Backatchya.
Giggity
Couples who share similar drinking habits tend to live longer than those who don't, according to a study of more than 9,000 people.
Wow 9000 people studied, wow.
Sounds like they might have lived forever if their livers hadn't died so young ...I used to know a couple drunks who were married and used to drink heavily under the bridge downtown. They lived forever until they got cirrhosis of the liver and died at the ripe old age of 59![]()
Are some of these in need of a fridge, like Kahlua, I know Vermouth does.
Some of them do taste better when cold. But not even Kahlúa needs refrigeration. Their alcohol content makes it needless. Although I once had a terrible experience with a bottle of Galliano that had gone stale after being opened and not served again for almost a decade.Are some of these in need of a fridge, like Kahlua, I know Vermouth does.
Never mind, it’s recommended. A cool dry place will do. However, the source said to make it last longer refrigerate.
kv
Just drink and be happy.Businesses carry the German names of families who arrived long ago — the Fishers, the Flusches — and never left. The lettering on police cars promises “Zu Dienen und Beschützen,” to serve and protect. Each year, the high school football team battles its rival in Lindsay, another German-heritage town, in a grudge match known as the “Kraut Bowl.”
Texas experienced several waves of German immigration in the 1800s. Many settled around the Hill Country cities of Fredricksburg and New Braunfels, near Austin, where some schools taught primarily in German.
“The German language held on longer and more tenaciously in Texas than anywhere else in the United States,” said Walter Kamphoefner, a history professor at Texas A&M University.
LOL, I once brought a bottle of Night Train to a party. It was a big hit, but the host was dead within the year. Unrelated?
Likely a factor but it could have just as easily been beer.LOL, I once brought a bottle of Night Train to a party. It was a big hit, but the host was dead within the year. Unrelated?