Ghosts Beer
I saw Goody Fletcher with the Devil!
- Feb 10, 2014
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- 16,620
Mix the whiskey with the vodka and you got yourself a Cold War shot. It even kills the memory cells from Beggar Vance.I think wine might be a little too weak, gonna need whiskey or vodka to get through these next couple years.
I tried some Stoli for nostalgia (only thing you could buy in Georgia and Armenia back in 2000 when I was a road warrior for USAID) and it was so harsh compared to Titos. Now Grey Goose is even smoother, but out of my league these days.The Oban price hike vexed me. Likewise for Tito's after it got big. My vodka is Sobieski now.
Tito's shreds my gut in a way no liquor does these days anyway. I have no idea why.
I tried some Stoli for nostalgia (only thing you could buy in Georgia and Armenia back in 2000 when I was a road warrior for USAID) and it was so harsh compared to Titos. Now Grey Goose is even smoother, but out of my league these days.
I swear Stoli changed something. I used to like it but it's like drinking buffet warmer fuel now.
Maybe I just found better vodkas.
Polish potato vodkas >>> Russian grain vodkas. Try Chopin vodka, another great one.
I do like Chopin
First of all, very commendable of you to be helping these 2 former Soviet republics. My hat is off to you.I tried some Stoli for nostalgia (only thing you could buy in Georgia and Armenia back in 2000 when I was a road warrior for USAID) and it was so harsh compared to Titos. Now Grey Goose is even smoother, but out of my league these days.
So many openings. Those who fail, had their opportunity.
First of all, very commendable of you to be helping these 2 former Soviet republics. My hat is off to you.
As for the drinks in Georgia, I guess you did not like chacha. . I used to drink only local wines whenever I visited- worked very well with local cuisine.
Welcome to Ukrainian sugar beet vodkaPolish potato vodkas >>> Russian grain vodkas. Try Chopin vodka, another great one.
Welcome to Ukrainian sugar beet vodka
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Yeh, it's almost impossible to be sober and hungry in Georgia.When I visited Georgia a few summers ago, I met the son of Stalin’s own personal winemaker (i’m sure he had a few) on a tour of his place. Fantastic (and oldest) wine tradition there. Much richer and flavourful body than the store bought stuff we are used to!
Also got very drunk on a couple occasions walking through markets in Kutaisi, where seemingly every older woman at each stand wanted me to try their variation of chacha in plastic bottles. Apricot, plum, cherry, the works!
Also, it's called horilka in Ukraine often with added chili pepper.Amazing. Have not yet had a chance to try it. The tradition of food chasers is one of best parts of Slavic culture. All that is missing is pickled herring!
Frost and Tippett are both 23. My baseline criteria for success is they lock down very available 3rd line roster spots and be over-40-point players.What's your criteria for success? Do you even have a definition of it? The Flyers don't.
This team is a mess and they'll do everything they can to sabotage getting the most out of their players.
They did it with Ghost, they did it with TK, etc. and that was under Hextall who at least had a vision unlike this clown.
32 pointsFrost and Tippett are both 23. My baseline criteria for success is they lock down very available 3rd line roster spots and be over-40-point players.
First of all, very commendable of you to be helping these 2 former Soviet republics. My hat is off to you.
As for the drinks in Georgia, I guess you did not like chacha. . I used to drink only local wines whenever I visited- worked very well with local cuisine.
40+ is pretty high for a 3rd line forward, 30+ ES points would be above average.Frost and Tippett are both 23. My baseline criteria for success is they lock down very available 3rd line roster spots and be over-40-point players.
The opportunities are there for both of them where they should hit 40 points. Scott Laughton had 30 points in 67 games with no PP time.Georgian wine is a bit "different' when you're used to American, European and SA wines (essentially the same grapes in different locations). Every house seemed to have a trestle with grape vines, growing your own is a national pastime.
Georgia had great food (there's a couple Geogian restaurants in NE Philly), my best meal was at a road side restaurant halfway between Tblisi and the Chechnya border (we were going to visit but forgot to bring our passports).
Armenia, not so much, the joke was that all the chefs had emigrated to Sacramento (though maybe they weren't joking?). The one good restaurant in Yerevan was unmarked (to hide it from the local mafia) from a reverse emigre from NYC.
I do know why Russian lost the Cold War, stayed at a former Russian hotel in Yerevan, let's just say the average American motel would kick ass on that place, which resembled an army barracks. The cars were vintage, knockoffs of 1950s Fiats and Chevys - and the English engineers said the locomotives they saw were knockoffs of 1920s GE models.
40+ is pretty high for a 3rd line forward, 30+ ES points would be above average.
More importantly is they play the way they did in the spring, high energy, able to match up against top lines and harass them.
Georgian wine is a bit "different' when you're used to American, European and SA wines (essentially the same grapes in different locations). Every house seemed to have a trestle with grape vines, growing your own is a national pastime.
Georgia had great food (there's a couple Geogian restaurants in NE Philly), my best meal was at a road side restaurant halfway between Tblisi and the Chechnya border (we were going to visit but forgot to bring our passports).
Armenia, not so much, the joke was that all the chefs had emigrated to Sacramento (though maybe they weren't joking?). The one good restaurant in Yerevan was unmarked (to hide it from the local mafia) from a reverse emigre from NYC.
I do know why Russian lost the Cold War, stayed at a former Russian hotel in Yerevan, let's just say the average American motel would kick ass on that place, which resembled an army barracks. The cars were vintage, knockoffs of 1950s Fiats and Chevys - and the English engineers said the locomotives they saw were knockoffs of 1920s GE models.
40+ is pretty high for a 3rd line forward, 30+ ES points would be above average.
More importantly is they play the way they did in the spring, high energy, able to match up against top lines and harass them.
Bustleton ave seems to have become "Little Georgia."True story. When I got back from Georgia, I strongly considered opening up a Georgian restaurant in Canada. They are a rarity here. Phenomenal food. However, without the amazing fresh produce of Georgia, it really wouldn’t be the same.
What are the name of the Philly restaurants? I’ll mark that down for my next celebratory trip when they fire Fletcher and clean house.
The opportunities are there for both of them where they should hit 40 points. Scott Laughton had 30 points in 67 games with no PP time.
Conversation about Matza (just flower and water) right now is by far more interesting and exciting than Flyers hockeyGeorgian food seems vastly more interesting and satisfying than 'Flyers hockey'.
40 points?! What.Frost and Tippett are both 23. My baseline criteria for success is they lock down very available 3rd line roster spots and be over-40-point players.
Laughton is in his prime. Seems an odd comparison for players who aren't, one of whom gets punished for offense.
Fletcher teams don't produce offense historically because he builds bad rosters. Combined with Tortorella, we shouldnt be expecting an offensive explosion.