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Another Look at Colorado Ballot Propositions 2022

As I sit down to vote, any changes of mind?

I pretty much stand by what I originally evaluated for my votes on ballot propositions this year.  There are two that I was not sure about, though, and one other I wanted to reevaluate.

Proposition 122 – Access to Natural Psychedelic Substances
YES

One proponent framed the question very well: is adult possession of magic mushrooms sufficiently dire enough to warrant destroying someone’s life through criminal prosecution? Hard to understand how.

On the other hand, the critiques of the proposition are inane. “It’s fentanyl all over again!” No, it’s not, in any way, shape, or form. “Ordinary people shouldn’t do these drugs because they won’t treat them as a spiritual sacrament!” Sorry, I eat bread and drink wine, too, outside of Mass. “It’s all a Big Pharma plot!” While not discounting Big Pharma’s ability to plot, this controlled access proposal seems a reasonable first step.

I’ll be voting Yes.

Some further reading:

Proposition 124 – Increase Allowable Liquor Store Locations
NO

Basically increases the number of liquor licenses which may be held by an individual or company. I wanted to give this one another look because there are some inequities in the current law that, in the coming several years, will disadvantage independent liquor stores.

Net-net, Prop 124 is a good thing if it helps local liquor stores expand and stay competitive with supermarkets, which will soon begin to get more licenses than they do. It’s a not so good thing if it helps big outside liquor companies (e.g., BevMo, or Total Wine) come into the state and supplant local liquor marts.

Give that the Trone brothers, who founded Total Wine, have each dropped almost a million dollars into this tells me that’s the intended direction.

I think there are better ways to help local liquor stores compete, so I’m going to vote No, but I strongly suspect that it will be voted in as a Yes.

Some further reading:

Proposition 125 – Allow Grocery and Convenience Stores to Sell Wine
NO

Should grocery stores be able to sell wine, too? (Also sake, mead, and hard cider, but wine is the biggie here.)

The issue being presented to consumers is, of course, convenience — though the donations from Albertsons Safeway, Kroger, and Target make it clear they see it as a big windfall for themselves.

The argument against is the impact on independently owned liquor stores. The best counter is that the same claim was made about grocery stores carrying beer, and today there are more independent liquor stores than there were when that proposition passed. I’m not convinced that actually applies, though, esp. given how independent stores have said their beer sales have dropped; kicking out the second of three legs from those stores (beer, wine, hard liquor) would have, I think, a more serious effect.

I will likely vote No, though I suspect it will pass.

Some further reading:

Oh, and that other stuff to vote for?

I’ll be voting a pretty straight Democratic ballot this year, as far as candidates go. While I’m not a rapturous fan of Polis or Bennet, for example (though I do like my US Rep, Jason Crow), their opponents are either lunatics or clearly disingenuous in their intentions — and my presumption in 2022, without strong proof otherwise (which would have kept them from getting on the GOP ballot in the first place) is that any Republican candidate is or will be a Trump supporter, happy to work alongside MTG and Jordan and Goetz and Cotton and Cruz, and enthusiastic to see civil rights protections rolled back, increased church-state entanglement, and democratic norms and governance broken down.

Vote!

New Orleans!

It’s a culinary destination location

NOLA has long been on my List Of Place I Want To Visit, but it never quite happened, until our friends Mario and Dirk got married and had one of their celebrations there (where Dirk’s family resides).

Royal Street

Physically, New Orleans reminds me of European cities — broad avenues and narrow streets, streetcars, elegant buildings often gone to seed from disaster or economic upheaval, places trying to find a purpose beyond being a tourist destination.

As a place to go, though, it’s very different from anywhere I’ve traveled. Usually, when I go someplace, there’s things to see. Natural wonders. Historic monuments. Museums.

NOLA has those for the most part. But that’s not why people seem to go there, and not why I’ll be going back.

A mid-afternoon snack at the Palace Cafe.

You go to New Orleans to eat and to drink. (And to party, if one is so inclined. The whole Mardi Gras experience aside, anything is an excuse to party, from the Saints winning a game causing gridlock in the French Quarter (as it did) to a wedding party and a second line parade (which we got to do, too).

But the food and drink and hospitality business is key here.

As we did it at least, a day’s activities consist of:

  1. Walk someplace.
  2. Stop somewhere interesting-looking or recommended for a bite to eat and a cocktail.
  3. Walk some more.
  4. Stop someplace interesting-looking or recommended for a sweet of some sort and maybe some coffee.
  5. GOTO 1

We did a (wonderful) breakfast at the hotel, but aside from that, we didn’t really do meals per se, just, “Hey, there’s that place we heard about, let’s go in there for a bit,” or, “Wow, my feet are hurting, that place looks intriguing to stop in.”

NOLA has signature cuisines — sea food, Creole food, soul food, Cajun food, lots of shrimp and rice and sausage and roux-based sauces, and bread pudding desserts (but with plenty of alternatives) — and plenty to wash them down with. The cheap bars that line the SW end of Bourbon Street will ply you with daiquiris and margs and cheap beer, but most bars of note will have both old favorites and some interesting signature cocktails. These may be tropical, they may be based on gin or pisco, or, most frequently, they start with bourbon or rye whiskey and go from there.

Cocktails

The Sazerac is the grand elder of cocktails here. I grew to like them, though I tried a variety of others.

NOLA, at least in the French Quarter, allows public consumption of alcohol. That usually means plastic cups and containers of garishly colored booze and beer. People tend not to stroll the avenues (not even Royal Street) with a Pimm’s Cup or Chicory Old Fashioned. (That just means you have to finish it up before toddling onto the next spot to try.)

Band at the 21st Amendment Bar.

It’s not, as I indicated all about eating and drinking. It’s also listening to music — live entertainment is all over the place during the evenings, and not hard to find during the day, even discounting the (often very talented) street performers, many of whom actually set up in the street due to the narrow sidewalks.

NOLA is steeped in history, starting its colonial period under the French and Spanish and French again, throwing around dates that make those British settlers on the East Coast sound like Johnny-come-latelies. There’s plenty of later history, from the War of 1812 (thus a legit excuse for Major General Andrew Jackson to have a square named after him, complete with horse) to the Civil War to being a Caribbean hub in the 20s and 30s.

National WWII Museum

Beyond the buildings and stories and museums about that, NOLA sports a very respectable Museum of Art (NOMA), convenient to the streetcar. It also is the home of the National WWII Museum, which is very US-centric (by mission), but an incredibly rich resource worth visiting.

Getting around is pretty easy; the blocks are relatively small, so hoofing it by foot is always a possibility for most things. The town has a very good bus and famous trolley system (currently hampered by a block of Canal Street being shut down to due to the partial collapse of the new Hard Rock Hotel, yikes). We ended up using all of the above, with Lyft filling in some gaps when we wanted to get someplace quickly(ish).

Streetcar

(I would not recommend renting a car, unless there’s things outside easy radius of foot and bus and streetcar that you really want to get to. NOLA drivers are very polite, remarkably talented at not hitting pedestrians, and somewhat insane, and too many areas are a twist of one-way streets to reliably navigate, even with Google Maps.)

It’s rare I go someplace and not want to go back, to explore new stuff and re-explore the old. To that end, I’d definitely do NOLA again. I can get the food and the drink anywhere, but there’s something kind of magical about the environment there makes it special.

Sazerac!

Recommended Places to Eat/Drink:

  • Palace Cafe: Elegant charm, good food, good drink, friendly staff. We ate a couple of mid-afternoon meals there.
  • Sylvain: Some of the best cocktails we had, and decent if simple food offerings.
  • Muriel’s Jackson Square: the food and service and setting for the reception dinner were all great. I’d like to eat there in and of itself.
  • Bourbon House: We stopped there a couple of times. Remarkable bourbon list, and decent food.

Other Recommended Places:

  • AC Hotel by Mariott New Orleans Bourbon: Where we stayed, just a couple of blocks SW of Canal St, in the street that turns into Bourbon when it crosses Canal. Modern rooms, fun building, faboo breakfast.
  • National WWII Museum: Schedule at least half a day. Really.
  • New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA): Fine midsize museum with an eclectic but solid collection.

Not-Recommended Places:

  • Sazerac Bar mural

    Sazerac Bar in the Roosevelt Hotel: The drinks were fine, the decor and ambience nifty, the bartender engaging. But those fine drinks were $18/pop. Maybe have one for the experience and move on.

Travel note: A lot of stuff (esp. museums and public buildings) is closed on Monday.

Cheers, New Orleans! We’ll be back!

Yeah, I’m a sucker for a Personal Q&A memes like this

Favorite smell – Sauteeing onions and garlic; cookies baking; apple pie; mimeographs
Favorite foot attire – Birkenstocks
Favorite restaurant – The Wooden Table (Greenwood Village, CO)
Favorite cereal – As a cold cereal, Cheerios (with plenty of sugar).
Jeans or shorts – Shorts. Though I can put up with jeans.
Favorite Condiment – Sriracha, as a sauce. Garlic Pepper, as a seasoning.
Beach or Mountain – Mountain. I’m seriously not a big sun-and-sand person.
Favorite day of the week – Friday. The anticipation of rest and recreation is so powerful.
Favorite Holiday – Christmas. Gifts, family, food. Hard to beat that.
Tattoos – Do. Not. Want. Needles.
Like to cook – When I want to do something nice for +Margie Kleerup (or when she’s on a business trip).
Favorite color – Cobalt Blue
Do you wear glasses – Since 1st Grade.
Favorite season – Autumn. I love fall colors and cooler temps. Spring is a close second.
Beer or wine – Wine (usually). Preferably a peppery red Zin. In beer, a wheat / hefe.
Favorite drink – Alcoholic: Caipirinha (though at a bar I’ll usually order a G&T). Non-Alcoholic: Root Beer (or, if not indulging, unsweetened iced tea).
Dream Place To Live – Tuscany. As a vacation home.
Favorite Fruit – Limes. For limeades, and for various cocktails.

[h/t +Stuckin D’South]

 

Original Post

Let’s raise a glass to trade wars!

When you bump up tariffs, and other countries bump up tariffs in response, guess what happens?

  1. Stuff that’s imported or relies on imported materials gets more expensive for American consumers.
  2. American businesses that rely on exports — and the American states that rely on tax income from them — lose bigly.

The American Bourbon industry — and, pretty much, all American distilled spirits — just got shivved by Donald Trump. But, hey, at least he gets to look tough, and that’s the important thing, right?

Cheers!




Trump’s Trade War Just Firebombed The Bourbon Industry In Kentucky
The European Union and Mexico have kept a promise to retaliate against Trump’s nonsensical trade tariffs with trade tariffs of their own.

Original Post

“The IPA Has No Clothes!”

While I know that there are folk who actually do like hoppy beers (just as there are people who like practically anything you want to suggest), I have to believe that the current trend of every other beer being sold or on the menu at restaurants being some IPA or other hyper-hopped beer is part of some conspiracy of timid silence, wherein everyone thinks that they must love hops in order to seem cool and with it and sophisticated (and, for men, manly). So everyone nods and orders hoppy beers and doesn’t catch the wince that everyone else makes around the table when they take their first sip.

I am more than ready for the IPA fad to recede into something that will meet the actual demand.

[h/t Doug Moran]




Stop pretending to like IPAs
There’s something I need to say. It’s a tough thing to do and takes bravery, but this has been weighing on my moral compass for far too long. It’s about …

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Assembly Line

We visited the new Breckenridge Brewery plant over on Santa Fe this past Monday, and the tour included this view of the packaging lines. I've always loved these things, and while it's not as impressive as the massive operation at the Coors Brewery up in Golden, it's still darned cool (and the beer is much better).

 

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Liquor Laws

Hey, look! Colorado's one of the "8 States with the Strangest Liquor Laws". Sigh.

And it's not been all that many years since liquor stores weren't allowed to open on Sundays. And who were the major force that opposed changing that law, and also now opposes lifting restrictions on liquor and wine sales at grocery stores? Some pious religious organization? Nope. An association of independent liquor stores.

Of course, all liquor stores in Colorado are independent. The main reason grocery stores can't sell booze is that the law actually says that a given corporate entity can only have a single liquor license for a single location. So there's just one WalMart in the state that sells booze, one CostCo, one Safeway supermarket that does so, etc., and liquor and wine stores are all single-outlet operations, not chains.

Which means you actually get some awfully nice liquor stores, and which actually helps smaller produces of wine and beer find a successful outlet for their wares, but does make grabbing a quick bottle of wine while shopping for dinner a separate stop.




8 States With The Strangest Alcohol Laws
What’s the first thing you do to prepare for a trip to another state? After finalizing your packing list, looking up the law of the land should be on your list — especially if you’re planning on d…

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Seasonal Drinks (at our house, at least)

Scotch Slushy, as chilled with fresh snow from the deck. This one's for +Margie Kleerup​.

 

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Retail chains push (again) for Colorado wine and beer sales

Colorado limits grocery stores to 3.2 beer, and liquor licenses to a single location. Supermarkets and big box retailers are looking to change that. They've been stymied in the past by independent liquor stores and, interestingly, craft brewers, but the plan is to, if need be, put it up to ballot initiative.

If that happens, I suspect it will pass. And, as much as I like the major independent liquor stores (which will be hurt most), I'm not sure that's a bad thing.




Grocers may take beer, wine sales question to Colorado voters
Colorado’s largest grocers and Walmart are throwing their weight behind the latest effort to have the state’s food stores carry craft beer and wine.

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All Your Beer Distributor Is Belong To Us

Aside from the archaic nature of beer distribution in the US, it's a pretty reasonable economic principle in all products that when producers start buying up distributors, it's usually not good news for competitors or consumers.

(With a nod to +The Bruce, Mile High and +Stan Pedzick)




The Feds Are Investigating Whether the Maker of Budweiser Is Waging a Secret War on Craft Beer
On Monday, Anheuser-Busch InBev, the globe’s largest brewer and maker of Budweiser, agreed to purchase SABMiller, the globe’s second largest brewer, for a tidy $104 billion. This, of course, is the biggest news in the world of suds right now—a truly massive merger that, if approved, “reshuffles the global beer…

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Our best friends know which we have more often

I think I also know which one they come over for.

 

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Oh, it's gin, gin, gin, that makes us want to sin

While I appreciate the Home Made Gin kit, what's more fascinating is the (likely inadvertent) visual idea that the Cybermen are, in fact, Gin Craze Victims, dulling their emotions for more efficient operation.

#doctorwho

 

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Oh, and about those beers

Well, heck — I posted about the Boulder Craft Brew Festival, and didn't note the beers I'd found particularly keen.

Fate – Uror Gose
12° – Walter's White
Bru – "Dim" Wit
Odd 13 – Imperial Saisson
J Wells – Hef
West Flanders – Angry Monk
Walnut – Please Don't Gose
Avery – Perzik Saisson
Sanitas – saisson
Twisted Pine – Recreational Wheat
Boulder Brewery – Shake Chocolate Porter

I've never had a Gose before, and there were two of them on my list (more info here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gose).

Anyway, that list is my particular kink of things I liked, so it's not a moral imperative or anything like that. But if someone wanted to get me a sixpack of something as a gift …

 

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Beer!

We have a fun time yesterday at the Boulder Craft Beer Festival. It was the second year, and while they had expanded the offerings a lot (20+ local craft breweries), it felt a bit better organized. We didn't have any torrential rain as interrupted last year, but it wasn't too hot.

We arrived a bit before 1 (when the plebes like us got to go in), and the line was about 15 minutes long. The festival was sold out, though, and by the time we had gotten through the line, the queue was twice as long.

Inside, starting off the queues to the tents were short — sometimes too short to finish your sampler before getting to the front of the next line. Things lengthened quite a bit by the end of the day, which still didn't turn out too badly — time enough to enjoy (or not) the sample, to chit-chat a bit, and digest.

We wrapped up (with a meal break) after not too many hours, pleasantly full and mellow. We adjourned (Jackie being along as our Designated Driver) back to Pedzwell, where we lounged around a bit, then headed off.

Altogether, a nice way to spend a Saturday.

   

In Album Boulder Craft Beer Festival 2015

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RT @pedzz_bd A wonderful time at the Boulder Craft Beer fest with @meoswell @Three_Star_Dave @MargieKleerup and Scott Wolfgang and Jackie Faulk.

RT @pedzz_bd A wonderful time at the Boulder Craft Beer fest with @meoswell @Three_Star_Dave @MargieKleerup and Scott Wolfgang and Jackie Faulk.

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Group pic: Jackie (DD), @MargieKleerup, Scott, @meoswell, and @pedzz_bd

Group pic: Jackie (DD), @MargieKleerup, Scott, @meoswell, and @pedzz_bd #bcbf

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Lines are a bit longer after lunch

Lines are a bit longer after lunch #bcbf

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Lines at the Boulder Craft Beer Fest are pretty reasonable

Lines at the Boulder Craft Beer Fest are pretty reasonable So far. #bcbf

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Hmmm

Hmmm What to do today? What to do…? #bcbf

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On whiskeys

The word itself comes from Gaelic sources — uisge beatha in Irish ("water of life," most likely a borrowing from the similar label aqua vitae in Latin). But what are the differences between the various whisky/whiskey spirits out there?

(This one's for +Margie Kleerup, since I'm not much of a whiskey fan in any of its varieties, at least not without various additional ingredients.)




What’s the Difference Between Scotch, Whiskey and Bourbon?
This might be common knowledge for some, but not for many, including my wife (who got into Harvard, btw ;-), so I thought it was worth a refresher. Let’s start with a burning question we answered back in 2008: what makes a whiskey bourbon?

The law. While knocking back a dram of bourbon is a decidedly carefree exercise, making it is exceedingly technical and requires that the whiskey meet a rigid set of criteria. The Federal Standards of Identi…

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