December 2012 Orlando Home & Leisure

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NEW-HOME TRENDS: SMALLER, SMARTER, MORE BELLS AND WHISTLES

December 2012

Holiday Spirits MASTER MIXOLOGISTS SHARE SECRET RECIPES LET’S DECK THE HALLS (AND THE TABLES, TOO) PHILANTHROPY FOR THE DIGITAL AGE

$3.95

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Something very unusual has been spotted rising from the shores of Lake Berry. While Loch Ness is famous for its mysterious inhabitant, Loch Berry will soon be famous for setting a new standard for senior living in central Florida.

If you own your own home, you are likely to find this wonderful way of life to be quite affordable.

“Unloch” the delight of a secure retirement in a beautiful place. Call 407-647-4083 for

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Loch Berry is the newest addition to Winter Park Towers, central Florida’s premier active living continuing care retirement community. Loch Berry will provide the same breathtaking views enjoyed by our residents, with new levels of distinction in its 54 lovely apartment homes.

Just steps away at Winter Park Towers are the flexible dining options and resort-style amenities that make life here so rewarding. And our full slate of services will keep you out and about, with no worries about everyday tasks—freeing you take full advantage of the fashionable shopping, cultural events and fine dining opportunities of nearby downtown Winter Park.

Loch Berry hugs the shores of Lake Berry, with many apartments enjoying superlative lake views. Inside, residents more information or to arrange a personal tour! will appreciate the custom-feeling touches included in the cost, such as granite countertops, hardwood cabinets and the security of garage parking. It’s a great value, brought to you by financially stable, not-for-profit Westminster Communities. OH&L05/12

1111 South Lakemont Avenue • Winter Park, FL 32792 • www.westminsterretirement.com

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Victor Farina is pictured with his father Mario on the cover of Remodeling Magazine, honoring the nation’s 50 most distinguished remodeling companies. Praised for his professionalism and high aesthetic standards. Large or small, each project receives our trademark attention to detail and teamwork approach. Farina & Sons is family owned, with a 62 year tradition of award winning renovations, additions and custom homes in Orlando’s finest neighborhoods.

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Natural elements of stone, wood and iron inspired the design of this whole house renovation.

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32 FEATURES: DECEMBER 2012

GETS PERSONAL

As governmental and corporate generosity shrinks, nonprofit organizations are adapting accordingly, with an array of tempting, one-on-one appeals. by Michael McLeod • photographs by Rafael Tongol

38 Home design

trends for 2013

Oversized, overpriced homes are on the wane as buyers look for value, energy efficiency and wise use of space, both indoors and out. by Randy Noles Photo: RAFAEL TONGOl

32 PHILANTHROPY

ABOUT THE COVER: Our toast to you and yours for the holiday season. Glass courtesy Entwined, Winter Park. Photograph by Rafael Tongol. 2

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G I V E T H E G I F T O F R E L A X AT I O N .

The perfect day of pampering begins with a stress-melting massage, refreshes with one of our specialty facials or body wraps and concludes with a visit to our full-service salon.

Choose one complimentary spa treatment with the purchase of a $250 gift card* Sole Soother Massage, Revive Facial, Tension Tamer Massage

• 22,000-sq.-ft. spa & fitness center • Private serenity pools • Indoor and outdoor treatment rooms • Outdoor aquatic massage therapy • Co-ed Relaxation Lounge • Separate male/female relaxation areas • Full locker room amenities including indoor whirlpool and steam room

For the perfect holiday gift, please call 407.345.4431.

Purchase a $250 gift card before 1/31/13. May not be combined with any other offers. Visit peabodyorlando.com/spa for complete details.

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DEPARTMENTS 12

JAY BOYAR’S AGENDA The Grinchmas Wholiday Spectacular is a whoot at Universal Orlando’s Islands of Adventure; a spirited twist on Dickens’ Christmas classic makes a visit to Orlando Shakes; country superstar Carrie Underwood breezes into the Amway Center; Gaylord Palms’ annual ICE! display makes merry with Merry Madagascar; a new “soundsuit” sculpture suits the Orlando Museum of Art nicely; a baroque-era coffeehouse concert warms up the Shake’s Margeson Theater.

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A FEW MOMENTS WITH Christopher Wilkins still has two years left as music director of the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra, but he’s already wistful about his tenure. by Harry Wessel

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DESIGN STYLE

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Flavor - Holiday spirits

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DISCOVER HEALTH

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SEEN

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VIEW

Interior decorator Francia Fusic transforms two rooms for the holidays and offers tips on classy Christmas decorations. by Laura Bluhm • photographs by Rafael Tongol

The making of a perfect cocktail for any season is more art than science, as three local mixologists clearly demonstrate. by Rona Gindin • photographs by Rafael Tongol

Taking yourself to a doctor shouldn’t be like taking your car to an auto mechanic. Or should it? by Dr. Deborah German

Orlando Home & Leisure is out and about, rubbing shoulders at the Athena Women’s Leadership Luncheon, the Orange & White (& Blue) Gala, and an intimate fundraising “salon” for the Orlando Philharmonic.

Frank Pohl’s Winter Park law firm features a huge collection of framed black-and-white photographs, all taken in Florida by Florida photographers. photograph by Rafael Tongol

Photos: (top) EVERETT & SOulé; (center left and bottom) rafael tongol; (center right) DAVIS WHITFIELD

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Ulbarri Dec


HOME OF THE YEAR 2012 Runner Up

BEST KITCHEN OF THE YEAR 2012

ANOTHER AWARD WINNING HOME By JORGE Ulibarri IMYOURBUILDER.COM | 407.733.5500

AS VOTED BY - ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE MAGAZINE

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FIRST

I

I’m Not So Snarky in Sweater Weather

DON’T KNOW HOW PEOPLE STAND EACH

other in hot weather. In summertime I’d just as soon the rest of you keep your body heat to yourselves. But now that it’s cool, I’m as snuggly as one of those dorky body blankets that make people look like mental patients. In short: I have actual social interactions to write about this month. Somehow I got invited to a party at the Isleworth home of time-share big shot and would-be political operative David Siegel and his buxom wife and would-be reality TV show star, Jackie. A film crew followed Jackie – and anyone who tried to talk to her – throughout the course of the evening. And please do not ask me to explain why the Siegels complain about publicity and then turn around and seek it out. It’s too complicated. I felt a bit more at ease having dinner at the new Burger Fi on Park Avenue in Winter Park with my friend, Nina Streich. She lives in New York City’s Upper West Side but darts in and out of Orlando periodically to organize the Global Peace Film Festival that is held here every year. Between the cool evening air and the onion rings, I was reminded of ‘50s burger joints with circular parking lots and how we spent our Saturday nights driving around them back in the day. Then Nina made a slip of the tongue that reminded me that New Yorkers might as well be from another planet. They certainly think of themselves that way. Nina was talking to me about what a childhood is like in New York City when she said, “I don’t know how they do it in the country.” I could tell, from context, that by “the country” she meant “the rest of the United States, with the possible exception of Chicago, Los Angeles and the Catskills.” It reminded me of that old New Yorker cover 6

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Take Note What’s ONLINE Check out our expanded listing of arts organizations and their schedules of events for the upcoming season. Follow us on Twitter at orlandohlmag.

that was a map of the world from a New Yorker’s point of view, with the grid of the city laid out in detail in the foreground and a hazy depiction of the rest of the country depicted as a big wheat field, strewn with a couple of rocks. You can’t do much socializing in this town without running into irrepressible arts patron Harriet Lake, a goddess of generosity who turned 90 in August. I believe she has adopted me as one of her charities. Ever since she discovered that I lost my wife earlier this year, she’s taken it upon herself to find a new mate for me. “Give me an age range,” she whispered in my ear when I ran into her at a recent charity ball. I kissed her on the cheek and said: “Find me a hottie in her 90s.” I’ll have more on the social scene next month, weather permitting.

What you CAN DO Check out the exhibition of vintage telephones at the Art and History MuseumMaitland, which opens Dec. 20 and runs through the summer. It features a display of antique telephones, telephone-related memorabilia and a chance for collectors and the general public to sell, buy or swap. What’s ON DECK We visit Southwest Florida’s Gasparilla Island, a watery haven that stubbornly clings to its Old World charm. What’s ON FACEBOOK LIKE us on Facebook and get fun updates and sneak previews. CORRECTION

Michael McLeod Editor in Chief mmcleod@ohlmag.com

Jones Clayton Construction was the builder of the “Tuscan Sun” home, which was the co-winner in Orlando Home & Leisure’s Kitchen of the Year category. The builder was misidentified in the October 2012 Home of the Year issue. DECEMBER 2012

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CONTRIBUTORS

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JAY BOYAR is arts editor

of Orlando Home & Leisure and a former longtime movie critic for the Orlando Sentinel. He teaches film at the University of Central Florida and at Rollins College.

RAFAEL TONGOL OHL’s Senior Photographer is a longtime Orlando resident. His photographs have been published in Newsweek, Women’s Wear Daily and the Los Angeles Times, among other publications. MARIANNE ILUNGA is an Orlando image and fashion consultant who holds a bachelor’s degree in fashion

SINGLES?

merchandising and retailing. She has served as a fashion contributor for magazines and as

With Whom ARE YOU Spending the Holidays? After All ... the MOST Important Element in Your Future is ... Who You are Going to Spend it With!

a wardrobe stylist for modeling agencies in Los Angeles, New York and Chicago. RONA GINDIN is a freelance writer and editor specializing in restaurants and travel. A native New Yorker, the award-winning journalist

Complimentary Private Consultation with

contributes regularly to national publications and

Elisabeth Dabbelt

is the author of The Little

Elite Founder, matchmaker Established Locally Since 1987

Black Book of Walt Disney World. DEBORAH GERMAN, M.D. is the founding dean of the University of Central Florida College of Medicine and UCF’s vice president for medical

(407) 671-8300

affairs.

www.EliteSingleProfessionals.com

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DECEMBER 2012

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Copyright 2012 by Florida Home Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part prohibited without written permission of the copyright holder. ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE (USPS 000-140) (Vol. 13/Issue No. 12) is published monthly by Florida Home Media LLC, 2700 Westhall Lane, Ste 128, Maitland, FL 32751. Periodicals Postage Paid at Maitland FL and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Orlando Home & Leisure Magazine, PO Box 5586, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33310-5586 DECEMBER 2012

11/16/12 2:42:03 PM

“5,

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5,000 YEARS OF

DIVINELY INSPIRED CULTURE

After its run of sold-out shows in March and May 2012 in the Tampa Bay area, Shen Yun Performing Arts will return to Orlando’s Bob Carr Centre with an unparalleled blend of energy, grace, and originality January 2013.

ALL-NEW 2013 SHOW WITH LIVE ORCHESTRA

The New York-based Shen Yun is the first company to present classical Chinese dance on a global scale and has taken the world by storm. In a collection of vignettes, audiences journey from ancient legends to contemporary tales of courage, from the highest heavens to the dusty plateaus of the Middle Kingdom. SHEN YUN is traditional Chinese culture as it was meant to be experienced. Dozens of dancers in dazzling costumes move in seamless, flowing patterns. China’s ethnic and folk dance styles fill the stage with color and energy. A full, live orchestra blends East and West like no other. Thunderous battle drums, masterful vocalists, and spectacular backdrops transport you to another world. “Fantastic!” says Joy Behar, of ABC’s The View. “If you ever get a chance to see it, you should.” “I probably have reviewed over 3,000 to 4,000 shows since 1942, that still cannot compare to what I saw tonight,” says Richard Connema, Critic for Talkin’ Broadway. “I will give this production 5 stars, that’s the top! The best word to use was ‘mind blowing’!”

JANUARY 15–17

BOB CARR CENTRE “5,000 years of Chinese music and dance in one night!”

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“An extraordinary experience!

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Exquisitely beautiful.”

—Cate Blanchett, Academy Award-winning actress

“So inspiring! I may have found some ideas for the next Avatar movie.” —Robert Stromberg, Academy Award-winning production designer Presented by Florida Falun Dafa Association, Inc.

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Phone: 1) 800-745-3000 (press 0 for a rep) 2) 888-884-6707 Online: 1) Ticketmaster.com (search “Shen Yun”) 2) FLShows.com

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11/16/12 9:08:29 AM


AGENDA • Now’s the Time for You to Go to Universal’s Grinchmas Show

wrote How the Grinch Stole Christmas, he probably could not have imagined that his hilariously heartwarming holiday tale would one day inspire a classic television special, let alone a big-budget feature film. And it’s even less likely that he’d have predicted anything like Universal Orlando’s annual Grinchmas celebration, now headed into its 12th year at Seuss Landing in Islands of Adventure. Like its inspiration, Grinchmas is entertaining in a self-aware (and semi-campy) way. The main event is the Grinchmas Wholiday Spectacular, which retells Seuss’ tale as a stage musical. The approximately half-hour production is performed by actors playing the sinister Grinch, sweetie-pie Cindy Lou Who and golden-throated Martha May, the head of the Whoville decorating committee, among other characters. Everyone’s favorite songs from the TV special – including “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch,” with its snaky melody and clever lyrics, and the lovely, inspirational “Welcome Christmas” – are performed, as are additional tunes includ-

Plan On It 12

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PHOTOS: (LEFT) COURTESY UNIVERSAL ORLANDO; (RIGHT) COURTESY ORLANDO SHAKESPEARE THEATER

FIFTY-FIVE YEARS AGO, WHEN DR. SEUSS

August: Osage County Through Dec. 23 Mad Cow Theatre The Pulitzer Prize-winning play, loosely based on Alexandre Dumas’ Camille , is a dark comedy that revolves around the dying, drugaddled matriarch of a large Oklahoma family. madcowtheatre.com

DECEMBER 2012

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BY JAY BOYAR ing the sultry and seasonal “The Man With the Bag.” As for the show’s original score, it was recorded by that mechanicalsounding musical marvel, Mannheim Steamroller. Immediately following the show, audience members can meet the Grinch and the Whos in person (or whatever they are). You and your kids can also meet them at various times and locations throughout Seuss Landing. And if that’s not enough Grinchiness for you, you can arrange to have breakfast with the great green grouch himself on select dates. (But, no, “roast beast” is not on the menu.) Meanwhile, over at Universal Orlando’s other theme park, Universal Studios Florida, the season will be celebrated in more squarely traditional fashion with Macy’s Holiday Parade, now in its 11th year. The parade is a version of the New York event you’ve seen on TV, with those giant balloons, fantasy floats and Santa himself – who also participates in a post-parade tree-lighting ceremony. Some balloons and floats from the New York parade are not part of the theme-park experience, but it’s a colorful production, anyway. My favorite part of Universal’s holiday celebration is Mannheim Steamroller (them again!), which will perform at Universal Studios Florida. Among the songs on the program are “Carol of the Bells” and “Let It Snow,” the latter accompanied by a snowfall of sorts. The Grinchmas show and the Macy’s parade will be presented Dec. 1 through Jan. 1. Mannheim Steamroller concerts are scheduled for several days this month. All three productions are included in your admission to the respective parks, with an extra charge for that Grinchy breakfast. Whether you choose Grinchmas at Islands of Adventure, the parade and Mannheim Steamroller at Universal Studios Florida, or all three, it’s hard to go wrong. Your heart may not actually grow three sizes, but you should have fun. Visit universalorlando.com/holidays for more information.

The Mysterious Content of Softness Through Dec. 30 Cornell Fine Arts Museum Explore the potential of fiber to “capture the fluidity of life” through the creations of 11 world-class artists who work with fabrics. rollins.edu/cfam WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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Babes in Toyland Dec. 13-16 Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center Mother Goose nursery rhymes are brought to life in this family-friendly, Christmas-themed musical. wdpac.com

Dickens’ Classic Retooled By Funny Farndale Farce OVER THE YEARS I’VE SEEN SO MANY VERSIONS OF

A Christmas Carol that I sometimes forget one important thing about Dickens’ original, 1843 story: It’s funny. Yes, it contains a serious message about how we should live our lives. And, yes, those three ghosts can be a little scary. But Scrooge’s blustery “Bah! Humbug!” is meant to be humorous, and so is much of the tale. The version of the story being staged at Orlando Shakespeare Theater through Dec. 30 is also a comedy, but not in that sophisticated, dark-toned, Dickensian way. The daffiness of the play is hinted at by its preposterously overlong, and insistently prosaic, title: The Farndale Avenue Housing Estate Townswomen’s Guild Dramatic Society’s Production of “A Christmas Carol.” “We just refer to it as Farndale,” says Matt Pfeiffer, the show’s director, with a chuckle. He adds that the play, written by David McGillivray and Walter Zerlin Jr., is not so much a comedy about Dickens’ original as it is a farce that pokes affectionate fun at the foibles of a small-town theater troupe – in this case, a company of marginally talented North London women. Even those of us who have seen numerous versions of A Christmas Carol may find something fresh here. “I like the idea of presenting Dickens’ tale, but presenting it in a way that’s inherently silly,” says Pfeiffer. “What Farndale does is, it shows people attempting to put on A Christmas Carol – but failing miserably at it.” Visit orlandoshakes.org for further information.

A Classic Christmas

Knowles Memorial Chapel Dec. 15-16 A Rollins College holiday tradition features specially arranged seasonal music from the Bach Festival Choir, Orchestra and Youth Choir. bachfestivalflorida.org

The Nutcracker

Bob Carr Performing Arts Centre Dec. 20-23 Orlando Ballet’s version of Tchaikovsky’s tender child-fantasy dreamscape features artistic director Robert Hill’s trademark blend of humor, modernity and reverence for the original’s grandeur. orlandoballet.org

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AGENDA

WHEN CARRIE UNDERWOOD STORMS THE STAGE,

she really storms the stage. In an impressive but largely unnecessary bit of stagecraft, the five-time Grammy-winner is enveloped in a tempest of confetti and smoke as she performs her latest hit single, “Blown Away.” It’s just one of the highlights of the country ingénue’s 2012-13 Blown Away Tour,, which whooshes into the Amway Center Dec. 21. Truth is, Underwood has been blowing away fans all by herself ever since she won Season 4 of American Idol,, going on to become arguably its most successful alum, selling more than 15 million albums and registering 15 hit singles. “In the beginning, it was like, ‘Oh, I have a No. 1. That’s awesome!’ I didn’t really understand what that meant,” Underwood says in her website biography. “I realize now what hard work it actually is, and I feel like I can appreciate those victories even more.” 259 -160 PM DecHomeLeisure.pdf 1 11/9/12 2:11

PM

Underwood, born in Muskogee, Okla., impressed Idol judge Simon Cowell so much in 2004 that he accurately predicted she would not only win the competition but that her recordings would outsell those of all previous winners. Though her songs stay true to her laid-back country roots, Underwood always adds an element of edginess to her music, ever so slightly blurring her good-girl image. Her debut album, Some Hearts, went platinum seven times over and remains the bestselling solo album ever by a female country artist. Underwood went on to make three more albums, Carnival Ride, Play On and her latest release, Blown Away. Hunter Hayes, the so-called “Justin Bieber of country music,” will open for Underwood. Visit amwaycenter.com for information. – Emily Blackwood

PHOTO: COURTESY ORLANDO VENUES

Overachieving Underwood Bearing Down on Amway

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11/16/12 2:33:53 PM


From whimsical to WOW! One of the Top 25 Galleries of American Crafts in North America as voted by American Craft Artists!

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11/16/12 1/12/129:08:53 9:47:23 AM AM


An Icy Menagerie At Gaylord Palms THE CAST OF CHARACTERS CHANGES

the classic Christmas poem, ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas. But there’s a constant: Among the 40 Chinese artisans who travel to Orlando annually to sculpt the figures from predyed slabs of ice in the 20,000-squarefoot installation, the greatest honor is to sculpt a figure that never changes from year to year: an angel. “Every year we have the big Nativity scene,” says Gaylord Palms spokesman Jeff Abbaticchio. “And it’s such an honor for the guy who gets to carve the angel.

That’s considered the most prestigious position. It’s a big deal.” The raw ice building blocks are manufactured and dyed at a Florida factory. The artisans – each arrives with his own set of tools – carve the ice and fuse the blocks into place by melting it with hot water. ICE! opened last month and runs through January 1. Visit gaylordhotels.com for more information. – Emily Blackwood

photo- carlos amoedo | focustudios.com

every year for ICE!, the winter wonderland crafted out of 2 million pounds of just that – ice – which overtakes the Gaylord Palms Resort & Convention Center in Kissimmee every Christmas season. This year it’s the animated animals of the 2009 DreamWorks film Merry Madagascar: Alex the Lion, Marty the Zebra, Gloria the Hippo, Melman the Giraffe and company. In previous years, freeze-frame shows have been inspired by characters from Shrek; the comic-strip cast of Charlie Brown and his pals from Peanuts; and

PHOTO: COURTESY GAYLORD PALMS RESORT & CONVENTION CENTER

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ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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AGENDA

OMA Making Noise with ‘Soundsuit’ “soundsuit” doesn’t mean it comes with speakers – though the latest acquisition on display at the Orlando Museum of Art may speak to you, just the same. Soundsuit, 2011, by Chicago fabric sculptor and performance artist Nick Cave, is a joyous, childlike creation that in and of itself makes a visit to the museum worthwhile. A figure much like a department-store manikin is encircled by a massive, globe-shaped mesh hung with found objects. A pink wig hovers like some ghostly apparition among a riot of beads, plastic flowers, ceramic owls and an antique gramophone. Cave, who is African-American, began making a series of figures such as this one in 1992 as a personal reaction to the Rodney King police brutality scandal. He covered his own face and body with a sculpture of twigs. When he moved, they rustled; hence the name: soundsuit.

That first creation was crafted out of sadness, but the ensuing series of sculptures has developed a broader and often more rambunctious emotional range. Cave creates the soundsuits in a former tire factory, which doubles as his home, on Chicago’s Near North Side. Dancers have donned wearable soundsuits and performed works choreographed by the artist, combining two art forms in impromptu, artistic test-drives. But OMA’s soundsuit won’t be making jetés through the museum any time soon. Cave appeared convinced, on a recent trip to Orlando to explain his creation, that the museum’s resident soundsuit can stand on its own two feet. “This is the world he lives in,” he said of the sculpture, whoever and whatever it represents. “It’s a fabulous place, and he is hidden within it.” Visit oma.org for more information. – Michael McLeod

PHOTO: COURTESY ORLANDO MUSEUM OF ART

JUST BECAUSE IT’S CALLED A

JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH, ARGUABLY WESTERN

music’s greatest composer, is inarguably among its most prolific. Even with several hundred works lost to history, more than 1,000 of his compositions have survived. Bach, who died in 1750, spent his last 27 years in Leipzig, Germany, where his primary job was composing liturgical music for the town’s four largest churches while teaching music at a church school. But he also had an important secular job: hosting chamber music concerts at a wellknown Leipzig coffeehouse. Bach was responsible for more than 500 two-hour performances at Zimmermann’s Coffeehouse, leading a mix of professional and amateur musicians in his own works as well as those of other composers he admired. Audiences “came to know Bach 18

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as an entertainer, an inventive programmer, and even a dramatic humorist,” says Christopher Wilkins, music director of the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra. Wilkins will conduct the Philharmonic’s chamber music orchestra in a Bach’s Coffeehouse performance at the Orlando Shakespeare Center’s Margeson Theater on Dec. 10. In addition to a couple of Brandenburg Concertos and a “Coffee Cantata” from the master himself, the program features a trio of baroque composers Bach favored: George Philipp Telemann, Pietro Locatelli and, especially, Antonio Vivaldi, “whose music played an important role in the development of Bach’s own style,” Wilkins says. Visit orlandophil.org for more information. – Harry Wessel

PHOTO: COURTESY ORLANDO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

Orlando Phil’s Chamber Orchestra Brews Up Some Bach

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A FEW MOMENTS WITH

Christopher Wilkins is a study in concentration as he conducts the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra. The itinerant music director announced earlier this year that he’ll leave the Philharmonic in 2014. 20

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Have Baton, Will Travel

PHOTO: JEFF ADAMS

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The Orlando Phil’s frequent flyer reflects on his seemingly endless musical journey. ike many world-class con-

ductors, Christopher Wilkins is a migrant worker. Apart from his post as Music Director of the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra over the past six years, he holds the same position with the Akron Symphony and the Boston Landmarks Orchestra, serves as Music Advisor to the Opera Theatre of the Rockies in Colorado Springs and is one of six finalists vying to lead the Charleston Symphony Orchestra. He served past lengthy stints as Music Director of the San Antonio Symphony and the Colorado Springs Philharmonic. During his Orlando workweeks, Wilkins, 55, lives in the Maitland home of an Orlando Phil volunteer. But his home base is Columbus, Ohio, where his daughter, Julia, attends Ohio State University’s School of Public Health. His son, Jimmy, who hopes to become a professional skateboarder, lives in San Diego and attends Full Sail University as an online student in computer animation. Wilkins, who announced earlier this year that he will leave the Orlando Philharmonic when his contract expires in August 2014, spoke with Orlando Home & Leisure about his time in Orlando and his life as a conductor. Can you listen to a favorite classical piece without moving your arms?

[Laughs.] I can. I can sit there perfectly still and in utter rapture at the same time. But, it’s also nice to move.

with a possibility of adding a fourth. Is there a limit to how many orchestras one conductor can simultaneously lead?

Do you practice conducting?

There’s sort of an international code that’s quite universally recognized. I could go to Korea, speak no Korean and give gestures that the orchestra in Seoul would understand perfectly well. It has to do with indicating the meter – the organization of the beats, what number of the beat we’re on at any given time. And rhythm, cueing, dynamics – how loud and soft. That’s about it. The rest is black magic.

Oh, absolutely. It’s a limit defined both by the orchestra and by the conductor. From the orchestra’s point of view, the question is both the quantity and quality of time together. From the conductor’s point of view, we’re like other musicians: If you’re a violinist, you don’t want to put your violin down and play it only once a month. Staying involved, keeping the juices flowing, is essential. It’s a kind of balance from both sides of the equation. Having said that, my orchestra in Boston is just a summer orchestra, so it’s not really a matter of conflicting schedules. The Akron and the Orlando orchestras have roughly similar levels of activity, but we’re able to plan far enough out in advance that I don’t feel they’re in conflict at all. And there have been some advantages: We’ve been able to share some productions, some commissions of new work. The Norman Rockwell collaboration with the Orlando Museum of Art [in 2008], for example, was actually a four-way project between both orchestras and both museums. The Akron Museum was the first stop on that Norman Rockwell tour.

You’re currently leading three major orchestras in three different cities,

You’ve played professionally as an oboist. Do you still practice the oboe?

Not really. You can’t really do that without an orchestra, which ends up being your instrument. Conducting has much less to do with waving the baton than it does with study and preparation. It requires intensive listening, and you can’t do that without an orchestra. What you can do is the studying part, and 90 percent of conducting is actually preparation for that first rehearsal. That’s how I spend my time, and it’s something I think is probably little understood by concertgoers. Are there rules when it comes to conducting, like which hand movement means what?

by Harry Wessel

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Wilkins leads the Orlando Philharmonic, backed by The Orlando Chorale, The Opera Chorus and the University of Central Florida Chorus, in a rousing 2011 performance of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony.

On rare occasions, but my jobs currently keep me really occupied around the clock. I’m never not working, and the oboe in particular is rather tough to keep going as a side act. It’s sort of a technical issue, but it’s almost impossible to pick up the oboe for just an hour a day because you have to constantly make reeds.

and oboe at the age of 8. I’ve studied other instruments along the way, but those were the primary ones. The oboe was my main instrument, but I play the piano considerably more than the oboe now, because it’s useful to do so.

Was that your childhood instrument?

A photo of you conducting the Orlando Philharmonic shows your face in intense concentration. What’s going through your head at such moments?

I started piano lessons at the age of 5,

I’m listening intensely. In the end that

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is what conducting is about: listening so intensely that you cause the orchestra to listen better. If you can do that, they will become an ensemble. Conducting is much less active than people imagine. It’s not about doing, so much as being present to what’s happening and lining that up against your vision. You have a certain vision for how you think you want it to go, which is completely based on how you think the composer wanted it to go. And that’s what happens in performance. You recently conducted a concert with the Akron Symphony featuring the

PHOTO: DAVIS WHITFIELD

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music of ABBA. Isn’t such pop music a bit pedestrian for a serious classical musician?

Oh, no. We’re all working with same 12 notes and most of the same chords. Music is a way to celebrate what’s best in life, and there are lots of different ways to do that. It’s true that the purpose of ABBA and the purpose of a Mahler symphony are utterly different. The purpose of an ABBA song has largely to do with feeling good in the moment, with emotions that are quite basic and usually not very complicated; there’s only so far you can get into it in three minutes. The purpose of a Mahler symphony is to reveal the deepest secrets of life, on every plane. That’s why it takes 90 minutes. They just have different goals, but I wouldn’t say one is better than the other or of higher quality or more profound. Still, there’s good and bad music in every genre. Are there pop groups you particularly admire?

I love The Beatles. Maybe what I love best is that combination of inevitability and surprise, the fact that every Beatles song has a little bit of a different take and yet sounds as if it’s always existed. That’s a sign of greatness. I’ve done a lot of pops music over the years. I’ve been involved every year with the Orlando Philharmonic’s pops program, and with all my orchestras I’ve done that. This spring we’ll do music of James Taylor at The Springs [in Longwood]. I love James Taylor; I love Paul Simon; that’s an era I grew up with. I’ve also done shows with classic rock. Certain types of songs blend extremely well with a symphony orchestra. Some get all messy and confused, but when you find the right song, like “A Whiter Shade of Pale,” and cut the orchestra loose, there’s nothing like it. I’ve also done a gospel concert in Akron every year for the last seven years, WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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A FEW MOMENTS WITH

and that’s been a fabulous experience. I also love the classic Broadway shows. There was a time when orchestras were a fixture in Broadway houses. The classic Jerome Kern, Richard Rodgers, even George Gershwin shows had orchestras in the pit. We’ve had a wonderful time in Orlando performing some of these classic Broadway shows, I would say even beyond the way they were originally intended, which was for small theater orchestras. We’re giving them a kind of grandeur in the Bob Carr [Performing Arts Centre] by putting a symphony orchestra underneath these glorious scores. It’s obvious what you’ve devoted your life to, but do you have any interests that have nothing to do with music?

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I love to travel, and I get to do a lot of travel in my profession. I’ve spent a lot of time in the Rocky Mountains, both in Colorado Springs and Salt Lake City, and I love a lot of the mountain sports. I did a lot of skiing, a lot of hiking. I learned how to fly fish when I was living out there, and I really enjoy that. Neither of your children appears to be heading for a career in music. Did you try to steer them toward music when they were growing up?

Their mother and I were intent on giving them exposure to lots of different things. They both studied violin in grade school. My son went on to play some guitar, and he still plays some guitar. My daughter did dance. But for whatever reason they both wound up

being athletes. The music didn’t take, but that’s fine. Did you play any sports as a kid?

I did a little of everything. I was actually fairly small until I finally had my growth spurt in the middle of high school. I played football and hockey but would get knocked around a lot. Then, after I broke my third bone, I gravitated more toward the racket sports. Tennis, anyone?

I haven’t played tennis in ages. I do yoga on a fairly regular basis. That’s become more my means of exercise. And conducting itself is pretty terrific exercise. Although you still have two full seasons with the Orlando Philharmonic

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Christopher Wilkins

to complete, a search is under way for your replacement. How does it feel to be a lame duck?

[Laughs.] Well, I’ve got a lot of wonderful concerts and activities to look forward to, and I can look back at some fabulous times with the orchestra. I’ve really enjoyed the musical performances on every level, but also the innovative things that we’ve been able to do, partly because of the rather unique nature of the Philharmonic itself, and also because of the community of Orlando. It’s so deep in talent, especially the singing, acting, dancing type of talent that the theme parks have attracted. On top of that, UCF is doing an amazing job of training singing performers, and many of the other local schools are, too. It’s with certainly a tinge of regret but also a great deal of satisfaction that I look back at the years in Orlando.

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Do you plan to stay connected to Orlando after your departure?

We’ll see how it all plays out. I probably have more friends in Orlando than I do in any other city I’ve worked in. I know in some way I’ll stay connected with them. I’ll also want to spend time in Florida itself, at the beach and in some of the incredible natural settings. I’ve enjoyed canoeing, for example, in Blue Springs and some of those other beautiful spots. I’m sure I’ll stay connected in some way. l WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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DESIGN STYLE

Home (Décor) for the Holidays by Laura Bluhm photographs by Rafael Tongol

W

hen Francia Fusic was asked to deco-

rate a client’s living room and dining room for the holidays, she had a pretty good idea what direction she needed to take. Fusic, owner-operator of All in One Decorating Solutions, had redesigned the same home for the same client three years ago, changing its overall look from Old World to Contemporary. Her task, then, was to find decorative elements that would match the clean, airy style the owners had requested in the redesign. For the living room, she decided to use simple silvers, pewters and mercury glass, punctuating the metallic hues with just one red stocking and one burgundy stocking hung on the mantle. “This is a color pallet that brings simplicity and a touch of elegance to a room,” says Fusic. For the dining room, where seasonal entertainment would be taking place, she chose warmer tones – oranges, reds and golds. Cast aluminum speakeasy round tray, $49.50; jewelcut cocktail shaker, $39.50; jewel-cut martini glasses, set of four, $49.50; gold sequin star, $10.50 (top). Noël bronze-finish stocking holders, $99 for the set; white feather owl, $12.50; stockings, $19.50 each (bottom).

All living room items are from Pottery Barn, The Mall at Millenia. All dining room items are from Neiman Marcus, The Mall at Millenia. 26

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Fireplace

NoĂŤl bronze-finish stocking holders, $99 for the set; white feather owl, $12.50; silver bay leaf trees: medium, $89, large, $99; clear glass angels: small, $24.50, large, $29.50; white and gold pillar candleholders, $59 each; beaded birch pillar candle, $29.50; silver bay leaf tree: small, $69; stockings, $19.50 each.

Coffee table

Jeweled crystal twig tree, $69; cast aluminum speakeasy round tray, $49.50; jewel-cut cocktail shaker, $39.50, jewel-cut martini glasses and jewelcut double old-fashioned glasses, both $49.50 for a set of four; gold sequin star, $10.50; decanter, $29.50; antique mercury glass trees: small, $12.50, medium, $29.50, large, $39.50; etched mercury glass pillar holder, $79; metallic bark pillar candle, $29.50; etched mercury glass vase (large), $99.

Table in window

Etched mercury glass pillar holder, $79; metallic bark pillar candle, $29.50; antique mercury globe (large), $26.50; twig metal reindeers: small, $19.50, medium, $29.50, large, $39. Available at Pottery Barn, The Mall at Millenia.

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DESIGN STYLE

Etched mercury glass vase (large), $99; etched mercury glass pillar holder, $79; metallic bark pillar candle, $29.50; antique mercury glass trees: large, $39.50, medium, $29.50, small, $12.50; antique mercury globes: large, $26.50, small, $16.50 (below).

Blue-glitter glass pine cone ornament, $10.50; silver bay leaf tree (small), $69 (right).

Silver bay leaf trees: large, $99, medium, $89; clear glass angels: large, $29.50, small, $24.50 (below). Available at Pottery Barn, The Mall at Millenia.

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Serving area, front of table

Parchment Check enamel butterhouse, by MacKenzieChilds, $75; gold coral charger, by Kim Seybert, $54; olive-branch wood serving bowl with fork and spoon, $99; triple compartment dish, $159; and pomegranate salt and pepper shakers, $99; all by Michael Aram.

Center of table

Parchment Check mug, $115; teacup, $115; saucer, $75; all by MacKenzieChilds; napkin, $30; coral napkin ring, $20; both by Kim Seybert; Parchment Check dinner plate, by MacKenzie-Childs, $115; gold-rimmed clear charger, handmade by Annieglass, $97; iron charger, $108; short cone glass with leaf embellished and brown wooden base, $76; tall goblet with leaf embellished and brown wooden base, $96; tumbler, $40; tall iron candlestick, $260; short iron candlestick, $250; all by Jan Barboglio; centerpiece flower arrangement, by Diane James, $595; gold and silver mesh table runner, by Chilewich, $57; coral and gold table runner, medium length, by Kim Seybert, $420. Available at Neiman Marcus, The Mall at Millenia.

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DESIGN STYLE

Gold-beaded charger, by Kim Seybert, $75; black olivebranch wine rest, by Michael Aram, $98; bouquets, by Diane James, range from $230 for small arrangements to $495 for large arrangements; stemware is the designer’s own (right).

Parchment Check teacup, $115; saucer, $75; both by MacKenzie-Childs; napkin, $30; coral napkin ring, $20; both by Kim Seybert; Parchment Check dinner plate, by MacKenzieChilds, $115; gold-rimmed clear charger, handmade by Annieglass, $97; iron charger, by Jan Barboglio, $108; short cone glass with leaf embellished and brown wooden base, $76; tall goblet with leaf embellished and brown wooden base, $96; both by Jan Barboglio; gold and silver mesh table runner, by Chilewich, $57; coral and gold table runner, medium length, by Kim Seybert, $420 (left). Available at Neiman Marcus, The Mall at Millenia.

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DECEMBER 2012

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Gold-rimmed sauce bowl, handmade by Annieglass, $58; olive-branch gold-plate and black-granite cheese board with knife, by Michael Aram, $119 (right).

Olive-branch triple compartment dish, $159; salt and pepper shakers with holder, $99; pomegranate salt and pepper shakers, $99; all by Michael Aram (left).

HOLIDAY DECORATING TIPS FROM FRANCIA FUSIK

Arrange items in groupings to create a point of interest. Take scale and proportion into consideration. For dramatic effect, use tall candleholders and oversized candles. Use different finishes of decorative metallic elements in the same room. Choose a color scheme in advance of everything you do. Color should flow and shift from room to room. WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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DO Have GOOD. Fun. Welcome to Philanthropy 2.0 by Michael McLeod • photographs by Rafael Tongol 32

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DECEMBER 2012

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I

magine having a beer with

“the most interesting man in the world” – the bearded, über-confident international adventurer played by actor Jonathan Goldsmith in those “Stay thirsty, my friend” commercials. Now take it up a notch or two. You’re chatting with Barbra Streisand over dinner. Or taking a few acting lessons from Ben Stiller. Or bouncing ideas for a new superhero epic back and forth with comic-book icon Stan Lee. That’s not fantasy. That’s philanthropy. It’s all within the realm of possibility for anyone with a charitable soul and a bank account to back it up, from a few hundred dollars to $25,000 or more – all to be contributed to a worthy cause. Celebrity encounters represent just a few of the options that are available 24/7 at Charity Buzz (charitybuzz.com), a fundraising site where dozens of nonprofit causes offer vacations, merchandise and face time with assorted luminaries in exchange for your generosity. The site represents several recent trends in nonprofit fundraising. It’s

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Patrons of the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra gather at the Isleworth home of John and Audrey Ruggieri for a “Behind the Curtain” event featuring face time with Executive Director David Schillhammer (above) and a chance to meet – and listen to – soloists such as soprano Twyla Robinson (left).

creative. It’s engaging. It makes use of a social media resource instead of the traditional hotel-ballroom fundraiser. And most of all: It’s personal. Of the $300 billion that was donated to nonprofit organizations in the U.S. last year, only 5 percent came from cor-

porations. The rest came either from individuals or from foundations and bequests set up by individuals. As governmental and corporate generosity shrinks, nonprofit organizations are adapting accordingly, with an array of fresh, tempting, one-on-one appeals directed at a new generation of givers. These days, even time-honored tools such as the collection basket are in danger of being phased out by digital alternatives such as mycharitybox.com, which allows donors to contribute online. Tyger Danger is an account executive with Uproar PR Orlando, which works ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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with a number of small, local charities to help them raise awareness about themselves and connect with a new generation of contributors. “We’re not necessarily sitting in a church pew when we’re inspired to give these days,” says Danger, whose father is a Lutheran minister. “We might just see a video online that touches us.” But whether they’re reaching for their cell or their checkbook, the key to connecting contributors with causes these days is engagement. That’s why charity golf tournaments drive Emily Furlong crazy. “My husband goes off to play in one of those things, and when he comes back I ask him what the charity was. He can’t tell me,” says Furlong, senior program manager at the Rollins College Philanthropy and Nonprofit Research Center. The center’s mission is to help charitable organizations raise funds effectively. “Today’s donors need that personal satisfaction that tells them they have made a difference in the world,” she says. “That’s the reward. That’s what the generation that’s coming up now is looking for.” Ideally, Furlong says, a charity event should be connected as intimately as Florida Opera Theatre’s Robin Stamper (above) accompanies bass-baritone Peter Strummer (left), who sang the role of Dr. Bartolo in the Phil’s production of Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro, in a private performance for boosters. Co-founders Paul Till and Sean Siepler (right) developed Clean the World, a shrewdly conceived Orlando nonprofit company that sanitizes and reconditions leftover hotel-room soap bars and donates them to remote, impoverished or disaster-struck communities. 34

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DECEMBER 2012

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possible to the cause itself – like a recent marathon on behalf of a Pensacola children’s hospital where the photos of young patients were posted at all 26 mile markers to remind participants of why they were running – and who was benefiting from their efforts. Glamour and glitz have long been a staple of charity balls stocked with inspirational speakers, guests decked out in formal attire and silent-auction treasures. That’s not going to change anytime soon. But there, too, you can find examples of events that offer fewer frills in favor of being tied more organically to the cause itself. The Neanderthal Ball, the Orlando Science Center’s annual fundraiser, is a prime example. Not only is the ball anything but black tie – guests are invited to come up with ensembles that owe more to Fred and Wilma Flintstone than Guccio Gucci and Coco Chanel – it takes place at the Science Center itself. It’s definitely the only charity ball in town where you can not only sample delectable hors d’oeuvres but inspect 3 millionyear-old hominid skulls while a volunteer walks you through the differences between homo africanis and homo habilis. “We make science fun. That’s what we do. It’s in our DNA,” says Jeff Stanford, the Center’s vice president of development. “It just makes sense for us to tie the event to our mission.” It makes sense for the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra, too, where a donor might make a contribution in exchange for having a glass of wine and a brief conversation with a guest conductor such as JoAnn Falletta. Lory Lippert and Even Hyatt (above, left) illustrate the latest in cave-dweller couture at the Orlando Science Center’s Neanderthal Ball, while Chris Hurst and Nabil May (left, with Heidi Hurst) sport prehistoric hairstyles. 36

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Philharmonic supporters also arrange a series of intimate gatherings each year, usually held in private homes, where donors are entertained by musicians performing selections from upcoming concerts. But there are plenty of donors out there who don’t mind rolling up their sleeves to participate in a humble but eminently noble cause – especially if it’s based on an idea that’s so specific and ingenious that you can’t help but pick it out of the crowd. No need to look too far from home for examples. Feeding Children Everywhere is an Orlando-based charity founded two years ago by a former contractor and youth pastor, Don Campbell. His organization ships casserole mix packages consisting of lentils, dehydrated vegetables, rice and a special mineral-rich salt to underprivileged families around the world. So far, 1.2 million meals have been provided. Dozens of volunteers assemble regularly at Campbell’s makeshift assembly line to weigh the ingredients for the casseroles and seal them in plastic bags for shipping. Clean the World is an Orlando-based nonprofit organization that recycles those tiny hotel-room soap bars and sends them to where they are needed most – particularly in third-world countries where the availability of soap can save lives. More than 2 million children die each year from illnesses that could be prevented if their parents had access to something we take for granted and thoughtlessly discard. Orlando entrepreneur Sean Siepler, who had been trying to come up with ideas for a green-oriented business, was actually staying in a hotel room when the inspiration to salvage hotel room soap bars hit him. Three-and-a-half years later, Siepler’s and co-founder Paul Till’s operation, based in Orlando and Las Vegas, has sent 11½ million bars of soap out to communities in 55 countries, including the U.S. – most recently to victims of Hurricane Sandy. WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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Dozens of volunteers turn up each week at a downtown Orlando processing center, wielding potato peelers to strip the soap bars of paper and residue so they can be processed and shipped. They’re drawn there by what is, in the end, the most powerful element of all in the philanthropical universe: the simple, straightforward power of a worthy cause. l Jacqui Potter and Gary Potter bone up on prehistoric formal wear in a Neanderthal Ball fashion contest judged by ageless social-scene matriarch Harriet Lake. ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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New-home trends include smarter space, upgraded technology and far greater value.

This backyard transformation included the addition of a covered porch extension and a covered outdoor living room with a summer kitchen, a spa, a water feature and a raised lap pool surrounded by new landscaping. With an outdoor living area, you can increase your home’s usable space without the cost of construction. This project was created by Farina & Sons and Lucia Custom Home Designs. 38

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Photo: everett & soulé

M

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by Randy Noles any boom-era buyers accepted less than they truly wanted. Homes were pricey, supplies were short and no one was eager to be left

behind when it seemed that a home – almost any home, really – was about the best and most lucrative investment you could make. Now, many of those buyers find themselves stuck in homes they don’t love, homes that may be worth less than they owe. Yet, as a nation we haven’t soured on home ownership. It remains the American Dream, even if that dream has been tempered by reality. People are still willing to buy, and want to buy. But they’re no longer willing to overspend, and are less willing to compromise or settle for a home that doesn’t measure up to their expectations. Builders realize this, and are more sensitive than ever to changing expectations and skittish attitudes. They are, after all, now required to satisfy a far more discerning market. Consequently, those who make their living designing, building and decorating homes spend considerable time and resources trying to figure out what buyers want – and how to deliver it at an acceptable price. Clearly, pampering amenities, bold colors, open floorplans, outdoor living areas and energy-efficient construction have supplanted sheer square footage in desirability, as far as buyers are concerned. But that’s not all. Smaller and smarter is important, but buyers seem to be developing very specific ideas about everything, from such big-picture concepts as neighborhood design to such small but significant details as kitchen and bath fixtures and finishes. Orlando Home & Leisure discussed new-home trends for 2013 with a wide network of local industry pros. The story on the following pages summarizes their opinions and those of national experts and trend-spotters. the popularity of such neotraditional enclaves as Celebration and Baldwin Park, NEIGHBORHOODS Buyers want eclectic styles, walkability as well as the newer Horizon West and and amenities. Whether the target marLaureate Park projects. ket is Generation X, Generation Y or a As far as amenities are concerned, buyers mix of baby boomers and younger firstwant perks that enhance their enjoyment timers, the most appealing communities of life and allow them to play near where are conveniently located and offer a varithey live. That means resort-style water ety of housing types. parks, playgrounds and tot lots, hiking In fact, if one thing about real estate and biking trails, community clubhouses, has remained constant through boom and wellness centers and sports fields are bigger bust, it’s that buyers still rank location, loselling points than ever before. cation, location at the top of the list when Infill development, in established resilooking for new homes, followed by ardential neighborhoods or gentrified urchitectural style and price range. ban areas, is also gaining in popularity. Buyers are also attracted to safe, walkOne reason: Close-in projects are likely able neighborhoods with plenty of open already near such conveniences as parks, space and nearby town centers that offer shopping, schools and medical facilities, retail and professional services – hence as well as entertainment venues and emORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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cializing in planning master-planned communities. “The street is an amenity. How do you enhance the street experience?”

Ashton Woods Homes’ “Big Red,” located in burgeoning Laureate Park near Lake Nona’s Medical City, is attracting attention for its whimsical color scheme and its surprising design, which has been likened to a Midwestern barn. This popular master-planned community, a relative newcomer, combines a broad range of home design styles with the coziness and convenience of its local predecessors, including Celebration and Baldwin Park.

ployment centers. Most older neighborhoods feature homes in eclectic architectural styles and a variety of price points. Likewise, new developments are also offering an assortment of housing types, appealing to multiple buyer segments. 40

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In short: Buyers are increasingly turned off by cookie-cutter subdivisions. They expect the view from the street to be interesting and original. “It’s important to focus on streets as part of the open space amenities,” says Tony Weremeichik of Canin Associates, an architectural firm spe-

Simplicity is back and curb appeal matters. Less cluttered facades are not only cleaner and more visually appealing, they’re also less expensive to build. That’s why today’s designers often operate using the KESS principle: Keep Elevations Simple and Smart. Locally, Phil Kean of Phil Kean Designs has been a leading proponent of the KESS approach. His Winter Park home, Via Palermo, which was Orlando Home & Leisure’s 2012 Home of the Year, is a relatively modest 3,280 square feet with a sleek, mid-century exterior that exudes a Zen-like calm. Kean used the same retro styling on his 2012 New American Home, also built on an infill lot in Winter Park. The home, which was showcased during the International Builders Show sponsored by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB), is also notable for its clean lines and emphasis on open space and technology over ornamentation. Enhancements can be accomplished inexpensively using landscaping and bolder exterior colors. Bi- and tri-colored paint palettes, for example, provide variety and enhance curb appeal – and can be changed at a later date without embarking on a major remodeling project. Although Kean’s ultra-modern designs represent the leading edge, simplicity is finding its way into even the most traditional architectural genres. Transitional styles, which draw heavily from familiar looks while incorporating some modern twists, are on the rise. Laureate Park, near Lake Nona’s Medical City, is an example of a project in which the homes mix Norman Rockwellian elements with high-tech materials and technologies. Mixed-material accents have become more popular lately, although unnecessary

Photos: (top left) courtesy laureate park; (bottom Left) courtesy ashton woods homes; (right) courtesy central kitchen & bath

HOME EXTERIORS

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cosmetic elements, such as faux dormers and extra gables, are passé. Gingerbread adds cost but doesn’t enhance function. “Clients want exterior design that has interesting movement and lines, but without all the twists, turns and unusual spaces that overdone design creates,” says Jorge Ulibarri of Jorge Ulibarri Custom Home Builder, who specializes in Old World European showplaces. Mediterranean architecture, long a Florida mainstay, remains popular but is being challenged for supremacy by such styles as West Indies, English Cottage and Prairie-style. Also, more attention is being paid to entryways, particularly doors, which come in a variety of styles and colors and offer outsized visual impact. Buyers want their homes to be unique, not just a slightly modified version of the home next door. That’s why even production builders, some of whom previously employed a one-plan-fits-all philosophy, are offering more liberal customization options.

Photos: (left) NEED CREDIT; (right) courtesy central kitchen & bath

FLOORPLANS It’s back to basics in floorplans, with the trend shifting toward more efficient use of space rather than vast expanses of square footage that have no practical use. “I think that people right now are trying to get the most value out of their home as possible,” says Greg Hardwick of Hardwick General Contracting. Hardwick, who’s also president of the Home Builders Association of Metro Orlando (HBA), builds custom homes and tackles remodeling projects. “From a design standpoint, buyers are open to using materials and products that can get them the square footage and the floorplan they’re looking for within their budget,” Hardwick adds. Ulibarri agrees: “Clients want practical, functional space as opposed to the voluminous, showy square footage of the past. As a result, formal living rooms are WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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Contemporary kitchens, with high-sheen appliances and fixtures and sleek lines, are becoming more popular. People who own more traditionally themed homes, however, often opt for transitional styles, which marry contemporary and traditional elements. This kitchen was designed by Central Kitchen & Bath.

disappearing from floorplans, replaced by grand family rooms. Some clients also are eliminating formal dining rooms, opting instead for dining/breakfast nook areas.” What’s in: smaller, smarter floorplans; larger everyday rooms; and simply designed house shapes. What’s out: unnecessary luxury features; seldom-used formal rooms and excess square footage added simply for the sake of resale value. Gone are the days of boxy rooms with squared off walls and limited views. Today’s homes should create the illusion of expanded indoor space by using sliding or retractable doors and pass-through areas. And a seamless transition between indoor and outdoor living areas can increase usable space without building more square footage. “Some of my clients are moving from the Northeast, where they’re used to having small cubicle rooms,” says Jim Lucia of Lucia Custom Home Designers. Lucia designs new homes for private clients and custom builders, and retrofits older homes for improved energy efficiency. “What they really want to see is a radical departure from what they had in the past,” Lucia adds. “That means less walls, more space.” And “space” no longer refers to just interior space. Outdoor living areas are

getting almost as much attention as indoor living areas these days. “No matter what style of house I’m working on, I like to integrate the outside and the inside,” says Kean. “I think it warms up a contemporary space when you can bring in surroundings.” New, more durable fabrics mean outdoor furnishings can be as stylish and comfortable as indoor furnishings. “I’m talking about a new breed of outdoor living, where the finishes, fixtures and décor match the interior,” says Ulibarri. “Outdoor living areas in the past were completely distinct with defined themes, and weren’t necessarily in synch with the interiors.” And the sky’s the limit as far as equipping summer kitchens, the most elaborate of which would wow any gourmet chef. Commercial-quality gas ranges and cooktops, rotisserie systems, extra-deep burner boxes, stainless-steel sinks and cabinetry, wood-burning stoves, wet bars and, of course, refrigerators are manufactured specifically for outdoor use. Even weatherproof high-definition televisions can enhance the outdoor living experience. And don’t forget the pool, which is the centerpiece of most outdoor living areas. Kidney and lagoon shapes are giving way to simpler, elongated designs that lend ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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ermo by Phil Kean Designs (above), reflects a trend toward simple, unadorned design with a mid-century attitude. Centerline Homes’ Generation X concept home (facing page) showcases a transitional style, taking elements of Mediterranean architecture but limiting unnecessary adornments to make the look cleaner and more streamlined.

themselves to lap swimming for exercise. Social features such as swim-up seating and water platforms for sunbathing also increase a pool’s usefulness. Also, buyers are asking for more storage space. Garages, for example, should be big enough to hold bikes, kayaks and sports equipment as well as vehicles. But garage doors shouldn’t dominate a home’s facade. A standard 18- or 19-foot-wide garage is no longer adequate for many buyers. There simply isn’t enough room, and vehicles end up stowed on the street, thereby making an otherwise lovely residential thoroughfare resemble a parking lot. Closet and pantry organizational systems also help buyers get maximum use from the space they’re buying. And to cut down on clutter, builders and designers are creating “drop zones” where shoes, backpacks and other items can be stowed on benches and in lockers. Flexible spaces are also in demand. A home office, for example, can convert 42

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into a bedroom; a laundry room can double as pet suite, with feeding and sleeping areas for furry family members. Floorplans that include guest bedrooms with private entryways are increasing in popularity because of the trend toward multigenerational living. In the kitchen, space for multiple functions – eating, gathering and cooking – is important. Family-sized kitchen islands and breakfast nooks with lots of seating allows family and friends to gather comfortably. Technology is a must throughout the home. Not only for energy efficiency but also for security systems and the ability to monitor and control home mechanical systems from a PC or a Smart Phone.

KITCHENS Central Florida has generally been a traditional market, and Tuscan- and New England-style homes don’t lend themselves to sleek contemporary kitchens. But that’s changing, say local experts.

“We’re doing more contemporary kitchens than we’ve ever done in Orlando,” says Rick Caccavello of Central Kitchen & Bath. “The minimalist look is really growing.” Caccavello adds that owners of more traditionally themed homes, in which a gleaming ultra-modern kitchen would look out of place, are often opting for transitional styles that incorporate contemporary touches with enough traditional elements to keep the overall look more consistent. Julie Collier of Signature Kitchens agrees: “The style is definitely more contemporary. There is more appeal for slab doors, veneers and laminates. People are leaning toward cleaner lines and less embellishments.” Cherry cabinets used to be the gold standard, but designers are now using other woods, such as walnut, birch, bamboo or alder. And new, more durable and more attractive laminates are coming on strong and finding their way into the most upscale homes. Light natural finishes on cabinets are also falling out of favor. Among painted cabinets, white continues to be the most popular option, with distressed finishes often preferred in traditional kitchens. A nice backsplash can tie any kitchen together. Interestingly, however, the most popular material right now is not tile, as you might expect, but glass. Glass pro-

Photos: (left) uneek luxury tours; (right) courtesy canin associates

This year’s Orlando Home & Leisure Home of the Year, the Via Pal-

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Photos: (left) uneek luxury tours; (right) courtesy canin associates

vides a sheen that meshes with another trend: surfaces – and even appliances – that carry a polished high gloss. Other commonly used backsplash materials include natural stone tile, ceramic, granite and quartz. Granite and quartz are popular because those same materials are also frequently used for countertops. Caccavello says Carrara marble, with its distinctive white or blue-gray surface, is coming back in kitchens because modern sealers have made it less prone to staining. With colors, gray, white and off-white continue to be the most popular color kitchen hues. Other hot colors include beige and “bone.” Caccavello notes that brighter, more splashy colors, such as green and orange, are being used to accent the grays and beiges. After years of losing the popularity contest to brushed metal finishes, polished chrome and bronze finishes are on their way back, at least in contemporary kitchens where a high sheen is preferred. As for lighting, LEDs are more expensive than traditional bulbs at the outset, but they’re also more efficient and can save money on energy bills in the long run. Compact fluorescent lights (CFLs) don’t fare as well, despite using roughly one-quarter of the energy of an incandescent bulb, due mostly to the poor quality of light they emit and the presence of mercury inside the bulbs. WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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BATHROOMS In master bathrooms, oversized soaker tubs are out. Today’s homes feature large, luxurious showers with multiple showerheads, rain heads and spa jets. The tried-and-true medicine cabinet had been swept aside over the past several years, replaced by decorative wall mirrors. However, as homeowners seek more efficient use of space, designers are now using this old reliable bathroom staple as a means of gaining additional storage without the need for separate shelving or cabinetry. Pool bathrooms are being built with floors that double as drains, which makes the space ideal for changing out of wet bathing suits. And kids’ bathrooms are being fitted with “helper steps” at the sink, which allows easier access and fewer messes.

GREEN BUILDING Like “all-natural” in the food industry, the terms “green” and “eco-friendly” have been used quite a bit in marketing materials. Consequently, certifying organizations have been formed to set standards and help consumers separate reality from hype. The Florida Green Building Coalition has developed green certification programs that apply to homes as well as commercial buildings, land development and even local governments. In addition, NAHB offers a Certified

Green Professional (CGP) designation, which recognizes builders, remodelers and other industry pros who incorporate green building principles into homes. You can find a directory of CGP designees online at nahb.org. “Net-zero” homes, while not as common, take green building a step further and actually generate more energy than they consume. “Watching a power meter run in reverse is really a gratifying experience in an era of high energy prices,” says Lucia, who has built one net-zero home in Central Florida and has another one under construction. But not every buyer is willing to go entirely green. “Clients are building with tighter budgets these days because they don’t want to invest all of their net worth into their home after experiencing the housing bust,” says Ulibarri. “Many green features cost extra upfront. Clients still want energy-efficient appliances, windows, and heating and air systems. Those green features are affordable, but other green features are still considered upgrades in most budgets and therefore not essential.” All in all, efficiency and technology – combined with depressed but slowly rebounding prices – are making homes a better value than ever. Best of all, no matter the price range, you no longer have to settle for a home that isn’t absolutely right for you. l ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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Walking into a closet that’s cluttered and stacked to the rafters with things you don’t need or use is no way to live. The first thing you need to do is to get rid of everything that doesn’t pertain to the life you want to lead. If it’s old, tired, worn out or if it just doesn’t match your vision, it’s time for it to go. Once you’ve pared down your belongings, you can get to work redesigning your closet space with fashion and luxury in mind. Vertical partitions break up your eye line and prevent you from seeing the big picture. Emphasize long, clean, horizontal lines. This will eliminate visual clutter and make your closet seem more spacious. Stack your clothing in smaller piles to keep it from toppling over. Leaving space between the stacks will make them easier to peruse and make morning dressing a breeze. Certain colors feel more elegant than others. Dark colors, like the Venetian Wenge finish shown in the image above, draw you in with their warmth and richness. Smooth, bronze finishes are associated with luxury, so consider accenting door handles and faces with bronze tones. Adding spot lighting, such as puck lights, will make it seem as though your clothes are being displayed in a boutique. It’s simple, but makes an exponential difference. With the right details, your closet design can create a feeling of luxury and comfort every day. To learn how California Closets can help create your perfect space, schedule a free in-home design consultation. DECEMBER 2012

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Busby Cabinets specializes in custom cabinetry for new construction or remodeling projects for virtually any room of the home. Family-owned and operated in Florida for nearly 40 years, the company manufactures and installs everything it sells. That means clients purchase directly from the factory to get the highest-quality product for the best possible price. Busby’s showrooms – in Alachua, Naples, Orlando and Tampa – provide a design center experience created for homeowners, architects, builders and interior designers. These showrooms also offer full displays of the company’s custom manufacturing capabilities, including sample doors, finishes and decorative hardware.

CLOSET FACTORY

Showroom: 670 N. Orlando Ave., Maitland FL 32751 407-767-7111 • closetfactory.com/orlando

The perfect gift for the person who has everything is an organized closet, pantry or garage. For more than 29 years, Closet Factory has provided custom design solutions for the home and office. The company’s professionals first gain a thorough understanding of what you’re looking for and then use that knowledge to create a custom closet solution that’s perfect for you. That’s how Closet Factory tailors its functional and attractive designs to your individual needs, desires and tastes. And all installations are built at the company’s local factory. At Closet Factory, you’ll get a design “built around you.”

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TRENDSETTERS PHIL KEAN DESIGNS

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Phil Kean Designs, an award-winning design/build company, specializes in designing distinctive luxury homes in Central Florida and around the world. Starting with a complimentary consultation and an in-depth discussion, Kean carefully analyzes your vision and reviews your architectural preferences, lifestyle needs and budget. He then develops a preliminary conceptual design for presentation and critical evaluation. Working closely with the client, the design is then converted within specialized 3D software prior to engineering. The PKD creative process is effective, efficient and detailed. Kean, recently selected as Business Owner of the Year by the Orlando Business Journal, has attracted international acclaim with his work, including the 2012 New American Home in Winter Park.

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Whether you’re remodeling a tired kitchen or bathroom or creating your ultimate dream home, you’ll find an unparalleled selection of highquality choices from today’s most recognized manufacturers at your local Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery. Browse through numerous stunning vignettes ranging from classic elegance to bold contemporary. Ferguson Showrooms offer a seemingly unlimited array of luxurious and functional options to suit any taste or budget. The best part? Ferguson customers can schedule an appointment with a trained consultant to enjoy the undivided attention of a friendly, knowledgeable professional. With showrooms from coast to coast, come see why Ferguson is recommended by professional contractors and designers everywhere.

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Signature Kitchens is Central Florida’s premier, full-service kitchen and bath design showroom, offering complete design services and furniturequality cabinetry. Signature Kitchens is family-owned and operated by Lee and Julie R. Collier, who both have more than 25 years of experience. Their attention to detail and commitment to using only high-quality products have rewarded them with hundreds of satisfied clients and a business that thrives on repeat customers and referrals. With Signature Kitchens, you’re guaranteed a kitchen that’s an extension of you, your home and your lifestyle. Handle-free kitchens, interior concealed lighting and floating shelves are just a few of the possibilities on display at the company’s newly remodeled showroom.

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FLAVOR •

BY RONA GINDIN

PHOTOGRAPHS BY RAFAEL TONGOL

Team Spirits

Scotch & sodas and bloody marys are as passé as TV dinners. These mixologists will freshen up that drink for you.

G

ONE IS THE BOTTLE OF SOUR MIX, the carton of Tropicana, the jar of maraschino cherries. At today’s tony imbibing establishments, bartenders are mixologists, and they use fresh, premium and often surprising ingredients in their delightfully daring drinks. Surprisingly enough, they aren’t overcharging for them. The ultra-lounge fad, with its high-tech décor and overpriced libations, “has gone back down to South Beach where it belongs,” notes Gary Tupper, operations manager at The Wine Barn. That means you can sip, slurp or swig at “entry-level price points” in less pretentious settings. Here’s a look at four local mixologists and their favorite concoctions.

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F L AV O R

Amanda Gibbons

HUE RESTAURANT

Other folks might spend their downtime watching Mad Men or playing Apples to Apples. Not Amanda Gibbons. She creates beverages. “It’s a hobby at home,” she says. “I infuse different liquors and things like that.” So it was with a certain inevitability that Gibbons, who started waiting tables at Hue two years ago, recently became resident mixologist at the trendy Thornton Park hangout, where the philosophy toward both food and drink has recently shifted in an “everything fresh” direction. In Gibbons’ world, a gimlet contains no venerable, bottled Rose’s lime juice. Instead, depending upon the season, you might find yourself sipping straight-from-the-citrus lime juice, scratch-made Concord grape purée and agave syrup blended with vodka. “Things always taste so much better when you have fresh juices and herbs,” she says. The drink Gibbons refers to as “the most favorite drink we ever made” is called The End of Summer. First, she infuses Four Roses bourbon with fresh peaches for three to five days. When someone orders the cocktail, she muddles mint, mashing it up at the bottom of the glass, adds a splash of simple ginger syrup made by boiling and reducing fresh ginger, stirs in the bourbon and tops it with a splash of soda. That’ll warm you up on a chilly evening.

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DECEMBER 2012

11/16/12 2:19:04 PM


Rick Giannasi

OCEAN PRIME

At 50, Rick Giannasi is an oldschool bartender with 30 years experience mixing scotch and soda. So it’s ironic that the oldtimer in Ocean Prime’s lounge recently won the sort of mixology competition popular with pros half his age – and it’s downright funny that his Italian Nonna helped. A year ago, Chatham Imports invited Florida’s spirits corps to develop recipes using its vegetable-flavored liquors. Giannasi chose the Crop Organic Tomato Vodka, but then was stumped. “So I spoke with my grandmother in Italy, and she said, ‘Throw in a little red pepper, toss in some celery, add some basil.’” Giannasi dutifully muddled red bell pepper and celery, made a basil-infused simple syrup and then added fresh lemon juice and the tomato vodka. He served it in a martini glass with salt and pepper on the rim and called it the Skinny Mary. The drink earned him a weekend trip to New York City. Although Giannasi appreciates the local renown earned by the Skinny Mary, he maintains an affection for “a well-balanced cocktail” and finds the changes in his profession amusing. “There was no muddling or whipping,” he says, chuckling, of his early days as a bartender in the 1980s. “Most of the job was a handshake, a hello and a pouring of the drinks. Having three brands of vodka was a fully stocked bar.” The veteran bar jockey has a following at the swanky Restaurant Row eatery, where a signature drink is the corporate-wide offering called Berries & Bubbles. This fruity mix is literally smoking, thanks to dry ice, as it’s delivered. Adds Giannasi: “That’s not just a drink. It’s a cocktail and a show.”

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F L AV O R Nikos Henry

COCINA 214

Nikos Henry was happily working at a tequila bar until he took a trip to Charleston, S.C., two years ago and was enlightened about a whole ’nother way of doing business. “All of the bartenders were mixologists,” he noted. Inspired, Henry started tinkering with infusions, such as jalapenoand habanero-infused tequila. Then he moved over to Cocina 214, a contemporary Tex-Mex restaurant in Winter Park, and “brainstormed on what I thought would go good with margaritas,” which is, not surprisingly, the restaurant’s topselling cocktail. The key, Henry found, is fruit. “That’s because people think of tequila as such a harsh thing, so everyone’s scared to drink it,” he says. Fruit is the featured attraction in a drink he created called the Fresharica, muddling strawberries and basil, then adding in the juices of lime, orange, cranberry and pineapple before stirring in Patrón tequila, Grand Marnier and agave nectar. Candy works, too. Henry may be 31, but the Pop Rocks in the neighborhood’s Sassafras Sweet Shoppe not only sparked his inner 6-year-old but got him thinking that the confection, ground up, might make a “cool rim.” In observance of National Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October, Henry served blush Pop Rocks margaritas with pink candy rims. The liquid was a blend of tequila, Grand Marnier, and lime, cranberry and orange juices. During the holidays, Henry will sweeten tequila still more. The S’mores Margarita will combine Kahlua, Baileys Irish Cream and Patrón tequila in a martini glass. The rim will be coated in chocolate syrup, and a skewer of miniature marshmallows will sit on top. Sweet. 54

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Elise Ciungan

THE COURTESY

Elise Ciungan was on the leading edge of Florida’s fresh cocktail wave when she worked at a club in Tampa, a city where handcrafted cocktails have been popular for more than a decade. So when she realized that such tempting treats were hard to find in Orlando, and met some folks who were starting up a local cocktail bar, she packed up her shakers and strainers and moved to the City Beautiful. Ciungan is a glamorous young woman with a refreshingly retro appreciation for “really boozy” cocktails such as Manhattans, Negronis and Old-Fashioneds. So it’s no surprise that the recipes she’s developed for The Courtesy’s upcoming new menu are not for spritzer sippers. Consider Ciungan’s Cocci Mezcal Manhattan. She pours Mezcal, a Mexican spirit, in a glass with equal parts of Cocci vermouth and a Cocci-fortified white wine. “Then I add a couple of dashes of lemon bitters, and stir in a pinch of dried hibiscus leaves to give it a floral sweetness that matches the smokiness of the bitters. I top it with a lemon twist so you get a big noseful of the essential lemon oil.” When Ciungan isn’t working magic with lemon rinds at The Courtesy, she’s doing her shtick independently as one of four partners in Sling Bar Company. She and her fellow mixologists create custom cocktail menus for bars, restaurants and lounges. Sling also writes the cocktail lists and trains the staff in such skills as proper stirring, pouring and serving. “It’s a lot of fun,” says Ciungan. “It keeps you on your toes. You get to work with new people and see new faces.”

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R O N A’ S F L AV O R L I S T I N G S AFRICAN

Nile Ethiopian 7048 International Dr., Orlando, 407-354-0026 / nile07.com. Locals willingly navigate International Drive to dine at Nile, a family-owned restaurant specializing in the exotic cuisine of Ethiopia. Order a few dishes to share and scoop up the intriguing concoctions with the eatery’s signature spongy bread. End with a strong cup of aromatic, brewed-toorder coffee. $$

Sanaa 3701 Osceola Pkwy., Lake Buena Vista, 407-939-3463 / disneyworld.disney.go.com/dining/sanaa. Sanaa, one of Disney’s most interesting restaurants, offers dishes based on cuisine from the Spice Islands, a coastal African area rich with Indian influences. Flavors are intense, but spicy only upon request. (Curry, the chefs insist, is a melding of flavors, not one particular spice.) The marketplace-style dining room boasts picture windows overlooking the Animal Kingdom Lodge’s savannah, so you might spot zebra or wildebeest while lunching on tandoori chicken or a vegetarian platter with stewed lentils and a vegetable sambar (stew). $$

AMERICAN

Bananas 942 N. Mills Ave., Orlando, 407-480-2200 / bananasdiner.com. Bananas has a split personality. It’s a wholesome, family place to grab higher-quality versions of such classics as burgers, shakes and pancakes (the Buffalo Benedict is a surprise pleaser). Other times, it’s a delightfully outrageous experience for more adventurous diners who enjoy the antics of cross-dressing servers. The Sunday drag gospel brunch (“Sinners welcome!”) is like no church service you’ve ever attended. $$

Cask & Larder 565 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park, 321-280-4200 / caskandlarder.com. Billing itself as a “Southern Public House,” this casual Winter Park eatery serves up modern twists on traditional favorites. Look for a three-ham platter with pepper jelly; pimento cheese; and seasonal favorites such as grilled pork belly and chicken-and-biscuits. Many beers are made on the premises. $$

Chatham’s Place 7575 Dr. Phillips Blvd., Orlando, 407- 345-2992 / chathamsplace.com. For an oldfashioned dining experience – a subdued dining room and doting personalized service by a longtime staff – dine at this hidden Restaurant Row establishment. Locals return regularly for Chef Tony Lopez’s classic dishes such as black grouper with pecan butter, rack of lamb and filet mignon. $$$ Dexter’s 808 E. Washington St., Orlando, 407-6482777; 558 W. New England Ave., Winter Park, 407629-1150; 950 Market Promenade Ave., Lake Mary, 407-805-3090 / dexwine.com. Central Florida has three Dexter’s locations, and each has become a neighborhood magnet, drawing diners of all ages for hearty portions of creative American fare (at fair prices), good wine and, in some cases, live music. Casual dress is the rule. The brunches, and the pressed duck sandwiches, are especially popular. $$-$$$ Emeril’s Orlando 6000 Universal Blvd. Orlando, 407-224-2424 / emerils.com. Get a taste of New Orleans at Emeril’s, a fine-dining restaurant at alwaysbustling Universal CityWalk. You’ll find classics from celebrity chef Emeril Lagasse, including the signature barbecue shrimp, andouille-stuffed redfish, doublecut pork chops and banana cream pie. The service, of course, is superb. Consider sharing appetizers at the bar area. $$$$

Hillstone 215 S. Orlando Ave., Winter Park, 407740-4005 / hillstone.com/hillstone. Formerly known as Houston’s, this Winter Park mainstay is part of a high-end chain. Still, it grows its own herbs, bakes its own bread, grinds its own meat, cuts its own fish and 56

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whips its own cream. In nice weather, guests relax with a cocktail in Adirondack chairs overlooking Lake Killarney. Many proposals have been popped during dinners for two on the boat dock. $$$

Rusty Spoon 55 W. Church Street, Orlando, 407-401-8811 / therustyspoon.com. Foodies flock to this Church Street gastropub, a warm and welcoming space at which meals are described as “American food. European roots. Locally sourced.” Your salad will consist of über-fresh greens, your sandwich will be filled with slow-braised lamb, your pasta will be hand-rolled and your meat will be robustly seasoned. $$-$$$

Seasons 52 7700 Sand Lake Rd., Orlando, 407354-5212; 463 E. Altamonte Dr., Altamonte Springs, 407-767-1252 / seasons52.com. A Darden concept founded in Orlando, the two local locations turn out creative and tasty meals in grand, bustling spaces. The food happens to be low in fat and calories; that’s just a bonus. The wine selection is impressive and the ittybitty desserts encourage sampling without guilt. $$$ Shipyard Brew Pub 200 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park, 321-274-4045 / shipyardemporium.com. This ultra-casual brewpub has been packed night and day since it opened in 2011, and not just because it pours a great lager. To complement suds brewed both inhouse and elsewhere, a from-scratch menu offers Buffalo chicken dip, amazing white-bean hummus, sandwiches, flatbreads and entrées, including étouffée and pot roast. Stop in any time to pick up a loaf of some of Orlando’s best bread. $-$$

The Table Orlando 9060 Via Dellagio Way, Orlando, 407-900-3463 / thetableorlando.com. For special occasions, book a place at The Table, a tiny restaurant that serves a five-course gourmet meal with wine pairings. Up to 22 guests at a time share the repast around an oversized table. The New American menu changes regularly and is comprised in large part of locally sourced foods. The price is a set $100 including tax and tip. Groups can host private events here. $$$$ TooJay’s Various locations / toojays.com. When it’s time for a taste of Jewish Brooklyn – pastrami on rye, latkes, blintzes, knishes – the six local outlets of this South Florida-based chain have it all. You’ll also find diner foods such as omelets, sandwiches and pot-roast dinners. Take home some black-and-white cookies. $

ASIAN

Anh Hong 1124 E. Colonial Dr., Orlando, 407-9992656. You’ll receive a bundle of fresh herbs to tear into your soup at this Mills 50 Vietnamese eatery, and another bunch for a roll-your-own entrée that’s like a DIY summer roll. Asian classics, such as grilled meats and scallion pancakes, are done exceptionally well here, which makes Anh Hong a top choice for local Vietnamese-Americans longing for a taste of home. $ Dragonfly 7972 Via Dellagio Way, Orlando, 407459-1892 / dragonflysushi.com. Stylishly attired 30somethings regularly pack this oh-so-hip restaurant, where groups share sushi, grilled “robata” items, and tapas-style Asian foods such as soft-shell crab tempura, crispy black pork belly and shiso-wrapped spicy tuna. $$

Hawkers 1103 N. Mills Ave., Orlando, 407-2370606 / facebook.com/hawkersstreetfare. This Mills 50 mainstay, named for street vendors of Asian fare, serves up generous tapas-size portions of curry laksa

THE KEY

$ Inexpensive, most entrées under $10 $$ Moderate, most entrées $10-20 $$$ Pricey, most entrées over $20 $$$$ Very expensive, most entrées over $30 indicates the restaurant is a Silver Spoon winner (Judges’ Choice).

(an aromatic Singaporean soup), roti canai (Malaysian flatbread with a hearty curry sauce), five-spice tofu, chilled sesame noodles, smoky mussels and sensational beef skewers with peanuty satay dip. $$ Sea Thai 3812 E. Colonial Dr., Orlando, 407-8950985 / seaorlando.com. Start with a green papaya salad and beef yum, then feast on steamed whole fish with garlic chili sauce, pad Thai and green curry chicken. But you can’t go wrong with any of the Thai classics offered at this welcoming East Orlando eatery. $$

Seoul Garden 511 E. Horatio Ave., Maitland, 407-599-5199 / orlandokorearestaurant.com. Seoul Garden is so Asian-focused that the “about us” section of its website is written in Korean. That authenticity extends to the food. Barbecued meats are grilled to order in the dining room. Be sure to try the marinated beef short ribs and the soft tofu stew. $

Sushi Pop 310 W. Mitchell Hammock Rd., Oviedo, 407-542-5975 / sushipoprestaurant.com. Oviedo is an unlikely location for this cutting-edge restaurant, a popular spot for sushi. The food is serious and often experimental, as chef-owner Chau uses molecular gastronomy to create some of the fusion fare. The aura is fun: Asian anime on the walls, playful colors, and servers who dress in outrageous themed outfits. $$ Tasty Wok 1246 E. Colonial Dr., Orlando, 407-8968988 / yelp.com/biz/tasty-wok-orlando. True, it’s a humble spot, but Tasty Wok offers an array of satisfying dishes, among them roast duck and steaming soups. Try the beef chow fun, eggplant with minced pork, and salt and pepper ribs. A smaller menu of American-style Chinese dishes is also available. $

BARBECUE

4 Rivers Smokehouse 1600 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; 1869 W. S.R. 434, Longwood; 1047 S. Dillard St., Winter Garden / 407-474-8377, 4rsmokehouse.com. A diverse array of barbecue specialties – from Texas-style brisket to pulled pork, smoked turkey and bacon-wrapped jalapeños – has gained this rapidly growing homegrown concept a large following. The Longwood outpost even includes a bakery and an oldfashioned malt shop featuring homemade ice cream. $

BURGERS

Hamburger Mary’s Bar & Grille 110 W. Church St., Orlando, 321-219-0600 / hamburgermarys-orlando.com. A colorful crowd is part of the fun at this Church Street hotspot, where bingo games, trivia contests and cabaret shows are among the events that vie for guests’ attention beside the enormous and creatively topped burgers. $ Pine 22 22 E. Pine St., Orlando, 407-574-2160 / pine22.com. Burgers go chic at this fast-casual downtowner, where every ingredient is special. The burgers are from happy cows, the eggs from free-roaming chickens, the pork from lovingly raised pigs. Mix and match your toppings over a patty of beef, turkey or black beans (or pulled pork), with options ranging from mango salsa to sautéed mushrooms. $$

CONTINENTAL

Venetian Room 8101 World Center Dr., Orlando, 407-238-8060 / thevenetianroom.com. Walk though a run-of-the-mill convention hotel to reach the AAA FourDiamond Venetian Room, an elegant, domed-service, continental restaurant that hearkens to the heyday of unapologetic, butter-and-cream-enhanced fine dining. The lobster bisque is an absolute must. After that, try the filet mignon, duck a l’orange or Dover sole. $$$$

CREATIVE/PROGESSIVE

Chef’s Table at the Edgewater Hotel 99 W. Plant St., Winter Garden, 407-230-4837 / chefstableDECEMBER 2012

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attheedgewater.com. Husband-and-wife team Kevin and Laurie Tarter are your personal servers at this intimate Winter Garden hideaway, where Kevin prepares the evening’s three-course, prix-fixe meal and Laurie helps choose the wine. Both stop by every table to chat with guests. Adjacent, the Tasting Room offers tapas-size portions of international dishes and a full bar. $$$ Finesse 7025 County Road 46A, Lake Mary, 407805-9220 / finesse-therestaurant.com. Talented chef Alex Brugger runs a remarkable kitchen at Finesse, a stylish Lake Mary restaurant with an ambitious menu. Begin with the tender duck confit encased in puff pastry, the complex black bean soup and whatever raw tuna appetizer happens to be on the menu. Continue with the creamy seafood paella, made with risotto, or the steak or pork with chimichurri and duck fat French fries. End with the chocolate-orange soufflé served with peanut butter anglaise. $$-$$$

Funky Monkey 912 N. Mills Ave., Orlando, 407427-1447; 9101 International Dr., Orlando (Pointe Orlando), 407-418-9463 / funkymonkeywine.com. Every meal begins with complimentary lime-garlic edamame at these eclectic eateries, known as much for sushi and intriguing wine lists as for creative American cuisine and an ever-changing menu. FMI Restaurant Group also owns Bananas, Nick’s Italian Kitchen and Prickly Pear as well as a catering arm and the Funky Monkey Vault, a wine shop that also sells gifts, apparel and furniture. $$ Hue 629 E. Central Blvd., Orlando, 407-849-1800 / huerestaurant.com. Hue is a progressive American restaurant on a busy corner in trendy Thornton Park. Well-dressed 30-somethings sip colorful martinis at the bar and dine, indoors and out, on of-the-now items such as tuna tartare, duck breast with cranberry

reduction and amaretto risotto, and grouper with smoked paprika olive oil. $$$

K Restaurant 2401 Edgewater Dr. Orlando, 407872-2332 / kwinebar.com. Kevin Fonzo, the go-to chef in College Park since 2001, owns this homey eatery, which is, in fact, located in an erstwhile residence. The menu is mostly creative-American, along with Italian favorites celebrating Fonzo’s heritage. Casual wine tastings and themed special dinners, along with a constantly changing menu, bring back regulars for singular experiences. $$-$$$ Le Rouge 7730 W. Sand Lake Rd., Orlando, 407370-0909 / lerougewinebar.com. This Restaurant Row hot spot is a sexy lounge with backlit lighting, a long bar and comfy sofas. It also features fine food. Guests can choose from among three-dozen tapas, including garlic shrimp and sautéed wild mushrooms, or enjoy traditional entrées such as seared salmon with winelemon-dill sauce. $$$

Luma on Park 290 S. Park Ave., Winter Park, 407-599-4111 / lumaonpark.com. If there’s pancetta in your salad, the salumi was made in the kitchen, by hand, starting with a whole pig. Most herbs are from local farms, fish from sustainable sources, pickled vegetables jarred in house and desserts built around seasonal ingredients. Luma’s progressive menu, which changes daily, is served in a sleek and stylish dining room in the heart of Winter Park, under the passionate direction of Executive Chef Brandon McGlamery, Chef de Cuisine Derek Perez and Pastry Chef Brian Cernell. $$$

Lakes, turns out artistic New World cuisine combining the flavors of Latin America, the Caribbean, the Far East and the United States. The dining room is dramatic, the food astounding and the service polished. Be sure to begin with a Norman’s classic: foie gras “French toast.” And you’ll be delighted with the Mongolian veal chop. $$$$

Ravenous Pig 1234 N. Orange Ave., Winter Park, 407-628-2333 / theravenouspig.com. After leaving their hometown for serious culinary training, Winter Park natives James and Julie Petrakis returned to open the region’s first genuine gastropub. Dinner reservations have been tough to snag ever since. The ambitious menu changes daily based on the fish, meat and produce that’s available, and it’s executed by a dedicated team that abhors shortcuts. Besides daily specials, The Pig always serves up an excellent burger, soft pretzels, shrimp and grits and a donut dessert called Pig Tails. $$$

Victoria & Albert’s 4401 Floridian Way, Lake Buena Vista, 407-939-3463 / victoria-alberts.com. Indulgent, seven-course prix-fixe feasts are served in the serenely elegant main dining room, accompanied by live harp music, while 10 courses are offered in the more intimate Queen Victoria’s Room. But what the heck? Why not go for 13 courses at the Chef’s Table? Chef Scott Hunnel, Maitre d’ Israel Pérez and Master Pastry Chef Erich Herbitschek travel the world to seek out impressive food and service trends, then adapt the golden ones locally. That’s why V&A, at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa, is Orlando’s only AAA Five Diamond restaurant. $$$$

Norman’s 4012 Central Florida Pkwy., Orlando, 407-278-8459 / normans.com. Celebrity Chef Norman Van Aken’s restaurant at the Ritz-Carlton, Grande

geh

Reserve Now For Your Holiday Parties

W inter Park 400 South Orlando Avenue s 407-644-7770 Reservations online at www.roccositaliangrille.com WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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R O N A’ S F L AV O R L I S T I N G S EASTERN EUROPEAN

Row pioneer, a link in a Honolulu-based chain owned by namesake chef, Roy Yamaguchi. $$

INDIAN

Hollerbach’s Willow Tree Café 205 E. 1st St., Sanford, 407-321-2204 / willowtreecafe.com. If you like to indulge in a good schnitzel with a liter of hearty beer, head to Sanford. There you’ll find Theo Hollerbach overseeing the gemütlichkeit while serving up authentic German foods from sauerbraten to a wurst sausage platter. Live music on select evenings gets the whole dining room swaying together in a spirit of schunkel abend. $$

Aashirwad 5748 International Dr., Orlando, 407-3709830 / aashirwadrestaurant.com. Begin with kashmiri naan, a slightly sweet bread stuffed with nuts, coconut and raisins, and continue with chicken biryani, cauliflower in exotic Manchurian gravy and a mixed tandoori grill. Whole spices are roasted and ground daily on site, further enhancing the cuisine’s authenticity. $$ Memories of India 7625 Turkey Lake Rd., Orlando, 407-370-3277; 3895 Lake Emma Rd., Lake Mary, 407-804-0920 / memoriesofindiacuisine.com. Exceptionally good Indian fare draws diners in Dr. Phillips and Lake Mary to these twin restaurants, where dishes such as palek paneer (creamed spinach) and lamb masala in rich ginger-garlic gravy always satisfy. $$

Yalaha Bakery 1213 N. Orange Ave., Orlando, 321-800-5212; 8210 County Road 48, Yalaha, 352324-3366 / yalahabakery.com. Fans of hearty German breads and scratch-made German pastries can drive to this homey outpost in rural Lake County, or they can pick up their loaves and sweets at an Ivanhoe District storefront. The Yalaha unit also sells sandwiches and hot lunches. $

ITALIAN

HAWAIIAN/ POLYNESIAN

Antonio’s 611 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland, 407-6455523 / antoniosonline.com. Fine Italian fare comes at reasonable prices at Antonio’s, proprietor Greg Gentile’s culinary homage to his ancestors. The upstairs restaurant, recently remodeled and expanded with a balcony overlooking Lake Lily, is somewhat formal, although the open kitchen provides peeks of the chefs in action. Its downstairs counterpart, Antonio’s Café, is a more casual spot that doubles as a market and wine shop. $$$

Emeril’s Tchoup Chop 6300 Hollywood Way, Orlando, 407-503-2467 / emerils.com. Emeril Lagasse’s Polynesian-fusion fare is executed by locally renowned chef, Greg Richie. Within a dramatically decorated space, diners enjoy tropical cocktails, steamed dumplings and creative entrées such as pan-roasted duck breast with gingered pear chutney and umeboshi (pickled) plum glaze. $$$$

Bice 5601 Universal Blvd., Orlando, 407-503-1415 / orlando.bicegroup.com. Bice, with 50 locations around the world, has a local outpost of ambitious Italian cuisine at the Loews Portofino Bay Hotel at Universal.

Roy’s 7760 W. Sand Lake Rd., Orlando, 407-3524844 / roysrestaurant.com. Hawaiian-fusion flavors enhance familiar and exotic fish dishes at this Restaurant

New Year’s Eve Dinner Buffet in The Tropicale

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$

adults, $ 15 ages 3-9, kids under 3 eat free

Homemade egg pasta is used for several dishes, such as spaghetti Bolognese; other choices include veal piccata and steak with a Gorgonzola-demi sauce. $$$$ Enzo’s on the Lake 1130 U.S. 17-92, Longwood, 407-834-9872 / enzos.com. Long before Orlando became a serious foodie town, Enzo’s was serving up lovingly prepared Italian specialties inside a converted Longwood home. Little has changed. Split a bunch of antipasto to begin your meal. After that, you pretty much can’t go wrong, but standout dishes include homemade ravioli stuffed with chicken and spinach, veal with artichoke-caper-white wine sauce and possibly the best spaghetti carbonara in town. $$$

Peperoncino 7988 Via Dellagio Way, Orlando, 407-440-2856 / peperoncinocucina.com. The menu changes every night at this cozy Dr. Phillips Italian, where chef-owner Barbara Alfano puts out plates of fried pecorino drizzled with honey, pear- and fourcheese pasta, and fish steamed in parchment paper. $$$

Prato 124 N. Park Ave., Winter Park, 407-2620050 / prato-wp.com. This is one of Orlando’s very best Italian restaurants, but don’t expect a classic lasagna or chicken parmigiana. Executive Chef Brandon McGlamery and Chef di Cucina Matthew Cargo oversee an open kitchen in which pastas are made from scratch, pizzas are rolled to order, sausages are stuffed by hand and the olive oil is a luscious organic pour from Italy. Try the chicken liver Toscana, a satisfying salad Campagna with cubes of sizzling pancetta tesa, shrimp tortellini and citrusy rabbit cacciatore. Begin with a Negroni cocktail; it’s possibly the best around. $$-$$$

At Caribe Royale, it takes all night to ring in the New Year. Join us for our New Year’s Eve Dinner Buffet from 6–11 pm while enjoying the sweet sounds of live jazz from The Falls Lounge. For reservations, 407-238-8020. Or enjoy contemporary continental cuisine in The Venetian Room from 6–10 pm, and toast the

All guests and visitors to the Caribe Royale may enjoy the New Year’s Eve entertainment and a Champagne toast in The Falls

New Year in style with a complimentary glass of wine or sparkling wine. Regular menu will be available. Seating is limited. Reserve your spot today, 407-238-8060.

Lounge at no charge.

Plus, you can always slide over to The Falls Lounge for cocktails and lively entertainment. Jazz from 5–10 pm and 8101 World Center Drive, Orlando, FL 32821 cariberoyale.com

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dueling pianos from 10 pm–1 am. And there’s a free glass of the bubbly waiting for you at the stroke of midnight! Also, don’t miss our Christmas Day Buffet from 1–7 pm.

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Rocco’s 400 S. Orlando Ave., Winter Park, 407-6447770 / roccositaliangrille.com. Calabria native Rocco Potami oversees this romantic Italian eatery, where fine authentic fare is presented in an intimate dining room and on a secluded brick patio. Classics include carpaccio (raw, thinly sliced beef with white truffle oil and arugula), ricotta gnocchi and a breaded veal chop topped with a lightly dressed salad. It’s easy to miss, tucked away in a Winter Park strip center, but once you find it, you’ll be back. $$$

LATIN

Mi Tomatina 433 W. New England Ave., Winter Park, 321-972-4317 / mitomatina.com. This eatery bills itself as a paella bar, and indeed guests share a half-dozen varieties of the signature Spanish rice dish. Yet others come for a mellow meal over tapas (garlic shrimp, potato omelet, croquettes) and sangria, enjoyed while seated within a small contemporary dining room or outdoors overlooking Hannibal Square. $$-$$$

MEDITERRANEAN

Bosphorous 108 S. Park Ave., Winter Park, 407-644-8609 / bosphorousrestaurant.com. This is the place for flavorful Turkish fare in either a whitetablecloth setting or alfresco along Park Avenue. Many couples fill up on the appetizer sampler with oversized lavash bread. For a heartier meal, try the ground lamb “Turkish pastry,” a shish kebab or a tender lamb shank. Outdoor diners can end their meals by smoking from a hookah. Or not. $$ Taverna Opa 9101 International Dr., Orlando, 407351-8660 / opaorlando.com. The food is excellent, but that’s only half the reason to visit Taverna Opa. On busy nights, the place is festive indeed: Some guests join a Zorba dance around the dining room while others toss white napkins into the air, joyously shouting “Opa!” Then there’s the belly dancer. $$

MEXICAN/ SOUTHWESTERN

Cantina Laredo 8000 Via Dellagio Way, Orlando, 407-345-0186 / cantinalaredo.com. Modern Mexican cuisine in a spiffy setting draws lovers of cilantro, jalapeño and pico de gallo to this Restaurant Row eatery, where the margaritas flow, the guacamole is made tableside and the portions are generous. The spinach enchilada is a vegetarian-friendly treat. $$

Cocina 214 151 E. Welbourne Ave., Winter Park, 407-790-7997 / cocina214.com. Tex-Mex food is top quality here (214 is the Dallas area code), with salsa, savories and even margarita flavorings made from scratch. The spinach-mushroom quesadilla and braised pork tacos with “orange dust” are especially noteworthy. $$ El Tenampa 11242 S. Orange Blossom Tr., Orlando, 407-850-9499 / eltenampaorlando.com. Many Orlandoans make El Tenampa part of their Costco shopping ritual, since the restaurant is located only a block from the OBT warehouse store. This authentic eatery features fresh fruit juices, spicy chicken chilaquiles (a Mexican breakfast, available all day long, made with fried tortilla pieces and a green sauce) as well as a satisfying shrimp quesadilla in addition to the standard enchiladas and fajitas. $

SEAFOOD

Ocean Prime 7339 W. Sand Lake Rd., Orlando, 407-781-4880 / ocean-prime.com. Designed to evoke the ambience of an old-time supper club, Ocean Prime’s white-jacketed servers offer sensational steaks and fish dishes along with creative options such as sautéed shrimp in a spectacular Tabasco-cream sauce, crab cakes with sweet corn cream and ginger salmon. End with the chocolate peanut butter pie. $$$$ WWW.OHLMAG.COM

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With Cantina Laredo gift cards you can treat friends & family to gourmet Mexican cuisine. Right now,

get a $10 GUEST CARD* for you when you purchase $50 in gift cards.

Let us make the holiday gathering perfect. Reserve our PRIVATE DINING ROOM or let us CATER the celebración.

Dellagio & Sand Lake Road 8000 Via Dellagio

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*While supplies last. Guest card valid Jan. 1, 2013 - Feb. 28, 2013. No cash value. Limit 2 guest cards per person, per day. Not available with on-line purchase.

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ohlmag.com ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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Todd English’s Bluezoo 1500 Epcot Resorts Blvd., Lake Buena Vista, 407-934-1111 / thebluezoo.com. Creatively prepared seafood is served in an over-thetop undersea setting at this fine-dining restaurant, located in Disney’s Swan and Dolphin hotel. The fashionforward choices might be a miso-glazed Hawaiian sea bass or fried lobster in a soy glaze. The desserts are among the best in town. $$$$

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Winter Park Fish Co. 761 Orange Ave. Winter Park, 407-622-6112 / thewinterparkfishco.com. Fish and seafood dishes are fresh and well-prepared at this humble Winter Park spot, where a counter service format helps keep the prices reasonable. Crab cakes, lobster rolls, mahi-mahi sandwiches and more ambitious dishes such as grouper cheeks in parchment and stuffed grouper are among a day’s assortment. $$

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Orlando, 407-597-5410 / bullandbearorlando.com. Orlando’s Bull & Bear looks similar to New York’s legendary steakhouse (except for the pool and golf course views), but ours has its own ambitious menu. Guests of the Waldorf Astoria’s fine-dining spot can feast on traditional items such as veal Oscar and prime steak that’s dry aged for 21 days, and intriguing ones like appetizers of gnocchi and escargot with crescents of black garlic, and shrimp and grits presented under a dome that, when removed, introduces a waft of aromatic smoke. The chocolate and lemon desserts are superb. $$$$

tylissima is a full service fashion consulting company that provides individual personal shopping, wardrobe assessment, travel packing as well as Glam Squad or special Open Christmas Day occasion consultation. Stylissima’s goal is complete enhancement - creating an empowered you inside and out with a special focus on color preferences, body shape and personal style.

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6 ORLANDO AREA LOCATIONS

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tylissima is a full service fashion consulting company that provides individual Wardrobe styling • Travel packing • Fashion production personal shopping, wardrobe assessment, travel packing as well as Glam Squad or special Closet assessment • Personal shopping occasion consultation. Stylissima’s goalno is complete enhancement - creating an empowered with obligation you inside and out with a special focus on color preferences, body shape and personal style.

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Christner’s Del Frisco’s 729 Lee Rd., Orlando, 407-645-4443 / christnersprimesteakandlobster.com. Locals have been choosing this prototypically masculine, dark-wood-and-red-leather enclave for business dinners and family celebrations for more than a decade. Family-owned since 1993, Christner’s features USDA Prime, corn-fed Midwestern beef or Australian cold-water lobster tails with a slice of the restaurant’s legendary mandarin orange cake. And there’s a loooong wine list (6,500 bottles). On select nights, Kostya Kimlat hosts magic shows along with a prix-fixe menu in a private dining room. $$$$

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Capital Grille 4600 N. World Dr., Lake Buena Vista, 407-939-3463 / thecapitalgrille.com. Capital Grille tries to one-up its upscale steakhouse competitors by dry-aging its beef, an expensive process that results in especially flavorful meat. Try a beautifully unadorned chop or a more creative dish, such as citrus-glazed salmon or Kona-crusted sirloin. The setting is clubby; the wine selection is generous. $$$$

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Dandelion CommuniTea CafĂŠ 618 N. Thornton Ave., Orlando, 407-362-1864 / dandelioncommunitea.com. Proprietor Julie Norris meant to open a crunchy teahouse, but her organic, locally sourced foods were such a hit that the Dandelion is now a hot spot for lunch and a mecca for the “OurLandoâ€? movement. Even carnivores can’t resist Henry’s Hearty Chili, Happy Hempy Hummus, and wraps and sandwiches. As for dessert, Razzy Parfait’s vanilla soygurt is delicious, filling and healthful enough to be a meal. $ Ethos Vegan Kitchen 1235 N. Orange Ave., Orlando, 407-228-3899 / ethosvegankitchen.com. Orlando’s Ivanhoe District is home to Ethos, a vegan restaurant with a menu that also satisfies open-minded carnivores. Fuel up on pecan-crusted eggplant with red wine sauce and mashed potatoes or a meat-free shepherd’s pie, if salads, sandwiches and coconutcurry tofu wraps won’t do the trick. $-$$

occasion consultation. Stylissima’s goal is complete enhancement - creating an empowered you inside and out with a special focus on color preferences, body shape and personal style. 60

ORLANDO HOME & LEISURE

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D I S C O V E R H E A LT H

Staying Healthy in a Digital Universe

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ext time you take your car in for a tuneup

or repairs, chances are your mechanic will know without ever lifting the hood when it was last serviced and whether you’ve had previous problems or accidents. All he has to do is check his computerized records. But what about keeping you running smoothly? Just as technology can provide vehicle maintenance information for your mechanic, it can provide personal health information for your doctor. And it can do so when time is of the essence. Let’s say a popular pain medication is recalled because it increases the risk of heart disease. How can your doctor quickly determine if you’re taking the drug? Bear in mind that he or she must identify every patient who is taking the medication. Combing through hundreds or thousands of individual paper charts is time-consuming and error-prone. Electronic records make it possible to track down the needed information and communicate with everyone who’s impacted. What happens if you’re injured and the ambulance takes you to a hospital where you’ve never been before? What do the doctors know about your health, your allergies, your medications? Electronic records can be crucial in such emergencies. Now a Central Florida program is exploring just that. The Central Florida Regional Health Information Organization (RHIO) is a health information exchange that provides a way for healthcare providers to share records securely, accurately and instantly, giving doctors the information they need to make better decisions. Recently, founding RHIO partners Orlando Health and Florida Hospital began to share electronic patient records – with the patients’ consent – at 13 emergency rooms across Central Florida.

By having access to this information, ER doctors didn’t need to order unnecessary procedures. A RHIO survey showed that 72 percent of ER doctors ordered fewer lab tests, and 85 percent ordered fewer imaging studies than they would have otherwise. Patients were saved from unnecessary radiation exposure and blood draws, meaning both they and their insurance programs saved money. The RHIO experience shows that we can improve healthcare through connectivity, providing more seamless care and making life easier for patients. Perhaps you’ve gone to a specialist without knowing whether your primary-care doctor had forwarded your records. Cancer patients, in particular, must often lug a notebook packed with charts and reports from one specialist to another simply because their doctors don’t have an efficient way to share data. With shared electronic records, your doctors are better informed, making medical decisions based on current, relevant data. But for many solo physicians and small practices, switching from paper records can be a daunting, costly and time-consuming task. With the help of a federal grant, the UCF College of Medicine is working with 1,400 local primary-care doctors to help them implement electronic systems. They’ll need to: Federal healthcare reform legislation has declared that all physicians should adopt electronic health records by 2014. If all goes well, the mounds of paperwork once needed to see the doctor will be a thing of the past. Of course, technology will never replace hands-on, personalized medical care. But it will enable our physicians to provide safer, efficient and more costeffective care for all of us. l Please contact Dr. German at deangerman@mail.ucf.edu.

by Deborah German, M.D.

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2 Athena Women’s Leadership Luncheon The gathering at the Country Club of Orlando raised money for scholarships for female students attending the University of Central 3 Florida. 1. Deborah German, Yolanda Londono, Ellen Titen-Wojcik, Vanessa Welch, Sherrie Sitarik, Eunice Choi, Leslie Hielema, Linda LandmanGonzalez, Martha Mertz, Martha Haynie, Beverly Marshall-Luney, Carolyn Fennell, Helen Donegan, Ann Sonntag, Roseann Harrington, Leila Nodarse, Mary Demetree, Carmenza Gonzalez.

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2. Seiya and Tina Yamada, Ann and Robert Sonntag 3. Yolanda Londono, Deborah German, Ellen Titen-Wojcik, Teresa Jacobs, Sherrie Sitarik, Martha Haynie, Linda Landman-Gonzalez, Leslie Hielema, Beverly Marshall-Luney, Roseann Harrington 4. Beverly Marshall-Luney, Frank Guerriero 5. Metz and Dwain Deville 6. Helen Donegan, Ann Sonntag

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Orange & White (& Blue) Gala The 14th annual fundraiser for the Art & History Museums-Maitland, which included a live and silent auction, was held at the Sheraton Orlando North Hotel. 1. Andrea Bailey Cox, Beverly Reponen

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2. Howard Schieferdecker, Butch Charlan, Renee Charlan, June Flowers, Bo Outlaw, Jefferson Flowers

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3. Howard Schieferdecker, Beverly Reponen, Bill Taulbee, Joelene Schieferdecker 4. Andrea Bailey Cox, Bill Randolph, Linda Landman Gonzalez

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4 Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra fundraising “salon� Opera singers serenaded delighted guests at the Isleworth home of John and Sarah Ruggieri. 5. Mary Palmer, Kristy Doyle Turner, Bob Turner 6. Cynthia Elitzer 7. Hal and Lleana Worrall 8. Judy Noble, Richard Beavers 9. Terry Thorspecken, Carrie Patterson

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VIEW

Legal Eye

Attorney Frank Pohl poses in front of one of the 175 landscape photographs that grace the walls of his Winter Park law firm, Pohl & Short. All of the framed photographs were taken in Florida by Florida photographers, says Pohl, and all are black and white as an ironic reminder to his staff “that nothing in the law is black and white.” Most of the photographs were taken by well-known Florida photographers such as Clyde Butcher and Marilyn Brown. The photo that’s behind him was taken by another of Pohl’s favorites, Steve Vaughn. 64

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Photo: RAFAEL TONGOl

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Holidays are made for Giving Since 1974

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MORE THAN JUST A GIFT CARD… THE GIFT OF EXTRAORDINARY EXPERIENCES.

©2012 Hilton Worldwide

If you’re looking for a special holiday gift that is sure to impress – whether for a beloved family member or an important business associate – consider the Waldorf Astoria® Orlando & Hilton Orlando Bonnet Creek resort gift card. Choose to give the gift of luxury and flexibility – as this card can be used toward overnight stays at either resort, dining in our world-class restaurants including La Luce® by Donna Scala and the legendary Bull & Bear®, rounds of golf at our Rees Jones-designed championship Waldorf Astoria® Golf Club and spa experiences at the rejuvenating Waldorf Astoria® Spa. It’s truly a gift of extraordinary experiences. Gift cards may be purchased online at either WaldorfAstoriaOrlando.com or HiltonBonnetCreek.com

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