kuhn went through a midlife fitness crisis. Two years later, he had impressively resolved it, qualifying for both the FINA World Masters Swimming Championship in Sweden and the USA Triathlon Age Group National Championships in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, last year. “Considering that I hadn’t been a competitive swimmer in 20 years and had never done triathlons before,” says Brian, “those two accomplishments came as a surprise. Nice surprises, though.” In the pool since he was eight, Brian was an elite swimmer on the Forest High School swim team. But after high school graduation, he got busy with other things in his life. He briefly started swimming again in his mid-20s, then stopped again, this time for almost two decades. “I got married, started my business, had kids, got divorced,” says Brian, 44, who has owned Evolutions hair salon on Fort King Street for 15 years. “By the time I was in my 40s, I realized I needed to make some lifestyle changes. I needed to make time to get fit and healthy again.” The first thing that Brian did was jump in the pool at the YMCA. He regained his swimming fitness quickly and his competitive nature with it. He formed a U.S. Masters swim team, dubbed the Woo Masters, which started competing at swim meets. When someone suggested he try triathlons, Brian was up to the challenge. Through swimming, biking and running, he was soon 25 pounds lighter and fitter than he’d ever been in his life. Brian entered a qualifying swim meet in St. Petersburg for the “Don’t be scared to start a fitness program. World Masters Championship. Pick an activity you Surprise #1: He like,whether it’s finished in the swimming,biking or top three in the running,and start 50 freestyle, 100 back slowly.Then freestyle, 100 as you progress, backstroke and 200 challenge yourself backstroke in his and you’ll be 40-44 age group, surprised at what you qualifying for the can accomplish.” World Masters
Brian’s
Photos by John Jernigan
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I’m a little more extreme & competitive than most people.
Championship that summer in Gothenburg, Sweden. Next up Brian entered the St. Anthony’s Triathlon, a USA Triathlon sanctioned event, on April 29, 2010. More than 4,000 athletes competed to qualify for the USA Triathlon Age Group National Championships. To qualify, an athlete had to finish in the top third of his or her age group. Brian completed the one-mile swim, the 24.9-mile bike event and the 6.2 mile run in 2 hours, 38 minutes and 52 seconds. Then came Surprise #2. “A couple of days later, I’m going through the St. Anthony results and realize that I had qualified for the national championships,” says Brian, who could easily pass for a surfer with his sun-streaked blond hair and laid-back attitude. “With two championships to choose from, I decided to do the triathlon championships.”
In Tuscaloosa on September 25, running and biking over terrain that Brian found surprisingly hilly and swimming in a big, deep river, he finished in a respectable 2:38:39. His next challenge is to compete in Ironman triathlons. Brian’s training schedule includes being in the pool at 5:30am Monday through Friday. During the week, he mixes in biking or a spinning class two or three times after a swim and running four miles a day. On Saturday mornings at 6am, a group of runners known as the Social 8 meet at the YMCA and run the eight miles to the Downtown Square. Once a week, Brian usually does his own personal triathlon. “Now I’m probably a little more extreme and competitive than most people,” says Brian, who follows a diet of lean protein, vegetables and fruits. “But everyone can make time to be fit and healthy. That’s the key—you have to make the time.”
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Our
Bodies Yawning, burping, hiccupping—we all do it. Some more than others. But why? We thought it would be fun to take a look at some of the human body’s biggest mysteries. Who knows? You just might learn a thing or two about why your own body acts the way it does. Written & Compiled by Karin Fabry-Cushenbery
snap, crackle & pop?
Why do we
iz
kqu erc i u q fing
? do y grow t s fa ll Hows genera nth nail er mo nch p
onth
A. 1 i ches per m er month nth p o n B. 4 i of an inch inch per m 0 n 1 C. 1/ action of a fr D. A e: kid Sourc
1/10 about ters) e grow ) Nails t 2.5 millim ke 3 to a u er: (C Answ ch (or abo ate it can t nail. a in sr of an eplace At thi ter) r onth. t mat letely comp air for tha ath. per m h ths to e 6 mon , nails (and row after d g o ue to And n in t cont do no h.org shealt
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E
ver known someone (or maybe you are that someone) who pops and cracks with every movement? Hard to believe it’s gas making that sound. No, not that kind of gas. Scientists explain that synovial fluid is present in our joints to aid in lubrication. Inside this fluid, carbon dioxide, nitrogen and oxygen build up. When we separate these joints, the gas is rapidly released, making a noise. Another reason? When a joint moves, the tendons move slightly out of place (particularly in our ankles and knees). That common pop you hear when you get up is the sound of the tendon snapping back into place. By the way, you won’t be able to pop that same joint again until the gas has had a chance to build up once more. Source: Library of Congress
What causes a
“charley horse” cramp? I
f the mere mention of a “charley horse” makes you cringe, read on at your own risk. These powerful spasms can occur in any muscle of the body, but are most common in the calf muscle. During the involuntary spasms, the muscle doesn’t relax—hence the “knot-like” feeling the cramp leaves in its wake. It’s believed that the most common reasons for these cramps is lack of hydration, overuse of the muscles, wearing high heels or taking certain medications. Even pointing the toes sharply or overstretching your muscle (particularly while sleeping) can lead to a
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Why do
boogers form? charley horse. If you find yourself experiencing these spasms on a regular basis, try upping the potassium and calcium in your diet. Also, skip the soda and grab a bottle of water. Sources: National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health
Anatomy Of A Sneeze
What happens when we
sneeze?
1. The upper nasal mucosal lining is
irritated by dust or other particles.
2. Nerve endings in the nasal lining
signal the sneeze center in the medulla part of the brain. (Yes, there’s a sneeze center.) 3. The brains tells the throat and chest muscles to contract and the eyes to close. term The ndheit t (Have you ever gesuns wha tried sneezing with mea rman? your eyes open? It’s in Ge impossible!) alth 4. Contractions in A. He s you es the chest and throat B. Bl ks in cause the sneeze to exit C. Zo in peace o through the mouth, D. G cleaning out the nasal cavity at the same time.
k quic i z
qu
A
nd now for the “grossology” part of a sneeze. Occurring over 2–3 seconds, a sneeze can spew as many as 2,000–5,000 germ-filled droplets into the air. Can you say yuck? And it all happens at an amazing 70–100 miles per hour. Before we leave this topic—no, your heart doesn’t skip a beat when you sneeze. Did you know some people say “bless you” following a sneeze because they believe a sneeze could cause your soul to escape your body? Who are these people? Source: washingtonpost.com
er: Answ h. ealt (A) H
Source: washingtonpost.com
C
hances are you’ll yawn once or twice before you’re Are done reading this contagious? paragraph. Ahh, the power of suggestion. It appears that seeing, hearing or thinking about yawning can trigger an actual yawn. Some evidence suggests that yawning is a means of communicating changing environmental or internal body conditions to others. If so, then its contagious nature is most likely a means of communication within groups of animals, possibly as a means to synchronize behavior. If this is the case, yawning in humans appears to have lost its significance over time.
yawns
Sources: scientificamerican.com, msnbc.com
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s icky as it might be, mucus does play an important role in protecting your body. As we breathe through our noses, lots of germs and fine particles make their way through our nostrils. In an effort to keep said germs from making a beeline to your lungs, your body forms snot—a sticky, slippery substance—to trap much of it. OK, so now that the dirt and germs are all trapped, our nose hairs (and yes, we all have nose hairs, and some need a good trim every now and then) move the trapped particles toward the front of the nose. As it moves along, it rolls, forming into a ball. When all of those elements lump together and exit your Rhinotillexis: The nose, voila, you have a scientific name booger! Oh and if your for picking one’s little one seems to have boogers with their acquired a taste for fingers boogers, no harm done Mucophagy: The (other than a little public scientific name embarrassment). Dr. (honest) for eating Friedrich Bischinger, an your boogers Innsbruck, Austria-based lung specialist says, “With the finger you can get to places you just can’t reach with a handkerchief, keeping your nose far cleaner. And eating the dry remains of what you pull out is a great way of strengthening the body’s immune system. Medically it makes great sense and is a perfectly natural thing to do.”
FunFact:
Source: Associated Content
What causes
goose bumps? T
hink of a goose bump as a tiny elevation of the skin, caused by a contraction of an even tinier muscle. These muscles are attached to each hair follicle on your body and are also what cause the little hairs on your arms and neck to stand on end. Some theories suggest that goose bumps may be proof that smooth-skinned humans evolved
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What is a
hiccup?
from much hairier humans. When apes, dogs or other animals are scared, their fur bristles, making them look larger. Might be useful for animals, but not so much for us (well, unless you’re Robin Williams).
Y
Source: scientificamerican.com
get shocked on dry, cold days?
FunFact:
Why do we
I
f you hesitate before touching something metal, you’re not alone. So what gives with the shock? Well, it all comes down to chemistry—not my favorite subject so I’ll keep this brief. It all starts with an itty bitty atom. They make up every single thing on the planet. Most of the time, atoms have the same number of protons (positively charged particles) and electrons (negatively charged particles). Sometimes, however, the charges aren’t balanced, thus creating static electricity. For example, when you shuffle your feet on a rug, you pick up extra electrons, giving yourself a negative charge. Electrons move more easily through certain materials like metal, aka conductors. When you touch something metal, which has a positive charge with few electrons, the extra electrons jump from you to that surface. That tiny shock you feel is the fast movement of electrons. By the way, static electricity occurs more during the cold season because the air is drier, allowing for an easier build up of electrons on the skin’s surface. Get it? Me neither. Let’s move on. Source: kidshealth.org
ou drank your soda too fast, or you were startled. Bam, you’re hiccupping. What’s up with these annoying little spasms? Most people hiccup four to 60 times per minute during a bout of hiccups, and everyone has a specific, lifelong hiccup pattern. So what exactly is happening? I feel a science lesson coming on. According to Discovery Health, during normal breathing, we take in air from the mouth and nose, and it flows THE HICCUP through the pharynx, HALL OF FAME past the glottis and into Persistent or the larynx and trachea, intractable hiccups eventually ending in are most common the lungs. (Got all in men and occur that?) The diaphragm most often in aids this airflow and adulthood. Charles moves down when we Osborne earned inhale and up when we the Guinness Book exhale. Any irritation of World Record to the nerves that title for Longest control this movement Hiccup Attack after causes a spasm of the hiccupping for 68 diaphragm. This spasm years (1922-1990). results in us taking a Source: Discovery Health short, quick breath that is interrupted by the closing of the epiglottis (a flap that protects the glottis, the space between the vocal cords). The sudden closing creates the sound we all know as a hiccup. Source: Discovery Health
Why does it hurt to hit our
“funny” bone?
G
iving your “funny bone” a good whack is one of those things that can send shivers down your spine. Sometimes it hurts. Sometimes it tingles. Either way, it’s not funny. First things first, your funny bone isn’t actually a bone at all. Along the inside part of your elbow is the ulnar nerve. When that nerve gets shuffled and bumps against your humerus, the long bone between your elbow and shoulder, (maybe that’s where the funny comes in!) it causes the nerve to react, sending an awkward sensation through your arm and into your fingers.
Source: kidshealth.org
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T
here’s a very good explanation for this. Why can’t we When you try to tickle yourself, your brain will anticipate the contact ourselves? from your hands and prepare itself for it. The predictability of the stimulus, coupled with the fact that our brain “knows” what our hands are doing, make tickling ourselves difficult. On the other hand, when somebody else grabs your sides to tickle you, whether expected or not, your brain sees it as a foreign sensation and reacts appropriately—usually with peals of laughter.
tickle
Sources: Discovery Health, National Institute of Health
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Walk This Way By Lucy Beebe Tobias
Ah, the sun is shining and the outdoors is calling. Who are we to refuse? Accept the call. Get some exercise. Learn new things. Be done in time for lunch. That, my friends, is my idea of a great walk and there are 50 of them in 50 Great Walks in Florida. The following six can be found right here in Marion County. But don’t think it is all dirt trails and backpacks. Nope, that’s hiking. Instead think historic neighborhoods, botanical gardens, nature areas—some paved, some not—and throw in some delightful surprises. So grab a sweater and your water bottle, and set out. What better way to enjoy Central Florida’s crisp, cool weather than with a brisk walk through some of our area’s most beautiful locales.
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East Meets West
Land Bridge Trailhead, Marjorie Harris Carr Cross Florida Greenway, South of Ocala
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like walks that have a payoff. After almost a mile of woods-walking you’ll reach the land bridge. Packed with dirt and landscaped with trees and bushes, this bridge, which connects two parts of the Cross Florida Greenway, is for wildlife, walkers and horseback riders. No cars allowed. There is no charge for this walk. Start by parking at the trailhead, nicely appointed with restrooms and picnic tables. Step through the fence posts onto the dirt trail and voilà! You’re transported into an old oak hammock. This is an easy to moderate walk, but unfortunately it’s not wheelchair accessible. Not far from the trailhead, walkers come across a fallen oak tree. It may not be too far into the walk, but it’s a great spot to sit and enjoy the view for a moment. My dogs, Suzi and Annie, particularly liked jumping over the tree. Yes, well-behaved, leashed dogs are welcome here.
The Land Bridge Trailhead 475A is located at 11100 SW 16th Avenue, Ocala. Contact the Greenways and Trails Field Office in Ocala at (352) 236-7143, or visit floridagreenwaysandtrails.org.
Walk with a Lake View
Lake Eaton, Ocala National Forest
D
id I mention there is one walk in the boonies? Well, here we are. Before I forget, make sure to take a potty break before setting out on this walk. There is an enclosed chemical toilet but no running water. This free walk totals 2.1 miles and is part of a dirt loop trail that is wheelchair accessible. The day we walked this trail for book research, we chanced upon great blue herons at the lake and witnessed a pair of eagles flying to their nest. And let me tell you, what a treat it was! Along the trail you’ll see gnarly scrub oaks twisted in startling shapes and a plethora of other shrubbery and wildlife.
The Lake Eaton walk originates on Forest Road 70 off County Road 314. Pick up free brochures for this and the nearby sinkhole trail at the Ocklawaha Visitor Center on SR 40, or call (352) 236-0288 for details. In the meantime, check out fs.fed.us/r8/florida.
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Flowers, Waterfalls and Headsprings Rainbow Springs State Park, Dunnellon
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n the first and third Saturday of each month from November through April, Rainbow Springs State Park in Dunnellon has a guided walk through the gardens and headspring area. And it’s well worth the trip! The walk begins at the most civilized hour of 11am and no reservations are necessary. The entrance fee to the park is just $1 per person and the walk lasts 30 to 45 minutes. The worn brick walkways at Rainbow Springs are uneven and can be slippery at times, making for a moderately difficult walk, so wear shoes with good traction. This particular walk is not wheelchair accessible. Rainbow Springs was once a private attraction that featured some beautiful waterfalls. Luckily for us, they still exist today. But while beautiful (and you can’t beat the sound of running water either), the waterfalls pale in comparison to the breathtakingly clear water of the spring’s headwaters. As a special treat, plan your visit for February or March when the azaleas are blooming. And don’t forget to bring your camera!
Rainbow Springs State Park is located at 19158 SW 81st Place Road in Dunnellon. If you’re interested in finding out more, you can view the park’s program at floridastateparks.org or call (352) 465-8555.
Two Rivers Run Through It Silver River State Park, Ocala
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lright all you dog lovers out there, did you know our four-legged friends are welcome in Florida’s state parks on a six-foot lead? Pack up Fido and head out to the Silver River State Park. You, the ever responsible dog owner, will of course bring cleanup baggies. The 1.2-mile round trip has a great payoff halfway through the walk—a spectacular view of the Silver River. Before setting out, ask for a trail map at the entrance when you pay the $4 fee, which by the way is good for up to eight people in the car (so bring your friends, too). When you reach the river, you’ll no doubt see some fish in the shallow water, maybe some nearby wading birds and possibly even an alligator. If you’re really lucky, you may even spot monkeys on the opposite shore. After your walk, make sure to take some time to tour the park’s cracker village. It will give you some new insight into how Florida used to be. Guests can visit the Silver River Museum and Environmental Education Center for just $2 and they’re open to the public every Saturday and Sunday. And while we’re talking extras, don’t forget to brown bag a lunch. The large picnic area, complete with a playground, makes this is a great place for an outdoor meal. This dirt-trail walk is moderately easy and mostly handicapped accessible.
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Silver River State Park is located at 1425 NE 58th Avenue (Baseline Road) and can be reached by calling (352) 236-7148. Check out floridastateparks.org for more information.
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A Peaceful Walk Sholom Park, Ocala
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holom Park is perhaps one of Ocala’s best-kept secrets. This peaceful meditation park features a formal garden, a savannah, a labyrinth and a koi pond, not to mention a forest. The opportunities to relax and reflect are plentiful. You can pick and choose your paths, but consider this: if you walk every trail in Shalom Park your grand exercise total would be a little over two miles. All of the walkways are paved, making this totally wheelchair accessible. The best part? There is no entrance fee. Dogs aren’t allowed, though, so leave Fido at home this time. On all sides of the park you’ll find some serious On Top of the World residential and commercial development, so it comes as a lovely surprise to find an oasis from all the hustle and bustle. I often ask at local book presentations if people have been to Sholom Park. Many hands shoot up. I ask if they would go back. Hands shoot up again. Shalom Park really is that kind of place. On a side note, bring a quarter to buy fish food, then watch the koi swarm to the surface. If you’re feeling particular lazy, bring a good book or your sketch pad and get in some much-needed “me” time. Who said walking had to be hard work?
Sholom Park is located at 6840 SW 80th Avenue in Ocala and can be reached at (352) 854-7435, (352) 427-1628 or hapi-info.org.
Walking With Friends Sunnyhill Restoration Area
T
he mailing address might be Umatilla but do not be dissuaded. Sunnyhill is actually in Marion County off County Road 42. A former muck farm, Sunnyhill’s 4,000 acres were purchased by the St. Johns Water Management District to assist with the restoration of the Ocklawaha River. The farm stretches along nine miles of the river. Old levees make excellent walking paths—flat and mowed with great sight lines. The elevation allows walkers to see long distances and you never know what you might come across. Wading birds are winter visitors and sand hill cranes like it so
much that these long-legged birds often stay all year round. So take note birders—bring your binoculars! A few things to keep in mind when considering a trip to Sunnyhill—first things first, there is no admission charge and there is no running water. A portable toilet is available (so you know the drill there). Nearby recreation activities include horseback riding, wildlife viewing, bicycling, picnicking, primitive camping and bank fishing. Whew! You may want to make a weekend trip come to think of it. Okay, back to the walk. You’ll begin at an old farmhouse (known as the Blue House) and make your way to an observation tower. Total hike? A very doable eight-tenths of a mile. Free trail brochures are available and make navigating your way a breeze. Check out the farm’s website at sjrwmd.com. I’ve been told that this month the Marion County Parks and Recreation Department plans to partner with St. Johns and begin tram rides at Sunnyhill.
Sunnyhill Restoration Area is located 5.9 miles east of Weirsdale on the north side of County Road 42. For information visit sjrwmd.com or call St. John’s Division of Land Management at (386) 329-4404.
Want More Walks?
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50 Great Walks in Florida by Lucy Beebe Tobias is available in Marion County at the following locations:
• • • • •
Appleton Museum of Art Barnes & Noble Brick City Center for the Arts Chelsea Coffee Company Silver River Museum & Environmental Education Center
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PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
interested to see what they can do here. Just 10 minutes later Cheryl smiles when she’s asked, “What do you think?” “It didn’t hurt,” Cheryl adds. “It was more of a sensation. No pain, though. I will definitely do it again.” Threading is great for all skin types and is all natural. Sallaram adds that there are no harsh chemicals or hot wax to contend with. Ana’s Eyebrow Place here in Ocala is Sallaram’s fourth shop, along with her husband, Lavaker Reddy Boreddy. The couple has three other stores, including Cincinnati, St. Petersburg and Port Charlotte. Before opening Ana’s both Manju and Lavaker were software professionals. “I decided to go into business for myself,” Manju ith a few quick twirls of her hand Manju says. “The ups and downs in the business world were Sallaram wraps common sewing thread too much. We made the move to Ocala from Ohio between her fingers and goes to work. because we wanted a warmer climate. It was a good Threading. The hair removal technique has been decision. Business has been great so far and we’re used in India for generations and is now available getting a lot of word-of-mouth recommendations in Ocala at Ana’s Eyebrow Place in the Paddock from our clients.” Mall. Consider it a less painful, more friendly way to Depending on your chosen process, hair removal remove unwanted facial or body hair. techniques can range from the very “You get a better eyebrow painful and inexpensive to medically shape from threading rather based techniques that can cost than waxing,” says Sallaram. thousands. Threading costs a mere “It’s much more precise.” $10 to $12 at Ana’s Eyebrow Place. By The process of threading the way, Ana is actually Manju and is quick and easy. The only tool Lavaker’s 5-year-old daughter who needed is a piece of thread that they named the franchise after. is looped around the unwanted —DONNA WELCOME If you’re tired of the pain and hair. As the thread slips in and redness that goes with waxing and tweezing, give out of a knot, the hair is removed at the root. Results threading a try. The looks you can achieve are plentiful. typically last about three weeks and the process leaves Whether you want a perfectly tailored arch or prefer minimal redness or irritation. a more natural look, Sallaram can accommodate your “It’s painless,” says client Donna Welcome. “I’m in preferences. And all in a matter of minutes. and out of here in a matter of minutes and the results are great. I went to work showing off my eyebrows the first time I had it done. Since then a handful of the girls from my work have also had it done.” Cheryl, a first time client visiting all the way from Canada watched as Donna’s eyebrows were threaded. “I saw someone having it done years ago,” Cheryl says. “I was interested but never came across a place Ana’s Eyebrow Place that offered threading. When I saw the signs for Ana’s 3100 SW College Road, Suite 502 I thought, (Why not, it can’t hurt to try something Inside the Paddock Mall next to Macy’s new). I’ve always done my own plucking, so I’m (352) 351-3937 / anaseyebrows.com
‘Achieving The
Perfect Arch’
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I’m in and out of here in a matter of minutes and the results are great.
If the thought of tweezing your eyebrows makes you shudder, rest assured there’s a better way to achieve the perfect eyebrow arch. Ana’s
Eyebrow Place
can help.
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PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
‘Exercise Is Vital To Your
Heart Health’ I
for her patients,” says Dr. Rao. “We are very proud to really love what I’m doing,” says Dr. Mikkilineni. have her in our partnership and to be able to offer her “There is great satisfaction in helping people get services to our patients.” healthier.” Mikkilineni logs long 10-12 hour workdays, While growing up in southern India, Mikkilineni splitting her time between seeing patients in always knew she wanted to be a physician. After the hospital and in her office. Part of her care is earning her medical degree in internal medicine from encouraging her patients to make heart-healthy Siddhartha Medical College in her native country, lifestyle choices, including diet and exercise. Mikkilineni moved to the United States. She enrolled “Along with good medical care, it’s very at the University of Toledo for her fellowship and important for people to exercise residency in internal medicine for a healthy heart,” she says. from 2003-2006, while still “I like my patients to exercise trying to decide on a specialty. consistently three to four times “I looked at a number a week. They can walk, use a of specialties, including stationary bike or do water pulmonary care,” says exercises. What’s important is that Mikkilineni. “But then I they do something they enjoy and met a cardiologist at the do it consistently.” University of Toledo who And despite her long really inspired me and —HIMA MIKKILINENI workdays and hectic home encouraged me to consider life, Mikkilineni follows cardiology.” her own exercise advice. She and her husband Mikkilineni made the commitment and entered Venkat Veerapaneni, who is a computer software a cardiology fellowship program at the University of programmer, have a four-year-old son named Anish. Toledo from 2006-2009. A year prior to completing Following family time, it is usually late evening when her fellowship program, Mikkilineni visited a longtime Mikkilineni climbs on her own treadmill at home. friend and fellow physician in Ocala. “It isn’t always easy to find time to exercise,” says “I came to visit in January and of course it was cold Mikkilineni.“But it is vital to your heart health.” and snowing in Toledo,” she says. “But Ocala was nice and warm with plenty of sunshine. I fell in love with the weather and since I already had a good friend here, I decided I would like to practice and live in Ocala.” When she applied for a position with Cardiovascular Institute of Central Florida, Mikkilineni discovered another bonus to moving to Ocala. Dr. Srisha Rao, who was the first and only female cardiologist in Ocala for more than a decade, Cardiovascular Institute was a CICF partner. Mikkilineni joined the CICF of Central Florida staff in November 2009. 2101 SW 20th Place “Dr. Mikkilineni is the perfect combination of Ocala, FL 34471 Hima Mikkilineni (352) 237-5944 in-depth cardiology knowledge and great empathy
Along with good medical care, it’s very important for people to exercise for a healthy heart.
Ask Dr. Hima Mikkilineni about her work as a cardiologist with the
Cardiovascular Institute of Central Florida and expect a smile in return.
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Tea Time
the
Tantalizing Tea in Leesburg is worth the trip. p92
Go Nuts! p86
Fresh & Fruity Recipes p86
Dish
Quick Bites p87
Seasonal Splendor p92
and more!
Superfoods To The Rescue According to the USDA’s National Food and Nutrient Analysis Program, these are the top superfoods ranked in order of overall antioxidant power. Are they on your grocery list? 1.
Wild Blueberries
14. Red Kidney Beans
2. Artichokes (cooked)
15. Navel Oranges
3. Black Plums
16. Prunes
4. Broccoli
17. Pinto Beans
5. Raab (raw)
18. Red Anjou Pears
6. Blackberries
19. Red Grapes
7.
Strawberries
8. Cultivated Blueberries
20. Russet Potatoes 21. Raisins
9. Red Cabbage (cooked) 10. Raspberries 11. Red Delicious Apples 12. Granny Smith Apples 13. Sweet Cherries
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Go Nuts!
RECIPES
Cashews
Fresh & Fruity
These moon-shaped little bites are packed full of nutrition. One ounce or only 13 cashews contains 21 percent of the daily recommended value of magnesium, which aids in protecting against high blood pressure. If you really love cashews, ¼ cup will give you a third of your daily copper requirements, an important mineral that your body can’t make on its own.
Walnuts It may be just coincidental that the shape of a walnut resembles that of the human brain, but research has shown that although walnuts won’t make you smarter, they do promote brain function. Just ¼ cup also provides 90 percent of the recommended amount of Omega-3 fatty acids, which helps protect against heart disease and acts as an anti-inflammatory.
Almonds
A selection of healthy, fruity recipes to get your new year started right.
Grilled Chicken Rice Salad with Pineapple and Pistachios Makes 4 servings Recipe courtesy of Prevention
Not a huge fan of milk? Try substituting almonds instead to support your bone health. Just one ounce, or 20–25 almonds, provides as much calcium as ¼ cup of milk and 12 percent of your daily protein requirements. Though high in fat, almonds contain no cholesterol and are naturally high in fiber, which can actually aid in lowering blood cholesterol.
DRESSING 1 can (8 ounces) pineapple chunks (packed in juice), drained, 1/3 cup juice reserved 3
tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
18 1⁄1⁄8 ⁄ ⁄8
teaspoon salt
18 1⁄1⁄8 ⁄ ⁄8
teaspoon ground black pepper
SALAD ¾ pound boneless, skinless chicken breast halves, grilled and cut into cubes
Source: American Dietetic Association
1 ½ cups cooked brown rice
A Chocolate Lover’s Dream
THE FESTIVAL OF CHOCOLATE CHOCOLATE—a traveling exhibit coming to Tampa this month and Orlando in March—is a must for all you chocolate lovers out there. Aside from indulging in tasty treats, visitors to the festival can watch chocolate-inspired cooking demonstrations and the judging of the “Best Of” Chocolate Indulgence Competition. Children have the opportunity to decorate their own chocolate pizza or design a chocolate cookie. For the over-21 crowd, there are chocolate and wine pairing classes offered along with other chocolate “how to” classes. Cookie stacking and ice cream eating are included in the list of chocolaty contests for adults and children alike. In case you want to take a little slice of heaven home with you, vendors will have a wide variety of delectable chocolate goodies on sale from $1 to $5. Remember, though, paper money is no good here! The only accepted currency is the chocolate chip coin. festivalofchocolate.com
MARK DATE
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Museum of Science and Industry, Tampa
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Mar
5-6
Orlando Science Center, Orlando
1
red bell pepper, chopped
½
cup red onion, finely chopped
4
large lettuce leaves
2
tablespoons chopped pistachios
1. To make dressing: Reserve pineapple chunks for salad. In small bowl, stir 1/3 cup pineapple juice with oil, salt and pepper. 2. To make salad: In medium bowl, combine reserved pineapple chunks, chicken, rice, bell pepper and red onion. Add dressing and toss gently to mix. Arrange lettuce leaves on 4 plates. Top with salad and sprinkle with pistachios.
In mid-November, Great American Coffee Roasters opened on the “S” curve in Ocala. Owners Steve and Jeryl Durand completely renovated the old Ocala Gold and Diamond building, creating a cozy, welcoming atmosphere with early American décor. “Coffee is something we love and are passionate about,” says Jeryl. “We serve the best coffee you can get in town. We’ve had great feedback and already have regular customers.” The coffee here is never pre-roasted and bagged. Instead, patrons walk in, choose their coffee and it’s fresh-roasted to order. The menu features popular coffee drinks: everything from classic lattes and cappuccinos to Coffee A La Mode and White Chocolate Mocha. Along with muffins and bagels, you can get a light lunch of a soup and sandwich. 816 S. Magnolia Ave., Ocala / (352) 328-3737 greatamericancoffeeroasters.com
QUICK BITES
Caribbean Black Bean and Fruit Salad 1
15-ounce can black beans, drained
2
tablespoons prepared salsa
1
tablespoon chopped fresh cilantro
1
tablespoon finely chopped red onion
½
teaspoon grated orange peel
1
tablespoon lime juice
¼
teaspoon ground cumin
1
ounce feta cheese, crumbled (optional)
1
large Dole Banana, sliced
1
Dole Orange, peeled and sliced
1. Combine beans, salsa, cilantro, onion, orange peel, lime juice and cumin in large bowl. 2. Spoon onto lettucelined platter. Sprinkle cheese on top of salad, if desired. 3. Arrange banana and orange slices alongside of salad. Squeeze additional lime juice over bananas.
PROMOTIONAL
Italian Fine Dining in the Heart of Ocala Ever since Fiore’s Café opened in its current location back in September, patrons have been raving about both the food and the ambience. Eating at this locally owned establishment is reminiscent of dining in Tuscany. Soaring ceilings accented by rugged wood beams; stone arches; soothing, rich colors; sleek granite table tops and exceptional service provide the perfect setting. The atmosphere is warm and inviting, but it’s the authentic Italian cuisine that has customers returning again and again. Handmade pizzas, strombolis and calzones remain part of the regular menu, but the recent additions such as the Marsala Pizza and Chicken Caesar are sure to make regulars out of even more customers. Patrons can’t stop talking about the original dishes at Fiore’s, especially the Black Seafood Linguine, one of the restaurant’s signature dishes. The homemade pasta gains its unique dark coloring thanks to the addition of squid ink. An array of fresh seafood—including clams, mussels, shrimp and scallops—is nestled in a luscious lobster sauce, making this entrée a perennial favorite. Another big hit is the lasagna and with good reason. “It’s a huge, hearty portion and one of our best sellers,” says manager Jenny Shull. “It’s a very cheesy, meaty lasagna and we use fresh, homemade pasta, not boxed. “We didn’t take anything away from our old menu,” assures Shull, “but wanted to add some new dishes. We’ve added a number of items, including a traditional favorite Penne alla Vodka. Other new items include the Linguini Puttanesca, Scampi Cosanostra, Spaghetti Gamberi, Tilapia Livornese, Salmon Mezzaluna and Pasta primavera.” Young diners will appreciate the new Kids’ Menu, which includes penne alfredo, spaghetti and marinara and Italian chicken fingers and fries.
Don’t miss the latest appetizer offerings including the antipasto special, Italian meat pies, coconut jumbo shrimp and the Carpaccio, a fabulous first course that highlights tender, thinly sliced filet mignon presented with delicately flavored olive oil, a spring mix, lemon and fresh Parmesan. As with all of Fiore’s dishes, everything is made from scratch with the freshest, natural ingredients. While each item is carefully prepared, it’s also artfully presented with flair and sophistication, making your dining experience a treat for the eyes as well as the palate. Savory garlic “knots,” warm from the oven, are served with every entrée, and you can select a fine wine, glass of beer or Fiore’s famous homemade sangria to round out your meal. Since Fiore’s Cafe is open seven days a week, why not set aside an evening soon to relax and savor an authentic Italian meal the way it was meant to be enjoyed? The chefs and staff at Fiore’s will go out of their way to make your visit memorable.
Fiore’s Cafe 119 S. Pine Ave., Ocala (352) 789-6980
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PROMOTIONAL
The Tilted Kilt Comes To Ocala Plaid kilts, personable servers and great pub-style food and entertainment are coming to Ocala when the popular Celtic-themed sports bar and restaurant Tilted Kilt opens this month on Silver Springs Boulevard. Launched nationally in 2003, Tilted Kilt is a rapidly expanding franchise based out of Tempe, Arizona. When the doors open in Ocala, this will be the fifth Tilted Kilt in the Sunshine State. “When we walked into a Tilted Kilt in another city, we thought it would be unique to Ocala,” says Larry Stone, who is the co-owner/operator along with David Stone and Larry Chauncey—all three of whom are longtime Ocala residents. Patrons visiting Tilted Kilt will never believe the building once housed the old Bennigan’s restaurant. With a brand new kitchen, bathrooms and an entire remodel, the facility has a completely new look and feel. With a total of 27 televisions, including two expansive big screens, and a state-of-the-art stereo system, Tilted Kilt promises to be the place to watch sporting events. There will even be live entertainment on the schedule. “It’s a full restaurant, not just a sports bar,” adds Stone. “Any time the doors are open, we’ll be serving a full menu. We’ll
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be open for lunch and dinner seven days a week.” Tilted Kilt’s menu features an array of satisfying options, whether you just want to snack or feel like having a full meal. Nachos, cheeseburger sliders, quesadillas and salads join over half a dozen hearty burgers, such as the Black & Bleu, The French Connection (lots of melted Swiss cheese, sautéed mushrooms and onions) and the BBQ Bacon. Of course, there are the pub favorites, including Maggie Mae’s Fish & Chips, Kilt Burner Wings, Chicken Tenders, the Ultimate Club Wrap, the Grilled Chicken Caesar Wrap and much more. Sausage Artichoke Fettuccini, Danny Boy’s Shepherd’s Pie, lasagna and additional choices can be found on the entrée side of the menu. Whatever you order, you can expect it to be served up with a smile by one of Tilted Kilt’s costumed staff members. Servers (they’re actually referred to as “cast members” or “entertainers”) and bartenders alike wear trademarked plaid kilt costumes. Titled Kilt might be the latest fun spot to eat and hang out with friends, but it’s built on an old history of tradition. “In England and the British Isles, when people would open their homes to travelers, those were called ‘public houses,’” explains Stone. “The pub evolved from that as a place where travelers and locals could go for food and entertainment. We’ve spent a lot of time getting our kitchen staff, management team and servers trained.” And if you feel the urge, you can even wear a kilt. “I’ll buy the first beer for anyone who comes in wearing their kilt,” Stone says with a smile.
Tilted Kilt 3155 E. Silver Springs Blvd., Ocala (352) 351-5458 tiltedkilt.com
Spinach Salad with Warm Maple Dijon Vinaigrette Makes 4 servings ¼
cup Hungry Jack Original Syrup
3
tablespoons cider vinegar
4
teaspoons Dijon mustard
1
teaspoon fresh thyme leaves, minced, or ½ teaspoon dried thyme leaves
2
cloves garlic, minced
½
teaspoon salt
¼
teaspoon pepper
½
cup Crisco 100% Extra Virgin Olive Oil
1
6-ounce bag fresh baby spinach leaves
1
small unpeeled red apple, cored and thinly sliced
½
cup crumbled blue cheese
2
tablespoons crumbled cooked bacon or real bacon bits
1. Whisk together syrup, vinegar, mustard, thyme, garlic, salt and pepper in a medium microwave-safe bowl until well blended. Gradually whisk in oil, stirring until thickened. 2. Combine spinach, apple, cheese and bacon in a large bowl. Just before serving, microwave vinaigrette on high for 30 to 45 seconds or until warm. Drizzle salad with desired amount of vinaigrette. Toss salad and serve immediately.
Amrit Palace Indian Restaurant is now open in its new location at 3415 SW College Road. The longtime Ocala establishment bought the property, built a brand new building and opened it for business on November 12. After 15 years in its original leased location, the new Amrit Palace offers a much larger dining area and is still open for lunch and dinner six days a week. “We had 48 seats in our old location and now we can seat 141. We also have two private rooms, which are ideal for birthday parties and business meetings,” says Mandip Singh, wife of owner and head chef Satnam Singh. Patrons will find all the old favorites on the menu as well as a few new additions. 3415 SW College Road, Ocala (352) 873-8500 / amritpalace.com
QUICK BITES
Come Visit Artisinal Dish Fine Grocer & Eats. A new neighborhood marketplace where your favorite natural foods—wholesome, fresh, and locally grown—are all in one place. Artisinal Dish Fine Grocer & Eats is a European-style marketplace conveniently located on HWY 27 and owned and operated by Mary Maverick Gary and Chef Greg Mullen. Together they have created a small grocer that offers only the highest-quality, freshest-
WELCOME
available foods for a one-stop shopping experience that gets back to the basics.
“Our ER is dedicated to treating heart attack patients at emergency speed. That’s why I “heart” Ocala Health.” During a heart attack, minutes matter. If a balloon stent is needed to reduce irreversible muscle damage, the ER at Ocala Regional Medical Center can take you from Door to Balloon, a procedure known as D2B, in record time. In fact, our success rate of beating the recommended D2B * time is the best in the region. Put your heart in good hands.
ocalahealthsystem.com
We are an accredited chest pain center. *hospitalcompare.hhs.gov
Chris Santacruz, R.N. Emergency Room Nurse
FREE, FIVE-MINUTE HEART HEALTH ASSESSMENT: www.ocalahealthsystem.com/D2B or text D2B to 84444 jan’11
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PROMOTIONAL
L-R: Chef Randal White, Deborah Fulgoni, Marge Felix and Charlie Dilebrio
Experienced Local Joins Hilton Team When it comes to sterling service in a beautiful setting, Hilton Ocala is an unmatched destination. Whether the event is an important business conference or a special private function, the sophisticated hotel is an ideal location for wonderful dining, top-notch service and exceptional professionalism. It’s little wonder then that the Hilton Ocala team recently welcomed Marge Newsom-Felix as its new director of catering and special events. Marge has spent decades in the hospitality business, most recently at her popular restaurant, Felix’s, on Silver Springs Boulevard, and brings a wealth of experience to her new position. “I arrived in Ocala 16 years ago from Gainesville where I worked in the hotel business, planning conferences for both Shands and the University of Florida,” Marge says. “I was also very involved in planning large, upscale weddings, bar and bat mitzvahs, and other private events.”
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Dish Fine Grocer & Eats has a full calendar of cooking classes and special events. Among the upcoming classes are Old Florida Cuisine, Vegetarian Cooking, One Pot Meals, Asian Fusion, Mother Sauces and More, Fundamentals of Cooking, Beef Pairing and even a Romantic Dinner. Classes are taught by Chefs Greg Mullen and Dave Bland as well as others. Seating is limited, so you’ll need to reserve your space. “We are getting ready to post more classes, so check out the calendar [online]. It changes almost weekly now,” says Mullen. The eatery/grocer is also expanding its hours and beginning this month will be opening early in the morning, making it a great place to grab breakfast. The menu will feature made-fromscratch biscuits and gravy; hearty, hot oatmeal; specialty croissants; coffees and more. 6998 N U.S. Highway 27, Unit 111, Ocala (352) 622-9977 / ocaladish.com
QUICK BITES
After moving to Ocala, Marge worked as the managing partner of Bella Luna Café for six years. She then opened her own restaurant, Felix’s, with her husband in the Historic 1890 House, and the eatery quickly became a popular culinary destination. “Both in our private rooms throughout the restaurant and through our catering division, I worked to create many special, memorable events for our guests,” Marge says. In fact, the management team Marge is joining at Hilton Ocala, including Executive Chef Randal White, Director of Banquets & Operations Charlie Dilebrio and Director of Sales and Marketing Deborah Fulgoni, couldn’t be more pleased to have such an experienced and popular local coming onboard. “By bringing Marge aboard to join our efforts,” says Debbie, “we have now unquestionably come full circle in providing our guests everything they could want and more from their event experience.” Collectively, the Hilton Ocala team boasts over 80 years in the hospitality industry and has the unparalleled experience to not only host but create unforgettable events for its clients. “I’m looking forward to getting involved in our community once again,” Marge says with a smile, “and seeing many special familiar faces as well as meeting new ones.”
Hilton Ocala 3600 SW 36th Avenue, Ocala (352) 854-1400 hiltonocala.com
Pineapple Salsa Chicken 6
boneless, skinless chicken breasts
2
cups chunked, fresh Dole Tropical Gold Pineapple*
¼
cup Dole Pineapple juice
½
cup finely chopped red bell peppers
¼
cup finely chopped green bell pepper
1
tablespoon chopped green onion
2
teaspoons chopped fresh cilantro or parsley
2
tablespoons chopped jalapeño chilies
1. Grill or broil chicken 5 to 10 minutes on each side or until chicken is no longer pink in the center. 2. Combine pineapple chunks, juice, bell pepper, onions, cilantro and chilies in bowl. Serve salsa with grilled or broiled chicken. *May substitute 1 can (20 ounces) Dole Pineapple, chunked, drained.
DININGGUIDE
Tony’s Sushi & Steakhouse 3405 SW College Road, Ocala / (352) 237-3151 Mon-Thu 11a-10p / Fri & Sat 11a-11p / Sunday 3p-10p Tony’s Sushi brings scrumptious sushi favorites from New York and Miami to Ocala, served in a fun, family environment. All sushi dishes are made to order—choose from a variety of specialty rolls or create your own! Whether you prefer chicken, steak or seafood, talented chefs will prepare it with dazzling showmanship on the hot grill right at your table. All entrées come with soup or salad and rice. In addition to the full Japanese kitchen, there is a full liquor bar and a beer selection, including imported Japanese beer and Sake.
For the truly adventurous, try Tony’s famous Sake Bomb! We also provide catering and private parties.
Crossroads Country Kitchen 7947 W. Highway 40, Ocala / (352) 237-1250 Mon-Thu 6a-8p / Fri-Sat 6a-9p / Sun 7a-3p Located west on Highway 40 in Ocala, the Crossroads Country Kitchen is a must for anyone craving down-home, country cooking. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner, menu items range from homestyle chicken & dumplings to prime rib, fresh salads, seafood, prime steaks and burgers. If you’re in the mood for a real treat, try the Prime Rib Dinner For Two. Make sure and leave room for one of the tasty home-baked desserts, too! In the mood for a fresh fish fry? Tuesdays and Fridays are all-you-care-to-eat catfish. Big screen televisions will allow you to enjoy your meal without missing one second of the big game or race.
Located at the Crossroads of NW 80th Ave. and Hwy 40 West. No matter what you have a taste for, Crossroads Country Kitchen is sure to become a new favorite.
Jitterz Café Located in Almeida Plaza / 11783 Highway 441, Belleview / (352) 307-9870 Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Tue-Fri 7a-7p / Sat 8a-2p / Sun 8a-1p If you’re searching for a friendly eatery where the food is delicious, the staff is great and the atmosphere is just right, then look no further than Jitterz Café on Hwy. 441 in Belleview. This delightful spot has been getting rave reviews from patrons! Stop by for a breakfast of Almond French Toast, a fluffy omelet filled inside and out or the wonderful biscuits and gravy. Try a lunch of homemade soup, a fresh salad and a char-grilled burger. Old-time favorites like the Beef Burgundy, or healthier selections like the Smoked Salmon Salad are perfect for dinnertime. For dessert, try our award-winning Bread Pudding topped with vanilla Grand Mariner sauce.
Jitterz’s tea and coffee bar encourages guests to sit a while and enjoy good company. Smoothies are available, and two-for-one beer and wine is offered all day, every day. Call for information about private parties and catering.
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Tea Time TANTALIZING TEA in Leesburg is gaining
quite the following of dedicated fans. And it’s no wonder! There’s nothing quite as relaxing and serene as a cup of tea. Perfect for a quiet talk with friends, as a tasty way to chase away the blues or even as a home remedy for throat ailments. It was owner Kathy Niles’ own love of tea (and long afternoons spent at the famous Mariage Freres tea salon in Paris) that inspired her to create Tantalizing Tea. As a level-three certified tea specialist, Kathy can often be found sharing her passion with groups, discussing such topics as the different types and flavor profiles of teas, cooking with tea and the health benefits of drinking tea. No matter what your taste in tea, Kathy is sure to have something to suit you. Her selection of loose-leaf teas includes black, herbal, white, decaf, green and oolong, and you can find them in a variety of specialty stores and food outlets nationwide. Want to check them out now? Visit tantalizingtea.com to peruse the selection, in addition to some great accessories and teapots.
Seasonal Splendor The wintry austerity of January and the budding promise of spring are captured perfectly in this delicate floral creation by LILLI’S FLOWERS & GIFT in Ocala. Placed on a glazed ceramic leaf and cushioned in a bed of live moss, this willow sphere features white tulips and calla lilies, and reinforces the notion that flowers are a source of splendor year-round—even in the dead of winter. At her shop just off of Silver Springs Boulevard, Lilli’s owner Kelli Hart reminds customers everyday that displaying fresh flowers throughout a home is a wonderful way to bring nature’s beauty indoors. For more on Lilli’s creations, call (352) 732-0500.
QUICK Chef Daniel’s Filet and Fin BITES Restaurant, Wine and Raw Bar had its grand opening on December 1. Located in the old Primary Oven building on SW Broadway in downtown Ocala, Filet and Fin serves lunch and dinner, specializing in steak, seafood and more. “It’s affordable, sophisticated dining with fine wine, food and friends,” says Chef Daniel. “It’s a very eclectic menu. We’re going to keep our signature dishes, but I love to play with food, so we’ll be changing and adding things to the menu every month.” Sundays feature “family-style dining” when Chef Daniel creates several ethnic dishes to pass around and share. The atmosphere is upscale,
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but patrons can dress casually. Filet and Fin serves beer and wine, including some hard-tofind artisan boutique wines. A variety of complimentary finger foods are served during Happy Hour from 4 to 6pm. Gourmet chefs will appreciate the store’s selection of specialty foods items, meats and cheeses. 306 SW Broadway, Ocala (352) 351-5063 / filetandfin.com
Patrons will be happy to know Honeysuckle’s Café is now offering their popular New Englandstyle Fish & Chips every day. The hand-dipped, center-cut cod is fried up light and crisp, and
QUICK BITES
Endive & Watercress Salad with Apples & Walnuts Makes 6 servings DRESSING: 5 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil 2
tablespoons white wine vinegar
2
tablespoons minced shallot Salt and freshly ground black pepper
SALAD: 6 California endives, halved lengthwise and cored 2
firmly packed cups watercress leaves (no thick stems)
¾
cup coarsely chopped toasted walnuts
2
tablespoons chopped fresh mint
1
large crisp apple, such as Fuji
1. To make dressing: In a small bowl, whisk together olive oil, wine vinegar and shallot. Season to taste with salt and pepper. 2. To make salad: Cut endive halves crosswise into ½-inch-wide pieces. Put endive, watercress, walnuts and mint in a salad bowl. Quarter and core apple, then slice crosswise as thinly as possible. Add sliced apple to salad bowl. Add enough dressing to coat salad nicely. (You may not need it all.) Toss well, taste and adjust seasoning. Serve immediately.
served with homemade cole slaw, chips (fries) and malt vinegar. “We have some English customers who say it’s as good or better than the Fish & Chips they have in England, so that makes me happy,” says Sherri Grady, who co-owns the quaint eatery with her mother, Chris. Grady insists on center-cut cod caught in northern U.S. waters. “That makes a big difference when you make Fish & Chips,” says the New England native. Now entering its fourth year in business, Honeysuckle’s Café is located next to Bealls and is open for breakfast and lunch from 8am to 3pm six days a week. Check back soon as they may start opening on Friday evenings. 4901 E. SR 40 (Six Gun Plaza), Ocala (352) 236-0046
DININGGUIDE
Blanca’s Café Ocala Palms Golf & Country Club / 5000 N US Hwy 27, Ocala / (352) 867-0001 Sun Breakfast 8a-Noon, Dinner 1p-8p / Mon-Sat Lunch & Dinner 10:30a-9p Tucked in among the rolling greens of the Ocala Palms Golf & Country Club, Blanca’s Café is a gem of a find for diners looking for excellent food served in a warm, friendly environment. Italian dishes and delicious homemade desserts are the café’s specialty, with a popular breakfast buffet offered every Sunday. Patrons enjoy a full service bar and live entertainment weekly as well as spacious seating for up to 150. Try one of the weekly dinner specials Blanca’s offers, or schedule catering for your next event through the café. Whether you’re a newcomer in town or a local looking for somewhere new to dine, Blanca’s Café offers something to please every palate.
Special menu for Valentine’s Day – Call for reservations. Weekly entertainment, call for details. Homemade pizza served daily. Lunches now feature Beef on Weck & Monte Cristo Sandwiches. Live Maine lobsters every Friday night. Reservation required. Welcome HITS!
Chili’s Grill & Bar Many Convenient Locations Throughout Our Area / chilis.com Sun-Thu 11a-11p, Fri & Sat 11a-Midnight (lounge open till 2a, at I-75 location only) Happy Hour All Day Everyday From freshly prepared salads to mouth-watering burgers, Chili’s kicks up the flavor with food that’s anything but ordinary. Smokey, sweet and savory ribs are now slowsmoked over pecan wood and impossible to resist. Enjoy the flavor without the guilt thanks to dishes under 750 calories. Share an appetizer and two full-sized entrees with Chili’s $20 Dinner for Two. Party Platters create the perfect event at Chili’s.
Happy Hour is all day every day with 2-for-1 drinks. New lunch combos starting at just $6.00!
Cody’s Original Roadhouse 2505 SW College Road, Ocala / (352) 237-8182 / codysoriginalroadhouse.com Doors Open at 11a. Serving Lunch & Dinner Daily. Cody’s Original Roadhouse – “Where Quality and Value Come Together!” Servin’ USDA Prime and Choice Steaks, rotisserie chicken, BBQ ribs, chops, fresh fish, burgers, salads and more! Two Kids 10 & under Eat Free every Monday and Tuesday, with the purchase of 1 adult entree. Wednesday is FREE Fajita Night– Buy One, Get One Free and Thursday, cut into Cody’s 10 oz. USDA Choice Top Sirloin Steak for only $11.95! Daily 2-for-1 Happy Hour, Early Bird Specials till 6 pm Mon.-Sat. After-church specials starting at $7.99 with dessert, plus there is always curbside takeout for those in a hurry.
Take-Out Service Available. Locations also in Gainesville and The Villages. New Year’s Day Spare Ribs & Sauerkraut - $9.98
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DININGGUIDE
Super Buffet Pine Plaza / 620 South Pine Avenue, Ocala / (352) 369-9937 Sun-Thu 11a-9:30a / Fri & Sat 11a-10:30p
Voted in the Top 100 out of over 43,000 Chinese restaurants in the United States by Chinese Restaurant News.
Finding the right place to dine is a nightmare. Wanting sushi, pizza, seafood, salad or Chinese food? There are loads of books and guides that will lead you to various places. But there is one place that carries all of these items. That place is called Super Buffet. With more then 300 items on its buffet, the consumer can choose from a hot, delicious food bar or a cold fresh fruit and dessert bar. The buffet offers generous portions, which explains the name “super,” so you can be sure to leave full and satisfied. Super Buffet is located in Pine Plaza by the Ocala Police Department. If you like to eat, come in and enjoy the buffet!
La Cuisine French Restaurant 48 SW 1st Avenue, Ocala / (352) 433-2570 / LaCuisineOcala.com Tue-Thu 11:30a-2p, 5:30-9p / Fri & Sat 11:30a-2p, 5:30p-10p
La Cuisine is now taking reservations for Valentine’s Day. On behalf of the entire team, Patrice and Stephane wish you a jolly 2011!
Make La Cuisine part of your New Year’s resolutions so you don’t have to worry any more about finding the ultimate venue for a romantic escape, a unique business lunch or dinner, or a cozy reunion with family and friends. Come enjoy hearty, quality food and dedicated service in the comfort and decor of a French bistro. La Cuisine with its unique atmosphere alongside world-class French food is definitely worth a closer look ! Private dining room and menu customization available upon request for a Special Occasion Banquet, Office Party, Wedding Brunch or Rehearsal Dinner.
Latinos Y Mas 2030 S Pine Avenue, Ocala / (352) 622-4777 / latinos-mas.com Mon-Thu 11a-9p / Fri & Sat 11a-10p / Closed Sunday
Of course dessert is a must at Latinos Y Mas. You won’t be able to resist the homemade Key Lime Pie! Same great taste, new and exciting decor. Gift certificates and party platters available for any special occasion.
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Wishing all of our customers and friends a Happy New Year! The beautiful newly remodeled Latinos Y Mas is perfect for hosting private parties and can also cater or deliver to any of your upcoming events. If you’re looking for consistently delicious food with a Latin flair, look no further. Begin your Latinos Y Mas dining experience with an exotic Passion Fruit Caipirinha or a Dragonberry Mojito. Follow that with the Peruvian Ceviche appetizer and for your main entrée, try the Titico’s Mero, a seafood dish consisting of mero, sautéed with shrimp and roasted red peppers in a white wine sauce.
DININGGUIDE
Mary’s Cuban Kitchen 101 SW 60th Avenue, Ocala / (352) 369-6279 (MARY) Monday-Friday 6:30a-8p / Saturday, 6:30a-4p Whether enjoying lunch or dinner, at Mary’s Cuban Kitchen it feels like you’re dining with family. A variety of lunch and dinner plates are available daily and the selections are too numerous to mention them all! New selections include Arroz con Pollo, Masitas de Puerco, Palomilla Steak, Frijoles Negros and more. In addition to the tasty new menu items, Mary’s also offers dinners to go, also known as “cantinas.” Now you can enjoy Mary’s one-of-a-kind dishes right in the comfort of your own home. Their all-day menu also includes Café Cubano, Café Con Leche, Papa Rellena and Empanadas as well.
Make sure to save some room for one of Mary’s signature shakes! Thick and creamy and made from fresh fruit, choose between banana, strawberry, seasonal fruits and the ever-popular chocolate and vanilla. You have to try Mary’s to appreciate how good it is!
Cuvée Wine & Bistro 2237 SW 19th Ave Rd, Ste. 102, Ocala / (352) 351-1816 / cuveewineocala.com Mon-Thu 4p-10p / Fri & Sat 4p-2a / Happy Hour 4p-7p & 11p-1a Cuvée is an elegant and approachable environment where you can embrace the age-old relationship between food and wine. In an inspiring and intimate atmosphere, Cuvée Wine and Bistro brings together the taste of upscale cuisine with the freshest ingredients combined with a wide array of wines from around the world. We guarantee your senses will be delighted and your palate overwhelmed. Feed your mind, your spirit and your curiosity at Cuvée.
Call for Reservations Private Parties and Off-Premise Catering Available.
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Get Revved Up!
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Check out the hundreds of Fords and Mustangs at Silver Springs. p98
Hinder @ The Hard Rock p100
Garrison Keillor Live! p108
Social Scene p110
and more!
Under The Bigtop RINGLING BROS. AND BARNUM & BAILEY present “Fully Charged,” the all-new addition to “The Greatest Show on Earth.” The show’s outrageous daredevil stunts, worldfamous Clown Alley clowns, amazing animal acts and other never-before-seen performances are sure to ignite your imagination and leave you breathless. Check out ringling.com for details and to purchase tickets. ST. PETE TIMES FORUM, TAMPA
January 5–9 AMWAY CENTER, ORLANDO
January 13–17 JACKSONVILLE VETERANS MEMORIAL ARENA
January 20–23
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Most Cherished Days Some of a woman’s most memorable moments involve a beautiful gown, gorgeous jewelry and the perfect hair style. Think of your high school prom or your wedding day. That’s exactly what The Cherished Bride in Ocala has in mind for its PROM & BRIDAL SHOW on January 23 at the Harbor Hills Country Club in Lady Lake. The event, held from noon to 4pm, will showcase some of the newest prom and bridal fashions as well as offer door prizes, entertainment and more. Not to worry, gents. There will be casino-themed tables to keep you occupied as well. And here’s a hint: Register in advance at The Cherished Bride website, and you’ll receive a discount on the price of admission. thecherishedbride.com or (352) 209-5805.
Robopalooza! Opa! If you’re a fan of everything Greek, then head out to the 11th anannual GREEK FESTIVAL February 4–6 at the the Father George Papadeas Community Center in Belleview from 11am to 8pm, Friday–Saturday, and 1–6pm on Sunday. Be Greek for a day and dine on everything from moussaka to baklava while traditional dancers and singers perform. Vendors will be on-site selling jewelry, clothing and souvenirs. It’s also a truly family-friendly event with face-painting, activity inflatables, clowns and much more in store. Admission is a $1 donation to benefit local charities. greekfestivalocala.com, (352) 237-1476 or (352) 622-1378
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Move over Robocop and Terminator. These budding young robotics engineers could give you a run for your money! The ROBOPALOOZA EXTRAVAGANZA, which includes The Cornerstone School “Weasels at Work” FLL Robotics Tournament, Forest High School’s EMIT Program FRC Robotics Demonstration and The Cornerstone School Jr. FLL Expo will take place on January 8 at Forest High School on Maricamp Road. So what does that mean? It means plenty of local kids from all grade levels will be showing off some cool engineerengineer ing inventions at the largest ever robotics tournament in Florida—all made possible by Legos. Whew! That was a mouthful. The First Lego League (FLL) introduces younger students to real-world engineering challenges by building LEGO-based robots to complete tasks on a thematic playing surface. The event is sponsored by Legoland, IHMC and Atheros, and draws hundreds of people. robopalooza.com
Cooking Out For A Cause What could be better than enjoying a tasty hot lunch all in the name of charity? Not much! On January 28, Highland Memorial Park is hosting a CHARITY COOKOUT to benefit Habitat For Humanity. The event will take place between 11:30am-1pm and lunch will be provided by The Mojo Grill & Catering Company. Donations will be accepted and 100 percent of the proceeds will benefit Habitat For Humanity. Participants can eat on-site in the shade, or take their lunch on the go. The address for the park is 1515 NE Third Street, two blocks behind the Cascades. (352) 369-1020
Round em’ up! Car enthusiasts will be gathering at Silver Springs Nature Park on Jan. 8-9 from 10am-5pm to showcase their Fords and Mustangs. The 17th annual FORD AND MUSTANG ROUNDUP is a fun-filled event held at beautiful Silver Springs Nature Park, and National Parts Depot will be on-site featuring products for the most discerning motormotor ist. A people’s choice voting will take place on Saturday with the award presentations held on Sunday. With over 1,000 cars at last year’s event, car enthusiasts will have plenty to feast their eyes on again this year. Bring the whole family as the park attractions will keep the young ones occupied. nationalpartsdepot.com or (352) 861-8701.
Don, 38 Special has had a lot of longevity in the music business. We certainly take pride in being called a classic rock or heritage band, but we were just Jacksonville neighborhood guys that fell on our faces for years and starved and paid all the dues that you have to. We were the flavor of the week years ago, so we understand the light’s going to shine on you for a little while and then it’s going to shine on somebody else because it’s their turn. But if you can create something that will propel you and give you a nice living and let you tour and bring the party to the people… that’s the thing with 38 Special. We have a reputation for being a premier live act in the country, so after so many years, it’s a great validation for us. We’re proud to be here. A lot of the young groups don’t understand that you have to accept a truckload of failure first. You have to learn to accept the failure because nobody really cares who you are. You have to pick yourself up and dust yourself off and say, “OK, that didn’t work but we’re going to try it again.”
Are you as happy as ever being on stage and performing? Listen, we get to turn the guitar up and be 19 years old again. Our hour and a half up there, we get to throw it down and move the people. We’re energetic and youthful and everything we could be.
I’m sure the energy you get back from the crowd never gets old. Every night, when the lights go down and we’re backstage and can hear that roar of 10,000
Q&A
DONBARNES
“Hold On Loosely,” “Caught Up In You,” “Back Where You Belong”—for over 35 years, the rock band 38 Special has been delivering unforgettable hits that helped define a generation and a music genre. A little Southern, a little arena, the band’s rock sound has evolved over the decades, allowing the group to gain a wide legion of loyal fans along the way. Ocala Style recently spoke to 38 Special’s lead singer and guitarist Don Barnes in advance of the band’s January 15 concert at Silver Springs. Interview by Kristina Kolesa
people—what’s not to like? [laughs] That’s the force and the energy that keeps us going. We always prided ourselves on making the songs sound like the records. If something sounds 50 feet tall in a PA system, then it’s tight. When Donnie [Van Zant] and I were kids, we’d go hear someone play somewhere and they wouldn’t sound anything like the record. People lip sync and all these things nowadays, but fans will come up to us and say, “I can’t believe you all play your instruments and sing live!” It’s almost an aberration. I talk to friends of mine—from REO Speedwagon, Styx—and they get the same thing. But that’s what you’re supposed to do. Doing it live and being a pro.
Jr. like I play. Of course, ZZ Top, we toured with them and they showed us that you really have to go out there and be 10 feet tall. It makes for a more bombastic presentation.
So what can fans expect, songwise, at the show? It’s everything you want to hear from the band through our history. We’ve also been able to put some new material in there. We have a long career of soundtracks from movies— Supertroopers, Revenge of the Nerds—so we put together a medley of about 15 minutes worth of songs from movies. It’s just a large time. We bring the party to the people. It’s explosive and we get the crowd in with us. People can forget their troubles, clap, sing along, yell and have a beer. It’s all about the music. When they leave, they’re as exhausted as we are.
We bring the party to the people.
Who were your influences growing up? As a young kid, I had pictures of Eric Clapton all over my bedroom. I just wanted to be him. All of us back then had a turntable, and we’d slow the record down to learn the solos note for note and try to pick it up. There were no instruction books, just the influences of Clapton, Hendrix, all the old greats. For voice, it was probably Paul Rodgers. Also Bad Company and then Steve Marriott from Humble Pie. People don’t realize that I also took a lot of influence from the singer of Foghat. We toured with them for a long time and he would just stand there and lean into that mike and just belt it out. I thought, Wow, I want to be able to do that. He played an old Les Paul
Photo by Carl Dunn
Photo by Carl Dunn
A QUICK
Special Delivery 38 Special will take the stage at 3pm at Silver Springs on January 15. Tickets are available online at silversprings.com or by calling (352) 236-2121.
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Concerts
Ticketmaster / (800) 745-3000 / ticketmaster.com All dates are subject to change without notice, so please call ahead to confirm venue listings.
Who
Where
When
The Duprees
The Villages, Lady Lake
01/06
The Crystals
Circle Square Cultural Center, Ocala
01/08
Livingston Taylor
Savannah Center, The Villages
01/09
Darryl Worley
Manatee County Fairgrounds, Palmetto
01/14
Patty Larkin
Phillips Center, Gainesville
01/14
Newsboys
Jacksonville Veterans Mem. Arena
01/14
Ray Price
Orange Blossom Opry, Weirsdale
01/15
Newsboys
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
01/15
38 Special
Silver Springs, Ocala
01/15
Little Feat
Florida Theater, Jacksonville
01/16
The Four Freshmen
Neel Auditorium, Bradenton
01/16
Michael Bolton
Youkey Theatre, Lakeland
01/19
Little Feat
The Plaza Theater, Orlando
01/19
Barry Manilow
Amway Center, Orlando
01/20
Drive-By Truckers
The Ritz Ybor, Tampa
01/21
Barry Manilow
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
01/21
Michael Bolton
Van Wezel Perf. Arts Hall, Sarasota
01/21
Kenny Loggins
Thrasher-Horne Center, Orange Park
01/22
Ronnie McDowell
Orange Blossom Opry, Weirsdale
01/22
Roy Clark
Silver Springs, Ocala
01/22
Drive-By Truckers
House of Blues, Orlando
01/22
Linkin Park
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
01/22
Drive-By Truckers
Freebird Live, Jacksonville
01/23
NOFX
Maverick’s, Jacksonville
01/25
Hinder
Hard Rock Café, Orlando
01/25
Barry Manilow
Jacksonville Veterans Mem. Arena
01/26
NOFX
House of Blues, Orlando
01/27
Little River Band
Hard Rock Café, Orlando
01/27
George Strait/Reba McEntire
Jacksonville Veterans Mem. Arena
01/28
Merle Haggard
Youkey Theatre, Lakeland
01/28
The Lettermen
Circle Square Cultural Center, Ocala
01/28
NOFX
8 Seconds, Gainesville
01/29
George Strait/Reba McEntire
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
01/29
Mel Tillis
Orange Blossom Opry, Weirsdale
01/29
Grand Funk Railroad
Silver Springs, Ocala
01/29
Merle Haggard
Florida Theatre, Jacksonville
01/30
John Pizzarelli
Robinson Theatre, Jacksonville
01/31–02/03
Charlie McCoy
Orange Blossom Opry, Weirsdale
02/04
Jimmy Eat World
House of Blues, Orlando
02/04
The Bellamy Brothers
Florida Sunshine Opry, Eustis
02/05
The Guess Who
Silver Springs, Ocala
02/05
Guster
House of Blues, Orlando
02/05
Gene Watson
Orange Blossom Opry, Weirsdale
02/05
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Mad for Manilow? If you’re a BARRY MANILOW Jan fan (and admit it because you 20 know you are!) this is a must-see concert. For the first time ever, Manilow will be backed by a live symphony. Who gets the honors? The Charlotte Symphony Orchestra of Punta Gorda. The show will include not only Manilow’s band, but also cast members from his critically-acclaimed Las Vegas show. Will he perform your favorite like “Copacabana,” “Mandy” or “I Write The Songs?” Grab your tickets now to find out! Manilow will perform for one night only on January 20 at 8pm in Orlando. Other Florida stops include St. Petersburg on January 21, Jacksonville on January 26, Sunrise on January 28 and Coral Gables on January 29. ticketmaster.com.
Jan
Get Hindered
25
Hard rock band HINDER is probably best known for the breakout 2006 hit “Lips of an Angel,” which they’ll surely sing as well as tons more soul-rattling songs during their January 25 concert at Orlando’s Hard Rock Café. We hope lead vocalist Austin Winkler rests those vocal cords because we expect big things from this show. pollstar.com or ticketmaster.com
Country’s King & Queen
Jan
28
If Nashville had a king and queen y’all (well, at least since the days of George and Tammy anyway), the crowns would surely have to go to GEORGE STRAIT AND REBA MCENTIRE. The Texan and the Oklahoman have joined forces for this once-in-a-lifetime tour across the country, including a stop at the Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena on January 28 and Tampa’s St. Pete Times Forum on January 29. Think of the hits between these two legends! Oh, and Lee Ann Womack will be their opening act—in case you needed any more reason to catch this concert. pollstar.com or ticketmaster.com
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THELOCALSCENE
Who
Where
When
The Full Monty
Ocala Civic Theatre
01/01–16
Ringling/Barnum & Bailey Circus
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
01/05–09
End Days
The Hippodrome, Gainesville
01/07–20
Orlando Orch.: Young Romantics
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
01/08
Jerry Seinfeld
Ruth Eckerd Hall, Clearwater
01/08
Legally Blonde
Moran Theater, Jacksonville
01/11–16
Rock of Ages
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
01/11–16
Jo Koy
The Improv, Orlando
01/12–16
Pauly Shore
The Improv, Orlando
01/13
Ringling/Barnum & Bailey Circus
Amway Center, Orlando
01/13–17
Jim Gaffigan
Hard Rock Café, Orlando
01/14–16
Ray Price
Orange Blossom Opry,Weirsdale
01/15
Golden Dragon Acrobats
Phillips Center, Gainesville
01/15
Jeff Daniels
The Plaza Theater, Orlando
01/16
Celtic Crossroads
University Auditorium, Gainesville
01/16
Bill Cosby
Van Wezel Perf. Arts Hall, Sarasota
01/16
Garrison Keillor
Phillips Center, Gainesville
01/18
Patton Oswalt
Hard Rock Café, Orlando
01/21
God’s Favorite
Melon Patch, Leesburg
01/21–02/06
Steel Magnolias
IceHouse Theatre, Mount Dora
01/21–02/13
Disney’s Beauty and the Beast
Phillips Center, Gainesville
01/24–26
Orlando Phil. Orch.: That’s Amore
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
01/29
West Side Story
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
02/01–06
The Marvelous Wonderettes
Ocala Civic Theatre
02/03–27
Penn & Teller
Hard Rock Café, Orlando
02/03
Neil Berg’s 100 Years of Hollywood
Phillips Center, Gainesville
02/04
Phantom
Bay Street Players, Eustis
02/04–27
Celtic Woman
Amway Center, Orlando
02/05
Royal Comedy Tour
Jacksonville Veterans Mem. Arena
02/11
Orlando Ballet: Battle of the Sexes II
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
02/11–13
Mike Epps
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
02/14
What My Husband Doesn’t Know
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
02/15–16
Orlando Orch.: My Favorite Things
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
02/19
Wicked
Bob Carr Perf. Arts Centre, Orlando
02/23–03/27
Jeff Dunham
Straz Jr. Center, Tampa
02/24
Serendib
The Hippodrome, Gainesville
02/25–03/20
What My Husband Doesn’t Know
Florida Theatre, Jacksonville
02/26
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THE UNSEEN EYE: PHOTOGRAPHY FROM THE COLLECTION OF W.M. HUNT (THROUGH JAN. 2) This photography exhibit at the Appleton Museum features 200 photographs from New York collector W.M. Hunt, with works by Richard Avedon, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Frank and others. appletonmuseum.org or (352) 291-4455. WOVEN WONDERS: FLORIDA PINE NEEDLE BASKETS (JAN. 1–9) View over 20 examples of pine needle basketweaving during this fascinating
exhibit at the Appleton Museum of Art. appletonmuseum.org or (352) 291-4455. THE FULL MONTY (JAN. 1–16) A guy’s gotta do what a guy’s gotta do, even if it’s with very few articles of clothing on. That’s the premise of this hysterical and popular comedy coming to the Ocala Civic Theatre this month. ocalacivictheatre.com or (352) 236-2274. MARGARET WATTS RETROSPECTIVE (JAN. 6-29) A resident of Ocala since 1953, Margaret Watts has been creating inspiring pieces depicting our
Jan
24-26
Beauty Vs. The Beast Who says you have to go to New York to see a Broadway play? The award-winning Broadway musical BEAUTY AND THE BEAST is coming for three days only to the Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Gainesville. This classic tale tells the story of Belle, a young woman in a provincial town, and the Beast, a loving prince trapped in the body of, well, a beast. If the Beast can be loved and learn to love someone in return, the spell will be broken. This production has become an international hit and has played to more than 35 million people in 21 countries and will feature the animated hit’s Academy Award-winning score. Ticket prices range from $40-$60 and are available through ticketmaster.com or by calling (352) 392-2787.
Photo by Joan Marcus
Performing Arts
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THELOCALSCENE
Sports MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA DATE
OPPONENT
Jan. 3 Jan. 8 Jan. 15 Jan. 22 Feb. 1 Feb. 5 Feb. 12 Feb. 24 Mar. 1
Rhode Island Ole Miss South Carolina Arkansas Vanderbilt Kentucky Tennessee Georgia Alabama
TIME
9:00p 8:00p 1:30p 8:00p 9:00p 9:00p 6:00p 7:00p 7:00p
FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY DATE
OPPONENT
Jan. 12 Jan. 15 Jan. 22 Feb. 2 Feb. 12 Feb. 26 Mar. 2
Duke N. Carolina State Boston College Wake Forest Virginia Miami North Carolina
TIME
9:00p 4:00p 7:00p 7:00p 3:00p 2:00p 7:00p
UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA DATE
OPPONENT
Jan. 5 Jan. 19 Jan. 22 Jan. 29 Feb. 9 Feb. 12 Feb. 26 Mar. 2
Marshall East Carolina Rice UAB Memphis Tulsa Southern Miss. SMU
TIME
7:00p 7:00p 7:00p 7:00p 7:00p 7:00p 7:00p 7:00p
NATIONAL BASKETBALL LEAGUE ORLANDO MAGIC DATE
OPPONENT
Jan. 3 Jan. 5 Jan. 7 Jan. 19 Jan. 21 Jan. 24 Jan. 30 Feb. 3 Feb. 8 Feb. 11 Feb. 13 Feb. 16 Feb. 23 Feb. 25 Feb. 27
Golden State Milwaukee Houston Philadelphia Toronto Detroit Cleveland Miami L.A. Clippers New Orleans L.A. Lakers Washington Sacramento Oklahoma City Charlotte
TIME
7:00p 7:00p 8:00p 7:00p 7:00p 7:00p 6:00p 8:00p 7:00p 7:00p 3:30p 7:00p 7:00p 8:00p 6:00p
MIAMI HEAT DATE
OPPONENT
TIME
Jan. 4 Jan. 18 Jan. 22 Jan. 28
Milwaukee Atlanta Toronto Detroit
7:30p 7:30p 7:30p 7:30p
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Jan. 31 Feb. 6 Feb. 8 Feb. 22 Feb. 25 Feb. 27
Cleveland L.A. Clippers Indiana Sacramento Washington New York
7:30p 12:00p 7:30p 7:30p 7:30p 8:00p
COLLEGE BASEBALL UF GATORS DATE
OPPONENT
Feb. 18 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Feb. 24 Feb. 25 Feb. 27 Mar. 4 Mar. 5 Mar. 6 Mar. 8 Mar. 11 Mar. 12 Mar. 13 Mar. 15
USF USF USF Boston College Boston College Boston College Miami Miami Miami Georgia Southern Rhode Island Rhode Island Rhode Island FSU
TIME
7:00p 4:00p 1:00p 7:00p 5:00p 1:00p 7:00p 4:00p 1:00p 7:00p 7:00p 4:00p 1:00p 7:00p
FSU SEMINOLES DATE
OPPONENT
Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Feb. 22 Feb. 25 Feb. 26 Feb. 27 Mar. 8–9 Mar. 11–12 Mar. 13 Mar. 23 Mar. 25–26 Mar. 27
VMI VMI Jacksonville Hofstra Hofstra Hofstra Maine Boston College Boston College Stetson Wake Forest Wake Forest
TIME
2:00p 1:00p 4:00p 4:00p 2:00p 1:00p 6:00p 6:00p 1:00p 6:00p 6:00p 1:00p
UCF KNIGHTS DATE
OPPONENT
Feb. 18 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Mar. 2 Mar. 4 Mar. 6 Mar. 8 Mar. 9 Mar. 11 Mar. 12 Mar. 13 Mar. 15 Mar. 18 Mar. 19 Mar. 20
Siena Siena Siena Maine Dartmouth Dartmouth Mount St. Mary’s Boston College Wagner Wagner Wagner USF Columbia Columbia Columbia
TIME
6:30p 4:00p 1:00p 4:00p 6:30p 1:00p 6:30p 6:30p 6:30p 4:30p 1:00p 6:30p 6:30p 4:00p 1:00p
region’s heritage for decades. Some of her murals can be seen inside Brother’s Keeper soup kitchen and outside of the Discovery Science Center. A retrospective showcasing her many accomplishments will be held January 6–29 at the Brick City Center for the Arts. An opening reception will be held on January 7 from 6–8pm. mcaocala.com.
Dance, Dance in Wildwood on January 13 from 4-7pm for an evening of health and wellness. The studio will offer health screenings and Life South Community Blood Center will be taking donations. Learn about the health benefits of different styles of dance. Children are welcome. dancedancedance.biz or (352) 748-3279.
PIPES, PEDALS, AND PIZZA (JAN. 9) This free American Guild of Organists event will introduce piano students to the “King of Instruments” at First United Methodist Church at 3pm. For details, please call (352) 537-0207.
SIDEWALK ASTRONOMY (JAN. 14) Bring the entire family to the Discovery Science Center on January 14 from 7-9:30pm for a fun and educational evening of stargazing. Telescopes are provided along with a short presentation. Admission is free. mydiscoverycenter.org or (352) 401-3900.
CF INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES (JAN. 11, 25) The College of Central Florida’s film series continues next month with Mother (Korea, 2010) on Jan. 11 and The Secret in Their Eyes (Argentina, 2009) on Jan. 25. Each plays at the Appleton Museum at 2pm and at CF Building 8-110 at 7pm on its respective date. Free and open to the public. cf.efu/foundation or (352) 873-5808. AN EVENING WITH RAY KURZWEIL (JAN. 12) Renowned futurist Ray Kurzweil will be at the Phillips Center on the University of Florida Campus on January 12 at 7:30pm. He will give a 40-minute lecture before the screening of the documentary film The Singularity is Near: A True Story About the Future based on his best-selling book, The Singularity is Near. An audience Q&A and a book signing will follow the film. Doors will open at 6:30pm and admission is free. arts.ufl.edu/kurzweil. DANCE, FITNESS & HEALTH FAIR (JAN. 13) Stop into Dance,
HEALTH & WELLNESS EXPO 2011 (JAN. 15) Head to the Circle Square Cultural Center at On Top of the World for this free Health & Wellness Expo from 10am to 2pm. The community’s fitness department will present fitness demonstrations, and guests will see presentations by Cameo Pharmacy, the Central Florida Eye Institute, Hospice of Marion County, plus many other local businesses and organizations. ontopoftheworld.com or (352) 854-3670. STARGAZING (JAN. 15) A cool, crisp night is the perfect time to enjoy the outdoors and take in some celestial sights. At least the Ocala Astronomy Club thinks so! Join them at the Silver River State Park (weather permitting) for an educational evening under the stars on January 15 at 6pm. They’ll even bring the telescopes. This is an ideal opportunity for budding astronomers to learn how to properly use a telescope and how to identify what they are seeing in the night sky. Don’t forget to bring a
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Listen Each
Weekday Morning!
THELOCALSCENE lawn chair or blanket. Regular park admission applies. (352) 236-7148. CF FACULTY EXHIBIT (JAN. 20–MAR. 12) Works of oils, acrylics, watercolors, ceramics and other media by faculty members from the College of Central Florida will be on display at the Webber Gallery beginning at the end of the month. A free opening reception will be held on Jan. 20 from 4:30pm to 6:30pm. cf.edu or (352) 854-2322, ext. 1552. OCALA CAMELLIA SHOW (JAN. 22–23) Some 2,000 camellia blooms will be on display and judged during this annual show presented by the Ocala Camellia Society at the Pioneer Garden Club, located at the Appleton Cultural Complex on East Silver Springs Boulevard. The show will be open from 2pm to 5pm on Saturday and 1pm to 4pm on Sunday. camellias-acs.com or (352) 595-3365. WRITER JOHN DUNN (JAN. 23) With more than 350 published articles under his belt, freelance writer and Forest High teacher John Dunn will speak on the craft of writing to those interested in learning more about the process, including the business end of writing. Refreshments will be provided. The program is sponsored by the Friends of the Ocala Library and will take place at 2pm in meeting room C of the main library branch on Silver Springs Boulevard. This event is free to the public. For details, visit friendsoftheocalalibrary.org. THE LETTERMEN (JAN. 28) Head to the Circle Square Cultural Center at On Top of the World for a one-night-only concert featuring the group that brought the world such hits as “Lay Your Head On My Shoulder.” circlesquareculturalcenter.com or (352) 854-3670.
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ANNUAL FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE CAR SHOW (JAN. 29) This fourth annual event held from 9am to 3pm at the Market of Marion on U.S. Hwy. 441 in Belleview features the presentation of “Best in Show” trophies, goodie bags, door prizes and a concession stand. (352) 236-3069. FATHER-DAUGHTER VALENTINE’S DANCE (FEB. 5) Alright dads, grab your favorite little gal and head out to the Circle Square Cultural Center for the 5th Annual Marion County Father-Daughter Dance. Girls (and their dads) ages 3–13 will enjoy a special evening out with the “man in their life” that will include dancing, refreshments, photo opportunities and plenty of memory-making. Tickets are $25 per couple (plus $10 for each additional daughter) if purchased before January 24, and $30 per couple (plus $10 for each additional daughter) if purchased after January 24. Tickets are available at The Learning Wheel and Ocala Traditions. father-daughterdance.com or (352) 362-3306. CHERISH THE LADIES (FEB. 5–6) Enjoy the traditional music of Ireland during popular group Cherish the Ladies’ two stops in Central Florida this month. On Feb. 5, they will perform at the College of Central Florida’s Ocala campus at 7:30pm and then at the college’s Lecanto campus on Feb. 6 at 3pm. Tickets are $24 for the Ocala concert and $23 for the Lecanto show. tickets.cf.edu or (352) 854-2322, ext. 1416.
To have an event considered for Ocala Style Magazine’s The Scene Send a short description (and a color photo, if possible) 60 days in advance to: email: Calendar@ocalastyle.com fax: (352) 732-0226 mail: Ocala Style Magazine The Scene, 1007 E. Fort King St., Ocala, FL 34471
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Visions of the Gulf
JAN. 22
THROUGH
MAR. 20
The Gulf Coast-inspired work (top) of Florida Artists Hall of Famer CHRISTOPHER STILL (right) will be on display from Jan. 22 to Mar. 20 at the Appleton Museum of Art. The award-winning graduate of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts has had his artwork featured in such important locations as Florida’s Governor’s Mansion and the Smithsonian Institute. Don’t miss this chance to see in person his beautiful interpretations of life on the Gulf. The work of famed photographer Carlton Ward Jr. will also be on display during the “Visions of the Gulf ” exhibit. appletonmuseum.org or (352) 291-4455.
JAN. 28
THROUGH
FEB. 1
Walk Across Florida Seventeen cities in five days. That’s the mission of Ocala singer and musician SHANE WOOTEN and his bandmate NIC WARD. Yes, it’s a bit of a Forest Gump-inspired adventure, but in addition to getting out and playing gigs, the 150-mile walk will raise money for the Ronald McDonald House in Orlando. Between January 28 and February 1, the duo will walk from Daytona to Clearwater, with stops and shows in DeLand, Pine Lakes, Eustis, Tavares, Leesburg, Okahumpka, Center Hill, Bushnell, Webster, Ridge Manor, Lacoochee, Dade City, Land O Lakes, Lutz and Tampa as well. To learn how you can donate to the walkers’ cause, visit shanewootenband.com/walk or facebook.com/shanewootenband.
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An American Companion
Jan
16
As the author of more than a dozen books, including Lake Wobegon Days, Homegrown Democrat and The Book of Guys, GARRISON KEILLOR’s down-home stories about growing up in the Midwest, late-life fatherhood and life in Lake Wobegon often elicit a smile and a chuckle. His radio show “A Prairie Home Companion” is heard by millions of listeners on more than 450 radio stations throughout the country. Now, the Grammy Award-winning entertainer is bringing his traveling show to the College of Central Florida’s Lecanto campus on January 16 at 3pm. Tickets are $26 each and are available online at tickets.cf.edu or by calling (352) 854-2322, ext. 1416.
Outdoor adventures, shopping fun and a relaxing atmosphere await you during your vacation getaway in Central Florida’s natural wonderland, Lake County. Lake County’s VIP Vacation Card offers great savings on a variety of local attractions, arts & culture, restaurants, golf courses and guided tours. Use this discount card at participating locations to receive special savings designed to make your vacation getaway fun, affordable and stressfree. Enjoy this gift from Lake County Tourism & Business Relations.
VIP Vacation Card offers are not valid in conjunction with other discounts, promotions or special offers.
Hike. Bike. Play. Stay For more information and tips for planning a vacation, including a wealth of tourism brochures and guides, visit the Lake County Welcome Center, located at 20763 U.S. Highway 27, Groveland, call (352) 429-3673 or log on to www.lakecountyfl.com. jan’11
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The Art Of Bobby Goldsboro ARTFUL GIFTS Art lovers had a chance to meet local artist and long-time entertainer Bobby Goldsboro last October at an opening reception for his “The Art Of Bobby Goldsboro” exhibit at Artful Gifts in the Circle Square Commons. The Bobby Goldsboro Show was the highest rated television variety show in the ‘70s, and Bobby has performed before more than two million people throughout his four-decade career. PHOTOS BY JOE DEMARTINO
Joel & Deborah Perdelwitz, Vince DiPeri
Bobby Goldsboro and Jan Whitaker
Ed Wise and Marylyn D. Adams Dave Atkinson, Bobby Goldsboro and Irene McCracken Shirley & Duane Stocking
Polly & Jan Whitaker Robert Stentiford, Bobby Goldsboro, Nancy Ledding, Devon Rose & Paul Stentiford
View more Social Scene photos and purchase prints of your favorites at ocalastyle.com
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George Van Natta, Terry Avick, Dianne Goldsboro and Edward A. Graves Paul & Kelli Brunner
Grace School
why Grace? Grace provides an unrivaled, closeknit community for all ages.
open house
Friday, January 21, 2011 9:00 - 11:00am and 4:00 - 5:30pm Come see the “Grace Effect”
Grace provides an unmatched program of academic excellence. Grace provides an unparalleled number of opportunities for enrichment outside the classroom. Grace School was the first private school in Marion County, and we hope that you will join us as we continue to be Marion County’s premier Christian school. We will strive each day to fulfill our mission statement:
To Prepare Our Children for Life, To Honor and Glorify God, In a Christ-Centered Environment Of Academic Excellence.
Grace School 352.387.3090 4410 SE 3rd Ave | Ocala, FL 34480
www.graceschoolocala.org
Limited Enrollment for the Second Semester of the 2010-2011 School Year Accepting Applications for the 2011-2012 School Year Accredited by the Florida Council of Independent Schools and Florida Kindergarten Council. Grace School does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion or gender.
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Utopian Bridge Club 80th Anniversary OCALA HILTON The 80th Anniversary Celebration of the Utopians Bridge Club was held on Sunday, October 17 at the Ocala Hilton. The all-female club joined together with friends and family for an afternoon full of dancing, food and fun.
Mary Johnson, Alex & Sheila Adams
PHOTOS BY JOE DEMARTINO
Jeanne Thomas and Richard Rogers
Richard & Josephine Figueroa Ina Kerr-Press and Margaret Holloman-Chappelle Sharon & Herman Brown
Jesse & Beverly Cunningham Barbara & Vernon Murray
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Barbara Young and John Livingston Thomas & Edith Harper
CAMEO
“Stay Alive All Your Life”
PHARMACY
Specializing In
- Dr. Norman Vincent Peale
Pediatric Medicine Diabetic Supplies Pet Meds Wound Care
Nestled among the majestic oak trees of Ocala lies an active community for seniors. Quiet Oaks Distinctive Assisted Living promotes a lifestyle that fosters independence while providing 24-hour assistance when necessary. With a highly trained, dedicated staff of professionals, Quiet Oaks enables residents to choose the service package that suits them best. As individuals’ health needs change, residents are able to stay in comfortable, familiar surroundings and obtain the support and assistance that they may require.
Family Owned Local Delivery Drive Thru Service Competitive Pricing Special Packages Available
352-861-2088
QuietOaksLiving.com 11311 Southwest 95th Circle Ocala, FL 34481
352-433-2990
Lic# AL9315
Twenty-four hour staffing • Three meals served in Arthur’s Court Personal laundry service • Daily housekeeping service • Large private garden Complimentary beauty & barber shop • Complete social programs & activities Complimentary cable TV & utilities • Chauffeured transportation Country Store with complimentary 24-hr snack center
M-F: 9am – 5:30pm All Major Insurances Accepted Sat: 10am – 2pm All Major Credit Cards Accepted
1326 S. Pine Ave, #202, Ocala, FL 34471
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WELCOME 2011 & HAPPY NEW YEAR! jan’11
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Chili Cook-Off NORTH CENTRAL FLORIDA AGRICULTURE AND CIVIC CENTER Marion County’s 29th annual Chili Cook-Off was a huge success again this year with more than 4,000 locals turning out at the North Central Florida Agriculture and Civic Center for sampling and fun. Over 30 teams competed for trophies with their chili and booth creations, and the day also featured salsa and cake/pie contests, live entertainment and a raffle. PHOTOS BY JOE DEMARTINO Continued on page 116
Jacquie Page and Dick Norris
Labreea Dawson and Amber Beyer
Sofia Rodriguez, Bruce & Catalina Denton
Natasha Cateau, Veronica Burt, Darcee Moreno and Diana Hammond
Xander, Tom & A.J. Pecca
Jack & Olgamarie Koehler Steven & Jane Carroll
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Clayton Williams and Brandon O’Malley Faith Lam, Joshua Neu and Stephanie Street
ODC_QuarterPgAd_OS_2nd_ODC_QuarterPgAd_OS 2nd 10/13/10 12:44 PM Page 1
Serving the Ocala Area for 27 Years in the Same Location
Dr. Terry L. Braun DMD and Associates
Gurvinder Sethi, M.D.
GENERAL DENTISTRY
Dr. Anju Vasudevan an & Gurvinder Sethi, MD Board Certified in Medical Oncology ncology Board Certified in Hematology Board Certified in Internal Medicine edicine
Seeing Patients Patients at S.W S. S.W. W Ocala Practice limited to Hematologyy and Oncology. Most Major Medical Coverage Accepted: Medicare, BC/BS, PPC/PPO.
General Dentistry When You Need Us
Anju Vasudevan, M.D.
OUR TIMBERRIDGE OFFICE HAS MOVED
Implants • Dentures • Dental Lab On Premises Same Day/Emergency Care Cosmetic and Restorative Dentistry
Blood & Cancer Center, P.A. 1040 SW 2nd Ave, Ocala, FL 34471
(352) 732-0829
10230 S.W. 86th Circle, Ocala, FL 34481
Located Near Best Buy in Shady Oaks Plaza on Hwy 200 | 2415 SW 27th Ave., Ocala
(352) 861-6633
www.OcalaDentalCare.com • 237-6196 M-F / 8-5 • Credit Cards Accepted
Spend the Morning in Our Bed...The Evening in Yours.
The Region’s Leading Center of Excellence For Outpatient Orthopaedic Surgery. Minimally-invasive procedures at TLC help you find relief from pain, regain your active lifestyle and still be home for moments too important to miss. Learn more about leading-edge outpatient procedures for: • Partial Knee Replacement • Arthroscopy of the Shoulder (rotator cuff tears, impingement, frozen shoulder, etc.) • Arthroscopy of the Knee (cartilage damage, torn meniscus) • Sports Medicine • Surgery of the Foot & Ankle (hammertoes, bunions, claw toes, Achilles tendonitis) • Fracture Care • Back Pain Seminars & Facility Tours FREE Community January Partial Knee Replacement
Medical Arts Building
OUTPATIENT SURGERY AND LASER CENTER RECAPTURE YOUR LIFESTYLE
J. Mandume Kerina, MD Tri-County Orthopaedics
Jan 14 & 28 • 4 p.m.
Central Florida’s Leading Partial Knee Replacement Surgeon
Reservations (352) 753-9105
(352) 753-9105
201 West Guava Street, Lady Lake
Accredited by Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care jan’11
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Chili Cook-Off NORTH CENTRAL FLORIDA AGRICULTURE AND CIVIC CENTER Marion County’s 29th annual Chili Cook-Off was a huge success again this year with more than 4,000 locals turning out at the North Central Florida Agriculture and Civic Center for sampling and fun. Over 30 teams competed for trophies with their chili and booth creations, and the day also featured salsa and cake/pie contests, live entertainment and a raffle.
Brian Vanderlip
PHOTOS BY JOE DEMARTINO Continued from page 114
Francisco Davila, Dr. Frances Ramirez and Paula Davila
Hollie Krause and Lynn Stamps
Hollie Hunt, Jacquelyn McKenna and Alexandra Sexton
Lyndsey & Daylynn Wills
Allen & Bonnie Parsons Dr. Robert Williams, Sharonda Oats, Crystal Grady, Brandy Thomas Tyler, Cynthia Thomas and Jennifer Zackery
View more Social Scene photos and purchase prints of your favorites at ocalastyle.com
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Tawny Davis, Hailey & Miranda Little Shirley Quarles, Kylee & Megan Gordon
Prior Insurance Defense Attorney Each Case Handled Personally by Marianne Howanitz Experienced Local Trial Lawyer
Ring in the New Year with a new place to live. The holidays are over but the good times are just beginning at Chambrel Pinecastle, where our leisurely lifestyle makes every day a holiday. In an ideal location, Chambrel Pinecastle provides a lifestyle where you can do everything you want, while we take care of everything you need! And it’s all backed by the strength and stability of Brookdale Senior Living®, the nation’s largest provider of senior accommodations.
Come visit today and reserve your lunch for two!
Family H E A LT H Practicing in
Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases
Let us show you how Chambrel Pinecastle is more accessible than ever.
No Long Waits • Now Accepting New Patients Independent Living • Personalized Assisted Living Exceptional Experiences Every DaySM 1801 SE 24th Road, Ocala, Florida 34471 (352) 368-7710 • www.brookdaleliving.com Assisted Living Facility # 5397
Back Row L to R: Javier B. Cairo, M.D., MPH; Rymon Reyes, BSN-RN; Subba Rao Daggubati, M.D. Seated: Gwendolyn McMahon, Office Mgr. and Wendy Pierantoni, MA
352-351-2767
8602 SW Hwy 200, Suite A • Ocala, FL 34481 (103rd Street Plaza next to Big Lots)
Exceptional Experiences Every Day is a Service Mark of Brookdale Senior Living Inc., Nashville, TN, USA 00751-ROP04-1210
jan’11
Medicus
FAMILY HEALTH Accept All Insurances
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PETETESCH
The Great American Way Y
Pete Tesch, President/CEO of Ocala/Marion County Economic Development Corporation
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ou have to meet my Aunt Marianne. Over 80, she’s full of energy, always engaged and chronically cheerful. A former Lutheran Sunday school teacher, possessor of perfect penmanship and ringleader of most of the social activities at her and Uncle Bud’s retirement community, Marianne never misses a beat. Last month, I took my mom to a family reunion compliments of Uncle Bud and Aunt Marianne. It was replete with three generations of relatives from Wisconsin’s heartland, and like most reunions, there was much reminiscing. To spice things up, Marianne brought out boxes of immaculately organized memorabilia, including old photos, newspaper articles and other artifacts circa Americana 1930–1945. We heard all the great stories again, ranging from Grandpa Pete’s silver fox farm to Uncle Art’s untimely death by a Japanese bayonet on Iwo Jima. Of course, I’d heard them all before, but it always has a different impact as the years go by. Marianne was certainly in her element as she doled out gem after historical gem. The last item she gave me was the 1943 Tomah, Wisconsin, telephone book. You would never think of a telephone book as a fascinating read, but it really was a snapshot of the life and times in a small Wisconsin farm town ravaged by the Great Depression and suffering through the darkest days of World War II. Each page of the phone book instructed the reader in a very matter-of-fact fashion how to prepare for an air raid, get gasoline ration coupons, remind residents of their civic obligation to buy war bonds and turn in their scrap. (The word “recycling” hadn’t been invented yet!) And, yes, please be polite and courteous to
Amid sadness, economic misery and death, there was great resolve, courage and optimism that America would triumph again. And it did.
the operator as you made your person-to-person or station-to-station telephone call. This was all topped off with catchy slogans like “Be aggressive to beat the aggressors!” It struck me right then how hard daily life was and how everyone was involved in the war effort. America was decimated by almost 10 years of catastrophic unemployment coupled with the nation’s entrance into a second world war. Yet amid sadness, economic misery and death, there was great resolve, courage and optimism that America would triumph again. And it certainly did. While it’s easy to idealize and romanticize the past, you do have to admire the hard work and “stick-to-it-iveness” (the old-fashioned version of “git ‘er done!”) the previous generation invested wisely and sacrificed to make things better. Life that featured the outhouse, the icebox and the RCA radio! Of course, things are much different now economically and politically, but how did we rebuild our infrastructure, educate our children, retrain our workers and retool our industries after paying for the war effort? I’m sure our various governments didn’t have much money back then either, but they managed. There was a strong commitment to responsibility for yourself and for your neighbors. Americans went back to work, started and grew their businesses. With that in mind, the key to our economic recovery is making key investments in our community. Local people like Jim Schneider, Doug Cone, Pete Beasely, Joe Santelli, Gary Ewers, Rob Stopanio, John Howard and Chris Deaton (and many others) are either business owners or executives who pulled the trigger on the risky decision to invest precious capital, expand their businesses and hire people. On behalf of the community, I say thank you! Many economists and business leaders talk about how important investment is and how it is a critical component to recovery. We always talk about increasing our consumption, but it is time to ramp up our investment in things that will reinvigorate our economy: education, infrastructure, technology, entrepreneurship and people. Maybe the key to our economic recovery was spelled out in the pages of that old Tomah telephone book after all.
awareness Connecting Heart, Body, Mind & Soul Specializing in Deep Tissue
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Regularly $60/hour. Gift Certificates Available.
Touching Into Awareness Tom Stodghill
352.286.6574
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