ROCK ISLAND, Illinois - The Hungry Hobo announced the grand opening of a store in Eldridge, IA. The store is located at 178 South 4th Avenue (next to the Genesis Rehabilitation Clinic in Mid Towne Plaza), and open Monday through Saturday from 10:00A to 9:00P, and Sunday from 11:00A to 8:00P. A ribbon cutting ceremony will take place with the Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce on Friday, November 8th at 4:00P.

"While we're in the process of trying to expand our concept in Eastern Iowa, we also wanted to get some experience with providing drive thru service." said Pryce T. Boeye, President and CEO of the company. "In this case, we were able to find a great complex in the heart of Eldridge that should serve both our customers and employees very well. If the first day of business is any indication of what to expect, it could end up being a surprisingly strong store."

The Hungry Hobo is a chain of sandwich shops that was created in 1973 by Jim Gende, Ray Pearson, Joe Gende, and Tom Spero, and is currently celebrating its 40th Anniversary with a series of promotions throughout 2013. The concept specializes in sliced-to-order and grilled sandwiches, baked potatoes with a variety of toppings, chef-prepared soups, shredded-lettuce salads, and desserts that are baked daily in The Hobo Bakery. They have 13 convenient Quad-City area locations, accept all major credit cards, deliver box lunches and party items, and have made their everyday menu available for delivery through www.good2goqc.com. They also recently launched a smart phone app and mobile rewards program, and have been voted Best Deli, Best Deli Sandwiches, and Most Distinctly Quad Cities Fast Food. For more information, visit www.hungryhobo.com and www.facebook.com/hungryhobo.

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(Davenport, IA)  The River Music Experience (RME) is excited to announce that Falbo Bros. Pizzeria will be replacing the existing cafe on the first floor of the Redstone building at 2nd & Main Streets in downtown Davenport.  The RME will continue to conduct its live music and educational programming on the RME Community Stage, sponsored by Lujack Lexus of the Quad Cities, which is currently located in the space.

"We're very excited about this unique opportunity for collaboration with a successful national brand," said Tom Swanson, RME Executive Director.  "Falbo Bros. will not only serve as a great amenity for the building and downtown, but having an independent operator in that space will enable the RME to focus even more on its musical and educational mission."

The Quad Cities Chamber's Executive Director of the Downtown Davenport Partnership, Kyle Carter, was heavily involved in the recruitment of the restaurant.  "Falbo Bros. Pizzeria is a successful franchise with locations in Wisconsin, Iowa, and Colorado," said Carter.  "We thought the addition of a location in Davenport was a real winner for downtown and the whole community."  Although best known for its pizza by the slice, Falbo Bros. also offers full-size pizzas and delivery.   Its fresh, gourmet pizza blends characteristics from the classics of New York and Chicago, but has unique style all its own.  The crust is rolled by hand using dough made fresh every few hours and the sauce is made from scratch as well.

"I can't wait to open the new operation," adds Barry Golinvaux, the franchise owner.  "The location is an excellent fit and the culture of the RME will tie in nicely with the culture of Falbo Bros. - we are very much looking forward to serving the Quad Cities."

The RME Café's last day of operation will be Thursday, October 31, 2013. The space will be closed for three to four weeks for a remodel and build-out. Falbo Bros. Pizzeria plans to be open Sunday - Wednesday 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. and Thursday-Saturday 11 a.m. - 3 a.m.

For more information about Falbo Bros. Pizzeria, visit www.FalboBrosPizza.com

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For many people, the holidays involve indulging in buffet tables loaded with lots of fattening, processed foods and sugary sweets.

For those of us who strive the rest of the year to eat a healthy diet while leading busy lives, it can be a challenging time. Not only are we busier than ever, we know that all those foods we usually try to avoid are going to give us indigestion, sap our energy, and pile on the pounds.

"It really isn't hard to give yourself, your family and friends the gift of delicious, nutrient-rich meals over the holidays," says holistic chef and certified healing foods specialist Shelley Alexander, author of "Deliciously Holistic," (www.aharmonyhealing.com), a new, full-color cookbook featuring more than 154 of her favorite healing foods recipes and 50 pages of holistic lifestyle tips to increase energy and immunity.

"Instead of heading to the local supermarket, visit a farmers' market, where you can buy fresh, local, seasonal and organic produce, along with other nutritious foods created by farmers and local food artisans," she says. "You'll have a much more enjoyable experience in addition to stocking up on all the ingredients you need to have handy. You can also find excellent choices at natural and health food stores."

Nutrient-rich, whole foods that don't have unnatural fillers and other additives, including seasonal, organic vegetables and fruits, wild-caught seafood, and pasture-raised, organic chicken and meats that come from well-fed, unadulterated, healthy animals, will completely nourish your body, make you feel better and ramp up your energy, she says. And you'll find you won't overeat, so it's much easier to maintain your weight without counting calories.

Alexander offers six tips for quick and convenient healthy eating during the holidays.

• When shopping, check labels and avoid foods with a long list of ingredients. The best whole foods have one or just a few unprocessed or minimally processed, easily recognized ingredients, Alexander says. Among ingredients to avoid: chemicals, artificial sweeteners, high fructose corn syrup, nitrates, MSG, genetically modified ingredients and preservatives (indicated by the initials BHT, BHA, EDTA and THBQ.)

• Set aside a few hours each week to prep foods to eat in the days ahead. Cut up produce and store it in airtight containers. Lightly wash produce before using with natural vegetable wash or use one part white vinegar to three parts water. Make several homemade vinaigrettes or dressings to last all week so you can make leafy greens and vegetable salads in minutes. Clean and marinate enough meat or poultry for dinners over the next few days.

• Start your day with a green smoothie. Cut and freeze organic fresh fruit to use in green smoothies. You can also buy frozen fruit that's already cut up. Add organic kale or spinach, coconut water or nut and seed milks plus natural sweeteners such as dates or stevia for an energy-boosting beverage.

• For your holiday dinners, plan on making at least three to four dishes that are both delicious and nutritious. Good examples are pasture-raised, wild turkey with sage and garlic, baked wild salmon with lemon and herbs, steamed greens, roasted heirloom root vegetables drizzled with balsamic glaze, pureed winter squash soups, and desserts made with seasonal fruits, spices, and healthy sweeteners like coconut sugar or raw honey.

• Invest in a dehydrator. Dehydrate fruits and vegetables and raw nuts or seeds that have been soaked in unrefined sea salt water (which removes anti-nutrients, kick-starts the germination process, and increases key vitamins), and you'll have plenty of on-the-go snacks with a long shelf life. Dehydrators are convenient and easy to use; Alexander recommends Excalibur.

• Make batches of fermented vegetables twice a month. Alexander recommends eating fermented vegetables every day to keep your digestive system healthy. They're loaded with probiotics - the good bacteria your intestines need. Mix a variety of organic vegetables such as carrots and celery into brine with warm filtered water, unrefined sea salt, and cultured vegetable starter or liquid whey, and mix with shredded cabbage heads. Pack the mixture into sterilized glass jars and allow the vegetables to ferment for five to seven days. Once done fermenting, store in the refrigerator for up to 6 months.

"Stick to whole, healthy foods this holiday season, and you'll feel so good, you won't want to go near the buffet table at your office party," Alexander says.

About Shelley Alexander, CHFS: Shelley Alexander has enjoyed a lifelong love of delicious, locally grown, seasonal foods. She received her formal chef's training at The Los Angeles Culinary Institute. Alexander is a holistic chef, certified healing foods specialist, cookbook author, and owner of the holistic health company, A Harmony Healing, in Los Angeles.
Chains expand robust morning menu with a classic American flavor for fall

CARPINTERIA, Calif. - October 9, 2013 - The leaves of the maple tree will soon be ablaze in seasonal colors, and the cooler weather is the perfect time to enjoy the flavors of the tree's syrup at breakfast. With hundreds of years of delicious history, maple epitomizes fall ... and America. After early settlers to the New World learned of maple syrup from Native Americans in the 17th century, they had to work long hours just to harvest one sweet taste. Starting today, Carl's Jr. customers can experience that same maple goodness far more easily. And starting Monday, Oct. 14, Hardee's customers get their chance. Both brands are introducing the new Maple Sausage, Egg and Cheese Biscuit, infusing the flavors of maple and sausage for a sweet and savory breakfast combination epic enough for the history books.

Made with three maple sausage links, a slice of American cheese and egg, all piled inside a famous Hardee's Made from Scratch Biscuit™, it is a culinary ode to fall.

"The combination of sweet and savory tastes has been part of a great breakfast at least since maple syrup became commercially available to the mass public at affordable prices in the early 20th century," said Brad Haley, chief marketing officer for CKE Restaurants Holdings, Inc., the parent company of Carl's Jr. and Hardee's. "Our new Maple Sausage, Egg and Cheese Biscuit continues that tradition by combining the sweetness of maple with the savoryness of breakfast sausage. Pile that with cheese and egg inside one of our famous Made from Scratch buttermilk biscuits and it's not surprising that it was a hit with our guests when we tested it earlier this year. While the fall season may be the time people start to think more about maple syrup, this biscuit would be great any time of year."

The Maple Sausage, Egg and Cheese Biscuit is available at participating Carl's Jr. and Hardee's locations for $2.69 as an entrée and $4.39 as a small combo. Prices may vary by location.

About Carl's Jr.
Carl's Jr. ® is celebrating more than 70 years in the quick-service industry. What began as a lone hot dog cart in Los Angeles, Calif., in 1941 is today a wholly owned subsidiary of CKE Restaurants Holdings, Inc. of Carpinteria, Calif. As of the end of the second quarter of fiscal 2014, the Company, through its subsidiaries, had a total of 3,373 franchised or company-operated restaurants in 42 states and 28 foreign countries and U.S. territories worldwide, including 1,403 Carl's Jr.® restaurants and 1,965 Hardee's® restaurants. For more information, or to find a Carl's Jr. near you, go to www.carlsjr.com. Carl's Jr. social media sites include www.facebook.com/carlsjr, www.twitter.com/carlsjr and www.youtube.com/carlsjr.

About Hardee's
Celebrating more than 50 years in the quick-service industry, Hardee's® Food Systems is a wholly owned subsidiary of CKE Restaurants Holdings, Inc. of Carpinteria, Calif. As of the end of the second quarter of fiscal 2014, the Company, through its subsidiaries, had a total of 3,373 franchised or company-operated restaurants in 42 states and 28 foreign countries and U.S. territories worldwide, including 1,403 Carl's Jr.® restaurants and 1,965 Hardee's® restaurants. For more information, or to find a Hardee's near you, go to www.hardees.com. Hardee's social media sites include www.facebook.com/hardees, www.twitter.com/hardees and www.youtube.com/hardees.

Beer ranks at #13 across our country's beer consumption across all states which upsets their livers mostly:).  With most of the locals preferring a bottle of Templeton Rye among other brands, they also love a good glass of wine or two, with Iowa citizens celebrating their fondness for these two drinks in festivals such as Clear Lake Harvest Festival scheduled this fall.

Beer and wine have definitely stood out among other choice of drinks, and you can see how much it has been embedded in our history as seen in the infographic: http://financesonline.com/beer-vs-wine/.

The infographic is also rich with other wine and beer related facts, figures and trivia that every enthusiast of these drinks will find interesting, or even surprising:

  • Did you know that no one enjoys wine more than the folks in the Vatican City? They are considered to be the world's biggest consumers of wine with 365 bottles a year per capita (which makes exactly one bottle a day!).
  • Those who favor wine will be thrilled to learn that California wines dominate the list of top wine brands in 2012
  • Beer fans can always boast the immense popularity of their favorite beverage as they discover that beer sells nearly 8,000 times more than wine and some archaeologists claim it may have even contributed to making our entire civilization possible!

Ham, Sausage, Bacon, Chops, Ribs, Tenderloin. No wonder we are excited to celebrate National Pork Month at the Shed! Although we are serving up delicious pork dishes all year long, we are planning some exciting additions for the month of October. Over the years The Machine Shed has won many awards for our pork dishes. This October we will be featuring award winning pork dishes and customer favorites from our past including The Smoke House Pork Chop, The Pioneer, and The Tangy Tenderloin. Be sure to try our new favorite, The Caramel Apple Bacon Pork Loin. When you stop in make sure you sign up for our Pork Giveaway packages compliments of the Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota Pork Producers. We will draw winners at the end of the month.

Check out our Machine Shed Blog to get our Fall Harvest eBook featuring delicious Pork Recipes as well as our Facebook page for more Pork Month fun. The Machine Shed is located at Northwest Blvd and I-80 in Davenport, IA.

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Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack released the following statement today after the House voted on the separate nutrition section of the farm bill. Breaking with decades of precedence, House Republicans separated the agriculture and nutrition portions of the farm bill, which threatens its chance at being signed into law. The nutrition-only section put before the House today contained $40 billion in cuts to nutrition assistance programs. The splitting of the two sections was opposed by hundreds of agriculture groups, including the Iowa Farm Bureau.

"As someone raised by a single mother who relied in part on food stamps to put food on the table, I know first-hand that the cuts included in this legislation would have a draconian impact on many families who are still trying to recover. We cannot pull the rug out from under working families, children, seniors and veterans.

"Now that the latest political theater directed by the Tea Party wing of the Republican Party is over, it is long past time for Speaker Boehner to get serious about getting a farm bill done and go to conference with the Senate. I strongly opposed splitting the agriculture and nutrition sections of the farm bill because it threatens the chances of getting a farm bill signed into law. Our farmers, rural communities and economy are depending on a commonsense, practical farm bill. The farm bill helps keep our economy strong and creates jobs far beyond the farm. We must pass the farm bill without further delay."

Loebsack has consistently fought to move a farm bill forward that can be signed into law. In July, he joined the Iowa delegation, and was one of only 24 Democrats to support the complete House version of the farm bill, which was voted down. He also introduced in the House the bipartisan Senate farm bill which was supported by both Senators Harkin and Grassley.

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MONTICELLO, IA --The annual Camp Courageous of Iowa Pancake Breakfast and Open House is set for Sunday, September 29, 2013 from 7:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.

Camp Courageous began serving individuals with disabilities during the summer of 1974 with campers totaling 211. Camp Courageous of Iowa is run on donations, without government support, without paid fund raisers, and without formal sponsorship. Today the camp is open year-round and the campers number is over 6,500!

Camp Courageous is celebrating their 39th anniversary. A DVD presentation about the camp, as well as new camp merchandise can be found in the camp's main office. Leo Greco CDs and DVDs also available.

A hot breakfast that includes pancakes, sausage, and more. The cost is $5.00 for adults and $3.00 for children under 12. After your breakfast enjoy a Live WMT Broadcast from the camp's main lodge. Live Reenactment Train Robbery by Red Cedar Regulators at the Train Depot at 9:00 AM, 9:45 AM, 10:45 AM, and 11:45 AM. Live! In the Sill barn performing free will be Dixie-Notes-Plus at 10:00, 11:00, 12:00.

See the new entrance to Camp Courageous, new curb / gutter, new parking surface, and location of future caboose.

The camp is located five miles southeast of Monticello off Highway 38 and 151-Exit 65.


The Pancake Breakfast is also kick-off for sales of the Camp Courageous Fruitcakes. The fresh baked Fruitcakes are $10.00 each with no purchase limit.


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Iowa State University Extension and Outreach will offer a ServSafe© certification class on Monday, October 14, 2013 from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM at CASI, 1035 West Kimberly Road, Davenport, Iowa. The class will be taught by nutrition and health specialist, Vera Stokes, a certified ServSafe© instructor and proctor.  

The registration deadline is October 7, 2013.  Please call the Clinton County Extension Office 563-659-5125 to have a form mailed to you.  

The $135 registration fee includes eight hours of instruction, a course book and a same day exam.

ServSafe© Food Safety Training was created by the National Restaurant Association to educate restaurant owners, supervisors, managers and employees about the dangers of foodborne illnesses and how to avoid them.  The course focuses on the foodservice leader's role in measuring risks, setting policies and training and supervising employees.

For more information call Vera Stokes, 563/210-0587 or email vstokes@iastate.edu

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