The Denver Post

This summer, give your weekend hosts a present they’ll use

- Weekend at Murray’s Cheese Box, $225. The Stick with Me Sweets Chocolates, $188 for a Garrett Popcorn Mix, Before- and After-Dinner Drinks, $44. Anyone Astier de Villatte InA fancy room spray, Louis Vuitton Cactus Garden Fragrance, Diptyque Softening Hand

The downside to having friends who can afford a second home is that they probably don’t need or want a hostess gift.

Please don’t misunderst­and: That coffee table book they’ll regift is very appreciate­d; so is a board game they’ll pretend they didn’t already have; equally nice and similarly unwelcome is a decorative knickknack you couldn’t quite afford. (“We just won’t order takeout for the rest of the month,” you whisper through clenched teeth to your furious spouse as the salesperso­n wraps it up.)

And before you ask: Yes, your hosts already have a petanque set. Probably two.

Happily, there is a real alternativ­e: Buy something your hosts will use, then use up. Food, soap, flowers, scents — here is an array of stuff that can be consumed, not displayed. Your hosts will love it, your duties as a house guest will be fulfilled, and everyone will be set for a successful summer weekend.

Food

New York cheese experts pack five different varieties, from piquant Rogue creamery smokey blue to the creamy French goat pyramid Valencay, along with a selection of charcuteri­e: aged Italian prosciutto, Iberico chorizo, and flatbreads. Serves 14 to 16 weekenders. 54-piece box. Within a book-styled box are exceptiona­l hand-painted chocolates. The fillings are designed to be tiny desserts-”Speculoos S’more” features a chocolate-enrobed cookie base topped with a mound of housemade marshmallo­w. $33. Even people who think they don’t like caramel corn will be won over by the ultra-light, fluffy-andcrunchy recipe from Garrett. Jumbled together with their savory, cheddar-dusted flavor, it makes a perfect combinatio­n for movie-time snacking or just sitting with a glass of wine on the porch. It won’t last through the weekend. can show up with a bottle of wine. Try to impress your hosts with something a little unusual but not so off-the-beaten-path that it will remain un-drunk. (A bonus is that you can flex your knowledge of three booze trends at once: vermouth, amaro, and lowABV.) As an aperitif, Lustau Vermut Blanco ($20) made from fino sherry and moscatel is an eye-opening way to start things off. Citrusy and floral, it’s best enjoyed over ice or in a simple spritz. After dinner, Amaro Sfumato Rabarbaro ($24) makes a singular substituti­on for Scotch.

Scents and Soaps

cense, $50. Yes, incense doesn’t really have beach connotatio­ns, but for anyone with a cool, calm, rustic home, incense could be the perfect present. Astier de Villatte, best known for its ceramics, has a wonderful side-gig crafting Parisian-blended incense that’s almost startlingl­y fragrant of clove, patchouli, and fresh linen. $55-$120. On one level you don’t want to imply their home smells musty. On another, these unisex scents can be brightly presented without comment, letting your hosts figure it out. Cult Swedish brand Byredo’s Tree House Room Spray ($120 for 200mL) is woodsy with bamboo and cedar, while Aesop’s Olous ($55 for 100mL) combines musky galbanum with grapefruit and jasmine. Both come in hefty glass bottles that would make a handsome addition to any bathroom vanity, and each is far classier than using a match.

$250. When we first saw that LV had a perfume called “cactus garden” as part of its new cologne fragrance collection, we weren’t sure it was going to go so well. But the scent is clean and lush, with bergamot, geranium, and lemongrass-perfect for both men and women. Your host can generously stick it in a guest bedroom for guests to spritz on before dinner, or hoard it for their own new signature. than a predictabl­e candle from Diptyque, opt for the secret weapon. Hand soap is a fabulous staple for any parlor or guest bathroom and will have your hosts thinking of you often-the luxurious lavender fragrance can linger on skin for an entire afternoon.

Decoration

Your host probably already has nice candles. The good news? They can always use another-and this scent, which smells like Southern California on a good day, brightens any home. Le Labo

Flowers, $100. Even if your host’s house is surrounded by a field of wildflower­s, a bouquet will be appreciate­d. It’s obviously not the ideal choice if you’re traveling by train, but if you can swing travel by car, it’s a guaranteed hit. If you’re in New York, try Miho Kosuda; if you’re in London, try Scarlet & Violet; and if you’re in Los Angeles, go to Jeff Leatham. No matter where you are, $100 seems a good minimum.

Sparklers, $6.99. They’re legal! Mostly. And regardless of local regulation­s, they’re discreet and low-impact enough that you can have fun without alerting local law enforcemen­t or, you know, setting the house on fire. $80. We’re sure that someone, somewhere, has been able to keep a Meyer lemon tree alive in a residentia­l home, but we have yet to meet that person. Who knows if your host will over- or under-water it, or if they’ve committed the sin of not living on Hydra or wherever these trees actually thrive. What we do know is that if you show up with a tree, your host will love it, live with it, and then — inevitably — lose it.

 ?? iStockphot­o ?? If you show up with a Meyer lemon tree, your host will love it, live with it, and then — inevitably — lose it.
iStockphot­o If you show up with a Meyer lemon tree, your host will love it, live with it, and then — inevitably — lose it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States