New River Elementary students and members of the schoolâs nutrition team (l.-r.) Cameron Keehn, Payton Furman, Payton Leidy & Charyn Maldonado will make their recipe, cheesy chicken and bacon quesadillas with Greek yogurt veggie dip, for the Dairy Council of Floridaâs third annual Gridiron Cooking Challenge.
A team of students from New River Elementary was chosen as a finalist to compete in the Dairy Council of Floridaâs third annual Gridiron Cooking Challenge this Saturday.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers will host the event, which is part of Fuel Up to Play 60, an in-school nutrition and physical activity program launched by the National Dairy Council and the National Football League to help encourage todayâs youth across the U.S. to lead healthier lives.
New River Elementary is a recipient of a Fuel Up to Play 60 grant and has participated in the event for the past three years, since the competitionâs inception. The schoolâs team won the first year it competed, and this yearâs team members want to put their school back on top.
New River fourth grade students Cameron Keehn, Payton Furman, Payton Leidy and Charyn Maldonado will make their recipe â cheesy chicken and bacon quesadilla with Greek yogurt veggie dip, for the eventâs judges.
âThe kids got together to create this recipe,â says Kathy Gillooly, one of the teamâs coaches, along with Holly Mitchell and Ryan Ketterer (all three are physical education teachers at New River). âThey wanted it to be fun and creative, and kid-friendly.â She says the students made their quesadillas in the shape of footballs, and that they were surprised at how much they liked the veggie dip, which includes spinach, peppers and onions.
Gillooly explains that the students are part of New River Elementaryâs nutrition team, which goes on the schoolâs morning show to give tips on healthy eating and sets up a table at school events to hand out free samples of nutritious snacks and smoothies. There are nine kids on the nutrition team, so Gillooly explains that they drew names out of a hat to choose which four students would be able to participate in the cooking challenge.
âItâs pretty exciting,â Gillooly says of the competition. âThey go all out to make it a big deal for the kids.â
The competition will be held at One Buc Place on Saturday, May 14. For more information about the Gridiron Cooking Challenge, please visit FloridaMilk.com/FuelUpToPlay60.
Incoming WC Rotary Club president Dr. Pablo Rivera (right) and current president Erin Meyer, at the club’s meeting at Quail Hollow Country Club in Wesley Chapel on May 11.
The Rotary Club of Wesley Chapel Noon has been forced to cancel the 2016 Freedom Fest, which had been scheduled for July 2, after the host site pulled out.
‘The Grove (at WC shopping plaza) just pulled out on us,” said Dr. Pablo Rivera, the club’s incoming president for the 2016-17 Rotary year & the event co-chair. “I literally have major sponsor checks inbound to us as we speak that I now have to return.” The club was hoping to have those sponsors instead sponsor the upcoming Duck Derby.
Rivera said the club tried to quickly relocate the event to a few other locations (including near the Tampa Premium Outlet Mall), “but we can’t pull off a (venue) change by July 2 (the scheduled date for the 2016 Freedom Fest).”
The event had previously been held at the Shops of Wiregrass mall, last year drawing an estimated 50,000 people to the July 3 event and raising more than $25,000 for the club’s selected charitable causes.
The club’s first-ever Duck Derby will be held on Saturday, May 21, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., lakeside at Hungry Harry’s BBQ on U.S.41 in Land O’Lakes. The top prize for the Duck Derby will be $2,500, with more than two dozen other prizes available.
“We’re now focused on making the first Duck Derby another major fund-raising event for our club’s selected charities,” Rivera said.
Current club president Erin Meyer added, “We still plan to host a fifth annual Freedom Fest next year.”
If you want to be able to be confident that your dog will be able to behave in any social situation, you may want to call Don Grady of Donâs Dogs. He can even make your rambunctious puppy or skittish rescue dog behave like a champion.
Don Grady says he was a whiz in the kitchen back in the 1990s and early 2000s. In Washington, D.C., he studied the culinary arts and worked as a chef, and after moving to Florida in 2004, he worked at several restaurants in Tampa.
He had yet to discover his true calling, however, even though his wife Valerie already had a pretty good idea of what it was destined to be.
Unbeknownst to her husband, she saw that a local pet store was looking for dog trainers. Don may have been hesitant about a career change, but his wife had seen him train their dog as well as some of their friendsâ dogs, and decided to apply for him.
The rest, as they say, is history.
âThey called, she took the phone call and said, âYeah, heâd love to meet with you guys,âââ Don recalled. Two interviews later, he was offer and accepted the job.
Today, he owns Donâs Dogs, a come-to-your-home dog training business, at least until he can find a place to call his own in Wesley Chapel or New Tampa. Don currently has about 20 clients, which is just about the maximum he can fit into a busy schedule turning unruly or shy dogs into well-adjusted and well-mannered pets.
âI was a classic chef, and I thought that was the greatest job in the world,ââ Don says. âMy wife for years told me I should be a dog trainer, but I told her she was crazy because I had no formal experience like I did in culinary.â
But, as it turns out, Valerie wasnât crazy. She was just prescient.
For years, Don had been asked by friends for tips on dog training, because his dog, Zoe, a Border Collie mix who is now 16, was so well-behaved. After four years of honing his skills at a pet store, Don felt he was ready to branch out and start his own business.
He said he was successful working in a shop, and has parlayed that â with the help of word of mouth, social media and advertising â into a busy career. He says he would like to one day open his own dog training school so he can do puppy socialization classes and teach agility skills, to name a few. Until then, however, he is staying mobile.
How It Works
Don will usually make an appointment with a new client at their home, to interact with the dog in its own environment for its first session and see how the dogâs owner reacts as well. Every dog is different, Don says, and they often require different training methods.
Puppies are the easiest to work with, with adult dogs a little harder to train. The level of training depends upon what the client is looking for â most just want a dog that behaves well at home â but 20-30 percent, Don says, desire further training so their dog can become a therapy pet, able to spread joy while visiting schools and hospitals.
âDonâs great,ââ says client Heather Moran of Meadow Pointe. âWe learned from the first session he did with us. I learned and Bo (her seven-month old golden retriever) learned. Don has a great connection with the dog, and he has a good way of teaching me, too.â
When it comes to turning dogs into perfect pets by teaching them to walk nicely, come when called, drop things they shouldnât have in their mouths and greet people without jumping on them, Don says his success rate is sky-high.
Depending upon what his clients are looking for, Don crafts a specific course for each dog. âI tell people itâs like college courses,ââ he said. âThereâs undergrad, Masters and Doctorate.â
Simple obedience can take six hours of training, spread over 4-6 weeks, with the owner having plenty of homework in between lessons. The skills Don tries to teach each dog are sitting on command, leaving items alone (âDonât look at that,â he will tell a dog), giving the owner its full attention and not jumping up on people when it meets them.
For more advanced training, he says, another six lessons are sometimes required. Don is a regular at the Loweâs in Land OâLakes, as well as at the Tampa Premium Outlets mall, where he will take dogs to practice what they learned in the first course.
Sometimes, itâs a morning trip when the locations are usually less crowded. As the lessons get tougher, lunchtime trips on weekends, when both places are at their busiest, are scheduled.
âHe doesnât just train in the house, he takes you out into real-world situations,ââ says Moran, who hopes Bo will take the Canine Good Citizen (CGC) test when he turns 1 and go on to become a therapy dog. âI just like knowing I can take him anywhere in any situation and heâll be able to handle it and Iâll be able to handle him.â
By the time Don is done giving a dog its second course, they are usually ready for the 10-step American Kennel Club (AKC) CGC test â the gold standard for dog behavior. Don is an AKC-approved CGC Evaluator, and can administer the CGC, AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy and AKC Community Canine programs.
Don often takes his own dogs â Zoe and Abby, a 4-year-old Pitbull mix therapy dog â to retirement centers to interact with residents as part of his Canines For Christ program. Abby also helps out with his training, by helping soothe the fears and aggression other dogs may be feeling.
Another client, Kathy Lahr, a mom to a 2-year-old Standard Poodle, says, âTonga is the best dog Iâve ever had, and Iâve had a few, and couldnât have done it without Don.â She says that when Tonga was 10 months old, he was âpetrified of everything,â the result of growing up on 45 acres and not being around many people or cars.
âShe was so shy, she wouldnât even look up at you,ââ Lahr says. But Don changed all that. In fact, Tonga is now a regular visitor at hospitals, schools and age-assisted facilities.
Don trains 4-5 dogs a day, five days a week. He leaves one weekday open and one weekend day open for emergencies and schedule changes. He has built dozens of relationships over the years with his business, which is why he calls it Donâs Dogs. Even after training is complete, he says he always feels connected to his furry students. He will organize dog walks with some of his graduates just to touch base, or get a group of his former pupils together for a âYappy Hourâ on some restaurant patio somewhere.
Today, the classically trained chef canât imagine doing anything else for a living. Sure, Don can still whip up an elegant dinner in his kitchen, but only after doing what he loves most during the day.
âNo matter if I had a good day or a bad day, I still played with puppies,ââ Don said. âPeople should be jealous. Itâs the best job in the world.ââ
For more information, visit DonsDogsTraining.com, visit his Facebook page, or email donsdogs@yahoo.com. Don can also be reached at 784-2698.
ALTHOUGH MANY more people these days enjoy sushi than they did when I first started loving it in New York City in the 1980s, the biggest complaint I hear about most sushi places is that theyâre just too expensive to enjoy too often.
Well, the new Ginza Endless Sushi & Hibachi restaurant, located between LA Fitness and Winn-Dixie in the plaza just south of County Line Rd. and west of Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. in New Tampa, is bringing great value, as well as delicious sushi and other Japanese and Asian fare to our area (itâs located a few hundred feet south of Wesley Chapel), especially for lunch.
Ginzaâs all-you-can-eat $12.95 lunch special (for ages 15 & older) really is as good as it gets if youâre looking for value, and the sushi is always freshly made to order and delicious â whether you get the all-you-can-eat special (which costs $24.95 per adult for dinner) or order off of Ginzaâs extensive a la carte menu.Â
Hereâs How It Works…
Whether you get the all-you-can-eat special for lunch or dinner, you have a selection of more than 200 items and yes, you can get as much as you want of almost every item. The Zheng family, which owns Ginza, reserves the right to limit certain items, and can even charge you for unfinished sushi.
Although I also enjoy the clear and hot & spicy soups, my favorite appetizers on the all-you-can-eat menu include the truly delicious pan-fried dumplings, the Japanese-style green salad with ginger dressing, the super-crispy pork egg rolls and vegetable spring rolls and my surprise favorite, the chicken and vegetable tempura. The tempura green beans are better than any fried green bean appetizer youâll find at the average chain sports bar.
And yes, while you can have all you care to eat of all of the aforementioned items, you also enjoy nigiri-style sushi (over rice) or sashimi (slices of fish without rice), and the rare tuna (which is one of the items Ginza limits on the all-you-can-eat specials) and snapper are definitely my favorites.
I also did really enjoy the spicy white tuna (escolar) hand roll, the regular and âgoldenâ California rolls, the rainbow (tuna, snapper, salmon and avocado-wrapped California roll) and the spider (soft shell crab) rolls. There are plenty of other favorites on the all-you-can-eat list, but some items â like a really tasty seared tuna tataki with wasabi cream and the grilled octopus with hot peppers, to name a couple (both are pictured on the next page), have to be purchased a la carte. And, I have noticed that most of Ginzaâs a la carte sushi rolls sell for $1-$2 less than youâll find at most other Japanese places.
No Liquor License? No Prob!
Although Ginza doesnât currently have its liquor license, the Zheng family â which also owns the Ginza in Sarasota but was not involved in the Land OâLakes Ginza which closed â invites you to bring you own alcoholic beverages until it does, and New Tampa Ginza general manager Andrew Zheng says he believes that should happen this month.
Ginza also has great kidsâ favorites on its all-you-can-eat menu, which costs just $6.95 for kids ages 4-10 and $8.95 for kids 11-14 for lunch, and $8.95 for ages 4-10 and $12.95 for ages 11-14 for dinner.
For more info about Ginza Endless Sushi & Hibachi (6417 E. County Line Rd.), which is open Mon.-Thur., 11 a.m.-10 p.m.; 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. on Fri. & Sat. & noon-9:30 p.m. on Sun., call 907-1688, visit GinzaFlorida.com or see the ad on pg. 46 of our latest Wesley Chapel issue for some great coupon offers.
John and Alissa Holcomb with their children (l.-r.) Isaac, Annlee, Jacob and Aliah.
Alissa Holcomb sat in church on Motherâs Day in 2011, when Pastor James Dodzweit asked for all the mothers in attendance to stand and be acknowledged.
That morning, Alissa had suffered her third miscarriage.
She stayed in her seat.
Her story, and journey, started right there.
That summer, Alissa and her husband John had all but given up on having children. Married in 2004, they started trying to make a family in 2006. Alissa had already been through two miscarriages, but the third one, on that Motherâs Day in 2011, was the cruelest of them all.
âLord, what do you have in store?,ââ she prayed.
They agreed to stop trying for a baby. The pressure, and heartbreaking failures, had become too much.
So, they turned to adoption, which Alissa says they had always planned to do, in addition to having their own babies anyway. Alissa had her heart set on adopting a baby, but twice, when they thought they were close, a pair of matches fell through.
They came to a halting revelation: âMaybe weâre not going to be parents,â she recalls.
But, Alissa continued to attend adoption classes. She learned that older sets of biological siblings were the hardest kids to find homes for, and also the most plentiful in the adoption system. So, while she desired a baby, she came home one night from class and told John she might be open to adopting somewhat older siblings.
She didnât share this with anyone. And yet, strangely, the adoption agency, which knew she was only looking for a baby, called soon after her conversation with John to ask if she would be interested in a five-year-old African-American boy and his four-year-old sister.
In October 2011, she met Isaac and Aliah, and on Dec. 3, the children moved into their home. She had her kids. She was a mother.
A week later, Alissa found out she was pregnant.
***
With a Dollar Store pregnancy test in the bathroom of a Cracker Barrel, Alissa confirmed the suspicion she had an hour earlier by the sickness she says she felt after catching a whiff of a soiled diaper.
Her previous pregnancy tests had taken longer to reveal a thin double line. This one was instant and âdarker than dark.â
She was dumbfounded. She went to the doctor for a quick blood test to confirm, and then met her husband at Walmart, where he was shopping. She surprised him with a baby Christmas stocking.
When he looked inside, he saw the pregnancy test.
âIt was crazy, just crazy,ââ she said. âI mean, thatâs not a plan. Thatâs not how this is supposed to happen. But, because of our faith, we felt this was totally God, they way he had orchestrated the whole thing.â
On March 7, 2012, the Holcombsâ adoption of Isaac and Aliah was made official. She spent her first-ever Motherâs Day pregnant with Jacob, eating breakfast in bed, compliments of Isaac and Aliah.
***
Alissa works as the New Tampa and Wesley Chapel area director for Young Life, a national, non-denominational Christian ministry dedicated to introducing teenagers to Jesus and helping them grow in their faith.
She doesnât share the same birthing story most moms do. There are no straight lines from moment to moment, just roadblocks and obstacles and twisting paths headed seemingly nowhere, until they all headed somewhere.
âThe moment I laid eyes on Isaac and Aliah, and other adoptive parents can speak to this too, it was like a unique birthing experience,ââ Alissa says. âWe were overcome by emotion. We knew. These are our kids.â
Jacob, who was born in July of 2012, made Alissa a mom again. And, after giving up on having a fourth child, the Holcombs found out â surprise â in 2015 that she was pregnant with Annlee, who is now 9 months old.
âItâs been a crazy journey,ââ Alissa said, âand Iâm really grateful. As hard as itâs been, Iâm really grateful for the (now four) children I have.â
Alissa works hard at making her family work. Despite her biological attachments to two of her children, she has worked hard at ensuring that she has that same feeling of attachment with Isaac and Aliah. They come from hard places. They have questions. The Holcombs attend family counseling to help seek those answers out.
âBeing parents is the hardest thing weâve ever done,ââ Alissa says. âBut, we are committed to the overall health of the family. Itâs a work in progress.â
***
For Alissa, Motherâs Day brings on a wave of emotions. It it is a reminder of pain and suffering, but mostly of hope and salvation. She thinks there were reasons for everything, from the miscarriages to failed adoptions to her change of heart that brought Isaac and Ali
ah into her heart, to her first and second successful pregnancies.
Since that lowest point in 2011 when Motherâs Day was only a reminder of failure, it now brings her joy.
Just a year after that, when Pastor James asked all the mothers to stand, she jumped to her feet, smiling, with one thought:
âOh my gosh,ââ she thought, âIâm here, and Iâm a mom.â