Stella while watching Argentina v Iran. Plus the last inch of a bottle of Springbank 10.
Gutted for Iran that Argies nicked it in extra time - but Messi can do that for you.
The new maize based Stella is extremely quaffable, they've gone from "reasuringly expensive" with only the finest ingredients to something akin to Sol. The old wife beater version was better IMCO, but this new version is a good session ale.
^ Stella is not my usual drink, but they were available cold and cheap in the nearby shop. One or two watching a game is fine.
Could never drink them all night though. Session beer for me is an ale below 4%.
After my failed experiment in cheap and cheery wine, I returned to known and proven sources of the good stuff and amongst the various fine wines in the 14-22 Euro price range (ahem), I purchased a bottle of dry gin called Dutch Courage from the Zuidam family distillery here in the Netherlands. I don't touch genevers as a rule, but this is genuine gin, distilled in the English style, but from a Dutch perspective. And mighty fine it is too, and so it should be at 41 Euros a pop! Very clean and elegant, extremely refreshing with tonic.
After my positive experience with the Zuidam gin, I have purchased their 3 year old "Korenwign" i.e. grain wine and it is a rather splendid bourbon replacement. It is only 38% and as a bonafide Genever in the 18th century style, I tried it with a tonic and it was bloody awful. Now, after dinner, with a little water, it is like a fine small batch Kentucky whiskey. Not cheap by the way, but at €36.99 a 1000cl bottle, it's still good value for what you could serve up to whisky connoisseur's as the real Amercian artifact. Slightly sweeter, but only just and with plenty of ice, you would definitely say this was premium US bourbon.
Woodfordes wherry at a very reasonable £2.30 in Baker Street Wetherspoons.
Then a pint of Dark Star Solstice in Barley Mow while watching first half of Argentina v Switzerland. I have not been in there since meeting Jim/ Russell Street. J S was closed when I walked by.
Ealing beer festival yesterday from about 3pm till it closed.
Excellent day drinking in the sunshine with friends
http://www.ealingbeerfestival.org.uk
* fenugreek sprout juice
* buckwheat lettuce sprout juice
* alfalfa sprout juice
* ryegrass juice
* snow pea green sprout juice
Dry old palo cortado sherry. Lustau for M&S. I had a Marks voucher and I did not want any clothing.
Nice tangy drop, now that the weather has turned a bit. Lustau are one of the decent sherry producers. I wish I had visited their bodega but it is by appointment whereas as Gonzalez Byass are daily every few hours.
Last edited by Kingston1an (2014-07-12 13:08:38)
I am drinking chea p wine,
Local session bitter at 3.6% at The Star Inn in Bentworth.
A lovely sunny Saturday afternoon in the Hampshire and Isle of Wight village of the year. Thatched roofs, spotless village green, local wedding with the bride and groom on the back of a LandRover and even a gold post box to commemorate a local Olympian(equestrian predictably. We guessed that or yachting).
Then on to Jane Austen's local for a pint of Fullers and a walk round her garden opposite the pub.
A great time of year to be in the heart of England.
Bottle of Wolf Glass Shiraz on special $7. Surprisingly good. Kingy 14.4% alcohol.
I've gone off the higher alcohol content wines, I'm sticking to 12.5 - 13% max these days. Of course, there's always the exception.
After vowing never to get on it again, was on the mini-cruise to Hull this week, it gets more and more like an alternative universe each time I travel on it and the boat was full of large English families and truckers heading or returning from the continent. Under the circumstances, I thought regailing strangers in the Irish Bar was not a valid option, so I headed up top to where the piano bar was and the pianist had clearly been drinking amyl nitrate. I ended in the braiserie restaurant next to a guy who was texting all the time. Put me off me steak.
Several mojitos later and I purchased some 1 litre bottles of gin on offer: 2off Tanqueray's for 40 quid and 2off Bombay Sapphire for 34 English pounds. I then fell in restless sleep and dreamt that the iGent chap who dresses like a Bugsy Malone extra had reinvented himself as Bing Crosby impersonator and was crooning his way to the top in Las Vegas. The odd thing was, I was managing him.
Back firmly in reality, the G&T weather continues - hot, humid, sticky and yucky, but I find several G&T's with ice, lemon or lime and dash of bitters does the trick.
G&T's....Memories of Mom.
Funny, for the longest time I thought it was a Puerto Rican thing because of the mosquito thing, etc., and little did I know it was an english thing.
On Dad's and my grandmother's side it was all about whisky, on Mom's side G&T's, but also Gin and fresh squeezed orange or grapefruit juice.
Come to think of it Hep, you have just talked me into my afternoon drinking programme- Gin and fresh fruit juices in memoriam, and in preparation for my trip to Amsterdam.
OK Hep, homemade cocktail-
Hendrick's gin (mom's fave), Tonic, grapefruit bitters (to remind me of the "Torongin- grapefruit juice with gin)
On the patio with fountain going and looking at Wife snuggling with daughter (visiting from New York), Monk on the speakers, magic moment making cocktail taste like heaven though perhaps will have to try elsewhere for a true reading.
* wheatgrass juice
* fenugreek sprout juice
750 ml all up.
Last edited by 4F Hepcat (2014-07-27 08:52:53)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-28486017
^Interesting, I think all white spirits can produce morose feelings, certainly the alcohol effect is different to a good whisky.
As for Old Tom, well there's no mystery there, the style of gin got the name as it tasted liked old Tom the cat had pissed in it!
Spey single malt, the Tenne finished in tawny port casks, packs a rich & tasty after dinner vibe for a mere €46 and is salmon pink too.
I've tried it as both an apertif and after dinner drink, but only one in each instance.
Jura Superstition. Sweet, very light peat and cloves at the end.
Liked it more than I thought I would.
The British PM's wife's father owns that distillery, I actually liked a number of the Jura expressions, but then they seem to get a bit too popular and the quality went down. I use to class them on par with Scapa, as a great new island whisky without the peaty negative effect of the Islays.
* rye grass juice
* snow pea shoot juice
* fenugreek sprout juice