Liquor, on the east side of Manhattan, as they carry my favorite mead, from the Long Island Meadery , which is straight-up real honey wine. A lot of other places sell this awful fucking white wine with honey and spices and call it mead, which is a little like stuffing a piece of malted barley into a bottle of pruno and calling it "whisky".
If you see that stuff, usually with an extra "e" tacked on to the end and served in a white bottle, don't buy it! The only downside to U. Liquor is that they'll often have one of the flavored Long Island Meads rather than the simple basic one. The flavored ones are great and all the root beer one is strangely compelling , but I assume you'd just want the basic flavor? Maybe you could call ahead first and see what they have. Oh, and on preview, I see Astor has the Honeyrun, too.
I've never had the Brooklyn Buzz or the Lurgashall, so I can't speak to those. As a third alternative, you want a bottle of my homebrew?
It started out kind of rough a couple of months ago, but it's aging pretty well; I think in another few months, it'll be pretty killer. It's made from wildflower honey, straight from Union Square's farmer's market! It's also the only mead in town that's so classy that it's bottled in recycled Corona bottles! Bierkraft in Park Slope has this mix of mead and gueuze, which you might like.
It is kind of fucking awful. PPS - both TheNewWazoo's and rmless's suggestions, a mixture of beer and mead, is called a " braggot " -- this is a handy word to know if you need to freestyle rap, as it's the only other word I know that rhymes with "maggot" yet is not homophobic posted by Greg Nog at PM on March 19, This comment will not be as helpful as I'd hoped: I was going to come in to recommend Vintage New York on Broome st, but they apparently have closed. I know that they carried wines from Lakewood , a winery upstate that makes a few meads.
They don't appear to penetrate far downstate , except for New Paltz Good luck? Response by poster: Ack! Sorry it took me so long to resolve this. Anyway, I wound up going to Astor because they're right around the corner from me. They do indeed have a few varieties of mead - in particular, I recommend the Lurgashall's. However, I want to thank everybody who gave me recommendations! Brouwerij Lane. Brooklyn Wine Exchange — Court St.
Father Knows Best. Good Wine. Gnarly Vines. Grape Hill Liquors. Greenwood Park. Hops Hill. Heights Chateau. Il Vino Torchio. Kent Ale House. Krupa Grocery. Kings County Wines. Om Organic. Natural Blend — Nostrand Ave. Prospect Wine Shop. Pier Wines. Rule of Thirds. Spuyten Duyvil. Sunday In Brooklyn. The Gilded Grape. The Double Windsor. The Market. The Sampler. The Natural Wine Company. The Winey Neighbor. The Well. Wine Exchange — Vanderbilt Ave. Thirst Wine Merchants. Astoria Beer Depot.
Beer Town. Craft Culture. Nassau County — Long Island. Classic Beverage — Bellmore. Bellmore Beverage. Monarch Beverages. Farmingdale Beverage. Syosset Beverage. Suffolk County — Long Island.
Babylon Beverage Co. Beer Shack. Capital Beer Depot. Bullseye Wholesale Beverage. Hop Scotch Bottle Shop. Flag Beverage Corporation. Long Island Beverage. Port Jefferson Beverage Center. Selden Beverage Center.
Riverhead Beverage. Shoreline Beverage. James Beverage. Starfish Junction Productions. Swiftway Beer. The Fifth Season. Whites Liquor. Village Beverage — Wading River. Westchester County. Beer World — Peekskill. Beer Noggin — Bronxville. Cherry Lawn Farm. Croton Tapsmith. Grape Expectations. Half Time Beverage — Mamaroneck. Grapes The Wine Company. Westchester Wine Warehouse. The Green Growler. Putnam County. Orange County. Beer World — Monroe.
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