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beer

Cold War Intelligence on Tap at Newburgh Tavern Talk

October 1, 2017 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

fshshh logoThe Friends of the State Historic Sites of the Hudson Highlands will host their second Tavern Talk, focusing on Cold War Intelligence, on Tuesday, October 3rd, at 7 pm, at the Newburgh Brewing Company.

This year, Assistant Professor of History at the United States Military Academy at West Point and former U.S. Intelligence professional, Dr. David Gioe, will speak on data breaches before the internet and the case of Oleg Penkovsky, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. [Read more…] about Cold War Intelligence on Tap at Newburgh Tavern Talk

Filed Under: Events, History, Hudson Valley - Catskills Tagged With: beer, Friends of the State Historic Sites of the Hudson Highlands, Newburgh

Schenectady Suds: A Historic Stockade District Beer Tour

August 31, 2017 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

schenectady sudsHistoric beer tours of the Stockade District will be held on Thursdays, September 14, 21, and 28 at 6 pm.

Hosted by the Schenectady County Historical Society, the “Schenectady Suds” tours will meet at the Schenectady County Historical Society and end at the Van Dyck / Mad Jack Brewery. [Read more…] about Schenectady Suds: A Historic Stockade District Beer Tour

Filed Under: Events, History Tagged With: beer, Schenectady, Schenectady County Historical Society

Spruce Beer: An Old Adirondack Favorite

April 15, 2017 by Lawrence P. Gooley 1 Comment

In keeping with last week’s spruce theme — Sprucelets: An Original Adirondack Medicine — is a look at one of the most common drinks in early Adirondack history: spruce beer. Like the aforementioned Sprucelets, it was believed to be of medicinal value due in part to its vitamin C content. Several evergreens share those same properties, and their use dates back centuries.

In one of the earliest mentions of evergreens used as a health aid in North America, there remains disagreement as to which tree along the St. Lawrence River (at today’s Quebec City) was used by Jacques Cartier in 1536 to cure scurvy. His voyage journal says that after learning nearby natives were quite ill with an unknown disease, Cartier quarantined his men on their ships, which were frozen in the ice.

As he noted, the precaution didn’t work. “Not withstanding these defences, the disease begun inside our group, in an unknown manner, as some of us were getting weak, their legs were becoming big and swollen, the nerves as black as coal. The sailors were dotted with drops of blood, and then the disease went to their hips, thighs, shoulders, arms and neck. Their mouths were so infected and rotten that all the flesh fell to the level of the roots of the teeth which had fallen out.” [Read more…] about Spruce Beer: An Old Adirondack Favorite

Filed Under: Adirondacks & NNY, History, Nature Tagged With: Adirondacks, beer, Culinary History

Craft Beer Fundraiser Celebrates Erie Canal Bicentennial

April 4, 2017 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

hudson valley hopsOn Saturday, April 8 from 4 to 7 pm, the Albany Institute of History & Art will host the sixth annual Hudson Valley Hops. This regional craft beer tasting event is a fundraiser for the museum and is sponsored by the Times UNions’ Table Hopping blog.

It’s an opportunity for the community to sample the flavors of Capital Region craft brewers, see brewing and distilling artifacts from the Albany Institute’s collection, meet industry experts, and receive a commemorative glass. This year, the fundraiser will toast the bicentennial of the groundbreaking of the original Erie Canal with an Irish Red Ale invitational, an IPA contest, music, and more. [Read more…] about Craft Beer Fundraiser Celebrates Erie Canal Bicentennial

Filed Under: Events, History Tagged With: Albany, Albany Institute For History and Art, beer, Culinary History, Erie Canal

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