Posts Tagged ‘drinking’

Happy Repeal Day

Monday, December 5th, 2011

Today is the seventy-eight anniversary of Repeal. I am re-posting something I wrote three years ago for the seventy-fifth anniversary. It was posted on my pre-wordpress blog so I am not sure how many people read it.

Prohibition happened because of deep ambivalence in American society over the use and abuse of alcohol. In 1920 the solution to these problems appeared to be the cessation of the production, distribution, and sale of alcohol. Thirteen years later Americans decided they had been wrong and allowed, once again, alcohol to be legally made and sold.

Repeal represented a turning point in American views of social behavior and habits. Since 1933 Prohibition has served as a negative reference point for any attempts to regulate or control problematic or unhealthy behavior. Reformers seeking legalization of other psychoactive substances such as marijuana use the nation’s experience with Prohibition to underscore the lack of wisdom in prohibiting other drugs.

Prohibition and Repeal did not eradicate our nation’s ambivalence about alcohol. As a country we are not alone in this ambivalence. Most modern states have a similarly complicated relationship with alcoholic beverages. Most governments receive some revenue benefits from taxing liquor while they must also deal with the health, safety, and public disorder problems that result from the misuse of alcohol.

From the liquor industry’s stand point the history of Prohibition and Repeal is a mixed blessing. They are always able to refer to Prohibition as the undesired end point of any attempts to increase regulation of the industry. They have been able to resume their role as financial partners in the federal government, an activity that continues to give them respectability. However they are ever vigilant in resisting any further sacrifices in the form of increased taxes. They are obviously aware, both from their own experiences as well as the experiences of the tobacco industry, that they are not invulnerable to another prohibition.

American responses to alcohol use and abuse have come in waves or cycles. From 1933 until the early 1970s American society increasingly saw alcohol consumption as a normal part of middle class social life. The low consumption rates that persisted until baby boomers became old enough to drink may have encouraged this benign view of liquor. The liquor industry as well as the medical field and academics all participated in the individualization and medicalization of alcohol problems.

In the 1970s alcohol consumption levels rose and a more public health approach to alcohol problems emerged. We are still living in this era. Public health advocates along with neo-prohibitionists had several successes including warning labels, the increase in the minimum drinking age, and a tax increase for beer. However they have not really moved forward in their attempts to restrict television advertising and drunk driving rates have not decreased for several years.

What remains to be seen is whether the pendulum will swing more severely one way or the other? Will bad economic times lead to increased or decreased drinking? Globally as the world’s population ages there seems to be a decrease in drinking. Less drinking usually leads to less negative consequences for society which in turn can lead to looser attitudes about drinking. However, at least in America, the baby boomlet could certainly impact consumption levels which might swing the pendulum towards stricter regulations and greater societal concern. The liquor industry is much better organized to withstand a regulatory or prohibitory onslaught than they were when Prohibition started.

 

Containing Beer

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

On Saturday, I had dinner at Egg, a great restaurant in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. With the meal, I ordered a Narragansett Bock, 16 oz., and my husband had a Sly Fox Pale Ale. The restaurant didn’t have any beer on tap.  The two beers came in cans which surprised me. I know that some craft brewers have been producing beer in cans and Oskar Blues Brewery only produces beer in cans and has done so since 2002. ( For an article about canned beer and session beers, another trend in craft brewing, click here.)

Narragansett is an old brewery that has been recreated as a craft beer. At one time, Narragansett, based in Rhode Island, was a top selling beer in New England. Falstaff Beer bought the company in 1966. The brewery closed in 1981. In 2005, Rhode Island investors purchased the brand.

Usually when I go out to eat, I drink whatever beer is on tap and the same is true when I go to a bar.  I probably retain the negative association of bad beer with cans. The Narragansett Bock was okay but there really wasn’t anything special about it. My husband said the same thing about the Sly Fox.

To really evaluate if drinking from a can makes a difference in taste, I would have to drink the bock from a bottle or on tap and then compare.

A few weeks before the dinner at Egg, we went to Yankee stadium to see the Yankees play the Red Sox. Our seats were not that great and far away from any food or beer. It was hot so I got a Miller Lite – only 110 calories – in a plastic bottle. Miller Lite is a terrible beer and mostly tastes cold and wet. It would be impossible for the plastic to make it worse.

It is funny that soda comes in all different containers and no one thinks that   from a can instead of a bottle makes it taste worse. The new cans that craft brewers are using are not supposed to affect the taste at all and are lighter and easier to recycle.

I still think that the association of bad, macro beer with cans will limit how many craft brewers embrace brewing in cans.

Repeal 77 Years Later

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

December 5 was the seventy-seventh anniversary of the Repeal of Prohibition. Jay Brooks has a video from the National Beer Wholesalers Association (NBWA) on his site. Two years ago, to commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary, I wrote a series of posts about various issues facing the liquor industry since Repeal.

Those posts were on my pre-wordpress blog and are very difficult to recreate. I invite anyone who is interested to click here and read them in their original format.

I have had my wordpress blog for almost two years. By and large and I am satisfied although I continue to find wordpress difficult to use. Since I started trying to tweet more I realize I blog less.

Cirrhosis and Liver Cancer

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

Several times a year I listen to CancerCare telephone workshops on different aspects of cancer research and treatment.  Today’s workshop was an “Update on the Treatment of Liver Cancer.” One of the speakers discussed the various risk factors for liver cancer. Cirrhosis underlies 50 to 60 percent of all the liver cancer cases in the United States. Hepatitis C and alcohol abuse are the most frequent causes of cirrhosis. According to the speaker, one can never ignore the degree of underlying damage to the liver when considering treatment for liver cancer. A patient would have the symptoms from the cirrhosis, such as ascites and varices, as well as the cancer symptoms. A few years ago, I wrote a post, “Your Liver on Drugs” which looked at some of the issues connected to maintaining good liver health. I am linking to it again because it still seems relevant.

Sales Tax on Alcohol

Monday, November 1st, 2010

Tomorrow people in Massachusetts will vote on three ballot questions. Two have to do with taxes. Question 3 would reduce the rate of the state sales and use tax from 6.25% to 3%.

Question 1 would remove the sales tax from alcoholic beverages. Before last year, there was no sales tax on alcohol. There is no sales tax on food, clothing, or prescriptions in the state.

I think sales taxes are very regressive and an unfortunate way to raise revenue. The basic rate for the Massachusetts income tax is 5.3%, which is less than the sales tax. Income taxes can be progressive and can even redistribute income but they are politically unpopular. Apparently, sales taxes are less unpopular.

I have not decided how I am going to vote on Question 1 because the liquor industry already pays excise taxes so the sales tax is, in some way, double taxation. Governments have usually seen alcoholic beverages as appropriate for taxation because they supposedly have inelastic demand.

Prior to Prohibition, the states did not generally tax distilled spirits, beer, or wine. Since Repeal, many states generate significant revenue through taxiing alcohol.  Only five states do not have a sales tax on liquor.

Both before and after prohibition, some legislators have felt that taxing alcohol provides benefits to society since it could potentially reduce drinking. This attitude would imply an elastic demand. Since the 1980s, public health advocates have called for increased taxation of alcohol to help pay for the societal costs associated with alcoholism, drunk driving, and other manifestations of alcohol abuse.

Usually the government’s need for revenue is what wins out. It is interesting that Massachusetts is looking at losing revenue from alcohol while California is seeking to gain revenue from legalizing marijuana. Legalizing the recreational use of pot would enable California municipalities to generate tax revenue, which would help shore up sagging budgets.

I urge everyone to vote tomorrow because voting is a privilege. If you don’t vote you shouldn’t complain.

Oktoberfest – Part 2

Monday, October 4th, 2010

I had my Oktoberfest dinner on Saturday. It was a lot of fun.  One of the guests was from Berlin, which gave the evening a ring of authenticity. We sampled four beers. Two were lagers – the Spaten Marzen and the Victory Prima Pils. We had one ale, Smuttynose Pumpkin Ale and one stout, Left Hand Milk Stout.

The Marzen went very well with the cabbage and bacon dish. It is a very smooth beer with a nice flavor. The Victory Pills was very light in color but had more taste and flavor than most lagers I have drunk. We drank it with chicken schnitzel. If Budweiser tasted like that, it would be a lot better.

The Pumpkin Ale is very nice with a moderate amount of hops flavor.  I actually like Dogfish Head Punkin Ale better. It has a more pronounced pumpkin flavor.  The warm potato salad I served with it had a tangy flavor so the ale was a nice contrast.

I served the stout with dessert, which was an apple cake. It was the best stout I have ever tasted and a very good flavored beer; several of my guests were surprised that you could serve beer with dessert.

I had never done a beer pairing meal before so this was very interesting. Although I think you could make too much of it, I can see that certain types of beer go very well with certain foods.  I would not want to see beer drinking become as complicated as wine. The final decision should be one of taste.

Last year, when we were in New York, I wrote a post about fall beers. This was the picture I used.

oktoberfest-beer

Oktoberfest – Part 1

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

Oktoberfest began on September 18 and will end this Sunday, October 3. I am having an Oktoberfest dinner with beer pairings on Saturday night. It is the 200th anniversary of Oktoberfest. The first Oktoberfest was a wedding celebration for Prince Ludwig and his wife. There was horseracing and some beer. In 1896 beer tents were added and the modern celebration was born.

oktoberfest2010

I found a sample dinner at the site, kitchendaily and modified their suggestions. The first course is sautéed cabbage with bacon. The beer will be a Spaten Marzen. Marzen is the quintessential Oktoberfest beer. It is lager, which is brewed during the spring – Marzen means March and then stored underground – lager means store – and served in the fall. Spaten is one of the oldest Marzens.

The main course is chicken schnitzel and German potato salad. The beers are Victory Prima Pils; pilsner is also a lager beer, and Smutty Nose Pumpkin Ale.  Interestingly the Victory cost more than the Spaten, which is imported. I chose pumpkin ale because I thought the sweetness of that style of beer would go well with the potato salad, which has a vinegar dressing.

The dessert is an apple cake that I will serve with Left Hand Milk Stout. Stouts are made with roasted grains; this beer adds some milk sugar to balance the stout.

In planning the dinner, I wanted to have several different kinds of beers. I’ll let you know how it all turns out.

Brewery Insurance

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

I had to do something with my home insurance today and I went to my agent’s website. Right there, Whalen Insurance was proudly proclaiming their brewing insurance program. Whalen is located in Northampton, one town over from where I live. The company has had insurance for brewers since 1987 when the Northampton brewery opened the second brewpub in the Northeast.

Given that I wrote a book on beer, it struck me as funny that my insurance company has this program.  I hadn’t ever thought about it but I guess many businesses need specialized insurance to provide coverage for their specific activities. The Institute of Brewing Studies/ Association of Brewers endorses the Whalen program.

The insurance is for breweries and brewpubs and covers property, general liability, workers’ compensation, liquor liability, equipment breakdown, and automobile. Liquor liability must have to do with serving alcohol and the risks involved.  On the website, they provide information about brewery safety and OSHA regulations.

Looking at all the different aspects of insurance for a brewery, I realize how complicated an endeavor opening a brewpub or brewery would be. Despite the romanticizing of craft brewing, it really is a business.

The Punch Bowl is Still The Punch Bowl

Friday, August 20th, 2010

In February, I had a post about the Bronx and the neighborhood I grew up in. I mentioned The Bronx Ale House. I was under the impression that the Ale House had taken over an old Irish neighborhood bar, The Punch Bowl. Today I was actually in my old neighborhood and saw that The Punch Bowl is still there on the corner of 238th and Broadway. The Bronx Ale House is also on 238th, a couple of doors down. Now all I have to do is to go to both and see if The Punch Bowl is still the same and what kind of craft beer the Ale House has.

Academic Couples

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

This post is an expansion of a comment I made to Tenured Radical’s post, “Never Mix, Never Worry: A Brief (and incomplete) History of the Academic Couple”. She wrote the post in response to Caroline Bick’s  essay in the Sunday New York Times, “Is the Husband Going to Be a Problem.”

That question arose in the mind of a professor interviewing Bick for her first academic position. Bick’s essay mentions this sexist thinking about her husband potentially being a hiring issue. However, this is not really the main point of the article, which is not about sexism in academia but is about the intersection of careers and relationships.

Her advisor reassured her potential employer, not Bick as Tenured Radical indicates. Bick wishes she could have responded. She would have told them that it would be no problem because she planned to chain him under the bed. Bick does acknowledge that the “adult” behavior expected of her in the moment would up influencing her choices for many years.

Tenured Radical and many of the commenters felt that Bick’s story had a happy ending because she, her husband, and their children live together in the same city. It is a successful conclusion from the point of Bick’s relationship with her husband. The husband’s first career ended and he had to reinvent himself. As I know from personal experience this can be very difficult. If the woman had to give up her chosen academic career but got to live in the same city with her husband and children would it still be a successful conclusion?

Tenured Radical feels that the issue of “academic commuting” is a recent problem. “Once women decided to stop baking cookies for their husband’s seminars and type manuscripts for love and pin money, it occurred to them get their own advanced degrees (it was around the mid 1960s, when women’s liberation really took off,…)” Was feminism really as straight forward and simple as women making a conscious choice to stop baking cookies and get PhDs? I guess there were not any social forces that kept them baking and no changes that enabled woman to have more options, in both career and personal life.

The post contains several pictures of Elizabeth Taylor from Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf and the reader might assume she represents the prototypical faculty wife. Honey, the younger woman in Edward Albee’s play, actually better fits the stereotype of the faculty wife.

Sandy Dennis, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Sandy Dennis, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Martha, the character Elizabeth Taylor plays, is an alcoholic, frustrated and vengeful woman. Her frustration does not seem to be related to her not having obtained an academic job. She does not really fit into the point Tenured Radical makes about  secret drinking by faculty wives.

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

College campuses across America have scholarship funds for women returning to school, loans for students, funds for campus beautification, and wings in medical centers because of faculty wives. Apparently, these women found time to do other things besides baking cookies and becoming alcoholics.

Spousal hires are much more likely if one or both of the people are stars or if they are looking for jobs at large public universities. In general, small private liberal arts colleges cannot easily add a second line when trying to hire someone. In addition, spousal hires can often conflict with affirmative action goals.

Two people in the same field are unlikely to wind up with two jobs at the same institution.   Someone will have to give up and do something else; that is what happened to Bick and her husband.