• beer and bars

    From JIM WELLER@1:123/140 to MICHAEL LOO on Tuesday, April 10, 2018 21:45:00

    Kokanee Gold [is] a little hoppier

    the megahopped beers tend not to go well with food

    Big Rock has started listing the number of IBUs right on the label
    which can be helpful if you aren't familiar with their products and
    are trying to choose one. Their Alberta draft lager has just 12
    IBUS, (aside to Bill, for reference, Coors has a mere 8), their
    Traditional English brown ale which I like 20 and their Session IPA
    a moderate 32. I do not enjoy those heavy duty IPAs in the 60-100+
    range either.

    Sloppy Joe's [...] filling was said to be a spicy picadillo
    not the Italianeque hamburger red sauce we get here today.

    Or worse, the pulled pork-like substance
    coated in sweet sauce, which is what they
    offered under that name at my elementary
    school.

    I've come across sweetly sauced pulled pork (roasted in a slow oven,
    not barbecued) but never labelled as a Sloppy Joe. That must be a
    Texas thing.

    Roslind made a huge cauldron of Ital-Canadian red meat sauce before
    heading off to Cambridge Bay. She sent a pint each to a co-worker
    she owed a favour to, her baby brother who is recovering at home
    from back surgery, her bookkeeper, the housekeeper and there has
    still half a gallon left over for me. For the first meal it topped
    fettucine and got sprinkled with Parmigiano-Reggiano. For the next
    meal I plan on adding chilies, chopped olives and cumin to some of
    it to serve on buns. Later on there will be re-seasoning and a
    conversion of the balance to tomatoey chili con carne, perhaps with
    beans.

    I wonder why there are no iconic
    bars now - perhaps the abundance these days
    makes it less likely that any one is going to
    rise head and shoulders above and become a
    literary-cultural icon such as that one or
    Harry's in Venice.

    Well in Canada there is the Chateau Lafayette, Ottawa's oldest bar
    which is actually older than the nation of Canada. It's located in
    the historic Lower Town Market District. The bar is actually older
    than the city of Ottawa itself, which was named in 1855. It was
    previously the village of Bytown, named after the founder Colonel
    By. The Laff opened six years earlier in 1849 and served up drinks
    for workers building the Rideau Canal.

    Later on, Canada's first Prime Minister, Sir John A. MacDonald,
    drank a few cold ones there (more like a few thousand, he was a
    notorious lush) as it was walking distance from Parliament Hill, Even
    Queen Victoria is rumoured to have been there once. More recently
    young Dan Aykroyd drank there when he wasn't hanging out at a nearby
    coffee house called Le Hibou which was THE Ottawa blues venue in the
    1970s.

    It's not fancy any more , just a dive tavern with a garish neon sign
    from the 50s, live music on the weekends, hundreds of beers and a
    snack menu featuring deep fried cheese curds. It may not be quite as
    famous as El Floridita or Harry's but it does have history and a
    unique bar snack.



    Cheers

    Jim


    ... I have more ancestors than any of my ancestors.

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