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Drink
Drinking customs in America are as varied as the backgrounds of its many
peoples, except the legal drinking age which is 21 years old for the entire
country. With some few interesting exceptions, one will find that the
countryside bars or taverns, as distinct from restaurants, are few. However in
urban settings you will find numerous bars and nightclubs where food is either
nonexistent or rudimentary. In very large cities, of course, drinking places run
the gamut from tough, local, "shot and a beer" bars to upscale "martini bars"
where you may sample anything from the traditional martini cocktail to exotics
which might include "coffee" martinis and "chocolate" martinis. Of course this
fad may become extinct at any time. One thing that may at first startle visitors
from more conservative countries is the number of women that go to bars, both
accompanied by men, unaccompanied, and in groups. While most American beer drinkers prefer light lagers, a wide variety
of beers are available all over the States. It is not too unusual to find a bar
serving one hundred or more different kinds of beer, both bottled beer and "tap"
or "draft" beer. And "Real" beer is making a comeback. Microbreweries -- not so
micro anymore, by the way -- make every kind of beer in much smaller quantities
with traditional methods. Most microbrews are distributed regionally; bartenders
will know the local brands. Some brew pubs make their own beer in-house,
and generally only serve the house brand. Some states also have a weird thing
called 3.2 beer which is 3.2% alcohol, though many light beers aren't much more
than that anyway but they get cans proclaiming 3.2%. In Colorado some
restaurants have licenses where they can serve real beer and others only serve
3.2% beer. Utah has strict and complex laws concerning alcoholic beverages due
to its highly religious nature. Some of these laws may seem odd to foreigners
and even Americans from other states.
Wine in America is also a contrast in low-quality commercial fare
versus extremely high-quality product. California wines are some of the
best in the world, and are available on most wine lists in the country.
California wines are labeled by the grape (merlot, cabernet sauvignon,
chardonnay) rather than the regional appellation, although wine producers are
trying to give names like Napa Valley some more clout on the market. French
wines are available, especially in the East. Some Chilean and Australian wines
can also be found, but what's imported to the US is usually of lower quality.
Other countries -- including Spain and Italy -- are also increasingly making
their way on to America's wine map. Also, North Carolina wines are of excellent
quality, and are well worth the visit if you are in-state. Sparkling wines such
as Champagne and Prosecco are available by the bottle in many restaurants,
especially Italian restaurants, but are rarely served by the glass as they often
are in western Europe. You will find that the wines served in most bars and
taverns in America is of the "bulk" variety, not very good, and often not served
in proper glasses. On the other hand, "wine bars", where wine is the featured
attraction are becoming more common in urban areas and in these establishments a
wide variety of quite good American and foreign wines are available.
Hard alcohol is usually drunk with a "mixer", such as tonic water,
cola, or another type of "soda", and each combination usually has a catchy name:
for example, vodka and orange juice is called a "screwdriver", while a
combination of vodka, peach schnapps, orange juice, and cranberry juice goes by
the pretentious and portentous name of "sex on the beach". Asking for liquor
plus mixer will sometimes get you funny looks, but you'll get what you want.
Drinking hard alcohol straight is mostly done in shots -- 1 or two oz.
glasses that are often drunk in one swallow, usually after a toast. There is a
long term trend in the US toward light colored liquors, especially vodka, and
away from the more traditional darker liquors such as whiskey and bourbon that
drinkers' fathers favored.
In some places, such as Texas, many bars only have a beer and wine
license. In such places, you are allowed to bring your own hard liquor in; the
bartender will then sell you juice and sodas at very high prices, known as
setups. It can turn a $1 Coca-Cola into $2.50, but if you mostly are drinking
liquor instead of Coke it can be a money saver on a night out on the town.
Several counties in the U.S. known as "dry counties", mostly in southern
states, do not allow certain types of alcohol or any type of alcohol. This means
you should plan ahead or intend to join a private club to drink. Sunday sales
are a problem in some states for hard liquor but beer and wine are invariably
available after noon on Sunday almost everywhere. Nightclubs in America run the usual gamut of various music scenes -- from
discos with top-40 dance tunes to obscure clubs serving tiny slices of obscure
musical genres. One dance format probably unfamiliar to foreign visitors is
country music, a musical form derived from traditional folk tunes but played
with electric instruments. Country music dance clubs, or honky tonks, are
laid fairly thick in the South and West, especially in rural areas and away from
the coasts, but one or two can be found in almost any city.
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