Thursday, October 30, 2008

Sycamore Beer Fest/Ten Years of Creole Love

This is a double fun post cause I skipped last week.

On the drinking news in the city, Sycamore, a bar/flower shop in Ditmas Park had a lovely Ocktoberfest a couple of weeks ago. Grand and tasty beer was provided at $3 for a plastic up, $12 for a liter stein. Spaten OcktorberFest was the beer of choice for the event -- a nice fall taste for the cold weather. It was pure and cheap brilliance in beer drinking. The upside is that the special lasted from 12pm-midnight, and because my friends and I were there all day, one of the awesome owners, Justin, allowed us to keep the beer mugs. The bar is a favorite of mine, but I have to admit, I don't have many options in my hood. The only other one I've been to is the god-forsaken Denny's at McDonald Ave where bright lights, Phil Collins and women in spandex reign. The downside to the Sycamore bar, and there are few, trust me, is that it's the center of babyville. I get that parents need to get out and bring there little ones along, but I get very disconcerted when it's after dark and the large, wonderful backyard of Sycamore has an entire section of children playing about and throwing pebbles at each other while adults are getting openly plastered nearby. Overall, Sycamore gets three stars out of five for this beer lover's event.


In other news, I just celebrated my ten year friendship with my good friend K. He was one of my first drinking buddies in the city. The first bar we began frequenting in the city was the hideous, but oh, so cheap Cafe Creole. Cafe Creole was housed in a little downstairs whole on 99 MacDougal Street. It was a place of odd memories: ten buck strong Long Island Ice Teas, random bongo drummers, and even shaman that used to give you odd spiritual trinkets. I loved the bar because it represented the bar of our youth, our first years of drinking in NYC. But as time moved on, we find better bars to frequent, I didn't even know when Cafe Creole was shut down. On our anniversary, we decided to see what had become of our old bar. What we found was 99 Below, a more upscale looking version of our former, dirt floor, bongo thumping Creole. 99 Below has your standard drink prices with a decent happy hour on weeknights of $4 well drinks, a nice accomodating bartender, and good bar food. After the kitchen closes, you can still order food, it's the same menu, just made and delivered from some unknown location across the street. It also has to be a separate bill from your bar tab. K and I spent several hours here drinking and reminscing, but the overall downside to this otherwise nice, cute bar was the music. Never have I heard Alanis, Joan Osborne, and Cranberries all in one place. Instead of remembering our old college drinking days, it made the evening a slightly painful trip back to high school. We also noticed that the music might have kept the bar patrons from staying. At one point, at 9pm on a Thursday, the bar had a decent crowd, but as the hours past, at 12pm, we were the only patrons. This made the bartender like us, he even gave us two buy backs -- one of them being a nice so-co and lime shot for the road. I liked the bartender so much that I decided not to tell him how you should never play Joan Osborne in any bar -- ever.








Thursday, October 16, 2008

The Home Away From Home Bar: O'Hanlon's


New York City is full of bars. Hip bars. Beer bars. Wine bars. Pubs, dives, jukebox sweet music bars. At a point in everyone's drinking life, there is always a bar you go to that's your home away from home. Sometimes, in a city where homes often change, that bar changes, but some bars are special enough to occupy a space in our drinking hearts. That bar for me is O'Hanlon's.

O'Hanlon's was never my original bar -- that title belongs to my dear, close drinking friend Ace. I've been drinking with Ace for several years now and O'Hanlon's was her home away from home bar. And because it was her home, it became my home as well. It's the type of bar where everyone knows your name, and if there's a special song that goes with your name, you go there often enough, they'll play it for you (Ace is one of those people.) For a long time, this was our steady bar, Ace 's and mine. For a time, it was also the "birthday bar", the place where we threw our respective bashes to celebrate a each new year of our lives. For a time, it was a bar where I moved on from the Long Island Ice Tea to more sophisticated drinking tastes.

Then I moved away, didn't go to O'Hanlon's for years. Ace and I stopped going out to drink that much, though she remained a happy regular at O'Hanlon's. But recently, I started going back there, having drinks there and it reminded me what a great place it was. I felt nostalgic after my second drink at the bar, I got my third drink as a buy back. I hadn't had a true buy back for years. This past Tuesday, I sat with Ace and her friend Chris while they reminisced on their great times there. And I started remembering all my good times there too -- Ace and I even ran into John, an old O'Hanlon's regular who introduced me to Van Morrison's Too Late to Stop Now and insisted how the only way to listen to Van the Man was on vinyl. I remembered how when Ace and I would drink there, often, O'Hanlon's regulars like John would buy our drinks for us, just out of the sheer goodness of their drinking hearts.

I realized that though it's a bar that's only my home away from home now like a second cousin -- the home being more others than mine, this bar was my home away from home for awhile. And then you got good memories every time you step into a place, it'll never really stop being a home.

Friday, October 10, 2008

What's on Your Friday Ready To Go Out Playlist?


It's a Friday, we're all at work, waiting for the hours to wind down to our weekend bar hopping New York nights in the city. I've been feeling down and out with money issues, career issues, et al. on the brain. So I choose to be upbeat with the tunes I bop my head to before I cruise into the weekend of fun times. Here is a top five of The Drunk Little Asian's Girl's playlist to prep for the weekend.


1. The Hold Steady's "Stay Positive" -- A tune that will have you pounding your fist in the air and yelling "Wo-oh-oh...wo-oh-oh, we're gonna Stay Positive..." And if that doesn't get you in a rockin', ready to go out and tear the New York Streets apart mood, I don't know what will.



2. Bruce Springtseen "The Promise Land" -- Okay, a little of a downer, but hey, there is something about when you hear that souful harmonica play, and gritty feel of the Boss's words "I've tried my best to live the right way, I get up in the morning and go to work each day..." to the crescendo of "Mister I ain't no boy, no I'm a man, and I believe in the Promise Land." And hell, after a hard working week, this gets me to thinking of better, greater times ahead --- like a Friday night out in great New York bar, a nice cold drink in my hand.



3. The Futurehead's "Beginning of the Twist" -- This feet stomper, adrenaline pumper is eoungh to make you put on your best hipster attire, zip up those black boot heels, and rock out on the streets until you head into the Friday Night dance whirl.



4. Against Me's "Thrash Unreal" -- And the first lyrics are..."If she wants to dance and drink all night then there's no one that can stop her." Need I say more?



5. The Virgins' "One Week of Danger" -- Listening to chic cool beat rhythm makes you feel like whipping on those shades, tilt your head to the fall sky and think, "Shit yeah, the weekend is here."


Rock out your weekend, folks. I know I will.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Sarah Palin Brings Out the Drinker In Me


The main topic of conversation these days amongst the drinking elite is not the best new cheap wine at Trader Joe's (BTW, it's a Vinho Verde at $3.99) or the new fall beer that we would like to grace our fattening bellys getting ready for the cold days ahead (Brooklyn Brown) -- no, it's Sarah Palin. I mean, come on people. Look at her. Is she the person you want to rule over you? Doesn't looking at her face make you wanna knock back a cold one and run for the fucking border? Maybe it's the way she says "Say It Ain't So, Joe" or the fact I've come to realize that I've traveled more countries that she has -- but listening to that woman talk on the world stage makes me be want to crack that Vinho Verde open and drink that entire bottle. Which I did on last Thursday night's VP debates. Me and my drinking posse sat around the television screen, drinking sherry and white wine, at the edge of our seats hoping this woman would verbally fumble as she does so well when asked any question that reaches beyond her carefully crafted soundbytes handfed to her by people that understand the issues better than she does. And the more she talked, the more I found comfort in that divine Vinho Verde and yelling at the TV screen to Joe Biden, "Good God, man, eviscerate her!!" Yet she didn't verbally fumble. She just sound byted very well with her gee, gosh, golly, darn tootin' oh-so-sweet you wanna vomit with the sheer cuteness of it all. And this is the woman who will possibly run our country should McCain will the election and then croak. I began a drinking game to count how many times she would say, "Mav-er-rick!" or "Joe Six Pack!" (Maverick, 6, Joe Six Pack, 1). Now, every time, I'm out drinking, the conversation always comes round to Sarah Palin. On Saturday, I was in the new flower shop/bar named Sycamore in Ditmas Park (which is the most happy drinking place ever for this little drinking Asian), trying to convince the bartendar why to vote for Obama over McCain -- "Dude, actuaries say that McCain has a 1 in 6 chance of dying in office! Palin could be our leader! You want her to lead you? I don't want her to lead me!" I make it a habit to bone up on all that is ridiculous about this woman so I'm prepared to drunkenly spout it to anyone that's undecided. At a friend's b-day party last night, we started talking about how awesome Tina Fey is as Sarah Palin, when my buddy said to me "Is Tina Fey really funnier than just Sarah Palin being Sarah Palin?" And as I drink my beer (an Obolon Premium, a damn lovely Ukrainian light beer) as I write this post and stare at this picture, my answer is no.