ReportWire

Tag: Food/Drink

  • After starting a bakery out of her home, New June owner to open first store in Brewerytown

    After starting a bakery out of her home, New June owner to open first store in Brewerytown

    [ad_1]

    New June owner Noelle Blizzard started her baking business in July 2021 as someone without much of a hankering for desserts. But after selling croissants, buns, tarts and more out of her home in Fairmount, she eventually found her sweet spot in the cake industry. 

    “I just don’t really like cake, I don’t really like frosting, so I had to figure it out because it was a classic thing that people want to celebrate with for special occasions,” Blizzard said. “So I set off to make cakes that I would actually want to eat, filled with really flavorful fillings, and thinking about the composition a little bit differently than I felt the cakes that I’d had before or that I could frequently get my hands on in Philly. And so our style of cakes were born.” 


    MORE: Meetinghouse, My Loup named to Bon Appétit’s best new restaurants list


    New June, which currently operates out of the Culinary Collective in Bridesburg, announced Wednesday that it will be opening a storefront at 2623 W. Girard Ave. in Brewerytown in November. The retail-to-go space will be a place to grab cakes, cookies, pies and other pastries. 

    Blizzard started New June out of her home as a self-taught baker during the pandemic before formally starting her company in 2021, even turning her dining room into a commercial kitchen at one point. Now, the bakery has grown to a team of five and has become a social media sensation, with a loyal following that shows up to pop-up events and decorating classes. The micro-bakery is known for occasion cakes in vintage style — which use Lambeth piping, ruffles and other decorations — and pressed flower designs; both of which can cost between $240 and $540 each. 

    The bakery doesn’t have an official opening date yet, but it plans to be up and running before Thanksgiving. Blizzard, who lives just a few blocks away, said she’s excited to interact more with customers with a brick-and-mortar store in a way that can’t be done with a commercial kitchen. 

    “It is something that fills me with a lot of gratitude … to bring something to my community, to get to open during the holiday season and be a part of it,” Blizzard said. 

    New June CakesProvided Images/Melissa MacDonald (left) and Louisa Adam Barnes for New June

    New June’s cakes (above) use Lambeth piping and other techniques for a vintage-style design.

    New June’s bakery will be open Fridays and Saturdays to start, though Blizzard said she’ll add more hours in the future. Customers can pick up full sheet cakes, mini cakes, and cake and pie slices from their seasonal menu. There will also be more “casual” options like pumpkin tea cakes, seasonal pies (especially around Thanksgiving), tarts and an assortment of cookies. Blizzard said she plans to add more everyday options too, like a banana cake or a riff on a Tastykake.   

    After opening the storefront, Blizzard said she hopes to continue evolving the company and would love to add additional decorating options with buttercream and wafer paper flowers. (She worked for years at the Philadelphia Horticultural Society, so florals are a passion). 

    She’ll also continue to host pop-up events, including a Halloween decorating class in October, as well as Christmas and New Years-themed classes at the end of the year. 

    “Seeing the cakes in front of them, they say ‘It’s like a dose of joy, it’s beautiful, the cakes taste amazing, they make me happy, I love looking at them, I love sharing them with others,’” Blizzard said. “And maybe it’s that sense of joy and just total satisfaction that has really helped [relate to customers].” 

    [ad_2]

    Michaela Althouse

    Source link

  • Wally Amos, creator of the ‘Famous Amos’ cookie empire, dies at 88

    Wally Amos, creator of the ‘Famous Amos’ cookie empire, dies at 88

    [ad_1]

    Wallace “Wally” Amos, the creator of the cookie empire that took his name and made it famous and who went on to become a children’s literacy advocate, has died. He was 88.

    Amos created the Famous Amos cookie empire and eventually lost ownership of the company — as well as the rights to use the catchy Amos name. In his later years, he became a proprietor of a cookie shop called Chip & Cookie in Hawaii, where he moved in 1977.

    He died Tuesday at his home in Honolulu, with his wife, Carol, at his side, his children said. He died from complications with dementia, they said.

    “With his Panama hat, kazoo, and boundless optimism, Famous Amos was a great American success story, and a source of Black pride,” said a statement from his children, Sarah, Michael, Gregory and Shawn Amos.

    They said their dad “inspired a generation of entrepreneurs when he founded the world’s first cookie store” on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles in 1975.

    Wally Amos was also co-founder of Uncle Wally’s Muffin Co., whose products are found in stores nationwide. But Amos said the fame never really mattered much to him.

    “Being famous is highly overrated anyway,” Amos told The Associated Press in 2007.

    His muffin company, based in Shirley, N.Y., was originally founded as Uncle Noname Cookie Co. in 1992, a few years after Amos lost Famous Amos, which still widely uses his name on its products.

    Amos had said the Famous Amos cookies sold today are unlike his cookies, which had lots of chocolate, real butter and pure vanilla extract.

    “You can’t compare a machine-made cookie with handmade cookie,” he told the AP. “It’s like comparing a Rolls Royce with a Volkswagen.”

    Uncle Noname, however, foundered because of debt and problems with its contracted manufacturers.

    The company filed for bankruptcy in 1996, abandoned cookies and went into muffins at the suggestion of Amos’ business partner, Lou Avignone.

    Inside his now-shuttered Hawaii cookie shop, he sold bite-sized cookies similar to the ones he first sold at the Famous Amos Hollywood store.

    Amos also was active in promoting reading. His shop, for example, had a reading room with dozens of donated books, and Amos usually spent Saturdays sitting on a rocking chair, wearing a watermelon hat, reading to children.

    The former high school dropout penned eight books, served as spokesperson for Literacy Volunteers of America for 24 years and gave motivational talks to corporations, universities and other groups.

    Amos earned numerous honors for his volunteerism, including the Literacy Award presented by President George H.W. Bush in 1991.

    “Your greatest contribution to your country is not your signature straw hat in the Smithsonian, but the people you have inspired to learn to read,” Bush said.

    In one of his books, “Man With No Name: Turn Lemons Into Lemonade,” Amos explained how he lost Famous Amos even before it was sold for $63 million to a Taiwanese company in 1991. Despite robust sales, by 1985, the business was losing money, so Amos brought in outside investors.

    “The new owners gobbled up more of my share until all of a sudden, I found I had lost all ownership in the company I founded,” Amos wrote. Before long, the company had changed ownership four times.

    Born in Tallahassee, Fla., Amos moved to New York City at age 12 because of his parents’ divorce. He lived with an aunt, Della Bryant, who taught him how to make chocolate chip cookies.

    He later dropped out of high school to join the Air Force before working as a mailroom clerk at the William Morris Agency, where he became a talent agent, working with The Supremes, Simon & Garfunkel and Marvin Gaye before borrowing $25,000 to launch his cookie business.

    He was the first Black agent in the business, his son, Shawn Amos, said.

    “Our dad taught us the value of hard work, believing in ourselves, and chasing our dreams,” his children’s statement said. “We also know he would love it if you had a chocolate chip cookie today.”

    [ad_2]

    The Associated Press

    Source link

  • Miss the Choco Taco? A limited supply is being sold in Philly on Thursday

    Miss the Choco Taco? A limited supply is being sold in Philly on Thursday

    [ad_1]

    For more than 30 years, the Choco Taco brought delight through the unlikely combination of taco shells, ice cream and chocolate before being discontinued by Klondike in 2022. 

    The dessert is being revived in Philadelphia, its birthplace, on Thursday – but you’ll have to act fast to get your hands on one before the Choco Taco is gone again. 


    MORE: Auntie Anne’s has created a perfume that smells like its pretzels


    Starting at 11 a.m., Choco Tacos can be ordered in Philadelphia through Gopuff as part of the delivery service’s “Nostalgia Week” — which also features discounts on childhood favorites like SpongeBob SquarePants popsicles and Furby toys. 

    The Choco Tacos cost $3.99 each and will be sold until their limited quantity runs out – likely by the end of the day, Gopuff said. But don’t expect the Choco Taco you once loved, because this iteration has sprinkles instead of nuts on its shell.

    philadelphia choco tacoProvided Image/Gopuff

    Choco Tacos will be available to purchase Thursday in Philadelphia through Gopuff.

    The Choco Taco was invented by Northeast Philly native Alan Drazen, who was an employee at the family-run Jack & Jill Ice Cream company at the time. He came up with the patented concept in 1983. Serving ice cream inside a taco — a Mexican staple that was rapidly gaining popularity in the U.S. at the time — turned out to be a massive success. Taco Bell started selling the novelty dessert at its stores in 1989.

    Taco Bell stopped selling the treat in 2015, but Choco Tacos continued to be sold out of trucks, at supermarkets and in freezers owned by Klondike’s parent company Unilever — which had acquired the right to manufacture them. That is, until Klondike nixed the treats in 2022, with a halfhearted promise that they may return one day – a response to public outcry and petitions.

    A version of the Choco Taco was supposed to return this summer through a collaboration between Taco Bell and Oregon-based ice cream chain Salt & Straw. The companies promised Ice Cream Chocolate Tacos that mixed sweet and spicy flavors, but it’s August and they are nowhere to be found online.

    Jack & Jill, which was founded in Philly and now is headquartered in Moorestown, New Jersey, retains the patent to the Choco Taco. That’s how Thursday’s rebirth came about. Gopuff worked with GlacierPoint, which acquired Jack & Jill in 2021. 

    Maybe high demand Thursday will prompt Jack & Jill to bring the beloved treat back on a permanent basis. If not – and if you can’t order a Choco Taco before they sell out Thursday – Philadelphia ice cream shop Milk Jawn sells a version of the ice cream taco from time to time. 

    [ad_2]

    Franki Rudnesky

    Source link

  • Auntie Anne’s launches an exclusive fragrance. Here’s what you ‘Knead’ to know

    Auntie Anne’s launches an exclusive fragrance. Here’s what you ‘Knead’ to know

    [ad_1]

    Do you love the iconic Auntie Anne’s pretzel smell? Well, now you don’t have to go to the mall anymore to smell buttery dough and salty goodness.

    On Thursday, the Pennsylvania-born pretzel company announced the launch of its new perfume “Knead: Eau De Pretzel.”

    “Knead transforms the iconic aroma you love into a wearable scent. One spritz is all it takes to envelop you in the nostalgic embrace of freshly baked pretzels. Surrender to the smell.” the company said in a social media post.

    The perfume is infused with notes of buttery dough, salt and a hint of sweetness.

    If you “Knead” this perfume, it will be available for purchase on Wednesday, Aug. 14. Visit www.auntieannes.com for more information.

    [ad_2]

    Cherise Lynch

    Source link

  • East Passyunk’s new weekly happy hour and sidewalk market starts Thursday

    East Passyunk’s new weekly happy hour and sidewalk market starts Thursday

    [ad_1]

    A new happy hour and sidewalk market with a cosmopolitan name is coming to South Philadelphia this summer.

    Starting Thursday, businesses along East Passyunk Avenue will offer weekly discounts and other promotions from 5-7 p.m. The so-called Passyunk Passeggiata, inspired by the Italian tradition of strolling the town after work to socialize, will run through Aug. 31.


    MORE: Northern Liberties Night Market returns July 24 with food trucks and beer


    Participating bars will hawk $5 beers, $6 wines and $7 cocktails and appetizers. Other food specials include $4 tacos at Juana Tamale, $1 snacks at Cartesian Brewing and $5 smash burgers at P’unk Burger. The full list of happy hour destinations includes:

    • Barcelona Wine Bar
    • The Bottle Shop
    • Cartesian Brewing
    • Ember and Ash
    • Human Robot Süd
    • Juana Tamale
    • Flannel
    • Laurel
    • Le Virtu
    • Marra’s
    • Noir Restaurant and Bar
    • Nutmeg Bar and Market
    • P’unk Burger
    • Pistolas Del Sur
    • Pizzata Pizzeria & Birreria
    • POPE
    • River Twice
    • Stogie Joe’s
    • Townsend EPX

    Passeggiata pedestrians can also shop sidewalk sales and in-store promotions from stores along the avenue. Eastern Pass Tattoo Co. and Tat215ive will offer tattoo flash specials, while all dogs who visit Doggie Style Pets (hopefully with their owner) will get a free pup cup.

    Over 40 restaurants, shops and salons have signed onto the summer program — and they’re enlisting a few musicians to soundtrack the stroll. Pistolas Del Sur will welcome Casey Parker and Mia Johnson, respectively, for the first two weeks of Passyunk Passeggiata. Mike Carney will also play the newly restored Singing Fountain on Aug. 1, and a DJ will spin new releases at Latchkey every week.


    Passyunk Passeggiata

    Thursdays, July 11 – Aug. 31
    5-7 p.m.
    East Passyunk Avenue


    Follow Kristin & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @kristin_hunt
    | @thePhillyVoice
    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice
    Have a news tip? Let us know.

    [ad_2]

    Kristin Hunt

    Source link

  • New law will require California bars, nightclubs provide date rape drug testing kits

    New law will require California bars, nightclubs provide date rape drug testing kits

    [ad_1]

    As of Monday, establishments that sell alcohol to consumers across the state will be required to provide on-site drug testing kits to those that ask.

    The law, formerly Assembly Bill 1310, would allow consumers to request the kits to test if there is the presence of “roofies”, substances used to spike drinks, which are often associated with the intent to commit sexual assault.

    With the law in place, it gives some peace of mind.

    “Its security for those coming out to drink,” said Brittany Halsell of Redwood City. “Sometimes you get carried away in a conversation and you turn your head and well, people are slick out here. You always have to be careful. It’s a wonderful idea”

    The test works by applying a few drops of the drink onto a designated spot of the card. If the card turns blue or green, the drink has likely been tampered with.

    Tests can also detect the presence of Ketamine and GHB.

    However, only establishments with a Type 48 license, or those that do not serve food, will be required to provide tests. Though, the law did not stipulate that tests have to be free.

    Establishments can choose to sell the kits at a reasonable price, however

    “It’s a great idea to protect the public and to give them a voice so they feel part of it,” said Ja’vonn Williams, the assistant general manager of San Pedro Social.

    Williams said San Pedro Social will have bartenders and security offers giving the cards to those that request it.

    The law will also require establishments to post signs at public entrances, bathrooms and exits explaining the kits are available.

    “I have to watch my drink so much… knowing I can come out to a bar and check my drink right here instead of thinking I have to say home to stay safe,” said Halsell.

    The law is expected to impact close to 2,400 licensed establishments across the state, according to the California Department of Alcohol Beverage Control.

    [ad_2]

    Marianne Favro

    Source link

  • New drink safety law in CA: Bars required to offer drug testing kits starting July 1

    New drink safety law in CA: Bars required to offer drug testing kits starting July 1

    [ad_1]

    Beginning July 1, California’s Type 48 license holders, which include bars and similar establishments that sell alcohol, will be required to offer drug testing kits as part of new legislation aimed to stop drink spiking.

    Under AB 1013, establishments must provide kits that can detect substances like flunitrazepam, ketamine, and gamma hydroxybutyric acid, according to the California Department of Alcohol Beverage Control.

    The drug detecting kits may be sold or given to customers.

    Additionally, the new law requires bars to display a prominently placed sign stating: “Don’t get roofied! Drink spiking drug test kits available here. Ask a staff member for details.” The mandatory signage is intended to raise awareness and be a preventive measure against drink tampering.

    While non-compliance with the regulation won’t lead to criminal charges, the department of Alcoholic Beverage Control warns that it could result in an adminstrative citation against the license.

    These regulations will remain effective until January 1, 2027, unless extended by the Legislature.

    [ad_2]

    Missael Soto

    Source link

  • South Philadelphia pizzeria serving up some of the best slices in the US, New York Times says

    South Philadelphia pizzeria serving up some of the best slices in the US, New York Times says

    [ad_1]

    The New York Times shared a list of the “22 Best Pizza Places in the United States” and one South Philadelphia pizzeria made the cut.

    The Times named San Lucas Pizza – located along Bouvier Street near McKean – as one of the best.

    Husband and wife duo Valentin Palillero and Eva Mendez, opened San Lucas Pizza back in 2005, according to Times.

    At first the couple sold traditional pies that were familiar to the historically Italian neighborhood but they wanted to switch things up and incorporate new flavors.

    “Using the same simple crust as a base, new recipes used ingredients found in Mexican cuisine: slightly smoky guajillo sauce, spiced pork, black beans, flecks of onion and chopped cilantro,” Times Writer Regan Stephens wrote. “Nowadays, these varieties, served with a side of lime wedges, are as popular as the originals. But they’re also a vivid link in a neighborhood that’s been an epicenter of Italian and Mexican immigration, roughly three-quarters of a century apart.

    Stephens calls San Lucas Pizza “a vivid link in a neighborhood that’s been an epicenter of Italian and Mexican immigration.”

    “We are very happy. For a long time we worked, for like 18 years working at the pizza shop, so we are very happy,” Palillero explained to NBC10.

    To see their full menu visit sanlucaspizzeria.com.

    [ad_2]

    Cherise Lynch

    Source link

  • A new option for Nepali food debuts in Boston’s northwest suburbs

    A new option for Nepali food debuts in Boston’s northwest suburbs

    [ad_1]

    The dining scene in Arlington has changed quite a bit over the years. Once known mainly for its Greek pizza houses and takeout Chinese food, it’s now a town with quite a variety of options for different cuisines.

    Indeed, while this Boston suburb may not have much in the way of high-end dining or destination spots, it is certainly a community full of outstanding eateries that won’t break the bank, including highly regarded Mexican, Indian, Vietnamese, Greek, Korean, Italian, Turkish, Thai, Lebanese and Japanese eateries.

    Now, Arlington is home to a restaurant that features Nepali fare: Zomsa Restaurant and Bar. It’s another local option for inexpensive street food that’s already starting to make a name for itself with outstanding dishes.

    Zomsa first opened in April, moving into the space in the center of town that had been home to Taipei Tokyo and, before that, Shanghai Village, the latter a popular spot for Chinese food for nearly 40 years until being hit by a fire in 2018 and never reopening.

    The people behind Zomsa did a nice job of renovating the space, which has multiple sections, including a comfortable seating area for people waiting for a table or takeout to the left complete with couches and sofas; a modern-looking bar with a few seats in the middle; and a separate dining room to the right with bench seats and both round and square tables. Attractive hanging lights are set up throughout the restaurant, and large windows allow extra light in while also helping make for a bit of people-watching along Mass. Ave.

    The restaurant considers itself a South Asian dining spot, so it’s not just Nepali food. There are plenty of familiar (and not-so familiar) Indian dishes, but the Nepali fare stands out when compared to the many Indian eateries in the northwest suburbs.

    PHOTOS: Great Nepali street food in the Boston suburbs

    The menu at Zomsa’s street food section features some very interesting options, including momos – dumplings with a relatively thick but soft wrapper that is crimped and pleated, looking vaguely like Chinese soup dumplings. Momos do not have broth inside them. Rather, they’re stuffed with meat and/or vegetables, and in the case of those offered at Zomsa, they can be ordered with chicken, pork, lamb or veggies.

    The restaurant has three momo options: Steamed, with a hearty sauce with a variety of spices; sauteed with veggies and sauce; and as a soup. The simple steamed pork momos are a highlight, stuffed to the gills with pork. The sauce has just a slight kick but not so much that it detracts from the dumplings themselves.

    Other options for street food include fried rice, chop suey, marinated chicken sizzlers and chatpate, which involves puffed rice, vegetables, cilantro and a mix of spices and lemon juice.

    Much of the rest of the menu at Zomsa includes items you might find in an Indian restaurant, though with a few other Nepali options that might not be seen on Indian menus, including a spicy and aromatic soup with Tibetan origins called thukpa; tareko kukhura, which is breaded fried chicken in Himalayan spices; and newari bara, or savory lentil pancakes.

    Some of the appetizers and meals often ordered at Indian dining spots are marvelous here, including the paneer pakoras, which are deep-fried fritters with a mild cheese and just the right amount of salt on the outside; a classic chicken tikka masala that can be ordered mild, moderate or hot and which comes with diced meat, rice and a creamy sauce; and palak paneer, which comes with cheese, a creamy spinach curry and rice.

    Tandoori chicken, lamb, salmon and shrimp are also available, as are various breads (roti, paratha, naan, poori). Meals include papadum lentil crisps with assorted chutneys.

    Zomsa does have a full liquor license, so those who dine in can choose from various beers, wines and spirits, while the menu also includes a Himalayan masala tea, and desserts include Indian doughnuts along with tres leches.

    Early impressions of Zomsa Restaurant and Bar are very positive, and the dining spot is one of two new places in Arlington that have gotten noticed by food lovers in and around Boston (the other one being Quilo’s Taqueria down the street in East Arlington, which had lines around the block when it first opened).

    There have been some ebbs and flows with the Arlington dining scene over the years — including during the pandemic, which saw the closings of such places as Sabzi, Tango, Twyrl and Common Ground — but things seem to be looking up once again for this Boston suburb, and Zomsa certainly appears to be a part of that with its delicious food, friendly service, laid-back atmosphere and reasonable prices.

    Zomsa Restaurant and Bar, 434 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, MA, 02474. zomsaboston.com

    [ad_2]

    Marc Hurwitz

    Source link

  • Can Beer Without the Alcohol Make a Splash at the Paris Olympics?

    Can Beer Without the Alcohol Make a Splash at the Paris Olympics?

    [ad_1]

    Bottles of beer emblazoned with the five Olympic rings are already rolling off the production line at Anheuser-Busch InBev NV’s brewery in Belgium, in preparation for the games in Paris this summer.

    It has been 100 years since the French capital last hosted the summer Olympics, and the city wants to make a mark after Covid meant the Tokyo Games were held in virtually empty stadiums. And now, for the first time ever there will be a beer sponsor for an event that showcases the pinnacle of human sporting achievements.

    But in this case, the drink—Corona Cero—doesn’t have any alcohol.

    The world’s biggest brewer has chosen to advertise to billions of sports fans a zero-alcohol product only launched in Europe two years ago. AB InBev hopes to use the Paris Games—expected to be one of the biggest marketing bonanzas the Olympics has ever seen—to improve its position in the only part of the global beer industry that’s really growing.

    Read More: Why Beer Is the World’s Most Beloved Drink

    Worth $13 billion and counting, brands from Heineken to Guinness, and now Corona Cero, see a cohort of health-conscious consumers—many young, others older and wanting out of a booze culture—whose wallets they can tap.

    Master brewers have been working on formulas to try to replicate the taste and texture of the real thing. Heineken, Guinness and Budweiser are all now available alcohol-free, while hundreds of craft brewers and newer labels are emerging to target the market.

    For Michel Doukeris, the chief executive officer of AB InBev, it’s quite simple: “The consumer has changed.”

    No-alcohol beer, or beer with alcohol content under 0.5%, is a tiny corner of the market, its 31.4 million hectoliters a year dwarfed by the 1.93 billion hectoliters of alcoholic beer, according to GlobalData Plc. But it’s had an annual compound growth rate of 3.6% since 2018, versus 0.3% for alcoholic beer. In the U.S., adults age 18 to 34 who say they drink has dropped from 72% in the early 2000s to 62%, according to Gallup.

    Those are numbers businesses can’t ignore, especially AB InBev. It’s already lagging behind and says it will miss a target of 20% of sales from low or no-alcohol beer by 2025.

    “There are a lot of sports events like the Olympics where the flagship brands are often the 0% variant,” said Susie Goldspink, head of no and low alcohol insights at market researcher IWSR. “That’s partly because it’s such a growing area but it also helps with their moderation agenda of responsible drinking.”

    There’s also a wider benefit for beer companies. Because their no-alcohol versions often share the same name and labelling as the original beer, the promotions help brand awareness and allow firms to circumvent increasingly tighter restrictions around alcohol advertising.

    The Olympics is part of a trend of zero-alcohol beers being promoted via sport, including Heineken 0.0 with Formula 1 and Diageo Plc’s Guinness 0.0 at the Six Nations rugby tournament. Carlsberg A/S last year handed out 400,000 cans of French no-alcohol beer Tourtel Twist at the Tour de France cycling race.

    Read more: How to Talk About Beer Like a Pro

    And in a sign of the competition between brands, Carlsberg is positioning Tourtel Twist as the non-alcoholic beer of choice at the Paris Games.

    “We are the official beer of Paris and France,” said Jacob Aarup-Andersen, CEO of Carlsberg. “They are the official beer of the Olympic movement. At the events you are going to be served Tourtel.”

    U.S.-based Athletic Brewing Co., which sells only non-alcoholic drinks, says an Olympic sponsorship benefits the entire category.

    “Sometimes to move the needle you need bigger players that can help drive awareness,” said John Walker, the company’s co-founder.

    For drinks companies, there’s a pressing need to keep up with shifting trends that have already proved the death knell for many businesses. More than 7,000 bars in the U.K. closed in the last decade, according to the British Beer and Pub Association. While alcohol duties, rents, costs and regulations all played a part, so too have changing drinking habits.

    As consumers, particularly social media-driven millennial and Gen Z demographic groups, look to temper their alcohol intake, it’s better to have a viable—and attractive—offering rather than have them turn to a rival brand, a soda or water.

    Heineken 0.0 is the market leader in the no-alcohol beer market globally, according to GlobalData. Other big sellers are Japan’s Suntory All-Free, and Brahma 0.0%, owned by AB InBev.

    At the world’s oldest continuously operating brewery in Germany, non-alcoholic beers have been in production since the early 1990s. But in 2020, thanks to rising demand, Bavaria-owned Weihenstephan more than doubled its alcohol-free beer capacity, taking a bet on future growth. Today, its non-alcoholic wheat beer is almost 10% of sales, and its third best-selling product.

    But all the promotion in the world can only take zero-alcohol beer so far if it isn’t any good.

    Until relatively recently, non-alcoholic beer compared poorly to the original, leaving drinkers unsatisfied. For brewers, there was a technical conundrum: how to achieve the depth of taste without alcohol. Do they stop beer from forming alcohol during the fermentation process or do they remove it after brewing a full-strength version?

    According to Jim Koch, chairman of Boston Beer Company, which makes Samuel Adams, taste breakthroughs have only been possible in recent years as brewers figured out a low temperature distillation process. The brewer introduced its own non-alcohol product, Just The Haze, in 2021.

    Launched in 2017, Heineken 0.0 is made with water, barley malt, hop extracts and yeast—the same ingredients used for Heineken. The alcohol is then removed using vacuum distillation, after which natural flavorings and aromas are blended back in to make the taste more closely resemble the original.

    “For a couple of years, I refused to start developing Heineken 0.0,” said Willem van Waesberghe, Heineken’s global master brewer. “Because I’d never tasted a good one.”

    The Olympic Games kick off in two months, with the Opening Ceremony taking place on July 26. AB InBev will soon unveil details of its campaign, which it expects will “accelerate no-alcohol beer growth.”

    Beyond that, getting no-alcohol beer on tap is expected to deliver the next leap in terms of volumes, increasing sales in bars by making the drinks more socially acceptable. It’s yet another technical challenge, but one that brewers are working on.

    “It’s like rosé in the south of France is always better than at home,” said Waesberghe. “And in a bar you like the draft, it gives you the impression of authenticity.”

    [ad_2]

    Sarah Jacob, Sabah Meddings and Andy Hoffman / Bloomberg

    Source link

  • Here are the best discounts on wine for National Wine Day

    Here are the best discounts on wine for National Wine Day

    [ad_1]

    Raise a glass because we’re toasting yet another food and drink holiday on the calendar.

    On Friday, May 25, restaurants, grocery stores and wine clubs will be celebrating National Wine Day with some seriously sippable savings.

    Whether you like white wine, red wine or rosé, this is where to find the best deals to stock your wine cabinet.

    From now until May 26, take 15% off your order on JoshCellars.com to celebrate the day with code NWD15.

    On May 25, celebrate National Wine Day at Dave & Buster’s and enjoy a $5 wine Happy Hour!

    You can save a few bucks on a variety of wines at Whole Foods Market. Browse their sale section to find deals like Whispering Angel rosé for $18.89, Line 39 Sauvignon Blanc for $8.99, Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon for $62.99 and dozens of others.

    When you sign up for a membership plan by May 28, you can get six bottles of a unique selection of wine for $36. Shipping on your first box is free.

    After the introductory offer, regular club shipments are always six bottles for $90-$120 plus shipping and tax, depending on which membership plan you choose. Frequency is set to every 2-12 weeks based on the shipment frequency and schedule in your account.

    If you don’t want to continue the membership after your first order, make sure to close your account before your next order is processed.

    Total Wine is always offering competitive prices. Right now, you can check out their deals page for limited-time offers on a variety of wines.

    Pick up a 1858 Chardonnay Monterey for $24.99 for a $5 savings or buy two Torial Red Blend bottles and save $20.

    Seeing as how National Wine Day kicks off Memorial Day Weekend, Vivino is having a MDW sale sitewide.

    From now until Tuesday, May 30, at 11:59 p.m. PT, get 15% off of everything with code AMERICA15. Max discount of $75 per order.

    After retiring from a career buying wine for a grocery store chain in Washington state, Chris Lueck realized there wasn’t a way to recycle glass wine bottles in rural parts of his state. Because of that, many of those bottles were ending up in landfills. Lueck created Ground2Ground, a company that pulverizes used bottles and turns them into sand that can be used anywhere from the beach to the bocce ball court.

    [ad_2]

    Maria Chamberlain

    Source link

  • Queen & Rook set to move to South Street, opening largest board game cafe on East Coast

    Queen & Rook set to move to South Street, opening largest board game cafe on East Coast

    [ad_1]

    Queen & Rook, the board game cafe in Queen Village, is preparing to level up with a new location that features three floors, two bars and a vintage video game arcade.

    At 123 South St., the new building is mere feet away from the original spot at 607 S. Second St. The cafe closed its original location on Sunday, and there will be a grand opening to welcome gamers to the new Queen & Rook on Saturday at 12 p.m. Owners Edward Garcia and Jeannie Wong are promising a stark difference. 


    MORE: Before Eastern State Penitentiary closed, music by the prison’s inmate band delighted radio audiences


    For starters, there’s the scale. Queen & Rook claims the new 6,000-square-foot location will make it the largest board game cafe not only in Pennsylvania but on the East Coast. (The old space was 2,000 square feet.) It will span three floors with indoor, outdoor and private event spaces and two places to order drinks: the Green Dragon Bar and Silver Dragon Bar. The cafe will also upgrade its current library of 1,300-plus board games to more than 2,000.

    A wood-and-brick cafe space with A-frame beams, chandeliers, booths, tables and chairs.Provided image/Kscope Philly

    The new Queen & Rook at 123 South St. will include much more seating across three floors.

    With the extra space comes new perks, like two outdoor seating areas and a new video game arcade. The arcade will have over 30 machines with hundreds of retro titles like Ms. Pacman, Street Fighter and Dance Dance Revolution. In between knockouts, players can order canned cocktails or beers from Yards’ 8-Bit series at the nearby bar.

    Queen & Rook arcadeQueen & Rook arcadeProvided image/Kscope Philly

    The arcade will include hundreds of classic video game titles and newer games like ‘Stranger Things’ pinball.

    The menu is also getting a makeover, as Queen & Rook plans to add wood-fired pizza, housemade soft-serve and other bonus desserts this spring. The cafe has teased more vegetarian and vegan options on its Instagram.

    Queen & Rook outdoorQueen & Rook outdoorProvided image/Kscope Philly

    This shows one of two outdoor seating areas at the new Queen & Rook game cafe on South Street.

    As for Queen & Rook’s adjacent retail shop The Keep, currently at 613 S. Second St., it will move next door to the new space in June. Garcia and Wong announced their plans to relocate the cafe in 2023, taking over the space formerly occupied by Pietro’s Coal Oven Pizzeria, and teased more game options and events programming. Queen & Rook hosts frequent Dungeons & Dragons sessions for kids and teens, as well as a board game and RPG after-school program. It also offers gaming camps scheduled around the School District of Philadelphia’s summer and spring breaks and other closures.

    When Queen & Rook opened in 2019, it was one of the only board game cafes in Philadelphia, though not the first — that title is held by Thirsty Dice in Fairmount. Since then, the scene has expanded to University City (The Board and Brew) and Ardmore (Twenty One Pips). 

    This story has been updated with the square footage of the new and old Queen & Rook locations.


    Follow Kristin & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @kristin_hunt
    | @thePhillyVoice
    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice
    Have a news tip? Let us know.

    [ad_2]

    Kristin Hunt

    Source link

  • Sweet treats: Oddfellows whips up new flavor and free brioche ice cream sandwiches for National Brioche Day • Brooklyn Paper

    Sweet treats: Oddfellows whips up new flavor and free brioche ice cream sandwiches for National Brioche Day • Brooklyn Paper

    [ad_1]

    To celebrate National Brioche Day, Oddfellows Ice Cream has created a new brioche and coffee flavored treat.

    Photo courtesy of Oddfellows Ice Cream