Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Where the Cocktail Party Came From

A cocktail party is a party at which cocktails are served. It is sometimes called a cocktail reception. A cocktail party organized for purposes of social or business networking is called a mixer. A cocktail hour is sometimes used by managers of hotels and restaurants as a means of attracting patrons between 4 pm and 6 pm, for example.

Cocktails can have some great origin stories, but how can you tell sober fact from tipsy fiction? The noble institution of pre-dinner drinking has a complicated history, stretching across the Atlantic and a century or two

This week, a look at where the cocktail party might have originated.

TTFN, Fred.

Quote of the week: "Maturity is a bitter disappointment for which no remedy exists, unless laughter can be said to remedy anything." - Kurt Vonnegut (US novelist, 1922 - 2007)



Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Grasping at Straws

A drinking straw is a tube for transferring a beverage from its container to the mouth of the drinker. The oldest drinking straw in existence, found in a Sumerian tomb dated 3,000 B.C.E., was a gold tube inlaid with the precious blue stone lapis lazuli, used for drinking beer, probably to avoid the solid byproducts of fermentation that sunk to the bottom. Argentines and their neighbors used a similar metallic device called a bombilla, that acts as both a straw and sieve for drinking mate tea for hundreds of years.

In the 1800s, the rye grass straw came into fashion because it was cheap and soft, but it had an unfortunate tendency to turn to mush in liquid. To address these shortcomings, Marvin C. Stone patented the modern drinking straw, made of paper, in 1888. He came upon the idea while drinking a mint julep on a hot day in Washington, D.C.; the taste of the rye was mixing with the drink and giving it a grassy taste, which he found unsatisfactory. He wound paper around a pencil to make a thin tube, slid out the pencil from one end, and applied glue between the strips. He later refined it by building a machine that would coat the outside of the paper with wax to hold it together, so the glue wouldn't dissolve in bourbon.


Beer, mint juleps, bourbon...once again, proof that alcohol leads to greatness.

This week, a look at the history of the straw.

TTFN, Fred.

Quote of the week: "The easiest thing in the world to be is you. The most difficult thing to be is what other people want you to be. Don't let them put you in that position." - Leo Buscaglia (US author and lecturer, 1925 - 1998)


   Grasping at Straws by fredwine on Scribd