There鈥檚 a new field guide to add to your collection and it has nothing to do with finding rare warblers. Put down your binoculars and raise your glasses, is here.
鈥淭he book was born out of frustration, really. It鈥檚 for anyone who has ever been out on the road and has been stymied by the liquor laws or an early last call,鈥 says Niki Ganong, author of the 230-page guide.
Blue laws are a bummer. There are few things worse than seeking out a cold beer after a day on the road and finding out you鈥檙e in a state that only sells beer at room temperature, not on Sundays, and not after 8 p.m. 聽
Ganong, a longtime spirits and beer writer, is originally from Pennsylvania, which has stringent liquor laws. The publisher of the book is from Indiana, which has its own strict booze laws. 鈥淲e were talking about how both these states have these rules but that they鈥檙e totally different,鈥 she says. The idea for a guide was born.聽
鈥淭he book was born out of frustration, really. It鈥檚 for anyone who has ever been out on the road and has been stymied by the liquor laws or an early last call.鈥
The book breaks the country down into regions, and then tackles the states individually. Each state is paired with detailed essay on its drinking culture and contributions, followed by practical advice on how best to drink in that state, including聽tips on how to procure liquor and mix state-specific cocktails (like the Stone Fence in Vermont and the Burnt Trailer in Maine).聽
Ganong says she was surprised by how much our drinking culture and customs vary. Sometimes suburban America looks totally homogenous鈥攐ur strip malls and tract houses s cut from the same cloth. But how and what and when we drink is still highly regional. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big country with widely varying political and religious beliefs,鈥 says Ganong. 鈥淚n some places drinking really isn鈥檛 part of the culture. In other places, like Wisconsin, it is. There, alcohol is around everywhere. It鈥檚 at kids鈥 basketball games.鈥澛
As might be expected, Ganong says Utah has the most stringent laws. 鈥淭he rumor is true with Utah. They don鈥檛 allow cocktails to be made in front of patrons.鈥 Utah bars have a piece a frosted glass partitioning off part of the bar called the 鈥淶ion curtain鈥 that drinks are made behind. 鈥淏ut really the kooky laws are everywhere, almost every state has one鈥攅ven Oregon,鈥 Ganong鈥檚 hometown.
Since so many drinking laws stem from prohibition, The Field Guide To Drinking In America is a rich trip through temperance movement history. Anyone with interest in prohibition, bootlegging, or nefarious characters will enjoy flipping through the pages.
It鈥檚 also full of useful tips, like how to instantly cool down beer if you had to buy it at room temp鈥攍ike you do in Indiana. 鈥淔or that, find a large container and fill it with half ice and half water. Pour in two cups of salt, like way more salt than you think you need. Put the beer in the container and agitate it,鈥 she says. In just a few minutes, your beer should be cold and your evening saved.聽
Beware, though: The book will make you want to go on a (totally responsible) cross-country bender. 鈥淭he thing I found as I was working was that every state I wrote about [51, which counts DC, are covered in the book] I sort of fell in love with it a little bit. Something about every state was really unique and made me want to go back,鈥 says Ganong. From drinking moonshine in West Virginia to hitting every street in the U.S. that allows open containers, your life list just got a whole lot more fun.