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DIY Tutorial: Cheeky New Year’s Eve Party Favors + Printable Tags
Growing up, my grandmother always made me eat at least one spoonful of black-eyed peas every New Year’s Day for good luck in the new year – a tradition with origins in the history of the South. This childhood experience – along with my battle-tested belief that Alka-Seltzer is just about the best remedy that modern medicine has to offer for over-indulgence – inspire these cheeky little favors for your New Year’s Eve fete. Cleverly wish your guests good luck with a handful of black-eyed peas and good health (at least the morning after) with a couple of Alka-Seltzer!  – Mandy of Fabric Paper Glue
Materials
Treat Bags in Two Sizes
Scissors
Black-Eyed Peas
Alka-Seltzer
Free Printable Favor Tags printed on cardstock
Washi Tapes
Step One: Depending on the size of your treat bags, you may want to trim a few inches off the top of each bag.
Step Two:Â Pre-fold the tops of the larger treat bags over about 1″, and the smaller about 3/4″ inches.
Step Three:Â Fill each larger treat bag with a small handful of black-eyed peas.
Step Four:Â Pop a couple of Alka-Seltzer into each of the smaller bags.
Step Five: Stack the smaller bag on top of the larger bag, and use strips of washi tape to affix the favor tags to the front and close the flaps on the back.
Enjoy!
For personal use only. Artwork created by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper
Photo Credits: Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper
Wedding Stationery Inspiration: Signature Drink Signs
With New Year’s Eve just two weeks away, signature drinks seem like a very timely topic! Signature drink signs, that is! When you are your bartender or caterer whip up a fancy one-of-a-kind cocktail for your event, it’s always nice to let your guests know just what that is! Signature drink signs on the bar can clue guests in on the drink recipe and even the meaning behind the drink. Here a few inspiring signs to get you in the cocktail mood, whether it’s for your upcoming wedding, or just your big New Year’s Eve bash! —Kelly
Photo by Lauren Peele Photography, Drink Card by Chips & Salsa Design Studio via 100 Layer Cake
Photo by Jose Villa, Drink Sign by Julie Song Ink via Style Me Pretty (left), Photo by Ali Harper, Drink Sign by Ashley Buzzy McHugh via Southern Weddings (right)
Photo by Dixie Pixel, Drink Sign by Gather & Company via Snippet & Ink (left), Photo by Nicole Franzen, Drink Sign by Chloe Greene via 100 Layer Cake (right)
Photo by Wild Whim Design, Drink Sign by Prim & Pixie via 100 Layer Cake
Photo by Love Katie + Sarah, Drink Sign by The Paper Pinwheel via Ruffled (left), Photo by Birds of a Feather, Drink Sign by Bella Figura via Style Me Pretty (right)
Photos by Jeremy & Kristin Photography, Drink Signs by Chips + Salsa Design Studio via Wedding Chicks
Photo by Nole Garey, Menu Cards by Fig. 2 Design Studio with Calligraphy by Meant to Be Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper
Photos by Jillian Mitchell Photography, Drink Signs by austin lane via Style Me Pretty
{images via their respective sources}
A New Year’s Eve Cocktail Dinner Party with St-Germain: The Recipes
New Year’s Eve. Is there a holiday that more loudly calls out for a cocktail party? (Hint: no.) Ring in the new year in style, impress your friends with interesting and well-crafted drinks, and celebrate without trudging outside in the cold. So here are some St-Germain cocktail recipes to try – or to spark your creativity. You still have a couple weeks left. Send out some invitations and start stocking up your home bar!
Alliance Club Punch
1 Bottle (750 ml) Genever
1/3 Bottle (250 ml) Cognac or Brandy
8 oz St-Germain
4 Lemons
1 Cup Sugar
First, thinly peel the lemons and muddle the peels in the sugar to extract the lemon oils. Let this sit for an hour, then remove the peels, squeezing out as much sugar as possible. Juice the lemons, combining about 8 oz of fresh juice with the sugar, then muddle again to combine. Pour the sweetened lemon juice along with the Genever, Brandy, and St-Germain into a punch bowl. Add two quarts of cold water and top the bowl off with ice. Invite your guests to serve themselves from the communal bowl.
Punch is pretty much the most perfect party drink you could wish for. It’s not particularly laborious to make a tasty, solid punch; a single punch can be enough to serve an entire party; and it brings your guests together to mingle as they refill their glasses. (This is why punch glasses should be tiny and demand frequent trips back to the punch bowl.) Punch has a terrible reputation thanks to years of abuse, so your guests might take some convincing. But a punch like this – boozy and sweet but not obnoxiously so, malty and complex from the Genever and St-Germain standing in for the punch’s traditional spice – should convince them. And feel free to play around with the recipe – just make sure to use full-bodied, pot distilled spirits. (You could replace the Genever with whiskey or maybe even rum, for example, but please don’t use English gin in its place.)
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The Entente Cordiale
2 oz Cognac or Brandy
1/2 oz St-Germain
Champagne
Lemon Juice and Sugar to Garnish
Add a splash of lemon juice to a chilled cocktail glass and swirl to coat the interior. Discard the lemon juice, then fill the glass with finely powdered sugar. Discard this too, leaving the interior frosted with sugar. Combine the Brandy and St-Germain in a mixing glass filled with ice, stir until chilled, and then strain into the sugared glass. Top with champagne and serve.
The Entente Cordiale is a play on a classic drink, the Buck and Breck, named somewhat improbably for the winning presidential ticket in 1856, James Buchanan and John Beckenridge. Despite all that fancy brandy and champagne, it’s actually a pretty fun and bubbly drink – smooth from the brandy, crisp and fizzy from the champagne, with the champagne’s dryness balanced out by the floral sweetness of the St-Germain and the sugar garnish. It’s also a lot easier to make for a party than it sounds. Just measure out your ingredients into a large mixing glass and sugar your glasses before the party begins. Then, once it’s time to serve, add the ice, stir and strain into the prepared glasses, and top with champagne in front of your impressed guests.
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French 105
1 1/2 oz Gin
1/2 oz St-Germain
1/2 oz Lemon Juice
Champagne
Combine the Gin, St-Germain, and lemon juice. Shake with lots of ice. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass or champagne flute, top with champagne, and serve.
The French 105 is our take on a classic drink, the French 75, invented in 1915 at the New York Bar in Paris. Like the French 75, the French 105 is named after an artillery piece – because this drink can pack a kick. It’s crisp and light and effervescent, and the gin and St-Germain lend a bit of floral flourish, but still boozy. This is another drink that’s pretty easy to prepare ahead in a big batch. Measure everything out ahead of time in a large shaker. Then, just before serving, add your ice, shake well, strain into chilled cocktail glasses, and top with champagne in front of your very impressed guests.
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Sparkle + Shine Mocktail
1/2 Lemon Juice
1/2 oz Lime Juice
1 oz Grenadine
Sparkling Water
To make your own Grenadine, combine two cups of pomegranate juice and two cups of sugar, heating gently and stirring frequently until the sugar is dissolved. Then add two ounces of pomegranate molasses and a teaspoon of orange blossom water, again stirring until fully dissolved. Let the Grenadine syrup cool, then combine all the ingredients in a highball glass filled with lots of ice and serve.
Ok, so not everyone drinks, but everyone can still enjoy the party. Sweetly-tart Grenadine syrup is a great way to whip up a fun mocktail – Shirley Temple, anyone? – but making your own Grenadine is a quick and easy way to elevate what could be a a phoned-in drink into a mocktail worth serving your guests. I like this one with tonic water, adding a bit of bitterness and depth. If you do this, I recommend adding a dash more Grenadine for balance.
All illustrations by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper
Calligraphy Cocktail Menu Cards: Meant to Be Calligraphy
Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper
This post is brought to you in collaboration with St-Germain. All content, photos, recipes, and words are our own. Thank you for supporting the sponsors that help make Oh So Beautiful Paper possible!
p.s. In case you missed them, you can see our first three cocktail party posts right here: a housewarming cocktail party + recipes, a backyard summer cocktail party + recipes, and a bon voyage cocktail party + recipes.
A New Year’s Eve Cocktail Dinner Party with St-Germain
Only a couple more weeks left in 2013! I always look forward to New Year’s Eve – both as an opportunity to celebrate with friends and as a chance to welcome change with open arms. Ever since I read The Night Circus earlier this year (so good!), I’ve been intrigued by the idea of formal midnight dinner parties. Invite a few close friends, give them an excuse to dress up in their best party clothes (something I don’t get to do nearly often enough), and have a wonderful evening full of great food and cocktails. And what better occasion for a midnight dinner than New Year’s Eve? So we’ve teamed up with our friends at St-Germain, Karson Butler Events, and Meant to Be Calligraphy to offer some inspiration for those of you planning some New Year’s Eve festivities: a cocktail dinner party!
As always, let’s start with the invitations! Because we were aiming for something a bit more formal this time around, I decided to go with calligraphy from start to finish. Michele from Meant to Be Calligraphy created a stunning invitation in classic black ink on white paper and a calligraphy flourish on the back. We paired the invitations with slate gray envelopes (with a colorful DIY envelope liner) addressed in shimmery gold ink.
We set up a side table as a makeshift bar to welcome guests with cocktails and appetizers – a little something to keep everyone happy through the countdown to midnight! We’ll be sharing the recipes a little bit later, but our menu included a cheese plate (a party requirement, yes?), a punch, a classic cocktail recipe, a champagne cocktail, and a mocktail for any designated drivers.
Slate from Brooklyn Slate Company / Wood serving board from Target
Vintage punch bowl set and ladle / Coasters from Linea Carta
I’ve been obsessed with these constellation matchboxes for the longest time – they seemed like the perfect favors for a New Year’s Eve party! We paired them with gray and white striped favor bags from Shop Sweet Lulu with Michele’s calligraphy in gold ink.
I found these heart shaped cards at Paper Source a while back (sadly no longer available in black), but wasn’t quite sure what to do with them. Michele came up with the brilliant idea of giving them to guests to inspire resolutions for the new year and conversations with fellow guests. Michele wrote out phrases on each card, again in gold ink – they’re now pretty much my favorite thing ever!
After midnight, time for dinner! Amber and Emily from Karson Butler Events created a backdrop of white streamers and a mixture of tissue paper fans and honeycombs in various sizes for a really beautiful layered texture. It’s so pretty against the white brick wall!
I had so much fun with the floral arrangements! I created a single centerpiece for the dinner table with peonies, garden roses, black and white anemones, paperwhites, silver brunia, white hypericum berries, and seeded eucalyptus. Smaller arrangements with the same flowers were sprinkled around the bar, along with a large bunch of seeded eucalyptus and bay leaves in an antique metal pitcher.
I also did a simple swag of greenery down the center of the dinner table using small clippings of seeded eucalyptus, bay leaves, olive leaves, hypericum berries, and gold spray painted pepper berries (for a bit of extra sparkle) – all tucked around the centerpiece floral arrangement and small mercury glass votives. No floral wire necessary! We also created a table runner using layers of burlap – a plain loose weave burlap over silver polka dot burlap from Joann Fabrics.
Our place settings included place cards with Michele’s calligraphy in silver ink on slate gray paper, metallic rimmed plates with gray linen napkins, and gold flatware.
Full cocktail and mocktail recipes are coming up in just a bit!
Styling: Oh So Beautiful Paper and Karson Butler Events
Invitations and Calligraphy: Meant to Be Calligraphy
Floral Design: Oh So Beautiful Paper
Location: Karson Butler Events Design Studio
Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper