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5 Bar Cart Essentials for the Leo Aesthetic

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A Hot Clooney Mezcal Cocktail sits in a tall old fashioned glass with limes, tajin on the rim, and edible flowers on top.

Leo season arrives in full color. The Sun is high, fruit is at its peak, and the days feel made for display and celebration. There’s a richness to this part of summer, a sense that things are ripe and worth savoring. Leo leans into that. It doesn’t content itself to entertain – it elevates the word! Even a simple drink can become a moment, a gesture, a show of care delivered with unmistakable flair.

This is a sign that celebrates generosity and excellence – the old texts go so far as to say Leo is a sign of opulence and magnificence. It doesn’t cut corners, but it doesn’t hoard either. The Leo bar cart is built with intention. It reflects personal taste, honors the guest, and holds space for a little drama. Things gleam here. Tools have weight. Glass catches the light. The drink doesn’t need to be complicated – it just needs to shine.

Below are five essentials to help bring that energy to life. Think bold, structured, and just a little regal, with color, texture, and presence in every pour.

What Should the Zodiac Sign Cancer Have on Their Bar Cart?

House-Made Syrups: Stone Fruit, Saffron, or Hibiscus

Color-rich, sensory, and ready to command attention.

A syrup is more than a flavor – it’s the signature at the bottom of the glass. Leo benefits from something that feels chosen and a little celebratory, with brightness, color, and a trace of indulgence. Stone fruits like peach bring sun-soaked depth. Hibiscus offers vibrancy and a tang that cuts cleanly through sparkling wine. Saffron, with its golden hue and faint floral warmth, softens a spirit’s edge while adding dimension.

Syrups should feel as intentional as the drink itself. That means clarity in color, balance in sweetness, and a finish that lingers. Start by simmering equal parts sugar and water, then infuse with your chosen ingredient – fresh peaches, dried hibiscus petals, or a pinch of saffron threads. Let the mix steep until it smells like something worth slowing down for. Strain and bottle once cooled. Store it in glass, label it with the date, and keep it ready.

These syrups excel in spritzes, gin fizzes, or anything served long over ice. Peach and saffron pair beautifully with citrus and tonic, especially when garnished with a strip of peel or a flowering herb. Hibiscus sharpens fruit purées and rounds out the edges of floral vermouths. Even a teaspoon in soda water can lift the tone of an afternoon.

What matters here is the visual and sensory impact. The syrup introduces color, catch, and clarity – just enough to make a drink feel composed. Keep one or two of these in regular rotation, and let their presence set the mood before a word has been spoken.

Hibiscus‑Mint Spritz

Two skinny glasses of our Hibiscus and Mint Spritz cocktail sit to the left next two a vase of full, blooming, dark red flowers.

If a hibiscus syrup sits on your bar car, use it to make a fruity and refreshing spritz. A simple mix of gin, lime juice, simple syrup, hibiscus syrup, soda water, fresh raspberries, and mint leaves is all this recipe takes. Think of this like a gin and tonic but for those hot, sunny days.

Bar Tools That Make a Statement

Well-made, weighted, and ready for display.

Leo loves a sense of occasion, and thrives where form and function meet. The tools on this bar cart deserve to be seen and used – polished metal, clean silhouettes, and materials with a little gravity. A balanced bar spoon, a shaker with a tight seal, a jigger that pours with precision: these pieces guide the rhythm of the pour and give each step a sense of show and intention.

The finish matters. Brass and copper warm up a cart visually, while matte black or lacquered handles bring contrast. Choose what suits your eye, and suits the bar cart’s surroundings. A muddler with weight, a strainer that fits the hand, or a narrow funnel can all become familiar favorites. The tools don’t need to match, but they should feel related – like they belong in the same scene.

Keep them visible and easy to reach. Use a shallow bowl, a tall glass, or a weighted tray. These pieces earn their place through utility, but they offer more than that. Their presence sets a tone before the drink begins.

Large-Format Ice Molds

Shape, clarity, and a controlled melt.

Leo loves a bit of show when it comes to form. Large-format molds offer structure and style – spheres, oversized cubes, or slow-melting blocks that hold form and cool the glass without rushing the flavor. These shapes carry weight in the hand and invite a more deliberate pace. They also add dimension to the drink, catching the light and reflecting whatever color is in the glass.

Clear ice elevates the presentation. It’s easiest to achieve by using boiled water and an insulated mold, though any clean cube will do when time is short. Spheres are ideal in spirit-led drinks, while tall cubes work well in spritzes or long builds. If your cart holds a chilled vermouth or infused whiskey, this is the kind of ice that makes the pour feel complete.

Store a few in advance and keep them wrapped to preserve clarity. A small bin or freezer-safe pouch makes it easy to grab what’s needed. The mold itself doesn’t have to be decorative – though if it is, Leo won’t mind. What matters is that the ice sets the tone before the first sip lands. The effect is subtle, but the impression lasts.

Summer Fruit: Mango, Peach, Blood Orange

Ripe color, fragrant flesh, and richness by the slice.

Leo’s season brings trees heavy with stone fruit, citrus at its deepest hue, and markets full of bold shapes and sugar. These fruits set the tone for a drink: their scent arrives before the glass does, and their color frames the whole composition.

Mango offers body and saturation. Use it sliced for garnish, diced and muddled, or blended into a purée with a touch of lime and simple syrup. Yellow peach carries warmth and softness, especially when paired with sparkling wine or white vermouth. Blood orange brings dramatic contrast, with sharp acidity and a deep red pigment that blooms in the glass. Its peel can be sliced thin and twisted, or broiled gently to release oils before floating.

These fruits work across the board – mixed into spritzes, layered into punches, or served as-is beside a neat pour. For a slower pace, try soaking slices in a light liqueur for a few hours before service. The infusion adds depth, and the fruit becomes a second course.

Display what’s ripe in a shallow bowl on the cart. (Pick fruit from the market with vibrant color you’d want to show.) Choose only what you’ll use within a few days and refrigerate what needs to keep. Let the fruit carry its own presence, with perhaps a few limes to punctuate the scene.

Grilled Peach Smash Cocktail

Deliciously refreshing grilled peach smash cocktail with fresh mint and a hint of citrus, served in a stylish glass.

You’ll need two grilled peach segments to create a slightly smokey infusion of sweetness. Besides the fruit, a basil brown sugar syrup takes this cocktail to extravagant levels that Leo can admire. Not to mention the depth of bourbon that peaks through the cocktail.

Hot Clooney Mezcal Cocktail

A Hot Clooney Mezcal Cocktail sits in a tall old fashioned glass with limes, tajin on the rim, and edible flowers on top.

For the Leo’s who prefer the complex, aromatic nature of a mango. Chunks of creamy-sweet mango come together with lime juice, cilantro, raw honey syrup, and mezcal. Top with cream soda and also add a Tajin rim for that little bit of fieriness that always comes with Leos.

Signature Glassware

Elevated shape, strong silhouette, and a sense of presence.

Glassware is part of the composition. Leo responds to line and proportion, to the way a pour catches light or rises just above the rim. Choose a few forms that stand apart – something with a flared bowl, a colored stem, or a wide base with satisfying weight. A tall coupe adds ceremony to even the simplest spritz. A vintage goblet shifts the mood before the drink has begun.

This doesn’t require a matched set. Three or four shapes in steady rotation is enough. Let one feel generous, another more restrained. Consider the feel in the hand, the balance of the foot, the color when backlit. A thin gold rim or etched pattern can add detail without overwhelming the eye.

Store glassware where it can be seen. A low shelf, a standing rack, or the cart itself can all work. Rinse with care and dry with cloth. If a guest reaches for the same glass each time, that’s a sign you’ve chosen well. A drink’s texture lives in the mouth, but its memory starts with the eyes.

A Note on Storage

Leo benefits from an arrangement that feels intentional. The bar cart should read as complete, but not overfilled. Let each item stand on its own. Group tools together in a tray or upright vessel. Display ripe fruit where it brings color. Keep spirits and mixers aligned by height or tone.

Glassware can sit on a shelf just below eye level, angled slightly to catch light. Signature bottles – vermouths, infusions, or a syrup in a glass jar – belong in view, but spaced with care.

Store ice molds in the freezer, labeled syrups in the fridge, and small tools where they’re easy to reach. Even a cutting board or linen towel deserves its place. When the cart is at rest, it still offers something to look at. When in use, it moves easily.

Now, put your newly organized bar cart to the test by mixing up an Aperol Spritz made especially for Leo.

Author

Wade Caves, based in Brooklyn, NY, is an astrological consultant and educator specializing in problem-solving applications of astrology. He teaches astrological divination and astronomy at the School of Traditional Astrology. Wade also publishes his work on world astrology through Skyscript’s In Mundo publishing desk. He even hosts the World Astrology Summit. A conference dedicated to the advancement of astrology for global problem-solving. Website: wadecaves.com • skyscript.co.uk/inmundo. Email: hello@wadecaves.com.

Story by Wade Caves

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Collier’s Cuts: Hi, I’m ‘Supergirl,’ Welcome to ‘Jackass: Best and Last,’ Hitting Movie Theaters

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Supergirl stands in her costume with her hair blowing back and the sun glowing around her.
Supergirl in sunglasses and her white dog on an orange movie rating card of 3.5 out of 5 stars.

A year after James Gunn rebooted the DC Comics series with the enjoyable Superman, Kal-El’s cousin gets the spotlight. The Supergirl movie stars Milly Alcock as a similarly super, but differently motivated, young Kryptonian whose heroic duty interrupts a solo vacation.

She’s Supergirl, but She’s Going through a Phase in Her First Feature Movie

Audiences met Supergirl — Kara Zor-El, officially — at the end of last year’s film, stumbling into the Fortress of Solitude after a bender to pick up her beloved pooch, Krypto. (Superman was just dog-sitting.) Now, she’s celebrating her 23rd birthday with a planet-hopping pub crawl. She only invites Krypto.

If drinking with only canine companionship in the galaxy’s worst dives reads as potentially troubled, stick around; we’ll get (blessedly succinct) summaries of Supergirl’s trauma later in the film. Now, though, there’s a reluctant quest afoot: Krem (Matthias Schoenaerts), an outlaw and human trafficker, has murdered the family of a vengeance-minded teen (Eve Ridley). The angry youth wants Supergirl’s help; our heroine would rather stick to the barfly life.

When Krem attacks Krypto, however, Kara is more than happy to join the hunt.

The Characters Outshine the Action

The chase will lead Supergirl across several seedy planets and into a string of rusty starships. The film, which is capably handled by I, Tonya director Craig Gillespie, has the lived-in realism of the Star Wars series with the added irreverence of producer Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy series.

The action lags a bit; this is a film where the dialogue has more impact than the fisticuffs. (Gillespie has dabbled in franchise filmmaking, including Disney’s Cruella, but clearly hasn’t spent much time studying up on his fight scenes.) And, while Supergirl is relatively brief at 108 minutes, there’s probably one relocation too many; we make a lot of stops for a straightforward story.

The cast, however, more than carries us through any dips in intrigue. Jason Momoa — clearly having more fun than he did in a half-dozen or so appearances in the previous version of the DC Universe — arrives as the mercenary Lobo, chewing the scenery in heavy face paint. And Alcock plants her flag as a star to reckon with here, easily making Kara the equal to her much more well-known cousin. Assuming this series sticks around, as superhero franchises tend to do, it’ll be a delight to see her again.

Does Jackass: Best and Last Stand Up to the Rest?

An orange background with a photo of Johnny Knoxville from Jackass Best and Last being chased by a goat with a movie rating of 2 out of 5 stars.

Before we get into this, let me say that I’m a longtime defender of the Jackass movies. At the risk of over-intellectualizing a series that’s primarily about pain and butts, they represent a long-overdue return of pure slapstick. There are traces of Buster Keaton in Johnny Knoxville.

That said, the fifth big-screen adventure for these aging rapscallions is less a celebration of the extremes to which motivated goofballs can push their bodies and more a reminder that … well, time catches up with all of us.

Our familiar jackasses just can’t hurl themselves around like they used to. (Knoxville, in fact, has been warned that he probably can’t handle another concussion and thus remains far from most action.) As in 2022’s Jackass Forever, that means many of the new stunts and setups focus on … well, anatomy — and the various substances the human body can produce. In the glory days of Jackass, such gross-out moments provide a break from the more engaging mayhem; now, they’re all it is.

Only the Greatest Hits Still Work

Diverging from the pure parade of chaos in the previous films, Jackass: Best and Last instead has three modes. About a third of the film is brand new. Then, another segment consists of old, previously unseen (or differently presented) footage. Finally, the film is rounded out by simply revisiting favorite moments from earlier in the series.

It’s telling that the biggest laughs come from decades-old footage. Nothing new can compete with the giant hand — if you know, you know — and I laughed at it, decades after I first saw it. Unfortunately, placing these sturdy bits of chaos against watered-down, modern mayhem only highlights the discrepancy.

Perhaps there would be more of a future here if this film had been a passing of the torch. The crew inaugurated younger members in Jackass Forever, most of whom return (though Rachel Wolfson, the first female member of the cast, is almost entirely sidelined in Best and Last). Instead of letting the youngsters take the spotlight, though, the old gang makes this film into one last ride into the sunset.

If I were Johnny Knoxville, I probably would’ve wanted the same thing. That does not, however, make for a great piece of comedy — and it’s a shame that this will likely be the final chapter.

Story by Sean Collier
Featured Photo Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

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Quick and Easy Kid-Friendly Fourth of July Treats

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Two people hold red, white, and blue homemade bomb pops above two glasses of clear sparkling liquid on a picnic table.

With brightly colored decorations, picnics, yard games, swimming, friends and family, and a finale of fireworks, kids just might think the Fourth of July is the best kind of a birthday celebration. We’ve sourced some of our easy, perfect for the Fourth of July recipes to prove those kids right. And this year, the nation’s 250th falls on a Saturday, so get ready for a big weekend of food, fun — and easy recipes!

Quick and Easy Fourth of July Treats All Kids Will Love

Paleta Popsicles

Various dark red and orange colored fruit popsicles sit on green wood. Paleta Popsicles Recipe

Paleta popsicles — aka Mexican ice pops — will bring out the best in your kids’ favorite fruit — choose from pineapple, mango, strawberry, or kiwi, frozen or fresh, and blend with a few ingredients. These pops could also be called the Parenta Pops, as the frozen confection can be added to a vodka soda, with the pop slowly melting into the drink. Cheers!

Breakfast Smoothie Pops

Children of all ages will say yes to a smoothie pop for breakfast.

While these pops — with oats and protein powder — are great for an on-the-go morning, they also fit the bill as a healthy midday snack that won’t cause your kids’ energy to crash. And they might not even know that this treat has spinach as a main ingredient. Shhhh. 

Homemade Bomb Pops

Two people hold red, white, and blue homemade bomb pops above two glasses of clear sparkling liquid on a picnic table.

Okay, the last popsicle recipe — ’tis the season! — is a hit with both kids and parents alike. Kids love the colorful, creamy layers and bright stripes, while parents appreciate the healthy, real ingredients like yogurt, blueberries, strawberries, and honey. It’s easy to make too — all it takes is a little time.

Watermelon Juice

A short glass of homemade watermelon juice with ice and sprigs of lavender on top as fruit ice cubes and watermelon slices sit on the table.

Kids love watermelon; kids love fruit juices, so this concoction seems like a summer-treat no-brainer. This can be a fun recipe to ask for their help with, as kids might find a certain novelty to the process of cutting, cooking, juicing — and then slurping down that giant watermelon.

Fourth of July Dessert Kabobs

A white plate holds 6 kabobs with strawberries, blueberries, and squares of poundcake on them.

This quick picnic dessert is fun to make with kids, and can be customized to the audience. The “white” portion of the kabob can be pound cake, powdered donut holes, marshmallows, or banana chunks (if you serve soon after you make them). Watermelon could replace strawberries. 

Easy Twix Cake

An aerial view of a candy cake with two pieces cut out and put on brown plates

Sometimes, no matter the occasion, chocolate is the answer. And this no-bake cake has all the fun of your kids’ favorite candy bars and all the delight of cool whip and pudding in one 9 x 13 dish. If you are so inspired, one quick swap-in could make this a Snickers cake. 

Easy Fruit Dip

Berries and pineapple on a white plate with a bowl of creamy white fruit dip, and a little gold spoon with some of the dip on a plate

When your family gets invited to a picnic and you’re short on prep time — which, let’s be honest, most parents are — turn a simple fruit platter into an interactive experience by adding a dip. Our choice dip is a bit sweet, a bit tart, a bit tangy, and very complementary to any fruit suits your Fourth of July wishes! 

Easy Sour Cream Cookies

Sour Cream Cookies - A delightful and light Valentine’s treat. Decorate with fresh raspberry meringues for added sweetness.

These fresh treats come together quickly — and if you’re short on time, skip the meringue topping and instead add a dollop of whipped cream with a perfect raspberry, or finish with a quick dusting of powdered sugar or cocoa.

Story by Lauri Gravina

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Zodiac Gift Guide: What to Buy a Cancer

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A record stand holds an album beside a white vase.

Happy Birthday Cancers! To learn about our friends born between June 21 and July 22, we consulted with TABLE Magazine’s astrologer Wade Caves about the personality, temperament, and likes of this water sign — and what might make a good gift for them. The first thing to consider, says Caves, is that, as a crab, “a Cancer has a hard shell but they’re very soft on the inside.”

Here are some ways to show the crab in your life that you care…

Best Gifts for Cancer Zodiac Signs: Ideas for June–July Birthdays

Throw Them a Birthday Party

Cancers are social creatures. “They’re ruled by the moon, and the moon is by far the fastest thing in the sky; it goes all the way around the Earth in 29 days, so Cancers are very known for being out and about and highly engaged.”

One way to make a party just for them is to throw a bash at their favorite restaurant or establishment as a surprise. Being both nurturing and sentimental, Cancers also often maintain long-standing friendships. Perhaps you could invite some old friends to join? 

Cancers love to entertain, says Caves, so you could throw an in-home celebration where friends bring a dish in their favorite server — the sentimental Cancer will appreciate this — or take the pressure off and employ a caterer to do the heavy lifting.

A tall blue kettle with a thin long spout.
Photo From Fellow Stag

A Gift for Their Comfort Space

“The moon also goes dark,” says Caves. Likewise, Cancers need their downtime, an escape, a safe spot to refuel. “Every Cancer has a den of some kind.”

The gift giver’s task is to consider: Where is my loved one’s den? How can I beautify and brighten their space?

This Mongolian cashmere throw from Quince is incredibly soft and cozy yet light. It’s hands-down divine. 

A mulberry silk pillowcase feels luxurious, and is also healthy for your skin and hair. Brooklinen’s version in the color Abyss is a soft place to get lost in thoughts. 

Cancers “appreciate things that they are going to interact with a lot — and are also one of the more stylish of the signs.” So, think gifts for their den that are utilitarian, yet have an inspired design.  

Sunglasses with polarized lenses in a cat eye shape.
Photo From Velodrome

Focus on Their Style

As a sign, “they appreciate sharp angles, sunglasses that have sharp angles, are dramatic, fun, cool, but not something that would make them stick out.”

Having developed a cult following, the Australian-born Le Specs is an on-point brand for Cancers, and the Velodrome cat’s eye style leans into the edges.

Quay embraces the 90s with these throwback frames, updated with sharp angles — and a sharp vibe for the guy in your life. 

Useful and Stylish Kettles

Top of our mind is the Fellow Stag Electric Kettle, which embraces a marriage of function and sleek style. 

Also, Breville is known for top-notch espresso machines, and their compact Bambino is a sweet introduction to the home espresso game.

A person cuts up steak on a wood thick cutting board.
Photo From The Boardsmith

Appreciation for Utility

Caves recommends gifts that are refined and elegant, “yet feel humble.” He suggests a 

“really, a really good cutting board.”

Boos Block is the long-standing gold standard of boards. The Boardsmith is another maker of heirloom-quality boards. Choose a close-grain hardwood, such as maple or walnut. 

A board with a lot of buzz is the MK Free Board. Landing on many “Best of” lists, the board is praised for its light weight, textured surface, and easiness to maintain. It is plant-based, non-porous, and leaves behind no microplastics. This chef’s favorite is great for cutting meat as it cleans up so well, plus, it comes in fun colors. 

Blue and white dyed cloths.
Photo From Gardenheir

Gift Something Blue…

Caves shares that Cancers, as a water sign, love beautiful, deep blues. 

As they also revere their private world, here’s a journal inspired by a deep blue-and-white porcelain plate from the Qing dynasty (housed at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). A meaningful design concept to pair with their meaningful musings? Perfect for the Cancer sign. 

Shibori is a Japanese dye method that creates a deep indigo. This Shibori Kit is a fun introduction to the art, and comes with two tea towels and two bandanas to dye. 

A small red leather square pouch holds keys and hand sanitizer.
Photo From Portland Leather Goods

Or Something Red…

Caves says that Cancers also have a penchant for red, adding “it’s an ancient association.” As well, “they like attention for things that they’re wearing, things they could be complimented for, things that people can notice.”

Red leather is unexpected and makes a statement, and this howler pouch from Portland Leather Goods is also a practical place to store small items that get lost in your bag — one reviewer called it a conversation starter. Plus, delivery is fast. 

A copper watering can on a bench.
Photo From Ten Thousand Villages

Support Cancers’ Nurturing Nature

Cancers are known nurturers who enjoy gardening (especially for Cancer rising). This antique copper watering can is functional and artisan-made, plus it’s fair trade. 

For this moon sign, you could order moonflowers for their very own moon garden. Its flowers unfurl at night — glowing at dusk — then close at dawn. You can order live plants online.

Two brown platters with fruit and vegetables.
Photo From Our Place

Entertain Their Love of Hosting

As Cancers are social, nurturing, and have good taste, they are natural hosts. Caves recommends gifting them clean, elegant dish-ware. Our Place garners a lot of love online and in trendy kitchens, and their ceramic stoneware serving platter set comes in sizes ideal for future appetizer spreads. 

A record stand holds an album beside a white vase.
Photo From Upton

Help Display Their Collection

This is a fun thing we learned from Caves: “Every Cancer I know has a collection of something.” And because of the “den thing is about protection,” they also want to keep their collection safe. Think about what your loved one collects — and how you can gift them the perfect way to display and protect it. 

For someone who collects vinyl records, this shelf achieves both ends perfectly. It displays up to three records — safely on the wall. This LP Stand, from Southern California-based Upton, allows your collector to curate a record selection to have at the ready for their next listening session. It’s got style; it’s got substance. Just like your Cancerian. 

We haven’t forgotten the little ones — for crabby kids who collect Pokemon cards, here is a Pokemon-stylized binder with a display window for their prized card. 

A person lays out bags of tea in front of a box.
Photo From Tea Runners

A Subscription That Leaves Them Surprised

Cancers like change, says Caves. So, monthly subscriptions will give the gift of novelty to your Cancerian each month. Here are a few curated choices: 

Jiggy Puzzle Club delivers 500-piece puzzles (made by female artists from across the world) on a monthly, bi-monthly, or quarterly basis. One reviewer calls it a “guaranteed spark of joy.” Who couldn’t use that? 

A Tea Runners’ tea subscription is another way to send a monthly surprise to your Cancerian. The boxes are customized: either herbal, pure, black, or their original tea box (which includes pure, blended, and herbal teas). You can even customize the first box with teas such as Ceylon Burning Sun (a Sri Lankan black tea), Lavender Lace with lavender cinnamon and mint, blood orange herbal, or the high-end green tea Clouds and Mist.  

A flower subscription is another way to add vibrancy to your Cancer’s den. Urban Stems offers a variety of price points and has a quick turnaround.

While you’re here, you can check out what to stock a Cancer’s bar cart with for more gift ideas! Plus, consider making them the perfect meal with a menu made just for the zodiac sign Cancer.

Story by Lauri Gravina
Featured Photo From Upton

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Your July 2026 Horoscope for the Full Moon in Aquarius

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A full moon beside a tall white light house.

The July 29, 2026 Full Moon falls in Aquarius – a name that means, simply, “water-carrier”: aqua, water, with the suffix that focuses the word on the one carrying it. The water in this image pouring out, not still, and that is an image worth staying with for a moment in this month’s horoscope.

A vessel that must be emptied to be useful. Fixed air, hot and moist: Aquarius is the most deliberate of the air signs, the one that has given its elemental nature intentional form. The water poured from the urn goes where it is directed, not where geography or gravity would take it on its own, and so this sign has associations with human intervention for the betterment of all.

The Babylonian star catalog placed here the figure of Ea, god of the subterranean fresh waters and of wisdom itself, depicted with streams flowing from his shoulders – distributing what was held at depth. The cup-bearer Ganymede, the more familiar Greek association, makes the same point from a different angle: a figure who carries a thing long enough to deliver it, and what is carried was never his to keep.

At 6°, this Full Moon activates the waterbearer’s operating principle: making good use of a resource is what allows more to come in. Keeping things past their delivery dates – ideas incubated beyond their readiness, contributions held back past the right moment – prevents the next thing from arriving.

Deborah Houlding’s notes on the sign Aquarius covers the astronomical and mythological background this sign carries.

Where the Sky Stands for the July Full Moon

The Sun Conjunct Jupiter: The Year’s Most Open Window

The Sun and Jupiter are both at 6° Leo at this Full Moon – exact to the degree. Leo is the Sun’s own sign, where it runs most freely. Jupiter at the same position amplifies anything already there. Think in terms of confidence, visibility and initiative, all of which can come together to multiply returns on your effort. This is a conjunction that opens things.

Jupiter returns to any given degree roughly once every twelve years, which means an exact conjunction with the Sun in Leo won’t come again for more than a decade. That it occurs in Leo – a sign associated with performance and the willingness to be seen publicly – gives this conjunction a quality encouraging a period of bravery and personal courage over the coming year.

Practically, this is a favorable stretch for anything that requires putting yourself forward: presenting work publicly or making overtures in professional and personal contexts that would otherwise feel like a stretch. The conjunction in Leo makes the effort feel natural rather than forced – and that naturalness is part of what the configuration produces.

Overcommitment and promises made in the glow of a good moment that don’t survive ordinary conditions are Jupiter’s characteristic liabilities here. The conjunction opens both possibilities, but it rewards the substance of effort more than showiness – i.e., forward movement in something you’d be glad to own six to twelve months out.

Venus Square Mars: Desire and Disagreement

The square between Venus and Mars at 21° of their respective signs produces friction between two different approaches to close relationships and creative work. Venus is in Virgo: in Virgo, it expresses through precision and care-as-competence, through attending to specifics rather than what feels immediately warm. Mars is in Gemini: fast-moving and argumentative in the productive sense – it generates debate as naturally as it generates ideas, and it isn’t a transit that settles easily.

Mercury rules both signs. That gives this square a particular vibe: the disagreement is likely to be verbal and specific, conducted through the exchange of positions and the speed of reasoning. This, most decidedly, isn’t a square that produces silence or cold distance; it produces friction through ideas and how differently people move through them. Nitpicking and pedantry is a major feature.

In practice, the aspect shows up most in close collaborations and partnerships (because these two rule opposing signs), where Venus in Virgo’s drive toward care and precision runs into Mars in Gemini’s drive toward response and motion. One wants to get it right. The other wants to keep moving. Neither position is wrong, exactly, and both signs being mutable means the friction has room to shift rather than calcify.

It is best to respond with slowness and waiting. Be slower in disagreement, and patient in hearing a position out before the quick response overtakes.

Saturn Stationing Retrograde: The review Before the Push

Saturn is stationing retrograde in Aries, moving slower than at any other point in its cycle, frozen in the sky. A station concentrates what a planet produces. Saturn’s connection to structures and commitments is felt more acutely during its station than at any other point in the retrograde period.

In Aries, Saturn has been pressing for accountability in the areas where drive tends to outrun reflection. The retrograde that begins here turns that pressure inward: the question shifts from what you’re building toward to what your project needs from you next.

The practical direction for this period is review rather than advance. Projects that feel stalled deserve a different angle of approach rather than more pressure. Commitments that feel burdensome are worth examining honestly rather than doubling down on. Saturn stationing in Aries is a signal not to put too much stress on anything unless you prepare to manage the fall-out.

The Moon Conjunct the Stars in the Horn of Capricorn

The Moon at 6° Aquarius is conjunct Giedi Prima, the principal star in the horn of the Sea-Goat. The Arabic name al Sa’d al Dhabih – the Lucky One of the Slaughterers – carries a tension characteristic of this star, namely sacrifice and prosperity bound together.

If you’re a fan of the Dune series, you may recognize the name Giedi Prime – the stars in the horn of the Sea-Goat are the very same binary star system that the Harkonnens call home.

Vivian Robson, working from the traditional catalog, notes that the Moon conjunct these stars brings peculiar and unexpected events alongside the arrival of new and influential contacts. The two qualities go together: this Full Moon tends to facilitate movement through channels that weren’t obviously part of the plan.

This conjunction arrives while Saturn is stationing – concentrated structural weight. The Moon crossing a star whose image is a fortunate sacrifice during Saturn’s standstill gives this Full Moon week a bit of an intense characteristic. Thankfully, the strong influence of Jupiter helps move things a bit toward the good here, even amidst a little chaos.

More on Giedi Prima’s astronomical history and Robson’s full observations.

Sabian Symbol for 6° Aquarius: A Child Born Out of an Eggshell

The Sabian Symbol for 6° Aquarius shows a child emerging from the shell that made its development possible. The shell was doing its job, incubating. The crack is the evidence that the job is over. The shell was the right structure for the right period. This Sabian image says that it’s time for the next stage.

The Full Moon at this degree concentrates attention on anything that has been in incubation longer than the preparation warrants (not unlike the Saturn’s station). If you’ve been in preparation mode past the point where more preparation is improving the result – if the shell has already cracked and you’ve been fitting it back together – this Full Moon marks a natural close of the incubation phase.

Linda Hill’s work goes further into this degree and the full system of Sabian Symbols, which you can reference for your own birth chart.

Seasonal Guidance for Your Zodiac Sign – Fully in Summer

Midsummer is the year’s hottest and driest point. For those who run warm, the heat at this stage can express as physical inflammation, irritability, or disrupted sleep. Resting during the early afternoon, when the heat peaks, is a practice worth adopting – it recurs across warm-climate traditions for straightforward reasons. Eating on the lighter side suits most constitutions; even those that handle heat well benefit from fresh, easily digested food.

These suggestions are drawn from an ancient tradition of thinking about how the body’s constitution responds to seasonal change. They’re offered for consideration, not as rules to follow to the letter – take what applies to your circumstances and leave the rest. To learn more about the theory behind this guidance, see Medieval Temperaments, an article by astrologer Ryhan Butler.

Fire Signs – Aries, Leo, Sagittarius

At peak summer, your constitution is under the most pressure it faces all year. External heat compounds internal heat, which tends to express as inflammation, insomnia, or a persistent short-temperedness that makes everything feel harder than it is. Eat cool and light: fruit, cold soups, fish, salad. Exercise should be gentle and consistent – walking, swimming, nothing that generates much additional heat. Alcohol tolerance is lower in the heat; keep it minimal.

Earth Signs – Capricorn, Taurus, Virgo

Your constitution functions well in the heat of midsummer. The warmth shows up as more limber movement and more agreeable digestion and mood – the season’s benefits at their fullest. Overindulgence is worth watching; you tend to be prone to excess when comfortable, and everything feels comfortable in summer. Keep activity regular even when the temptation is to be leisurely. Eat the season’s produce freely. Alcohol in moderation – there’s more latitude than in other seasons, but excess in heat is still worth avoiding.

Air Signs – Libra, Aquarius, Gemini

Midsummer can be taxing even for a constitution that runs warm. Keep meals cool and light – salads, fresh fruit, cold fish – through the peak heat. The drying quality of summer continues to work in your favor: excess moisture eases, and mood and mental clarity tend to benefit. Sleep in a cool, well-ventilated room; you tend toward restlessness, and heat makes that worse. Exercise consistently but not intensely.

Water Signs – Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces

No stretch of the year suits your constitution better than midsummer. The body tends to feel capable, energetic, and more emotionally settled than at any other point in the year. Eat well and with variety; raw and cold foods are fine. Exercise freely. The main thing worth watching is becoming so comfortable that the habits – sleep, movement, measured eating and drinking – start to slip. Good patterns established in summer are harder to maintain once the cold returns.

What Does July’s Full Moon in Aquarius Mean for Your Horoscope?

The themes of this Full Moon will play out differently depending on where Aquarius falls in your chart. What follows offers sign-by-sign guidance for working with the weeks ahead. For a more detailed picture of how this lunation engages your own chart, consultation with a professional astrologer can help clarify what is personal and what is simply passing through.

Want to see a professional astrologer? I offer birth chart consultations that explore dominant life themes through your present circumstances – whether you’re looking to align your actions with what’s ahead, get a sense of near- and mid-term timing, or simply understand your chart more deeply. Get a sense of what we can accomplish together.

Aries

Local activity is at a high pitch – conversations and local plans that keep generating more of themselves. The argumentative edge that comes with it can be turned productive or pointed in the wrong direction depending on where you aim it. Daily work is where the friction tends to show up: there’s more than usual to do and less tolerance for how long careful work takes. The most useful thing to aim the drive at is the backlog of tasks that have been waiting for someone to push through them.

Explore the perfect menu for Aries.

Taurus

Home life is where the energy is concentrated at this Full Moon. Family matters and domestic decisions are actively in play, and the combination of confidence and good fortune around the home makes this a favorable period for addressing what has been unresolved there. Property decisions, home improvements, or the personal work of mending what’s frayed in family relationships are all well-placed. There’s more capacity for those conversations than usual – this period is worth using rather than letting pass.

Explore the perfect menu for Taurus.

Gemini

Your personal life is undergoing shifts – Uranus in your sign has been at this for a few months now, but now brought into focus. What’s sharpest at this Full Moon is the financial angle: income and expenses, and whether the balance between what you earn and what you’re spending warrants a closer look. A fair assessment of your actual resources – actual numbers rather than a general sense of whether things are fine – serves you better than optimism at this juncture.

Explore the perfect menu for Gemini.

Cancer

Finances are the main story at this Full Moon. Both the Sun and Jupiter have landed in your material resource house, and the combination tends to expand the financial situation – income rises and prospects improve with it. The caution worth noting is that Jupiter here enlarges spending with the same enthusiasm it enlarges earning, and the two don’t always move in tandem. The period is favorable for financial matters; whether your discipline matches the scale of the opportunity is the variable worth watching.

Explore the perfect menu for Cancer.

Leo

The conjunction of the Sun and Jupiter in your sign is the year’s most personally favorable configuration for Leo. Both planets support visibility and initiative; confident self-expression follows. This is a period where presenting yourself clearly and going after what you want tends to produce better results than caution – and the conditions for going after it are as good as they’ll be this year. The standard Jupiter proviso: overcommitment is the characteristic trap, and the confidence of the stretch can make it harder to spot.

Explore the perfect menu for Leo.

Virgo

Career disruption is the longer story operating in the background – Uranus in your professional life has been producing changes to how you’re seen and what you’re working toward. At this Full Moon, attention shifts to your social circle and group connections: the mind is busy with friendships and networks, and the ideas they generate are better developed with input from others. The social contacts you’re cultivating through this are part of what shapes what opens professionally in the months ahead.

Explore the perfect menu for Virgo.

Libra

Relational life is quieter than usual at this Full Moon – Venus in its more withdrawn placement keeps affection out of the open, and anything unresolved in close connections surfaces more readily than it gets expressed outward. Mars is pushing toward larger horizons: travel and learning, the desire to range. The relational backlog tends to press for attention regardless. The more useful question is whether the drive outward is a way of not attending to what’s surfacing close to home.

Explore the perfect menu for Libra.

Scorpio

Professional life is prominent – the Sun and Jupiter together in your career represent a concentrated period of visibility and opportunity that doesn’t arrive often. What you put forward publicly should be better received than usual, and this is a favorable stretch for professional advancement or going after recognition you’ve been building toward. The caveat that comes with Jupiter at career heights: confidence that exceeds what the situation can support tends to cost you. Keep ambition realistic and the momentum will follow.

Explore the perfect menu for Scorpio.

Sagittarius

Learning and travel are in active alignment at this Full Moon – Jupiter in its most natural territory for Sagittarius, and the drive there is strong. Take the course or make the journey; engage seriously with the ideas that have built up over time. The partnership picture is more complicated: Uranus has disrupted close relationships and isn’t finished – the changes continue alongside Jupiter’s forward movement. Making your life bigger doesn’t resolve the partnership difficulty, and that difficulty doesn’t have to define what in your life you can make bigger.

Explore the perfect menu for Sagittarius.

Capricorn

Partnership and close relationships are intellectually active at this Full Moon – conversations are substantive and negotiations are in play; the quality of your communication in one-on-one contexts either deepens or strains depending on how honestly it’s being conducted. Saturn’s station is pressing on home and family simultaneously: the weight of unresolved domestic matters is intensified while Saturn stands still, and the retrograde period that begins here turns attention toward foundations rather than outward ambitions. Domestic clarity is the more pressing work.

Explore the perfect menu for Capricorn.

Aquarius

This Full Moon falls in your sign, and the axis runs through close relationships: the Sun and Jupiter both sit in your partnership house, making one-on-one connections the active site of expansion this period. New and significant people arriving in your sphere is a strong possibility. For existing partnerships, Jupiter here favors resolving long-standing differences or formalizing what’s been developing. The Full Moon puts the partnership in focus – what it is, rather than what you’ve been hoping it becomes.

Explore the perfect menu for Aquarius.

Pisces

Work is going well – Jupiter in your daily life has been expanding what’s professionally possible, and this period continues that: improved working conditions, more scope in your role, better function in the day-to-day. Home and family are the more turbulent territory: Uranus has been producing disruptions to the domestic sphere, family relationships, or the relationship with where you come from that are still in motion. The daily work provides a reliable anchor while the home situation finds its new shape.

Explore the perfect menu for Pisces.

Horoscope Author

Wade Caves, based in Brooklyn, NY, is an astrological consultant and educator specializing in problem-solving applications of astrology. He teaches astrological divination and astronomy at the School of Traditional Astrology. Wade also publishes his work on world astrology through Skyscript’s In Mundo publishing desk. He even hosts the World Astrology Summit. A conference dedicated to the advancement of astrology for global problem-solving. Website: wadecaves.com • skyscript.co.uk/inmundo. Email: hello@wadecaves.com.

Story by Wade Caves
Photo Courtesy of Çağlar Oskay

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Collier’s Cuts: Confronting the Tech Future in ‘Toy Story 5’

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Woody and Buzz from toy Story huddle together in fear.
(L-R): Buzz Lightyear (voiced by Tim Allen) and Woody (voiced by Tom Hanks) in Disney and Pixar's TOY STORY 5. Photo courtesy of Disney/Pixar. © 2025 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
A rating card for Toy Story 5 with 3/5 stars and a still of Jessie and Bullseye with a tablet.

The original Toy Story — made, I’m sorry to report, a full 31 years ago — was a minor masterpiece of animation. Even more so, it was a technological marvel. The first fully computer-animated film, it was a herald of the future, both rich in promise and laden with questions about the role of human artists in an increasingly digital world. Three decades later, the series is now casting modern technology as the enemy, as its living toys contend with the arrival of a child-distracting tablet computer in Toy Story 5.

Toy Story 5 Movie Review: You’ve Got a Friend in Lily

Bonnie (Scarlett Spears), the young girl that ended up with our cast of playthings a few movies ago, has an imagination that can’t be matched — but she has trouble relating to other kids. Her parents gamble on a high-tech solution and buy her a tablet named Lilypad (Greta Lee), hoping that its kid-friendly social functions will help her connect with other children.

Lilypad can’t quite fit Bonnie into its algorithm, however, quickly matching her with a mean-girl trio who mock her for her affinity for IRL play. The bullying sends Bonnie into a spiral of shamed silence — and makes our toys, particularly the tenacious cowgirl Jessie (Joan Cusack), desperate for a solution and questioning their own purpose.

If you noticed that I haven’t mentioned many of the series’ main characters yet, that’s because they’re sidelined from the main action, one of many flaws in the script. The plot in Toy Story 5 is fractured, jumping between threads in a desperate attempt to keep everyone involved. Woody (Tom Hanks) comes back from self-imposed exile when Jessie calls for help; a trio of obsolete gadgets attempts to convince Jessie that progress has its place; a fleet of waylaid Buzz Lightyear toys (many instances of Tim Allen) attempt to find … Star Command, I think? It’s a bit muddy.

Talent — and Nostalgia — Keep the Batteries Charged

Toy Story 5 is certainly the weakest entry in the series; while many bemoaned the previous sequel spoiling the perfect ending delivered in Toy Story 3, the fourth installment was far more cohesive and inventive than this chapter.

Fortunately, this world is so rich and charming that story flaws can’t sink the ship. The performers are clearly happy to be back, and newcomers including Conan O’Brien, Craig Robinson and Melissa Villaseñor fit right in. A marvelous score, once again by Randy Newman, helps ground the action.

For many, the characters and world of this franchise provide a direct connection to the heartstrings. (That certainly includes me; the first film came out when I was 10 years old.) And Toy Story 5 finds, amid its too-many threads and contrivances, moments of really emotional impact. When Bonnie discovers a piece of her past, you’ll fight off tears — even if some other dramatic scenes left you cold.

Does it have anything profound to say about the incursion of technology into children’s lives? No — in fact, the script could be accused of hand-waving those concerns. But, as always, this series is about childhood and the pain of growing up; those matters, while complicated by modern developments, are timeless.

After 31 years, it seems this series might be, too.

A Feature-Length Song Adaptation and More

Actress and singer/songwriter Hayley Kiyoko struck a chord with Girls Like Girls, a ballad of adolescent love that she later adapted into a music video and a young-adult novel. This week, she turns the tale into a feature film of the same name, starring Maya da Costa and Myra Molloy; Kiyoko directed and co-wrote the adaptation (with Stefanie Scott). Early reviews are positive; writing for The Hollywood Reporter, Angie Han called it “beautifully shot and tenderly acted.” Girls Like Girls is in wide release this week.

Less glowing reviews are out for Never Change!, an absurdist, fish-out-of-water comedy debuting this weekend on Hulu. The film follows a group of poorly behaved thirty-somethings forced back to high school due to a legal loophole. Actor John Reynolds, known for roles on Search Party, Stranger Things and Yellowjackets, writes and co-stars.

Celebrate a pair of anniversaries with screenings at AMC Theatres this week, as Ocean’s 11 celebrates its 25th and Raiders of the Lost Ark marks its 45th. If you only see one, there are few better in-theater experiences than Raiders, but if you have a great deal of free time ahead, both are absolutely worth revisiting.

Story by Sean Collier
Photos Courtesy of Pixar

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Mexican Street Cornbread

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A person picks up a Mexican Street Cornbread fritter off a plate that sits beside slices limes, three forks, an ear of corn, and a bowl of lime crema with cilantro.

Chef Kenny Cumberland uses his fave store-bought cornbread mix for this Mexican Street Cornbread. As food icon Ina Garten frequently says, “Store-bought is fine.” Just start by following the recipe on the box. Go the extra mile by adding Kenny’s topper of cotija cheese, paprika, and two types of chili powder prior to baking and then his lime crema after to elevate the whole thing.

A plate with a burgundy pattern around the edge with little Mexican Street Cornbread fritters and slices of limes.

What’s the Difference Between Ancho Chilis and Guajillo Chilis?

Ancho and guajillo aren’t types of chilis you can pick off a plant, instead they’re simply dried versions of poblano and mirasol peppers. This means that ancho chilis are more mild than guajillo while also showcasing depth and a slight smokiness. Guajillo chilis on the other hand are brighter and have more of a tang to them. When incorporated into this Mexican Street Cornbread, the ancho chilis add a burst of flavor and then the heat comes from the guajillo chilis for a delicious balance.

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A person picks up a Mexican Street Cornbread fritter off a plate that sits beside slices limes, three forks, an ear of corn, and a bowl of lime crema with cilantro.

Mexican Street Cornbread


  • Author: Kenny Cumberland

Description

Upgrade that store-bought cornbread mix!


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 box cornbread mix

For the topper:

  • 2 cups cotija
  • 1 tsp paprika
  • 1 tsp dry Ancho chili powder
  • 1 tsp dry Guajillo chili powder
  • ½ tsp cumin powder
  • 1/2 tsp garlic salt

For the lime crema:

  • 1 cup sour cream/crème frâiche
  • 2 tbsp fresh lime juice
  • 1 tbsp lime zest
  • ½ tbsp chopped cilantro


Instructions

  1. Make cornbread mix as described on box.

For the topping:

  1. Mix together in small bowl.
  2. Add to the top of your cornbread muffins before baking (follow directions on box).

For the lime crema:

  1. Mix together in small bowl.
  2. Drizzle over the muffins just before serving.

Plus, check out more of Chef Kenny Cumberland’s recipes like Pizza Hot Pockets, Lunchtime Tamales, and Peanut Butter and Jelly Rolls.

Recipe by Chef Kenny Cumberland
Photography by Dave Bryce

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Grain Bowl with White Balsamic Dressing 

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A grain bowl with quinoa, brown rice, greens, and beets sits next to a White Balsamic Dressing and another grain bowl.

You can’t go wrong with a Grain Bowl since it’s a recipe that tastes delicious and benefits your body too. In this particular Grain Bowl, quinoa and brown rice make the base. These two add a little nuttiness as well as a mix of chewy and soft textures. Plus the two are both whole grains so they can help with blood sugar and provide long-lasting energy rather than a quick sugar crash-out. Next, you sprinkle roasted beets and baby greens (spinach or arugula) for boosts of antioxidants, a variety of vitamins, and fiber. Lastly, the White Balsamic Dressing is mostly for your tasting pleasure but it does use heart-healthy extra-virgin olive oil and antioxidant-abundant honey.

A person holds up a fork with greens from a grain bowl on it above the actual grain bowl.
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A grain bowl with quinoa, brown rice, greens, and beets sits next to a White Balsamic Dressing and another grain bowl.

Grain Bowl with White Balsamic Dressing 


  • Author: Kenny Cumberland

Description

Lunch should be both delicious and nutritious!


Ingredients

Scale

For the bowl:

  • 1 cup roasted beets
  • 1 cup quinoa, cooked according to instructions and cooled
  • 1 cup cooked and cooled brown rice
  • 1 cup baby greens such as spinach or arugula
  • Toasted bread

For the dressing: 

  • 1/2 cup shallots, chopped fine
  • 1 tbsp chopped garlic
  • 1/2 cup white balsamic
  • 1/4 cup white vinegar
  • ½ cup honey
  • 2 and 2/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil


Instructions

  1. Roast about a cup of cubed beets. Cook quinoa according to package directions. Same for brown rice. Wash and dry a cup of dark baby greens like spinach and arugula.
  2. Make the dressing in a blender. First, mix onion, garlic, and vinegars until smooth.
  3. Add honey and blend until smooth.
  4. With blender running, slowly add olive oil to allow for emulsification.
  5. Into a shallow bowl, spoon portions of brown rice and quinoa.
  6. Top with beets and greens.
  7. Drizzle with dressing.
  8. Serve with crusty slices of toasted bread.

Plus, check out more of Chef Kenny Cumberland’s recipes like Pizza Hot PocketsLunchtime Tamales, and Peanut Butter and Jelly Rolls.

Recipe by Chef Kenny Cumberland
Photography by Dave Bryce

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Earl Gray and Blueberry Punch

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Two tall glasses with Earl Gray and Blueberry Punch with blueberries on top and a flower garnish.

Have you ever been craving Earl Gray tea but it’s a hot summer day and a warm drink would be overwhelming? Get your fix with our Earl Gray and Blueberry Punch. This recipe uses Earl Gray tea bags but it also incorporates smashed blueberries with tart and sweet flavors. In case you prefer your tea more on the Southern side of sweetness, you can add in sugar too. Just make sure you don’t forget the cold brewing process for a crisp, cool finish.

One glass fills with a tea-looking punch in a glass with ice and a flower garnish then another sits behind with dark punch and a blue berry garnish on a pink picnic table.

What Makes Our Earl Gray and Blueberry Punch Stand Out?

The cold brew process is what really sets our recipe apart. By using cold water to brew the tea rather than hot, it pulls out tannins (the stuff that makes tea taste sharp or bitter) slower. Blueberries also take longer to infuse so your mix needs to sit longer than it would for hot tea but the end product is full of flavor. You can even taste each part of the recipe rather than your punch turning out like water with a hint of fruit.

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Two tall glasses with Earl Gray and Blueberry Punch with blueberries on top and a flower garnish.

Earl Gray and Blueberry Punch 


  • Author: Kenny Cumberland

Description

A balance of bergamot Earl Gray and juicy blueberry.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 3 bags of Earl Gray tea
  • 1 cup blueberries, smashed


Instructions

  1. In a half-gallon mason jar filled with cold water, add tea bags and blueberries. Seal lid tightly. Let sit in refrigerator for 2 days.
  2. Serve cold over ice. Garnish with citrus.

Plus, check out more of Chef Kenny Cumberland’s recipes like Pizza Hot PocketsLunchtime Tamales, and Peanut Butter and Jelly Rolls.

Recipe by Chef Kenny Cumberland
Photography by Dave Bryce

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Polish Pigs in a Blanket With Kielbasa

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Pigs in a blanket beside a side of mustard and a bowl of sauerkraut.

Hot dogs in crescent rolls are a comforting reminder of childhood and the simplicities of life. But, since we’re adults now, let’s kick Pigs in a Blanket up with a Polish twist that utilizes kielbasa. You’ll roll smoked kielbasa and roasted sauerkraut in a delicate and buttery puff pastry. Make sure to have your mustard on hand for dipping.

A white plate full of polish pigs in a blanket with kielbasa with one split open over a side of mustard.
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Pigs in a blanket beside a side of mustard and a bowl of sauerkraut.

Polish Pigs in a Blanket With Kielbasa


  • Author: Kenny Cumberland

Description

Take your hot dog and turn it into a kielbasa for this deeply savory take.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 lb smoked kielbasa, cut into 3-inch pieces
  • 1 sheet of puff pastry, cut into 3-inch squares
  • 3 cups sauerkraut, drained


Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. On a baking sheet, lay out your sauerkraut evenly. Place on bottom rack of the oven. Roast for 15 minutes till it dries and starts to brown slightly.
  3. Lay out squares of dough. Place kielbasa diagonally at one corner and roll corner to corner.
  4. Place on baking sheet with the end corner facing down.
  5. Bake for 15 minutes till golden brown. Kielbasa needs to reach 160 degrees on a meat thermometer.
  6. Remove from oven and serve with a portion of sauerkraut.
  7. Have grainy mustard on hand as a condiment.

Plus, check out more of Chef Kenny Cumberland’s recipes like Pizza Hot PocketsLunchtime Tamales, and Peanut Butter and Jelly Rolls.

Recipe by Chef Kenny Cumberland
Photography by Dave Bryce

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