51 min listen
Beer in the Bronx: Brewing with Authenticity
Beer in the Bronx: Brewing with Authenticity
ratings:
Length:
50 minutes
Released:
Jan 8, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Bronx brewers come to Brooklyn to discuss a new collaboration: Mama's Candied Yams Imperial Ale. Jimmy talks with Joel Suarez and Matt Negron of Uptown Beer Society, Rey Cortez and Oscar Santiago of First Boro Brewing, Paul Ramirez and Anthony Ramirez of The Bronx Beer Hall, and Dave Lopez of Gun Hill Brewing. Dom Cook, the founder of Beer Kulture and author of This Ain't the Beer That You're Used To: A Beginner's Guide to Good Beer also calls in from Tampa, Florida. They speak about the clash between authenticity and cultural appropriation in the beer world, the importance of giving back to the Bronx community they grew up in, and how learning about beer can be a positive force in a person's life.Beer List:Mama's Candied Yams, Gun Hill Brewery CollaborationBeer Kulture and Green Bench Brewing Company's Kulture Khronicles Vol. 1Barrier Brewing Company's Bronx Dance PartyGun Hill Brewing Company's Maple Bacon Void of LightGun Hill Brewing Company's Antigua MoonGun Hill Brewing Company's FelixSeparatist Beer Project's Strange Landscape: Sauvignon Blanc Beer Sessions Radio is powered by Simplecast.
Released:
Jan 8, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Episode 114: Taverns and U.S. History: Jimmy Carbones talking about taverns on this weeks episode of Beer Sessions Radio. Christine Sismondo, author of America Walks into a Bar, is in the studio to offer s perspective on the importance of taverns as gathering places throughout history. Also in the studio are Ken Tirado of Killmeyers Old Bavarian Inn and Barry Smyth of Fraunces Tavern, two of the oldest taverns in New York City. Tune in to hear about some of the beers at Killmeyers and Fraunces Tavern, the importance of owner involvement in bars, the consequences of Prohibition in the United States, and why its important to keep old tavern traditions alive. This episode has been brought to you by GreatBrewers.com. I dont see the American Revolution happening without taverns. One interesting thing about Prohibition is that people are really invested in the story as something that created more problems than it solved. To some degree, its true, but if you look at the beginning of Prohibiti by Beer Sessions Radio (TM)