The BLager

Month

October 2011

27 posts

Witches' Brew

I read somewhere that the “witches” of days past were brewing beers in those cauldrons of theirs. The brooms of course served as the safest mode of night-time transport after several hours of holiday imbibing. So, there’s your holiday fun fact of the day. Happy Halloween!

Oct 31, 20111 note
#beer #halloween #witch #history
Oct 30, 201121 notes
#beer #gender #women #brewing #craft beer #culture #slate
Oct 28, 2011136 notes
#beer #russia #packaging #design #label
Views and Brews now at NiteHawk! → ny.eater.com

Guys! You can order beer, wine, cocktails at NiteHawk Cinema now. Oh, and food. But I mean, not just at the bar, from your table while watching the movie! How fun is that. I think I will enjoy the movies much more now.

Super.

Oct 27, 201159 notes
#beer #wine #cocktails #repeal #legal #legislation #nitehawk #williamsburg #brooklyn #news #movies
America's Northeast Breweries Featured in BBC Travel → bbc.com

Limelight given to NY and MA (oh, and a couple other states I haven’t lived in).  Also, is Penn. considered the Northeast….?

Oct 27, 20114 notes
#beer #things to do #road trip #travel #bbc
Oct 27, 201115 notes
#beer #bar #culture #taiwan #kaohsiung #black dog
Oct 20, 20112 notes
#beer #bars #nyc #things to do #josh bernstein
Oct 19, 201122 notes
#how to #beer #wifi #internet #tutorial
Oct 19, 20119 notes
#beer #homebrew #how to #diy #kegging
Oct 18, 20114 notes
#beer #ginger brew #Hitachino Nest Beer #japanese
Oct 17, 201134 notes
#beer #pubs #australia #rubber #sustainable #recycled #violence
Oct 17, 20118 notes
#beer #oktoberfest #western massachusetts #berkshires #tasting event
Oct 14, 20115 notes
#beer #food
Lisanti Quarterly: The Types Of People You Meet At An Introductory Home Brewing Class → marklisanti.tumblr.com

*TheBLager

marklisanti:

* Guy Wearing Shirt Of His Favorite Obscure Microbrewery (in California)

* Guy Who Loves Beer So Much He Audibly Gasps At Malt Being Added To Giant Pot Of Boiling Water

* Guy Wearing Shirt Of An Even More Obscure Microbrewery (in Portland)

* Guy Feverishly Taking Notes On Everything

*…

Oct 13, 201164 notes
#stereotypes #beer #homebrewing #gender
Oct 13, 201112 notes
#beer #art #octopi
Marketing beer to latino's → npr.org

Not sure how I feel about this article, but any article that focuses on a large corporation targeting (their defined) demographic for dollars always comes across as a bit D-baggy. But it does raise some interesting points.

Oct 12, 201118 notes
#beer #language #culture #latino #marketing #advertising #npr
Oct 12, 20119 notes
#garrett oliver #oxford companion #gothamist #interview #news #beer
Oct 12, 20114 notes
#food #beer #recipe #honey #ribs #food52 #cooking with beer #seasonal
Oct 12, 20113 notes
Oktoberfest in Palestine → guardian.co.uk

suip:

Beer and Islam. Two things that go together like… well, like two things that don’t go well together. Or so I thought.

I lived with a few Muslim guys for a year at university who really liked their beer, and my mates and I used to give them a pretty good ribbing. They said that alcohol was a long-tolerated tradition of many Muslim communities and that we were being narrow-minded by sarcastically giving them the “Good Muslim” award at the end of year fines evening. They brought up how Sufi mystics and poets often wrote about their love of wine, and not only as a metaphor for spiritual intoxication. I also had a few Muslim friends who would never dream of touching a drop of alcohol. It was complicated.

This sounds a lot more serious than it actually was - it was good-natured fun, after all - but it did raise an interesting issue: can beer and Islam co-exist?

The answer it seems is a qualified yes. While devout Muslims usually consider alcohol haraam, that is, forbidden, there exists many others who not only enjoy alcohol but make it too, arguing that alcohol has long been a part of Islamic culture. But how does it actually work in Arabia?

Enter Taybeh Brewery, Palestine’s only microbrewery. Run by Christians, its products are enjoyed by Muslims and secular Arabs alike. I found a very interesting article by the Guardian about this little brewery’s seventh annual Oktoberfest, held in its tiny home village on the West Bank.

To add to the bizarreness of the situation, this Oktoberfest, the seventh of its kind, took place not in hip Ramallah but in the remote village of Taybeh, perched picturesquely at 850m above sea level and with a population of just 1,500. Moreover, readers in western countries may wonder why thousands upon thousands of revellers had trekked all that way to attend a beer festival with only one beer on tap.

Secular Palestinians, expats and even leftist Israelis equipped with glasses of Taybeh beer wandered around food and handicraft stands, watched traditional Dabke dancers, modern music, comedy and theatrical performances.

Despite its remoteness and tiny proportions, Taybeh has earned its place on the cultural and social map as being the location of the only Palestinian beer brewery. It has battled the restrictions imposed by the Israeli occupation and the rise of Islamic fundamentalism to become a rare Palestinian business and cultural success story.

This may explain why Taybeh once adopted “Taste the revolution” as its advertising slogan. And, judging by its micro-brewery quality, the revolution tastes pretty good.

For an extremely interesting insight into how beer and Islam co-exists in a country whose largest city, you know, has a religiously-informed ban on all alcohol, this article is recommended reading. It also provides a very interesting perspective into how the issue of alcohol has been dealt with in Islamic cultural and historical writings and how non-Muslims enjoy their tipple while living in Islamic states.

Of course, I’m not going to argue about how a faith that isn’t mine deals with their matters, but from a beer perspective, this is very interesting indeed.

Oct 11, 201110 notes
#beer #islam #palesstine #oktoberfest #culture #religion
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