Handy Spa Belmont Mass

The Spas of Boston, Just Not the Kind with Massages

Walking around some of Boston’s suburbs, it is curious to notice that some corner stores are called spas. They do not offer spa treatments, but sell tobacco and lottery tickets. This usage of the word is hyper-local to Boston and has deep history in the city’s soda fountain history.

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drinking cologne

Florida Water and Bay Rum: Drinking Colognes for Fashion and Addiction

Don’t drink cologne! Just know that other people used to. In fact, the original eau de cologne was sold as a medicine to be ingested. Throughout the history of modern toilet waters, Europeans and Americans have drank them for medicinal, cosmetic, and intoxicating effects. From freshening the breath, to satisfying an addiction on a budget, toilet waters have a long history as a drink.

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medidas de pulque

The Many Measures of Pulque: Cups, Vases, and Gourds in Mexico’s Ancient Drinking Culture

Drinks come in all shapes and sizes, at least when you pour them into different cups. Pulque is no exception. The Mexican booze has evolved through many centuries of drinking culture. In the earliest eras, pulque was consumed out of natural materials like gourds or leaves. Under the Aztecs, clay vessel were used in ritual contexts. Modern Mexico used an abundance of different glass vessels, all of varying shape, size, and style.

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is there potato in vodka

Who Put the Potato in Vodka?

Vodka is not always made from potatoes. Europeans in Germany, Poland, and Russia began to ferment the tubers and distill them into vodka during the 19th century. Potatoes, however, originally come from South America where indigenous peoples have long made alcoholic chicha from a variety of plants including tubers. Did they distill potatoes? Some evidence suggests they were the first to make a rudimentary potato spirit.

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selling lemonade history

The Lemonade Stands of Boston Common

Lemonade, a classic American taste of both summer and entrepreneurship. It is only suitable that America’s oldest park, the Boston Common, welcomes business owners who endeavor to sell lemonade to visitors. Lemonade has long been sold in the park, and today, the vendors offer a diversity of flavor and experience.

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Lament of the Albany Brewers

Dead Cats Make Dirty Beer: Early Food Sanitation and Temperance

Albany, New York was once the brewing capital of America. In the early 1800s, a libel law suit brought this brewing industry into the public eye. The threads of brewing, temperance, and food sanitation collided, but the brewers got the short end of the stick. Nevertheless, the case was an early example of public advocacy for food safety.

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mexico city pulque

Pulque Curado: A Mexican Tradition with Flavor

In Mexico, alcohol made from fermented agave sap is well over a thousand years old. Called pulque, this drink can also be flavored with fruits, vegetables, herbs, or seeds. If the drink is ancient, how long have people been flavoring it? The history is complicated, but the flavored drink is enjoying a renaissance today.

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iced coffee invention

Did Boston Invent Iced Coffee?

Did Boston invent iced coffee? The city can claim credit for pushing coffee as an American drink. Also, Frederic Tudor of Boston was the first man to commercialize the ice trade on a global scale. He sold almost exclusively to coffee shops. Now more than ever, Boston identifies itself with the cold drink.

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