wish this was you!
     HOME         LINKS         POETRY          EMAIL         TRIBUTES          CHAT ROOM         PICTURES          PROFILES          INFO          NEWS          


 Ahh...Its everyone's favorite section.   It's the reason to came to the Cafe...right?
Some sorry schmuck ,                                                                                                              told you that we had The best selection of drink recipes you could find on the web...
  And like the idiot that you are...you
  believed them...right?
  Well....
  That schmuck was right!
  Behind these inocent looking links...are
  in fact enough fucking recipes to keep
  your happy ass, drunk for a lifetime!
  So...
Sit back, grab a glass of Jim Beam on the rocks...and enjoy!    
Lord Croucher and Frost

Jack Daniel's Old No. 7 is a simple reminder that some things just never change. And shouldn't. This is the old-time whiskey made as our fathers made it. Jack Daniel's Old
No. 7 Brand Old-Time
Tennessee Sour Mash
The BACARDI Bat Device appears on every label of every product carrying the Bacardi family name. According to Family lore, it originated in 1862 when Don Facundo's wife,
Doña Amalia Lucía
Whiskey is a whiskey and not a bourbon. Unlike bourbon, Jack Daniel's is charcoal-mellowed smooth, drop by drop through 10 feet of charcoal made from sugar maple.
 Victoria Moreau, suggested employing the Bat as the trademark for their new rum.

"©2000 Kahlúa® Liqueur, 26.5% alc./vol. (21% alc./vol. available only in Ohio).
Allied Domecq Spirits USA, Westport, CT.
Anything Goes™
except irresponsible
drinking



mmm
Jim Beam is a bourbon of great finesse and subtle nuance, neither light nor heavy, but rather a mellow "baritone" of a spirit. It is distinctive not because it is



different, but because it is perfect.
Federal US law dictates that corn whiskey be aged for at least two years for consideration as true "bourbon." Jim Beam Bourbon ages for a minimum of four full years to perfect its rich amber glow and uncommonly smooth taste.

Every bottle of Southern Comfort includes  the distinctive oval scene entitled "Home on the Mississippi.
" It was created in 1874 by
Nathaniel Currier and James Ives, who were generally regarded as the
finest lithographers of the 19th century.
The plantation featured in the Currier and Ives print is known as the Woodland Plantation. Originally built as a sugar cane plantation and mill in 1834, Woodland has survived the last century and a half and remains the last of the great plantation houses on the West Bank of the Mississippi River located just 34 miles south of New Orleans in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana.
Today, you can visit the newly renovated Woodland Plantation,
which operates as a
9-bedroom country inn.




  Copyright©2000-ArcadiaDesigns-All Rights Reserved

                                                           JavaFILE