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Celerity
Celerity's Journal
Celerity's Journal
November 3, 2022
Shamefully, AIPAC's working for Republican control of Congress, further destabilization of democracy
Lets rally for @SummerForPA. Help her out with a volunteer shift or donation today: https://summerforpa.com
Jacob Rubashkin
@JacobRubashkin
Whoa... AIPAC's Super PAC is spending against Democrat Summer Lee in PA-12. This looks like the group's first spending in any D vs. R election, and comes as there's some concern over Lee's race because her GOP opponent has the same name as the outgoing Democratic member.
https://twitter.com/AOC/status/1587192628038307840
November 1, 2022
https://www.thrillist.com/drink/nation/best-classic-beers

With at least one craft brewery in almost every neighborhood in America, consumers are spoiled for choice. Sometimes, thats great. Choice means variety, and variety is the spice of life. But perhaps in the maze of milkshake IPAs and cookie-infused breakfast stouts, you find yourself wishing for simpler times: times when a few-dozen brave independent craft breweries pitted themselves against the might of Big Beer, when discovering a hidden case of Bells Hopslam at your local bottle shop felt like winning the lottery, when looking at a taplist involved choosing between five or ten options from breweries that you knew, loved, and trusted. Ah, to be alive and of drinking age in the early 2000s! Luckily, theres a way to capture that experience. Many of the original breweries that kicked off the craft craze are still making their flagship beersoften in new packaging and more accessible than ever. However, if youre like me, you probably havent tried the old standbys in a while. So this is your cue: Head down to the bottle shop, pick up one of the classics, and remind yourself why you fell in love with craft beer in the first place.

Firestone Walker Parabola
Firestone Walker head brewer Matt Brynildson has more experience aging beer in bourbon barrels than almost anyone in the world. That experience is best expressed in Parabola, a thick 13.6% ABV bourbon barrel-aged stout with notes of chocolate, black cherry, and coffee. A celebratory beer to drink with good friends, the brewery has released a new vintage each year since 2006, which you can drink right away or cellar for years to come.
New Belgium Brewing La Folie
With the tartness of kombucha, the spritz of champagne, the color of rich mahogany, and the taste of oaky tannin and funk, New Belgiums La Folie isnt for everyone. But its perfect for those who appreciate challenging, complex beers. One of the first commercially brewed sours, La Folie tastes just as good today as it did during its first release in the late 90s. If you havent tried this beer in a while (or at all), you owe it to yourself to quaff a bit of U.S. beer history. Because lets be honest: When was the last time you drank a Flemish sour brown ale?
The Alchemist Heady Topper
In 2003, John and Jen Kimmich borrowed $150,000 to open a 60-seat brewpub called The Alchemist Pub and Brewery in Waterbury, Vermont. By modern standards, that makes The Alchemistand its bestselling Double IPA Heady Topperan OG. Available since the earliest days, Heady Topper spent many years as a functionally unobtainable delight, requiring a pilgrimage to Vermont and crushing defeat if the brewery was sold out. Dank, unfiltered, and endlessly smooth, Heady Topper tastes just as good today as it did then, when patrons snuck into the bathroom to pour their pints into water bottles. True story!
snip

15 Classic Beers That Are Definitely Worth Revisiting
From Sam to Oskar to Pliny, dont forget about these old standbys.https://www.thrillist.com/drink/nation/best-classic-beers

With at least one craft brewery in almost every neighborhood in America, consumers are spoiled for choice. Sometimes, thats great. Choice means variety, and variety is the spice of life. But perhaps in the maze of milkshake IPAs and cookie-infused breakfast stouts, you find yourself wishing for simpler times: times when a few-dozen brave independent craft breweries pitted themselves against the might of Big Beer, when discovering a hidden case of Bells Hopslam at your local bottle shop felt like winning the lottery, when looking at a taplist involved choosing between five or ten options from breweries that you knew, loved, and trusted. Ah, to be alive and of drinking age in the early 2000s! Luckily, theres a way to capture that experience. Many of the original breweries that kicked off the craft craze are still making their flagship beersoften in new packaging and more accessible than ever. However, if youre like me, you probably havent tried the old standbys in a while. So this is your cue: Head down to the bottle shop, pick up one of the classics, and remind yourself why you fell in love with craft beer in the first place.

Firestone Walker Parabola
Firestone Walker head brewer Matt Brynildson has more experience aging beer in bourbon barrels than almost anyone in the world. That experience is best expressed in Parabola, a thick 13.6% ABV bourbon barrel-aged stout with notes of chocolate, black cherry, and coffee. A celebratory beer to drink with good friends, the brewery has released a new vintage each year since 2006, which you can drink right away or cellar for years to come.
New Belgium Brewing La Folie
With the tartness of kombucha, the spritz of champagne, the color of rich mahogany, and the taste of oaky tannin and funk, New Belgiums La Folie isnt for everyone. But its perfect for those who appreciate challenging, complex beers. One of the first commercially brewed sours, La Folie tastes just as good today as it did during its first release in the late 90s. If you havent tried this beer in a while (or at all), you owe it to yourself to quaff a bit of U.S. beer history. Because lets be honest: When was the last time you drank a Flemish sour brown ale?
The Alchemist Heady Topper
In 2003, John and Jen Kimmich borrowed $150,000 to open a 60-seat brewpub called The Alchemist Pub and Brewery in Waterbury, Vermont. By modern standards, that makes The Alchemistand its bestselling Double IPA Heady Topperan OG. Available since the earliest days, Heady Topper spent many years as a functionally unobtainable delight, requiring a pilgrimage to Vermont and crushing defeat if the brewery was sold out. Dank, unfiltered, and endlessly smooth, Heady Topper tastes just as good today as it did then, when patrons snuck into the bathroom to pour their pints into water bottles. True story!
snip


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