Archive for the Category » North America «

Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

distillery district distillery lane01 web1 300x199 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

The Historic Distillery District

The pleasant aroma of baked food seemed to permeate my soul“–InOntario

I wasn’t long in Toronto, when Pigcat—who understood my penchant for fine dining, great coffee and culture in unusual settings—took me to the historic Distillery District, just blocks from her apartment in downtown Toronto.

Set on 13 acres in the heart of downtown Toronto, The Distillery District is the single largest collection of Victorian Industrial architecture in North America and one of Toronto’s hottest “gastrozones”. I was in COOL Travel Cat Heaven. Wonderfully restored to retain its funky retro-industrial setting, The Distillery features a wide and eclectic tapestry of shops, cafés, restaurants and galleries including: chocolatiers who produce artisan chocolate directly from the cocoa bean itself; cafés that micro-roast Fairtrade beans; Canadian fine cuisine in industrial chic settings; and galleries and shops that embrace original funk-chic.

potters shed 044 web1 300x199 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

The Potter's Shed

Founded in 1832 by brothers-in-law William Gooderham and James Worts, the Gooderham and Worts Distillery grew into the largest distillery in the world. They exported spirits and whiskey to ports around the world from New York to Rio de Janeiro and Montevideo. After 153 years of continuous production, the plant distilled its last drop of rum in 1990. Resident beer gardens, wine bars, an award-winning microbrewery (Mill Street Brewery) and even a sake distillery (which opened a few months ago) have amply filled the gap. The Ontario Spring Water Sake Company is the first and only sake brewery in Ontario. It’s prepared in the “Junmai” (pure rice) style, freshly pressed, unpasteurized and unfiltered. They have a lovely tasting room and several sakes to try along with Japanese food.

case goods lane distillery district web 300x199 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Old meets new in the Distillery District

The Distillery was restored and developed into a pedestrian-only cultural “Victorian Industrial chic village”, opening in May 2003 as Toronto’s new centre for Art, Culture and Entertainment. Pigcat and I strolled along the brick lined promenades and European piazza-style squares in what the Globe and Mail calls “a picture postcard draw”. Where ever I turned, a paradox of hip sophistication and retro-industrial funk greeted me. I was reminded a little of Soho in New York

potting shed distillery district02 web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Behar serves a customer at the Potter's Shed

 as my senses feasted on a range of motion, color, texture and fragrance: an old roadster parked in an alley overlooking the industrial punk sculpture of Dennis Oppenheim;  a collection of clay pots, dried lavender and ferns adding colorful texture to a red brick road.   As we strolled past eclectic shops and avant-garde galleries—once a distillery complex, flour mills and cooper shop—I inhaled the pleasant aroma of baked food and freshly roasted coffee. The Distillery, like a fine distilled spirit, is a feast of the senses. If Hemmingway was a Torontonian, he might have reserved his famous quote for this place.

saki distillery web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

The sake distillery

Pigcat took me to Soma, where we savored a provocatively delicious Mayan hot chocolate over a Sparky chocolate (named after my good friend, Sparky, no doubt! LOL!)—a dark chocolate “half-moon” covering a “genache” of gianduja laced with paprocks. Eugenia served us our Mayan hot chocolate, made with ginger, Madagascar vanilla, orange peel, and their secret blend of spices. HA! I know that chili is one of them. The hot chocolate ran smooth over my tongue, rich with chocolate and a little heat.

soma fleur de sel caramel cclose 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Soma's fleur de sel caramel chocolate

Soma is one of the few artisan chocolatiers in North America who make small batch chocolates directly from the cocoa bean (which they get from plantations around the world including the Dominican Republic, Madagascar, Costa Rica and Panama—with a preference for Fairtrade, Organic and flavor grade. You can see them making their chocolates in their micro-chocolate factory through the display window! Toronto Life Magazine and Now Magazine voted Soma chocolates as the best in town. And why not? Their exquisite chocolates are lovingly made by dedicated and friendly staff (probably intoxicated with chocolate-induced endorphins). You can’t go wrong with names and elegant ingredients like fleur de sel caramels, almond cluster dark Peruvian, Arbequina Spanish olive oil, cherry bomb, Gooderham and Worts Whiskey, Douglas Fir and Bergamot. Veni, vidi, vici!

soma gelato close web 300x197 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Enjoying the gelato at Soma's!

Soma’s gelatos and sorbettos are also extremely popular. We returned later to savor one of their 14 flavors.

We stopped for lunch at the Mill Street Brew Pub, a place to eat with character and its own micro-brewery. Mill Street Brewery is East Toronto’s first commercial brewery to open in more than 100 years, home to Ontario’s first certified organic lager, producing handcrafted beers and ales in historic Corktown area of the city. The pub was built around their open-concept brewery beneath 18 foot ceilings and huge skylights, successfully preserving the character and ambience of the century-old distillery district.

toulouse coffee porter mill pub close web 300x242 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Toulouse enjoys his Coffee Porter

We sat in their patio facing Tank House Lane. Pigcat decided on their English Tea Beer and I asked Natalie, our friendly waitress, for their Coffee Porter. The Coffee Porter features roasted beans from Balzac Coffee, down the street, and delights the palate with complex lingering flavors of nuts. With 100% certified ingredients in their stock ales, tank house ales, and porters, who can go wrong?

The Brew Pub opened in 2006, serving exceptional pub-style food that use the Mill Street brews, brewed on site. I ordered a Drunken Butter Chicken (the name somehow appealed)—an organic lager marinated chicken simmered in the Mill’s own butter sauce and served with basmati rice and naan bread. I found large chicken pieces bathed in a delicate “rose” sauce with complex flavors that lingered with a mild heat.  Along with their cob salad, which Pigcat smartly chose, and their signature fish and chips, it is a favorite among Brew Pub patrons.  

cobb salad mill street brew pub web 264x300 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Scrumptious Cobb Salad

Then it was time to exercise some of that butter chicken away. A little ways down Tank House Lane we felt drawn to the magic realism of The Potter’s Shed, whose earthy artworks looked like they’d spilled out from the tiny shop in artful chaos among the brick pavestones. Clay pots and gardening implements lay scattered among dizzying sprays of lavender, hydrangeas, and ferns.  Inside, Behar, in her rainbow sarong, added to a setting out of a classic fiction novel. When we finally stepped back into the sun, Pigcat asked me if I’d seen all the ferries sitting among the pots.

We ambled farther, poking inside eclectic shops, and ended up on Trinity Street. I highly recommend Cube Works Gallery, a fun shop that features original works created from Rubik’s cubes.

Balzacs distillery trinity street01 web 300x210 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Enjoying an espresso outside Balzac's

We followed our discerning noses to Balzac’s Coffee, the very establishment whose roasted beans provided the basis for my Coffee Porter at the Mill Street Brew Pub. The inside looked like the set of an old Bogart movie, with tall mirror, high ceiling, chandelier, staircases that lead nowhere and—what convinced me that this was a serious coffee establishment—an original nickel Elektra espresso maker, complete with soaring eagle. Although it was no longer used for espresso-making, according to the barista (they only used it now for frothing milk), its presence on the counter signified serious coffee intent. I wasn’t surprised when my single-shot espresso tasted exquisite, with a deep coffee nose and an attractive natural crema. We sat outside the coffee shop in the square that featured a kind of space-retro-industrial punk sculpture by Dennis Oppenheim. Called “Still Dancing” Oppenheim described it as “a combination of sculpture, architecture and theatre.”

spirits oyster house grill web1 300x176 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

The acclaimed Pure Spirits patio

We took Case Goods Lane, past several galleries, toward Pure Spirits Oyster House & Grill and decided to have an early supper of fresh oysters and beer. Ah, the life of a Cool Cat… We settled on the outside patio—called “Toronto’s Best Patio” by Toronto Life—for an exquisite dinner of fresh oysters and salad. Ben, out waiter—who recognized me, because he is from Toulouse, France!—offered us creamy sweet Fanny Bay oysters from British Columbia andmore briny Beausoleils from New Brunswick. They came on the half-shell with shredded horseradish and sauces including a mignonette sauce of red-wine vinegar and shallots. I showed Pigcat how to throw the oyster to the back of the throat and bite into them to savor the full flavor of the creamy-sweet, sea-salt meat. Pure Spirit oysters are considered “the best” in Toronto by OurFaves.com. We slurped them down with panache, licking our little pink tongues, along with a refreshing baby spinach and arugula salad.
ben toulouse oyster bar web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Ben and Toulouse discuss oysters and "Toulouse"

It was Tuesday May 31st and Pure Spirits was launching its “Topshuck Patio” shucking contest at 6pm. Of course, we stayed and watched them shuck their little hearts out—well, actually their little oysters out …hehe… It turned out that all of Toronto’s best had come to compete for money and a huge bottle of Sky vodka. Contestants from Rodney’s Oyster House, Oyster Boy, Big Daddy’s, and Starfish (to name a few quality establishments) shucked as we gorged on oysters (Pure Spirits donated the shucked oysters to its patrons. Bonus!). Head chef Tim Miles put on the shindig.

toulouse pigcat spirit oyster house 02 web1 300x199 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Toulouse and Pigcat about to devour the oysters

 He timed contestants on their ability to successfully shuck a dozen oysters. The fastest shuck against the least demerit points for quality won. Tim and his assistant Carlier Morejon (the “Cuban Missile”) judged each shuck. They added to the time if: the oyster wasn’t severed, the gut was still in the oyster, the shell was broken, the meat was out of shell, it was a bad oyster, it was scrambled, and the count was wrong. We didn’t leave until very late that night and we had actually had our fill of oysters. We felt a little like the “Walrus and the Carpenter” as we ambled home, bellies stuffed and happy.

luis shucking contest web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Luis from Pure Springs shucks against the clock

With more patio space than any other Toronto location, The Distillery is a favorite hangout among thirsty locals in search of a little bit of European flair. I was told that The Distillery District is destined to become the epicenter of the largest waterfront redevelopment in North America. The Pan Am Games athletes village is currently being constructed just east of the Distillery with accommodation for 6,000 athletes. Right after the games in 2015 they will be transformed into residential units along with others in the West Don Lands. Old Corktown and The Old City environs between St. Laurence Market and The Distillery are being revitalized in the old heritage vision that has made The Distillery District so chic.

judging shucking contest02a web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Judging the oyster shucks

  

World-class theatre and entertainment thrive in The Distillery District. I noted that several theatre companies have made The Distillery their home, including The Soulpepper Theatre Company and George Brown’s Theatre School, housed in the Young Centre for the Performing Arts. The Toronto Star calls it “Toronto’s new cultural hotspot.”

distillery district filming web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Filming the day Toulouse was in the Distillery District

Pigcat informed me that over 1000 movies, television shows, commercials and music videos were shot in The Distillery District; some include X-Men, Chicago, Long Kiss Goodnight, The Recruit and Cinderella Man.

potting shed distillery district01 web1 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

The Potter's Shed

The Distillery Historic District, 55 Mill Street, Toronto, ON, Canada; 416-364-1177

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events, places or people for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar).

 

If you want Toulouse to write up your place or activity, contact us at nina.sfgirl@gmail.com with your information.

Share and Enjoy:
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Historic Distillery District

Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

girl reading bike beach close web 253x300 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Cyclist relaxes on Cherry Beach

Kitesurfers catching a fresh gust and skimming the waves between gravity-defying leaps… children playing trucks in the sand … swimmers sun-bathing on a world-class beach… and dogs running like wolves among the trees. Where else in the heart of Metro Toronto can you find all these in one place?

Cherry Park on Lake Ontario lies less then five minutes from where Pigcat lives and may be one of downtown Toronto’s best kept secrets. So, before I tell you more about it, you must swear secrecy… Mum’s the word!… Okay…

kitesurfers 04 closer 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

kitesurfing at Cherry Beach

Here’s what Cherry Beach has going for it: a clean expansive sandy beach, ideal for sun-bathing, swimming and water sports; extensive paths for walking, cycling, and dog-walking; lots of free parking; a picnic area with tables, benches and lots of grass and trees; a large off-leash and fenced-in dog park along the water and trees, where my friend Sparky (the show dog whippet) could run a Derby race; a public change room and toilets; and a great-food cantina open every day during the season from morning until 9 pm. 

blue flag beach web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

The FEE Blue Flag

kids on beach frizby web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Youth playing frisbee

Cherry Beach is also a Blue Flag beach. The Foundation for Environmental Education (FEE), an international non-government organization, awards the Blue Flag to a beach that meets their standards. Toronto was the first municipality in Canada to receive the Blue Flag for managing its beaches according to international environmental standards. Cherry Beach earned its flag based on its high standards in water quality, environmental management, environmental education, and safety and service.

Other Blue Flag beaches I intend to visit this summer in downtown Toronto include The Woodbine Beaches, Wards Island Beach and Hanlan’s Point Beach.

mr j with toulouse web 300x230 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Mr. J discusses the merits of olive oil with Toulouse

The owner of Mr. J’s Cantina—Mr. J—originally came from Greece around 25 years ago, when he set up cantinas in several Toronto parks, including Cherry Beach. He lives here 6 months and in Greece 6 months where he owns and operates an olive orchard business that makes olive oil. He kindly gave me a bottle to try out; Pigcat and I made some awesome spaghetti and Caesar salad with it. Mr. J’s makes delicious hamburgers and hotdogs along with very decent coffee, along with their signature French fries. They also serve ice cream (Bonus!).

mr j cantene murat ice cream web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Mr. J's cantina

When I was there, Turkish brothers Murat and Tarik were running the place. Although Pigcat and I had brought along our own gourmet picnic lunch, we both succumbed to the tantalizing aroma of home-style French fries made from hand-cut potatoes and done to perfection with Mr. J’s fresh olive oil, no doubt! The French fries beautifully augmented our gourmet sandwich spread of Maestro Italian salami, tomato, asiago & artichoke spread with Maille moutarde Provençale on dark rye. Accompanied by havarti cheese, green and black olives and in-season cherries and pears, we were in paradise!

picnic lunch web 199x300 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Pigcat's gourmet sandwich picnic

vanessa at work 01 web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Vanessa in her outdoor studio

As Pigcat talked with a local jewelry maker, I went on walkabout to lose some calories, so I wouldn’t feel too guilty eating the ice cream I had my eye on. I bravely started in the dog-park, thinking I might be in for a good run and wishing Sparky was with me. I walked, without incidence, along a pleasant path lined with tall lanky poplars and graceful willows to a grassed-in beach, and met Toronto local Jason and Reggie, his 5-year old Jack Russell companion, playing fetch by the water. The large off-leash dog area is one of CB’s main attractions. Treasure, a jazz singer from Toronto, regularly brings her dogs to frolic and run their hearts out. That day she was walking an Italian greyhound, two rambunctious doodles, a Basset hound, pug and a very docile German shepherd/border collie cross.

jason reggie fetching web 218x300 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Jason and Reggie fetching

The diversity of park amenities draws a truly diverse people. Local artisan Vanessa, who’d adopted Cherry Park as her outdoor studio, confided that the park inspired her creativity. “I feel rooted and grounded in Nature, which speaks to my inner soul,” said Vanessa of Inspired Designs 4 You. “My surroundings give me inspiration and Cherry Park does it for me.” She then showed me the beautiful beaded ankle bracelet she’d just finished making that belonged to her “Cherry Beach” Collection. You can find it on www.Artfire.com.

elsie peter fries web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Elsie and Peter enjoy Cherry Beach

Elsie and Peter, a senior couple I met on the beach, shared that the park hadn’t changed much since Elsie’s childhood. “This park is for everyone,” Elsie told me as she handed me one of Mr. J’s fine French fries. “Children, dogs, all kinds of people come here. It’s a family place.”

Pigcat and I settled on our picnic table adjacent to the sandy beach and watched a group of youths playing Frisbee “football”. Later on, a group of kitesurfers geared up on the beach. Soon moon-shaped kites streaked across the azure sky like green, yellow and orange comets. Surfers skipped over the waves, leaping and soaring like birds against a cerulean sky. We also spotted windsurfers, kayakers, sea-dos, and lots of sailboats taking advantage of a warm breezy day.

freighter rowers sailboat web 300x213 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

freighter enters port near Cherry Beach

For many years Cherry Beach was one of the few Toronto

dogs leash free zone web 150x150 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

leash-free dog park

 beaches that was clean enough for swimming and water sports. It was created in the early 1930s and lies at the foot of Cherry Street on Toronto’s outer harbour and adjacent to the Toronto Port, one of the largest commercial ports in Canada. The port sprawls over 55 acres at the foot of Cherry Street and you can get great views of incoming boat traffic on Lake Ontario from the park shore. Despite its location at the tip of Toronto’s formerly heavily industrial Port Lands area, Cherry Beach has remained a popular gathering place for years. The park is surrounded by marshland and leftover grounds from what was once commercial industry and factory grounds. That didn’t affect us as we strolled along the Martin Goodman waterfront trail and beneath the tall archways of poplar, maple and willow trees in the enchanted woodland of Cherry Park.

toulouse pigcat cherry beach web 300x249 Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Pigcat and Toulouse "chilling" at Cherry Beach

Water Quality:

The City of Toronto tests the water quality (e.g., coliform count) at Cherry Beach daily. The water quality must not exceed the guideline set by the Ontario Ministry of Health of 100 E. coli per 100 ml of water for 80% of the time during the swimming season.

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events, places or people for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar).

 

If you want Toulouse to write up your place or activity, contact us at nina.sfgirl@gmail.com with your information.

Share and Enjoy:
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach
  • services sprite Adventures in Toronto: Cherry Beach

Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

toulouse buttertart edited 1 web1 225x300 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Toulouse goes to heaven with his butter tart

I’ve travelled from Bangkok to Paris and quilted my way across North America, from Florida and Lunenburg to Vancouver and Laguna Beach. I’ve come to realize during my travels that the best experiences are the ones you aren’t looking for; the ones that tease your peripheral muse with pure magic. And they always appear in the most unlikely places.

Yesterday, a sultry wind swept through the city of Toronto, luring us to the countryside in search of a pastoral drive with the top down and some cool drinks. Pigcat had heard about the Creemore Springs Brewery, a micro-brewery that specializes in small batch seasonal beers. It was the perfect outing.

Pigcat packed a small panier with iced tea and some Petit Ecolier gourmet biscuits. We slid into my ToulouseMobile and sailed up the Airport Road to Creemore, a village nestled in the rolling hills of Ontario’s western Niagara Escarpment agricultural region.

nina creemore brewery web 150x150 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

A stranger with a stranger smile dispenses our kellerbier

Our keen noses scented out Creemore Springs Brewery on Mill Street.  A tanker truck was filling its load in front of the small brewery. We chuckled at the sign on the truck’s backside that proudly proclaimed: “A Hundred Years Behind the Times”.

norma cafe outside edited 1 web1 150x150 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Norma's cafe

After an informative tour of their charming facilities, Pigcat and I tried their new seasonal Kellerbier, an unfiltered, naturally cloudy brew that packs a zesty full-bodied flavor. The brew master adds Special German whole-leaf hops late in their brewing process to produce a wonderfully aromatic beer with a hint of citrus and spice on the palate. Greg Clow of Taste Toronto claims this new beer “is not only the most unique and interesting beer they’ve ever brewed, it’s also one of the best beers to be launched in Ontario in recent history.”

normas cafe interior web 300x200 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Rich ambience of cafe-bakery greets Toulouse and Pigcat

Feeling rather peckish, we strolled past shops and galleries and let our paws stop beneath the unassuming green sign that read simply “Café”. The awning above the double red doors gave us more information. It read “Affairs Catering & Café”. Something about the century-old building, the cozy tables out front and original red storefront windows invited. We glanced at one another. On a whimsy we entered and I immediately knew: this was why we’d come to Creemore.

toulouse reunion island coffee web 300x246 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Toulouse delights in a Reunion Island coffee

Roy Orbison’s warbling voice filled the spacious café with nostalgia. I felt like Marty McFly in Back to the Future, as I gazed around the russet brick walls, tastefully adorned with 1950’s vintage memorabilia. Artifacts ranged from kitchen implements my mother used to old signs advertizing extinct products and funky sayings like “Espresso Yourself!” I realized that I’d stepped back in time to when Pigcat was born.  “It feels like home when I come here,” one customer later confided to me.

norma making sandwishes web 150x150 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Norma makes exquisite gourmet sandwiches

We sidled past the displays of exquisite pastries, cakes and breads to where Sam took our order from behind the counter. I chose a BLT with cheese and home-style coleslaw, prepared for us by owner, Norma Panzini.   We watched as Norma created our gourmet sandwiches using hearty ingredients: juicy tomatoes, lettuce, thick slices of pepper-spiced back-bacon on grilled Panini bread.

Affairs Bakery & Café is a life-long dream of Norma’s. “This is my whole life,” she confided. Norma graduated from Ryerson Polytechnic institute where she specialized in the hospitality services program. After several years managing and developing standards and best practices for the food industry, she moved to Creemore with her family in search of a quiet lifestyle and launched her café bakery soon after. Her dedication to quality foods and impeccable practices translates to the products she uses and sells, including Fair Trade organic coffee, 100% in-house baking, and use of seasonal produce.  

normas cafe pastries 150x150 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Mousse tarts and cherry cheesecakes

Affairs Bakery & Café features espresso and regular organic coffees blended and roasted by Reunion Island Coffee Limited in Oakville, ON, and freshly ground for customers. Reunion Island roasts small batch coffee from around the world to match the rare, exotic and distinctive hallmark of their orchid logo, itself a universal symbol of elegance and uncommon beauty. Affairs Catering promotes Reunion Island coffees certified organic by OCIA and by the Rainforest Alliance, whose exacting standards ensure high caliber coffee farmed and produced to conserve biodiversity and provide sustainable livelihoods.

I chose the Organic Sierra Verde, a Rainforest Alliance smooth medium-rich full-bodied blend with buttery chestnut tones that mellowed to a citric acidity. To go with my coffee, Norma insisted I try her signature dessert: the butter tart. I was in kitty heaven! The pecan butter tart sent my soul soaring. I might have burst into harmonizing with Buddy Holly. Pigcat didn’t let on; she was humming her own tune. 

norma toulouse02 edited 1 web1 194x300 Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Norma and Toulouse discuss the merits of butter tarts

Come to Creemore for this alone: Norma’s exquisite pecan butter tart and great Fair Trade coffee. 

After directing us to Mr Norman’s Nephew Ice Cream Parlor at Wasaga Beach, Norma informed us that very August Creemore puts on the Copper Kettle Festival when the street shuts down to all but foot and paw traffic for some stomping fun, entertainment, food and drink. The party happens August 27th & 28th this year. Don’t forget to stop at the Affairs Catering Bakery & Café to claim your very own butter tart!

Contact Information for Affairs Catering Bakery & Cafe: Telephone (705) 466-5621; Fax (705) 466-5624; http://www.affairsbakery.com/

Creemore Springs Brewery: 139 Mill Street
Creemore, Ontario
Canada L0M 1G0
Tel: 1-800-267-2240
or 705-466-2240
Fax: 705-466-3306
Email: thefolks@creemoresprings.com

The Rainforest Alliance: http://www.rainforest-alliance.org/

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events, places or people for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar).

Share and Enjoy:
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café
  • services sprite Creemore Springs Brewery and Affairs Catering Bakery and Café

Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

animal kingdom winner of 2011 derby 137 300x240 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Animal Kingdom wins the 137th Kentucky Derby

Kentuckians know how to enjoy a horserace. Get a good seat at the Derby and order one of their signature mint juleps. The refreshing aromatic spice of mint and complex bourbon whiskey rouses the palate with sunshine and song. This “sort of snow cone for grownups” according to Ann Limpert of The Washingtonian, has kept Derby fans cool since Churchill Downs racetrack opened in 1875.

mint julep02 150x150 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

the mint julep

The mint julep is a signature part of the Southern States cuisine and it takes four ingredients to make it: mint, bourbon, sugar and water. They’re usually served in a classy silver or pewter cup or tall old-fashioned glass like a Collins glass or highball glass with a straw. The key to a great mint julep lies in two things: decent bourbon whiskey and fresh mint.  I was in the right state for bourbon (clever smile at my pun). Kentucky brews 95% of the world’s bourbon and is, after all, known for two things: its Derby and its Bourbon.

lynns paradise cafe021 300x199 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Lynn's Paradise Cafe

Just prior to the Derby, my good whippet friend Sparky took me to Lynn’s Paradise Café on Barret Avenue in the Highlands. We enjoyed a gourmet sandwich with a superb mint julep inside this funky retro-fifties restaurant from another dimension. For a whippet, Sparky sure gets around.

Sparky march 2011 150x150 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Sparky, Toulouse's show dog friend

Enchanted with this festive icy cocktail, I suggested that we go back to Sparky’s place and make our own. He readily agreed and took me to his favorite friendly liquor store on Bardstown Road to buy a good bourbon.

Kentucky Bourbon

Bourbon is a barrel-aged American whiskey made mainly of corn since the 18th century. Like Champagne, Bourbon is named for the area it was first conceived, known as Old Bourbon (now Bourbon County in Kentucky) and after the French House of Bourbon royal family. The typical bourbon grain mixture, called mash bill, is 70% corn mixed with wheat and/or rye and malted barley. Yeast is added to a sour mash of ground grain and fermented. This “wash” is then distilled into a clear spirit, which is aged in charred white oak barrels. Bourbon gains color and flavor from the wood as it ages. Straight bourbon has aged at least two years and received no additional color or flavor. After aging, the bourbon is taken out of the barrel, diluted with water and bottled to at least 80 US proof. Whiskeys up to 151 (and higher) proof exist; they’re called barrel proof because they weren’t diluted after they were taken out of the barrel.

kentucky great bourbons 300x150 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Some Kentucky bourbons

The store was well stocked with fine bourbons, mostly single-barreled. I gravitated to the Buffalo Trace, drawn to its nose with a complex procession of vanilla and citrus, and an elegant finish of sweeter vanilla joined by a dry toasty oakiness. Meantime, Sparky was eying the 15-year old Pappy’s Van Winkle Family Reserve. Going for $37, this complex and smooth bourbon has an intensely fruity nose, buttery palate with complex sherry and vanilla notes. We ended up agreeing on Maker’s Mark for our mint julep (favored by Louis Rice and recommended by the Washingtonian for a bourbon julep); this amber bourbon is a smooth and mellow whiskey, with sweeter tones of honey and vanilla. And it’s perfect for sipping.

Look for a premium class sipping whiskey that is a Kentucky Straight (aged at least two years and made entirely in Kentucky) and a single-barreled bourbon (e.g., the bottle comes from an individual aging barrel; not a blend from various different barrels to provide uniformity of color and taste). Blanton’s Single Barrel Bourbon, whose bottle top is an exquisite brass jockey and rider, makes a great souvenir for anyone traveling through. It boasts a very deep and satisfying nose, with a start of caramel and vanilla and a “soft pepper” aftertaste.

If you’re driving through Louisville Kentucky in September, take Bardstown Road all the way to the town of Bardstown (the Bourbon Capital of the World) for the annual Kentucky Bourbon Festival. Sparky says he’s going. Like I said, he gets around.

Kentucky Mint Julep

Mint julep at Blue Smoke 300x225 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

The mint julep at "Blue Smoke" Louisville

The recipe for mint julep varies quite a bit among avid julep drinkers. One of the variations is in how much the fresh mint is handled. Some recommend that it be only lightly bruised, if at all. Others treat it like a “smash” (as in the brandy smash and the mojito), in which the fresh mint is crushed or eagerly “muddled” to release essential oils and juices into the bourbon and sugar to intensify the mint flavor. Whether the mint is simply added as a garnish or crushed outright, the intention is to introduce its flavor and aroma through the nose. This is particularly important for those of you who are human—we can’t all be cats or dogs, after all!

making simple syrup edited 1 150x150 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Toulouse makes the mint simple syrup

No one is certain how the mint julep came about. People suggest that it originated in the southern United States during the eighteenth century; Kentucky Senator Henry Clay introduced the drink to Washington, D.C. at the Round Robin Bar in the Willard Hotel—a fitting and splashy intro for this festive cocktail. Known as the crown jewel of Pennsylvania Avenue, The Willard is Washington DC’s most celebrated historic hotel, having hosted political and social events of consequence since it opened in 1818 and enjoyed such notable guests as Charles Dickens, Buffalo Bill, David Lloyd George, and Mark Twain. Clay’s mint julep was in great company! Juleps, says Jim Hewes, bartender of the Round Robin Bar “evoke an era of hospitality and geniality, when you were offering the best of what you had: whiskey, ice—which was hard to come by—mint, and time.”

toulouse muddling mint 150x150 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Toulouse muddles the mint

The word “julep” actually comes from the Persian word for rose water and is generally identified with the notion of a sweet drink. While some people use gin in their juleps, I highly recommend bourbon-based juleps. If you’re in Kentucky why would you miss a chance to drink this state’s most exquisite signature spirit?

Here’s the recipe that Sparky and I used to prepare our mint julep:

Ingredients for one drink:

  • About 20 mint leaves, plus more for garnish
  • 2 tsp. sugar or 2 tsp. mint simple syrup (you can google to find out how to make it)
  • 2 to 3 oz. bourbon
  • Plenty of crushed ice

Preparation:

  1. Put mint leaves and sugar (or mint simple syrup) in a Mint Julep cup or old fashioned glass.
  2. You have two choices: 1) muddle or crush the fresh leaves and sugar until the sugar dissolves. This will take a few minutes. Don’t be discouraged; the sugar and mint will comingle in an exquisitely fragrant mash worth the effort; 2) or you can infuse the leaves in the mint simple syrup, and still muddle if you wish. We went with muddling (because we like the word). Many suggest that you let it stand and steep for a bit to allow the broken leaves to release their flavor. We were ok with that too. We needed to rest our tired little paws anyway. Some recipes further suggest an overnight stay in the fridge to further infuse the mint with sugar water. Once you’ve prepared the mint simple syrup you can store it in the fridge for several months prior to completing steps three and four.  But why would you wait that long?… :-3
  3. Fill a glass with crushed or cracked ice. Add bourbon and stir until an icy frost develops on the outside of the glass.
  4. Garnish with additional mint leaves (or a whole sprig) and serve immediately.
toulouse pours bourbon 150x150 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Toulouse pours the bourbon into official Derby glass

Sparky and I then settled in his back patio-deck and kicked back this zesty sunny drink with sllloooooowww sips. I recommend good company, a shady place outside on a sunny day where birds and the gentle rustling of the trees can mingle with joyful discussion. Amen!

The Kentucky Derby

Kentucky is best known for two things: its horses—with possibly more per capita than anywhere else in the world, according to my Kentucky friends—and its world-class bourbon. There is no better place or event that combines these two icons than the Kentucky Derby, called “the most exciting two minutes in sports.”

On May 7th, Sparky and I watched with baited breath and suspended julep in paw as twenty-to-one longshot “Animal Kingdom” won the 137th Kentucky Derby this year at Churchill Downs in Louisville. Animal Kingdom charged down the middle of the stretch to win by 2¾ lengths in front of a crowd of 164,858 people, the largest in Derby history.

kentucky derby03 300x225 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

The Kentucky Derby at Chuchill Downs

The mint julep became the official drink of the Kentucky Derby in 1938, keeping wide-brimmed and well-heeled track-goers loose-limbed and happy every since. Every year over a hundred thousand juleps are cheerfully imbibed at the Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks over a two day period, virtually all of them in specially made Kentucky Derby collectible glasses, like the one pictured here. You can, of course, escalate the derby experience by augmenting your mint julep with a meal out of Kentucky Hot Browns and Derby Pie. YUM!

Some Great Kentucky Bourbons:

toulouse mint julep outside edited 1 300x265 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Sparky gives Toulouse the official Derby glass

Here are some of the best bourbons according to BlueKitchen.net, and Greatbourbon.com:

Maker’s Mark Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey: an amber-colored 6-year old 90 proof bourbon. The rye-less recipe of this mellow bourbon smooths its edges, revealing its soft and gentle spirit. This bourbon celebrates a subtle, complex yet clean nose with vanilla and delicate floral notes of roses, lime and cocoa beans. This delicate and circumspect bourbon (compared to some of its more redneck cousins) makes it perfectly suited for sipping neat or pouring over rocks.

Buffalo Trace Straight Bourbon: a 90 proof well-rounded bourbon with initial aroma containing elements of spice, sautéed butter and old leather gloves; sweet and almost fruity, with sweet oak, cinnamon, nutmeg, honey tar and beeswax, ending with a spirited and feisty finish. A good sipping bourbon.

Evan Williams S.B. Single Barrel Vintage: a 9-year old 86 proof bourbon that is extremely aromatic and slightly sweeter than most.

W.L. Weller Special Reserve: a 7-year old deep bronze 90 proof bourbon with aromas of lanolin, almond oil and creamed corn with a long sweet oaky finish. It is most noted for being the first “wheated” bourbon, which, like Makers Mark, removes all rye from the formula and replaces it with wheat, making it a smoother ride down the throat.

Woodford Reserve: a classy 90 proof bourbon that flows mellow over the tongue with a soft and satisfying burn down the throat.

1792 Ridgemont Reserve: a deep amber 8-year old 94 proof bourbon with distinctly smooth, rich and velvety taste and complex aromas of honeyed fruit cake and chocolate covered cherries followed by a soft caramel, nuts and exotic peppercorn notes. This bourbon finishes with a nice ginger and spice accented face with noticeable heat.

Basil Haydens Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey: an 80 proof 8-year old bourbon that is less heavy on the palate, owing to its lower proof.

Knob Creek: a 9 year old 100 proof bourbon that, according to BlueKitchen.net, “is just what the doctor ordered (or asked you to stay away from)”. A rich, dark and dense bourbon that commands your mouth’s attention with every sip.

Elijah Craig Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey: a 12 year old bourbon from Bardstown. Considered one of the oldest bourbons on the market, it starts nice, with caramel and rye being most noticeable, then finishing with a punch.

Pappy Van Winkle’s Family Reserve: a 15 year old 107 proof bourbon with a fine copper color, intense fruited nose with tantalizing citrus zest note to a long and elegant finish. As the first drops roll over your tongue, you taste caramel and spice. The taste evolves into a slow burn as it warms you up inside. Great straight up.

Baker’s Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey: a 7 year old 107 proof bourbon with oaky tones that is slightly sweeter than most; good for sipping.

sparky slipper08 cropped 150x150 Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

After the Derby and julep Sparky falls asleep with his favorite toy

Fighting Cock: a 6 year old 103 proof bourbon with a noticeable “rye” kick.

Booker’s: a 126 proof completely uncut and unfinished bourbon; a “dangerously good” bourbon!

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events, places or people for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar).

Share and Enjoy:
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby
  • services sprite Mint Julep and the Kentucky Derby

Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

CP art fair aerial view02 edited 2 web 300x171 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

View of Art Fair from Sparky's house

It was a week before the famed Kentucky Derby and I was in Louisville, visiting my “show dog” whippet friend, Sparky, in the Highlands (more on him in a later post). Sparky told me I was just in time for his big front yard party of over a thousand guests, two hundred artisans and tonnes of grilled food, ice cream and beer. I told him he didn’t have to go to all the trouble.

Well, he really didn’t, because Sparky lives on Cherokee Parkway and every April (a week before the derby) art lovers and artisans make their annual pilgrimage to this beautiful historic neighborhood, lined with mature sycamore, oak and maple trees. Thousands of people inundated Sparky’s elegant neighborhood to attend the 40th annual Cherokee Triangle Art Fair–right outside Sparky’s doorway! Some came from as far away as California…and Canada! Known for its large Victorian homes and eclectic architecture, Cherokee Triangle Historic District is a short walk away from funky Bardstown Road, home to a rich diversity of cool cafés, trendy restaurants, movie theatres, boutiques, and antique stores.

CP art fair cherokee parkway 01 edited 1web 300x220 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Sparky's front yard!

The beautiful homes on Sparky’s street and in the Triangle reflect an eclectic mix of architectural styles like Italianate, Second Empire, Queen Anne, Richardsonian Romanesque, Neoclassical, Tudor Revival, Beaux Arts, among others. Sparky’s street lies next to Cherokee Park and Willow Park, which provide an urban oasis for cycling, picnics and—of course—walking your dog (more on Cherokee Park below).

The Cherokee Triangle Art Fair began in 1972 as a neighborhood plant exchange, organized by neighbors, friends and businesses. Profits from artist booth fees, food and drink and plant sales are invested back into community projects like restoring Willow Park, free summer concerts, and other worthy community activities.

cherokee park08 edited 2 300x199 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

The entrance to Cherokee Park

This year over 220 artisan booths lined both sides of Cherokee Parkway and its adjacent lane, selling original eclectic arts and crafts that included pottery, clothing, leatherworks and metal works, kites, glass art, paintings, photography, furniture, and original jewelry made from exotic sources ranging from seeds and wood to rocks and old silverware. The fair also featured homemade spices, confectionaries, soaps, and other body products.

CP art fair joanne rawley edited 2 150x150 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Joann with her funky art

CP art fair fountains and funktinis01close1 150x150 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Colorful spoons of Fountains and Funktinis

Joann Rawley of Fountains and Funktinis from Westlake Ohio featured colorful hand painted funky glassware, cutlery and other fun household items. Cappi Phillips of Moe’s Ache Studio in Bloomington Indiana featured beautiful mosaic tile work as wall art, sculptures and jewelry. Melissa Oesch of Re-Imagined was selling upcycled handmade journals, sketchbooks, and notebooks created from handmade paper and imaginative leather covers. I thought her use of old classic book covers that sandwiched blank paper—to write your own version of a classic—was a piece of creative genius. I picked up an old copy of “The Essentials of an Enduring Victory” and flipped through the blank pages, whiskers twitching with victorious possibilities. What a clever girl that Melissa was!

CP art fair melissa oesch011 150x150 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

A beaming Melissa shows Toulouse her cool books

CP art fair barbara mellissa close1 150x150 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Barbara and Mellissa with cool purses

The mother and daughter team of Barbara and Mellissa Diersing of Designs by Mellississippi, created lovely accessories, such as purses and clocks, from classic cigar boxes with exotic satin interiors. “Accessorizing is the spice of life!” Mellissa said cheerfully. I heartily agreed. As we ambled away, I had to smile as Sparky leaned over and said, “I wonder what they did with all the cigars?”

CP art fair rich kolb1 150x150 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Rich Kolb with his prize horse

Rich Kolb of Yardbirds Classic in Louisville cannibalizes old bike and car parts (to name a few sources) to create funky metal art and useful garden and household items like the splendid race horse he is standing next to. I looked over from a creative wine rack using a bicycle chain to where Sparky was pointing to a paperweight-card holder made from a spark plug. Sparky tilted his head at me with his signature toothy grin and I chuckled. Good find, Sparks! I thought.

CP art show cappi phillips 150x150 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Cappi stands by her mosaic tile art

Diane and Chuck Geier of The New Homestead are silverware artists, who’ve taken old silverware and converted them into funky artful household items, mobile art, necklaces and other fanciful jewelry. I examined exotic pendants as teapots swung in the wind above me, and felt a bit like Alice…

CP art fair cosa seria salsa01 edited 11 300x209 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

High stepping to Cosa Seria

I was starting to think I should have taken the red pill when I bumped into Sparky who’d come to a dead halt. He sniffed the air as if he was tasting it; or devouring it…

I thought he’d spotted one of the bazillion squirrels that live in luxury squirrel condos in this posh neighborhood but there was no squirrel in site. “Do you smell that?” he asked me. Then he grinned that famous whippet grin of his. “Food!”

I was a little annoyed that he’d beaten me to it. He is a sight hound, after all; not a scent hound. We followed the tantalizing smoky aroma of grilled pork and beef BBC brisket to Willow Park where I downed several bratwursts with European mustard on rye bread and Sparky gobbled his BBQ brisket.

CP art fair cosa seria edited 11 150x150 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Cosa Seria

The meals slid down easily with a couple of mimosas as we watched locals high-step to the energetic tunes of Cosa Seria, an 8-piece Latin powerhouse of Salsa-Timba fusion and other contemporary Latin rhythms from Cuba, the U.S. and Panama.

squirrel condo 294x300 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Highland squirrel's cozy condo suite

Considering the scenic 400-acre park, tree-filled classy neighborhood and general amenities, I’ve decided to come back in my next life as a squirrel in the Highlands! Meow… :-3

Contact Info:

Designs by Mellississippi: www.cigarboxart.net

Fountains and Funktinis: www.bejoart.com; funktini@yahoo.com

Re-Imagined: www.reimagindonline.com; reimaginedbyluna@gmail.com

Moe’s Ache Studio: www.MoesAche.com

Yardbirds Original Whimsy Classic: customerservice@yardbirds.info

The New Homestead: www.thenwewhomestead.com

 

Cherokee Park and the tornado Super Outbreak:

cherokee park03 300x199 Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair

Cherokee Park

Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the 409-acre park, which includes Beargrass Creek (a tributary of the Ohio River) was severely damaged in April of 1974 by the tornado Super Outbreak, an F4 on the Fujita scale. A massive re-planting effort was undertaken to replace the thousands of mature trees destroyed by the tornado. The Super Outbreak is the second largest tornado outbreak on record for a single 24-hour period. 148 tornadoes were confirmed in 13 US states over a two day period.

Six F5 and 24 F4 tornadoes swept over Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and New York. Even the Canadian province of Ontario was affected. The tornadoes cut a swath over 2,600 miles. Frustrated forecasters in Indiana, unable to keep up with all of the simultaneous tornado activity, put the entire state of Indiana under a blanket tornado warning, making it the first and only time in U.S. history that an entire state was under a tornado warning.

 

This site is powered by donations. For your reading pleasure I do not clutter it with advertizing; nor do I charge any of these fine establishments, events, places or people for my reviews. If you are a patron who enjoys my articles or at the receiving end of one of my reviews you can show your appreciation with a donation (see right top sidebar).

Share and Enjoy:
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair
  • services sprite Keeping Louisville Weird: the Cherokee Art Fair