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Seattle Bar Openings

Urban Family Public House Opens

This weekend raise a glass at Ballard’s newest beer bar.

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Urban Family Public House opens at 5329 Ballard Ave NW. Photo: Allecia Vermillion

Happy Friday, here’s a new bar for your weekend carousing.

Timothy Czarnetzki says Urban Family Public House will unleash its arsenal of craft beer tonight. The brewhouse at 5329 Ballard Ave NW is equipped with 25 Belgian and American taps. (Curious which ones? They’re listed on the Urban Family website.)

Eventually Czarnetzki and co-owners/pals David Powell and Sean Bowman will start producing their own ales under the Urban Family Brewing label. Will they be in rotation at the Ballard bar? You bet.

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Tags: Ballard, Seattle Beer, Seattle Beer News, New Ballard Bars, Urban Family Public House

Seattle Bar Openings

First Look: Macleod’s Scottish Pub

The scotch and cocktail destination opens December 21 on the southern end of Ballard Ave.

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Macleod’s Scottish Pub, located at 5200 Ballard Ave, opens December 21.

View Slideshow » Photo: Brian Colella

Macleod’s Scottish Pub, located at 5200 Ballard Ave, opens December 21.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Alison Macleod, wife of Allen, painted this mural of Scotland. Plotted are the 26 distilleries the traveling trio visited.

View Slideshow » Photo: Brian Colella

The spirits menu showcases a large selection of single malts. Scotch enthusiasts will appreciate the well-aged labels at decent price points. Four beers are on tap, and barrel-aged cocktails are in the works.

View Slideshow » Photo: Brian Colella

During their visit to lauded scotch producer The Macallan, Weimann and Maclise picked up vintage signs like this one that detail the stages of distilling; seven of them line the length of the bar.

View Slideshow » Photo: Brian Colella

For food find soup prepared at nearby Bastille, savory pies, Scottish smoked salmon, and meats and cheeses.

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The cast iron railing on the mezzanine hails from the Scottish Highlands. The upstairs features a lounge area, bringing capacity for the 1,000-square-foot space to 75.

View Slideshow » Photo: Brian Colella

Macleod’s is open every day from 4:30 to 2.

James Weimann and Deming Maclise, owners of the king-sized Bastille and Poquitos, will open the notably intimate Macleod’s Scottish Pub on Wednesday, December 21.

The whiskey den will house 50, maybe more, varieties of the peaty stuff to start, says Rich Fox, who heads the bar program; the emphasis is on single malt scotches. Expect that number to grow to as many as 150 by the time Macleod’s first anniversary rolls around, adds Weimann.

The cocktail bill is split between classics and scotch-based creations. (Of particular intrigue is the Atholl Brose, made with Glenffidich, honey syrup, cream, cinnamon, and an oatmeal brose that’s “like Mother’s Milk.”) While Fox recognizes Macleod’s may be many bargoers’ first run with scotch, he is confident they’ll embrace the spirit. To wit: years ago people drank mainly vodka or gin, now they guzzle ryes and bourbons like there’s no tomorrow.

“People are looking to be exposed to more, to be more adventurous. For scotch the timing is perfect.”

The famously globe-trotting Weimann and Maclise spent nearly two weeks in Scotland researching the drinking culture there (rough gig) and acquiring design elements like the stained glass trim on the maple bar. Good friend and longtime collaborator Allen Macleod, an Edinburgh native and the guy who will be “the face of the pub,” joined them.

Of course Macleod’s takes over the space that was once (fleetingly) home to Harlow’s Saloon. To check out the nearly complete overhaul and to learn what else is in store, click through the slideshow.

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Tags: Scotch, Ballard, Bar Openings, New Ballard Bars

Still Life

Introducing Captive Spirits, Ballard’s New Microdistillery

The trio behind the operation plans to release the “very vibrant” Big Gin in March.

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The Captive Spirits label. Photo courtesy the distillery.

Big Gin is the name of the flagship liquor Captive Spirits will produce. It’s a play on Ben Capdevielle’s nickname for his dad, Big Jim, a craft distiller in Wisconsin. Big Jim’s dad also was a distiller, a purveyor of Templeton Rye during Prohibition.

Capdevielle along with Holly Robinson and Todd Leabman—“he’s our brains,” explains Robinson—are carrying on the family tradition with their Ballard-based operation. Even if he wouldn’t have said as much it’s obvious owning and operating a distillery is a lifelong dream of Capdevielle’s—the guy was positively gleeful when he showed me around their spirits lab last week.

Three years ago Capdevielle set the wheels in motion, letting operations evolve organically since. “It’s like starting a restaurant,” says Robinson, a Walla Walla native. You can’t force inspiration or settle for just any space. “We let our strokes of genius come” sporadically, quips Capdevielle, an alum of the Linda Derschang and Tom Douglas empires.

In September Captive Spirits took over the back room of 1518 NW 52nd Street, now tricked out with a 100-gallon Vendome-made still and boxes upon boxes of bottles waiting for their juice. That will come in March, when 1183 dictates spirit makers can commence self distributing.

Big Gin also is a reference to the spirit’s robust flavor. What botanicals Capdevielle uses he won’t reveal, but he says to expect “a very vibrant gin.” Savory and a bit spicy, he compared it to something your grandpa might swill. Junipery? “Oh yeah, big time.” According to Robinson they sampled juniper juice of all stripes to create something “that’s missing from the market.”

The trio wants to keep Captive a small-batch outfit but they do aspire to implement a mail order system and release an aperitif and a whiskey, barrelling for which could start in the summer. Bottling parties are in the cards but a tasting room isn’t. But Big Gin shouldn’t be hard to come by at local watering holes. “The bars around Ballard have been incredibly supportive,” said Capdevielle. “They keep asking, ‘Where is it? Where is it?’”

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Tags: Ballard, Microdistilleries, Distillery Report, Seattle Spirits, New Ballard Bars

Openings

The Sexton Opens in Ballard Next Week

What to expect: Southern hospitality and a cocktail program by Marley Tomic-Beard.

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The Sexton, opening next week on Ballard Ave NW.

Photo: Brandon Cook

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The Sexton, opening next week on Ballard Ave NW.

Photo: Brandon Cook

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The bar, topped by winding rows of old cassette tapes. And backed by plenty of booze.

Photo: Brandon Cook

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The wallpaper is an old photo of trees, blown up and repeated. Out back: the makings of an excellent patio.

Photo: Brandon Cook

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Chef-owner Ryan Davidson strung the light fixtures himself.

Photo: Brandon Cook

When I visited the Sexton earlier this week, the owners handed me a postcard. On one side was a vintage photograph of owner Amber Sexton’s extended family members. On the other, the following description: “serv[ing] small-plate Southern comfort food beside thick fingers of bourbon, several hands of well-pours, and/or whatever else you’re drinking, on tables of our own making, to music of our own liking, near bout the night’s backside.”

Yep, that just about sums up the bar (or is it a restaurant?) that’s been coming together in the former location of Madame K’s at 5327 Ballard Ave NW. Sexton, her husband Ryan Davidson, and partner Brandon Cook, have transformed the former bordello-themed pizza den into a space both rough-hewn and ornate, and also incredibly personal.

Nearly a year after its owners took over the space, the Sexton is planning a quiet opening early next week, with an official grand opening next Friday, December 16. The space has the makings of a stellar addition to a neighborhood already bursting with great spots.

Though there will be bourbon pours aplenty, you won’t want to pass up the Sexton’s craft cocktail menu, especially since it’s the creation of Marley Tomic-Beard, most recently at Golden Beetle, and previously at Spur and Bathtub Gin. She has fashioned a Southern-tinged cocktail list that includes a rotating seasonal julep and the double bind, made with bourbon, a sage lemon shrub, and ginger beer. If you’re seeking a little smoke, another creation planned for the list will be composed of tequila, Campari, sweet vermouth, and mezcal.

Though Tomic-Beard brings some major craft cocktail bona fides, she and the owners hasten to say that the Sexton should also be a destination for drinkers seeking a shot and a beer or other straightforward libations.

As for food, the restaurant (or is it a bar?) will serve a playful Southern menu, according to Sexton and Davidson. The term “comfort food” is teetering on the brink of overused, but how else does one describe hush puppies, pork chops, fried chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, and a five-cheese mac and cheese made with bacon roux? Prices range from $3 to $13.

Davidson, who managed the kitchen at the Matador for the past three years, will be doing the cooking. He’s also a musician, as evidenced by the dismantled guitar that graces the kitchen doors, the four-track player that sports antlers over the bar, and the bar itself: a cunning compilation of old white cassette tapes that somehow looks just right with all the weathered wood. The Southern influence was inspired by Sexton’s family, which is rooted in Tennessee, Arkansas and Oklahoma, and also featured in old photographs that hang on the walls.

The Sexton will be open from 5pm till 2am every day but Monday, and will be 21 and over. The ample back patio space also holds great promise for the summer months. Check out the slide show for some in-progress photos that the Sexton team shared with me.

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Cocktails, Ballard, Bar Openings, The Sexton, Marley Tomic-Beard, New Ballard Bars

Seattle Beer

Reuben’s Brews Plans Taproom, Microbrewery for Ballard

Yet another local brewer north of Ship Canal, this one family friendly.

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Adam Robbings of Reuben’s Brews, destined for NW 53rd Street. Photo courtesy reubensbrews.com.

Ballard is becoming ground zero for craft beermen. The latest to enter the fray is husband-wife team Adam and Grace Robbings. They just signed a lease at 1406 NW 53rd Street, and in June 2012 plan to open Reuben’s Brews.

The microbrewery and taproom will showcase Adam’s impressive repertoire of decorated ales. Drinkers will find six seasonal potables, which will rotate monthly from an arsenal of forty, and possibly one guest tap “to complement what we have,” according to the Brit. You will also be able to fill growlers, to enjoy there or elsewhere.

In his years of home brewing Adam’s handiwork has included pumpkin suds with molasses and bourbon, a porter and a kolsch, an old-style ale, and a German rye, to name a few. “Most of my beers tend to have rye,” Adam explains before rattling off several more examples, among them the Roasted Rye PA that took the People’s Choice award in the 2010 PNA Winter Beer Taste. (Reuben’s was one of two home brewers allowed to enter.)

Though the Robbins plan to bottle their brews next fall, Adam is dubious of further expansion plans. “I want to stay close to the customer,” something he feels kegging and distribution would only complicate.

As parents of a two-year-old (the operation is named for their son, who as a babe “gave” Adam the home-brewing kit that kick-started his trade) the Robbings say Reuben’s will welcome fellow families. Adam may even conjure up an ale (ginger, of course) just for kids.

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Tags: Craft Brewing, Ballard, Microbrew, Seattle Beer, Seattle Beer News, New Ballard Bars

Seattle Beer

Urban Family Public House: Ballard Ave’s New Brewpub

The craft beer bar will open in early December.

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Photo courtesy urbanfamilybrewing.com.

The latest chapter in the Ballard beer boom: Urban Family Brewing.

Behind the operation are three pals—David Powell, Timothy Czarnetzki, and Sean Bowman—who lived together in Washington D.C. where they bonded over home-brewed beer on a “rental house’s ratty sofa.” Eventually their love of suds (and each other—note the brotherly moniker) had them hatching a plan to move cross country and start their own business.

“D.C. is a different culture,” says Czarnetzki, tagging the capitol a microbrew graveyard. “Seattle is a great city for beer.” And Ballard, with its rabid ale enthusiasts and proliferation of brewers, proved a perfect fit for their nascent enterprise. “We really feel at home here.”

In a matter of weeks the trio plans to open Urban Family Public House, a Belgian-American craft beer bar outfitted with 25 taps, at 5329 Ballard Ave NW. A couple months in, says Czarnetzki, the plan is to lend their name to two or three ales, which will be on rotation as well. Eventually they hope to expand production at a second facility, but that’s not likely to happen for a year or two.

The threesome are taking over the former Sutter Home and Hearth space, which Czarnetzki says fortuitously “just fell into our laps.” “There’s so much history,” Czarnetzki coos as he alludes to the century-old brick. The address will accommodate just under 50 but that number will grow once a back patio opens.

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Tags: Ballard, Bar Openings, New Seattle Breweries, Seattle Beer News, New Ballard Bars

Seattle Beer

An Opening Date for Ballard Brewery Hilliard’s

The bottle-eschewing brewsky operation reveals itself on September 17th. Get ready to crack a can.

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Sixteen-ounce cans of Hilliard’s amber will be on hand at the brewery’s opening-date event.

Photo: Hilliard’s

UPDATE 9/5: Hilliard’s opening has been delayed.

Hilliard’s co-owner Adam Merkl has just sent word that the no-bottle-using Ballard brewery has an opening day taproom party planned on Saturday, September 17.

Brewer Ryan Hilliard’s saison-style beer has shown up at a few Seattle bars (including Naked City Brewery and Taphouse in Greenwood). But the opening party, which lasts from noon to 9pm on the 17th, marks the first occasion for local beer drinkers to try tallboy cans of Hilliard’s Amber Ale.

The year-round amber and saison will be canned and sold at retail stores and at the brewery, and Hilliard’s will offer kegs of seasonal and limited-edition brews at its HQ. Some of those, including its Scottish Ale and Imperial IPA, will be on tap at the opening event. The saison will be on draught that day too.

Regular taproom hours will be Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 3pm to 9pm, and the plan is to increase those once things are popping along.

Hilliard’s is located at 1550 NW 49th Street in Ballard.

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Tags: Beer, Ballard, New Seattle Breweries, Hilliard's Beer

Cheap Drinks

Gin Cocktail Specials at Paratii This Thursday and Saturday

An event so nice they’re holding it twice.

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Head to the English gin happy hour at Paratti Craft Bar tonight, and then do it all over again on Saturday.

Photo: Columbia Pictures

There’s no such thing as a free drink, most of us learned that in the earliest moments of our 21st year on the planet (or earlier). But if you don’t mind some sponsored-style drinking, this comes pretty close: Head to Paratii Craft Bar in Ballard tonight, August 25 between 5 and 7pm to have a cocktail on Pernod-Ricard, parent company to Beefeater and Plymouth gins. Fine print: After the first 50 drinks, cocktails are $5 each.

If you can’t make it tonight, you’re in luck: This event will groundhog day itself on Saturday, August 27. What I mean is: Head to Paratti in Ballard on August 27 between 5 and 7pm to have a cocktail on Pernod-Ricard, parent company to Beefeater and Plymouth gins. Fine print: After the first 50 drinks, cocktails are $5 each.

Brand rep Andrew Bohrer will be on hand to answer all your burning English gin questions.

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Tags: Gin, Ballard, Free Drinks

Imbibing Agenda

Upcoming Drinking Events: Outdoor movies with Booze, New Belgium in Georgetown, Wines Under $10

Plus: An outdoor concert and a biochemistry lesson in a pub.

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This is your wake up call: King’s Hardware screens the great Point Break.

Photo: IMDB

“That’s Bodhi. They call him the Bodhisattva.”

“You’re sayin’ the FBI’s gonna pay me to learn to surf?”

“Found one of your passports to Sumatra, I missed you by about a week in Fiji. But, I knew you wouldn’t miss the fifty year storm, Bodhi.”

Kathryn Bigelow’s eternally quotable Point Break will be screened tonight, Monday, July 25, on the deck at King’s Hardware. Free popcorn, cheap wings, and drink specials are part of the package. Get there around nine.

Also tonight, nerd alert: Science on Tap (drink beer, talk about science) has invited UW biochemist Dana L. Miller to discuss genes and the environment. That starts at 7pm at the Pub at Third Place in Ravenna.

Wednesday, Full Throttle Bottles is tasting through New Belgium Brewing’s delectable brewskies. The tasting costs $3 ($2 if you bring your own reusable container). That’s from 5 to 7pm.

Outdoor film fans who always enjoy a beer should head to the South Lake Union Discovery Center this Friday, July 29 to watch Kick-Ass. The Brave Horse Tavern will set up a beer garden with brews and food. See the event website for details.

From 1 to 4pm on Saturday, July 30, the Whiskey Gaels Celtic Band will perform on the lawn at Soft Tail Spirits’ new tasting room in Woodinville. Wines from Challenger Ridge and Patit Creek will be on offer, as will Soft Tail products. Bring your own lawn chair, picnic blanket, etc.

Also on Saturday: Esquin is doing a tasting of suggested wines under $10; it lasts from 2 to 5pm. If you can’t make it, check out Sauced’s own list of under $10 recs from Esquin’s Jameson Fink.

Bonus: Here’s a full list of outdoor movies in Seattle this summer. Fair warning: they don’t all serve beer.

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Tags: Beer, Drinking Events, Ballard, Outdoor Drinking, Drinking Culture, Outdoor Movies

Imbibing Agenda

Upcoming Drinking Events: More Bastille Day, Murray Stenson Back Behind the Bar

Plus: Kirkland Uncorked, beers in Phinney Ridge, and a very cool herbal infusion class.

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Roadhouse and chicken wings come together tonight at King’s Hardware.

Happy Monday, Seattle drinkers. We’re in the ides of July and you know what that means—lots of drinking events for celebrating summertime.

Here’s what is on tap and tasty this week.

Monday, July 11 it’s movie night at King’s Hardware in Ballard. Drink specials, free popcorn, and 28 cent wings are among the attractions. Tonight’s movie is Roadhouse, the magic begins around 9pm.

Attention aspiring craft cocktailers and soda jerks: On Wednesday the 13th, Herban Wellness is offering a very cool class in herbal syrups, honeys, and infusions. The lesson includes how-tos on making your own ginger ale and root beer bases along with syrups and infusions to mix into mixed drinks. That’s $20, register on the website.

Thursday, July 14 is of course Bastille Day. Last week I rounded up promising parties but, as Allecia Vermillion over at Eater Seattle points out, I forgot the ever-important Corson Building fete. There will be live music and games and, most importantly, food—food not only from the Corson Building but also Nettletown and Walrus and the Carpenter.

Also wanted to follow up on that petanque (bocce ball) tournament at Bastille. The tourney is sponsored by Rhum JM and Rhum Clement and will happen on a swatch of lawn across the street from the restaurant. Registration is $10 per team and includes a t-shirt. Sign up starting at noon; games begin at 1pm.

Friday, July 15 through Sunday the 17th is Kirkland Uncorked: an outdoor wine tasting event along the lake’s edge in Kirkland. Very pretty. The website has the details.

The Phinney Neighborhood Association’s Summer Beer Taste (or Beervana) happens on Saturday, July 16. Non-member admission is $30 and for that you get 10 local beer samples plus snacks. The PNA website has details and a list of participating breweries.

Looking forward to next week:

On Monday, July 18 the Bookstore Bar is hosting a Canadian whiskey tasting. It’s $30 and includes snacks plus a chance to try Rich and Rare Reserve, Royal Canadian Small Batch, Forty Creek, and Caribou Crossing. Reserve by emailing bookstorebarevents@alexishotel.com, or calling the bar.

Also, don’t forget that Monday, July 18 is the benefit auction for Kristal Lana at Bluwater Bistro. One night only: bartender of bartenders Murray Stenson will take a hiatus from his hiatus to support his friend. Don’t worry about Stenson’s hurt shoulder—the occasional stint behind the stick isn’t a problem, he told me. “Besides,” said Murray, “[Toulouse Petit bar manager] Joe Jeannot will be there to do all the hard work. I’m just the pretty face.”

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Tags: Kirkland, Wine, Beer, Drinking Events, Ballard, Murray Stenson, Outdoor Drinking, Bastille Day

Drinking Holidays

Bastille Day Celebrations Around Seattle

Oh, happy francophiles. Food and drink specials abound next Thursday, July 14.

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On Thursday, Seattle honors French Independence by eating lots of frites.

Photo: Bastille via Facebook

Can you picture a bunch of Parisians standing around the Weber on the fourth of July eating Oscar Mayers and potato salad, stars and stripes decorating their plastic cups of macro-brewed Colorado lager?

Me neither. Only in America do we so zealously celebrate other nations’ independence days as if they were our own. It’s kind of cute, when you think about it.

Here in Seattle, we are particularly fond of Bastille Day, or La Fete Nationale as it’s called in France. What we do is crowd into French cafes and restaurants, which then feed us discounted food and plenty of alcoholic beverage.

This Thursday, July 14 is Bastille Day 2011. Here are places to party like it was your people that overpowered the famous prison in 1789, closing the doors on Louis the 16th and the whole Ancien Regime thing.

Bastille in Ballard is opening up its beer garden starting at 4:30pm on Thursday. Pints of Kronenbourg are $3 and there will be oysters, charcuterie, and wine for $5. I’ve also heard tell of a bocce ball tournament.

Meanwhile, in Pike Place Market, there is Cafe Campagne and its famously festive Bastille Day party. Five dollar food specials include garlic sausage sandwiches, brie or ham en baguette, and the cafe’s always-amazing fries with aioli.

Le Pichet’s party runs from 6pm to midnight on Thursday and will include live music from Le Quartet (7-9pm) and Bastille-Day stalwarts The Djangomatics (10pm-midnight). Again, Parisian street food is on the menu. That menu isn’t quite finalized but owner Jim Drohman says there will be sandwiches—pork shoulder and roasted pepper with sheep’s milk cheese among them—a pissaladiere, and sweet crepes. Sister restaurant Cafe Presse on the hill will operate as usual on Bastille Day—if you want the party, go downtown.

Luc in Madison Park has drink specials on Thursday: Lillet, pastis, and rose are $5 and wines from Vacqueyras in the southern Rhone are $6. Food specials include a honey-roasted duck breast, a salad Nicoise, and a strawberry shortcake.

Michael Mina’s Downtown sensation RN74 is currently running a Twitter promotion to get people amped on its Bastille Day celebration. If you tweet the following: “#BastilleDay party @rn74seattle on July 14 with awesome food and drink specials” you are eligible to win a free wine dinner. If you just want to go to the party, well, I hear there are going to be “awesome food and drink specials.”

Finally, ViaVita Café and Wine Bar in Bellevue is celebrating with a five-course meal—pate de lapin, coq au vin, etc. That’s $55, a $20 wine pairing is also available. Call 425-449-8917 to reserve.

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Tags: Bellevue, Downtown, Wine, Pike Place Market, Street Food, Food Events and Festivals, Ballard, Bastille Day, Downtown Seattle Restaurants

Happy Hour

One Night Only: Golden Beetle Extends Happy Hour

…and presents its summer cocktail menu.

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Bargain at the Beetle: Golden Beetle extends HH this Thursday.

Okay don’t get too excited. Golden Beetle is only extending its happy hour until 7pm on Thursday, June 16th, so you still have to get there kinda early. But typically the menu only runs from 5-6pm and then again from 10-11pm, so this is your chance to try those $3 snacks (chicken wings, herbed falafel, za’atar-enhanced French fries) in a more leisurely manner.

Maria Hines’ Market Street restaurant recently opened its outdoor patio. Weather permitting, that may be the spot to sip on one of the cocktails from the new summer menu—geeks: I’ve provided it in full below because I love you. All drinks are $10.

Now, here’s that menu:

Cypress Cooler
Vodka, Mint Shrub, Soda

Two O’Clock
Gordon’s Gin, Gran Classico, Grapefruit, Pink Peppercorn, Cucumber Dry Soda

Wandering Gethsemane
Olive Oil Infused Gin, Black Pepper Syrup, Lemon, Dill

Hammock Dazed
Voyager Gin, Arak Razzouk, Watermelon, Cilantro

Pegu Club #2
Gin, Angostura, Lime, Simple Syrup

Burn Notice
Novo Fogo Aged Cachaca, Cointreau, Pineapple, Chili

Choppy Waters
Linie Aquavit, Ramazzotti, Celery Bitters,
Old Seattle Lager

Swashbuckling Sangaree
Flor de Caña Aged Rum, Simple Syrup, Lemon,
GB Spice Bitters, Port

Kirsch Sour
Bulliet Bourbon, Kirschwasser, Cherry

The Old Razz
Ransom Old Tom Gin, Ramazzotti, Cardamom

GB Perfect Summer Manhattan
Russel’s Reserve 6yr Rye, Punt e Mes, Dolin Blanc, House Orange Bitters.

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Tags: Happy Hour, Ballard, One Night Only

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