Archive for the community Category

Local woman gives endangered pandas a bright future.

Posted in community, world, writings on January 19, 2012 by jeffbedel

A JEFFBEDEL.COM EXCLUSIVE!

After decades of the bamboo industry depleting nearly every last acre of bamboo in China for the needs of cheap crafty homemakers, and the like, the panda’s demise is almost certain without the help of scientists and volunteers to meet the growing needs of keeping America’s need for cute alive.

Despite tireless hours of practice of ‘grooming children’ at a state budget strapped school, and wearing scrubs nightly for low paying fashion shows, Milwaukeean Amanda Walker still finds time to travel to her socialist, ‘commie’, run panda farm in China to mostly smuggle bamboo from local Michael’s stores in the area back to where it belongs, in the mouths of hungry China-men, er, pandas.

“I tried to convince them (the pandas) that discarded christmas trees are a delicacy, but them bears are pretty damn smart”, Walker notes. “Turns out that anything that tinsel has come in contact with makes their eyes turn black”. It’s kinda cute, but I found that burning the trees much more favorable than transporting all those trees by a slow boat to China.

She attributes most of her financing as ‘confidential’, though it’s rumored that she made out big before the Nigerian bank account bubble burst. “The economy is really bad out there” she claims “but I’ll keep the fire burning here and carry a big bamboo stick!”

Currently the panda farm has three young pandas (give or take a screw) that has playground equipment and a deal with several internet stock photo sites for the desktop wallpaper industry to assure it’s financing.

Moving on/back

Posted in beer, biking, community, Just me, local business, Packers on November 8, 2011 by jeffbedel

Awhile back I made it known about my decision to move to Cincinnati in the near future and that I would blog about it. After mulling this decision over a month the thing I’ve thought about most is what I’m going to miss and NOT going to miss about my home for over 4 years, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The lists will be an edit in progress, but for the moment it’s more about the motivation in general.

When the opportunity to arose to move to Milwaukee it seemed a bit daunting. I had moved several times, but had always lived in the confines of my home for 34 years of Indiana. Not being married, having kids, or having a house I felt like now would be a good time to spread my wings and leave my comfort zone even though 6 hours away doesn’t seem that big to most. Still it was a big deal, and my siblings/family even reacted to have a going away party before I left. We went to a park in Indy, had pizza and snacks, and played a few games. You see, the rest of my siblings are all just minutes away from where we grew up, so it was quite radical for my family. That’s me, Mr. Radical.

And my time in Milwaukee was pretty radical. It seemed at first like an indefinite business trip. Instead of having a few days/weeks/months to see all the sights and get the feel for the city I had an indefinite amount of time. This was especially so at first because I made several trips back to Indiana/polis when I first moved. After one of those trips it all kinda hit me that I was in this for the long haul and I had to forge some relationships.

Did I ever.

It was slow at first, but then suddenly because of Twitter I didn’t have to fill holes on my calendar anymore because I was doing something all the time. In short I kinda developed and felt like a minor celebrity which of course brings out the worst in someone who can’t quite handle that. I had been there before, and the next thing I knew I had to do what I do best; withdraw. The only thing I really had left was my trivia show and after losing my job it became everything to me. My circle was much smaller, but it was nice to able to have the time and passion to dump into one thing. When all of the right pieces came together this show became a sell-out for several weeks until school schedules changed. This is the only time in my week I have structure, and that I see the same faces and a few of those I consider my friends.

But it’s not enough.

There is beauty and heart here, but also divisive politics to the point they are life severing. Perhaps it’s not only here, but if there is a trend I saw it and lived it while it began and evolved upon this past cold Wisconsin winter. Fortunately there is heart, passion, and will to beat back the thrones of evil here, and hope those I’ve seen fight and affected by the agenda win back Wisconsin. I’ll likely get to vote and see the outcome while I’m still here, but even though I felt like I adopted Wisconsin this past winter there is another thing I mentioned before that has bigger pull. My family.

I have nieces and nephews growing like weeds, parents not getting any younger, and siblings I feel disconnected from. One of the difficulties of living “far” away is trying make a trip home worth it. With travel, even when I fly I practically lose two days so even a 4 day weekend isn’t worth my cost and effort to visit. So I take off 5+ days away from work which always put pressure on a job where you’re indispensable. I think that was a factor in my demise at my last job. So upon looking for another permanent full-time job this factor weighed in and made me realize it’d be hard to obtain a job with that much flexibility in this market (or a job at all, damn!). Therefore I need to look for a job that is closer to “home”. My need and lifestyle requires a big city so my options near my parents (where I can take a day trip to visit my family) are Indianapolis and Cincinnati. I lived in Indianapolis for about 5 years and really it didn’t pan out and it doesn’t offer many of the things I’ve become accustomed to here in Milwaukee. Even though Cincinnati may lack many of those things as well, it’s a new and fresh place with lots of familiarity to me. Actually when I was watching the Brewers on TV playing in Cincinnati and saw I fan sitting in the stands with a bengal striped chicken hat on after attending Oktoberfest it sealed my decision.

My last trip home for my parents 41st anniversary party I made the announcement about my pending move and on my way back to Milwaukee I had that feeling of unrest of having to return to Milwaukee and how much I hated these rides back and forth. I want that feeling to be over. I want the convenience again of being near the most important thing to me.

I’d prefer to move at the end of the year, but logistically it’s likely not possible till May. This works well as I expect to be working as a tax preparer this season so I should have plenty of hours and bonuses to make the move easy come May and give me a cushion to find the beginning/path of my next and hopefully final home. I feel this strongly about Cincinnati right now.

Again though, there is a lot more I’m going to miss about Milwaukee than what I’m not, but it’ll be fun to list those things. I also need to list the things I want to do either for the first time or AGAIN before I leave. Chances are I’ll be back to visit at least once a year, but ya never know. So here are those list that rattle upon my brain everyday. Thanks for reading….

THINGS I’M GOING TO MISS ABOUT MILWAUKEE/WISCONSIN

- My trivia show, and Becky at Vintage

- Tour of America’s Dairyland

- Glendale’s “authentic” Oktoberfest

- Koppa’s chili & brats

- The awe I still get every time I ride by Lake Michigan

- Bread, bacon, eggs, butter, milk, etc. made in Wisconsin

- Cooler by the lake

- Mr. Anthony Leto /aka/ my barber at http://razorbayview.com/

- Rabid Packers fans

- Unrivaled bike trails

- Glorioso’s

- (more to come)

THINGS I WANT TO DO OR DO AGAIN BEFORE LEAVING

- Visit the Kettle Moraine ( I can’t be picky about the season now)

- Cafe Centro (even though it’s in Riverwest)

- Go to Madison, specifically to have a Walleye w/egg sandwich at The Old Fashioned again.

- Visit the Roman Coin

- Mader’s, Benji’s, Jake’s…

- (mind is blanking..more to come)

THINGS I WON’T MISS ABOUT MILWAUKEE/WISCONSIN

- Daily vomit on Farwell Avenue

- Bar dice

- Early MCTS buses

- Riverwest

- Everything Miller (see below)

- (Enter ethnicity) Fest (change the flag + Miller) = every damn festival (see above)

- “I drink PBR and have a fixie” so I can disregard traffic laws/safety folk. (I really hope not, but expect this contingent is in Cincy too).

- Miller Park (I see a trend here)

- The light at Water & Pleasant. It is never in my favor no matter which direction I’m coming from!

- The HORRIBLE CBS 58 jingles. Somebody needs fired.

- (this list is easier than I had expected, more to come…….)

My top 10 things that I love about Milwaukee!!

Posted in beer, biking, cheese, community, local business, music, Packers on October 1, 2010 by jeffbedel

I’ve lived in Milwaukee for 3 years, and I still love it! This is the short list of what makes this city so great to me. Minus some editing I’m here to proclaim my love for this great city.

10- Locally owned businesses

There are so many here and they are well supported. I moved here from a chain city and the local businesses were far and few in between and left to struggle and usually die. Granted, that still holds true in Milwaukee, but sometimes I think it’s because the level of competition and expectation of a grand product/s and service is high. A few things that come to mind is the small bakeries like Peter Sciortino’s, Canfora, and Cranky Al’s (no average white bread here), the craft breweries (Lakefront, Milwaukee Brewing Co), and the local coffee businesses (Alterra, Anodyne, Stone Creek) just to name a few. I feel the city of Milwaukee appreciates the days of quality over quantity still, and I believe that is the cornerstone of the rest of this list.

9- MCTS

My belief to a happier life has been the choice of being car free. I’ve been that way for over 6 years, and it wouldn’t be possible in Milwaukee without the value of “the bus” provided by the Milwaukee County Transit System. Being car free gives me a ton of disposable income allowing me to support the businesses I patronize everyday. Though I don’t ride the bus daily (mostly in the winter) it gives me the piece of mind given inclement weather or a breakdown of my bike; its vast and frequent number of lines of service with bike racks will get me home dry or back to the shop for a repair at Cory’s. Let’s hope funding continues, and the chipping away of an A+ system doesn’t wreck it.

8- Green Bay Packers

The first Super Bowl I remember watching was Super bowl XVI between the 49ers and Bengals. With growing up just the road from Cincinnati it was the first time I really relished what football was all about and I became a fan from that point. I watched the Bengals be a powerhouse through the 80′s and then just take a dive for the cellar for nearly 20 years. I ended up being stuck with being split Colts/Bengals fan for a long while, and could never get over over how the Colts fans were so fair weather and “fashionable”. The buzz in Indy when they won it didn’t even feel right.

I’ve always been a closet Packers fan and didn’t even think much about it when I moved here. Low and behold my first night living in Milwaukee the Pack had a Monday night game in Denver. I ended up catching the 4th quarter and a game winning overtime throw by Favre. The fans were rabid. I was a fan by the time I laid my head to sleep my first night here.

They should be ranked higher on my list, but the important thing is that if I ever left Wisconsin I can still find a way to follow them in another major city, or via satellite, so I guess it’s their fans who ranks #8 on my list.

7- Heritage/history

I think the reason why small towns are treasured are because of the tight knit history of the town and how its people have kept traditions and trades important. Milwaukee basically is a huge cultural merger of small towns, er neighborhoods, of Irish, Italians, Polish, Germans, and more that have kept their traditions alive to keep this city as a whole treasured. Together we find ourselves celebrating those traditions at the many festivals (please note I don’t count the ones on the Summerfest grounds), shops, and restaurants that fill those nooks and crannies on the corners off the beaten paths of Milwaukee. Such great history and quality foods here that makes me salivate for more.

6- The parks/lake

I think about this post every time I bike home from Bay View/ Walker’s Point/Third Ward and roll past between the Milwaukee Art Museum and the lake harbor. The skyline shines down and the moon/lights glisten off the rustling waves with that glorious piece of landmark architecture next to me. It can’t be described in words, but alas it’s breathtaking each and every time. I feel like I leave the city without having to go more than a few blocks and I’m surrounded by lush forest, and along many bike paths I can enjoy this all the way out of the metro area. The people who have designed and groomed this city have done an amazing job, and for the Midwest, you can’t make it much better by having a beautiful coastline to go along with it. When I bring my family up I have the hardest time trying to tie together why I love this city so much, but if I could get them on a bike for a couple of hours; I think they would have a much better understanding.

5- 88 Nine

I brought “my radio station” with me when I moved here three years ago. Technology allowed me to continue to listen to one of the most unique radio stations in the country that was practically born in my backyard. WOXY.com which was based out of Oxford, OH for the longest time was one of the first terresttial stations to go online. They played real radio, great music, and had a real community backing it. Unfortunately it withered away, and I was left to some serious issues in how to replace it.

I checked out 88 Nine, Radio Milwaukee a few times. I liked things about it, but overall it didn’t come close to replacing my old friend, WOXY. After dabbling with some other options I got reacquainted, and at some point we really hit it off. Happiness for me is trusting someone to put the light on the most diverse and best music there is to offer, and I trust them every single day. I’m much happier when my face is being rocked off by Marcus, Jordon, Rachel Rose, Tarik, and all of the rest off those hard working guys and gals, and community supporters out there that make it possible.

With doing a trivia show I have the utmost confidence now that the music I’m delivering is the best. I have 88 Nine. I have happy.

4- Romans’ Pub

It’s not always the biggest selection in town that gets the props, it’s who gives you the best beer and experience in the same place. When I first heard and checked out what Romans’ was all about I was skeptical. It took me 6 months to finally figure out it was worth my time to check out this south side dive bar looking place to get good beer. It was a little far, but I had to at least take a peak. On a cold December day a couple years ago I took the bus down and to my surprise I walked into a busy crowd. I made my way through the patrons to get my first beer, and had to sit with some strangers. It turns out I walked in on the Christmas party! There are generally a more than a few people who sniff these parties out to grab some free grub, drink some cokes, and check out. So, with being a new face they assumed I was a party crasher. I made some new friends that night and met my most favorite bartender/owner in Milwaukee, Mike Romans.

Fortunately each visit is a little out of my way so it’s more appreciated. Every time I leave trying a new fresh beer, and a great story or two. You feel a history at Romans’. They have a great deck. Didn’t I mention he has 31 beers on tap. Don’t order the Miller Lite. “Ball wash!!”. That is why I love this place.

3475 Kinninkinnic Ave., MKE WI

3- The community

When I think about this item I think back to one evening in particular at the Milwaukee Art Museum. MAM After Dark is a once a month gathering at the Art Museum that usually has a local event/exhibit tied with their feature exhibit. Besides the pleasure of having several of my good friends there, I was just in awe of the crowd that came out. Every demographic was represented, the energy was electric, the masses, the music, the dancing – I feel like I was in a different world, not just down the street. I believe I posted on Twitter that this was just an average night in Milwaukee. I go art nights in the Third Ward and I leave early because of a good problem, it’s too crowded. The charitable support among the community I know is strong. The outreach of this community saves entire families directly. This community is not just in my circle, but seemingly is ingrained in the fabric of this city.

For every negative this city has, there are at least another 12 positives to cancel it out.

2- Cory the Bike Fixer

I can’t say enough about this bike shop. When I moved from Indianapolis one thing I was going to miss the most was my bike mechanic, but in the end I traded a bike mechanic for a dream team. I ventured into Cory’s a few months after I moved here I think after seeing their ad on a divider at Pick ‘N Save that still exist actually. The biggest selling point at Cory’s is the two years free service with a purchase of a new bike. This is unheard of in the industry, and is perfect for me since I’m mechanically declined. I bought my first bike there in February 2008 and semi-retired it 5,000 miles later. Since then I have purchased 3 more bikes putting a total of over 10,000 miles of well maintained service to the road.

Cory pretty much has added one employee for every year of being open 14 years ago, and they all take Cory’s laid back but professional approach to making cycling a recreational and fun lifestyle/hobby/exercise (how ever you want to slice it).

Group rides and frequent parties at Von Trier makes being a customer at Cory’s a benefit and a friend to his excellent team of sales and service. I realize that my crazy biking goals could and would never be possible without them and leaving Milwaukee would likely end my biking days. I’m that confident and dependent on them. They simply rock Milwaukee.

Thanks Cory, Ian, Jared, the Andy’s, John, JD, Devon, Stephanie, and all the rest who have kept me rolling.

1- So much to do!

This one doesn’t take much explaining, and I’ve already written enough above. It’s not too often I leave Milwaukee to visit family, but every time I do I seem to miss a ton of events. It’s also quite often even on weeknights that I have a multitude of choices of things to do. It took a bit to make the connections to make this possible. I remember a time where I actually kept a calendar of events every time something popped up so I wouldn’t forget because I was bored. Now, I just go with the flow. I realize every time I do something I’m missing something else. A good problem to have I say. This is why I love Milwaukee. The end.

Bike Fed (10)

Posted in biking, community with tags , , , , on December 11, 2009 by jeffbedel

I finally had an incentive to go check out the Bike Fed when they had a party at the Lakefront Brewery early this spring.  I figured I could spend $25 for a membership that included food, beer, and like minded cyclists.  I met some great people that night and realized more about the power that we had to make Milwaukee and Wisconsin a better place to bike.

One of the best events of the year was bike-to-work week.  Each day stations throughout the city were supplied with free coffee, pastries, and one day you could even ride in with the Mayor.  Also after work parties were held and was finished off with a bike-in-movie and the Miller Lite Ride for the Arts.

The Bike Fed’s lobbying work with legislators has been a great force and gives me one of the things Milwaukee was lacking on the buses, bike racks.  For me those are my tow truck. More lanes, trails, and most importantly safety and awareness is a benefit to us all.

The National (4)

Posted in beer, community, local business, new places, wine with tags , , , , , on December 5, 2009 by jeffbedel

Sometimes there is so much more than just being a local business.  Creating a cornerstone to make the neighborhood you live in a better place is another.  Michael Diedrick decided to do just that by opening The National off the beaten path in Walkers Point.  With concerns about crime in the area he felt that creating a place to build foot traffic and visibility in the area would improve his own and surrounding neighbors quality of life.

I first caught wind of The National last year when while meeting with some friends who support sustainability.  Primarily a breakfast and lunch destination, the cafe has large comfortable booths and a deli case for a counter that tempts you with the sandwiches and desserts along with a full menu board that will only leave you with a difficult decision of what to get.

For breakfast there are many pastry items to choose from along with something I’ll doubt to soon forget, the French Toastwich.  Can’t decide between having french toast or some ham for breakfast, heck, why not both?  The sandwich is just that, a two slices of french toast with ham and pecan cream cheese pressed together with a side of syrup.  To wash it down they have two coffee choices, one local from Anodyne, and Chicago’s Metropolis which I will go out of my way just to get for a pick me up before a bike ride.

They spent the past several months expanding their hours and menu choices for dinner usually posting a special entrée for each evening.  To accommodate  the dinner crowd locally and organically produced beers were added along with some select wines. Presentation and service on top of a large meal made this place a hit for me.  I recently brought the Twitter community out for a trial and we had a great turnout and one on one experience with Michael as our server and chef.  He even made us Twitter Bird Brownies for dessert.  How sweet, really. :-)

Everything about The National is based on design from the walls to carefully thought out and prepared dishes.  It’s been designed for you to stop in too.

839 W. National Ave, Milwaukee (9th & National)

Blatz Liquor (3)

Posted in beer, community, local business, wine with tags , , , , , , on December 5, 2009 by jeffbedel

This is the most overdue blog post and sorta tribute to what has been one of the most important additions to my life in Milwaukee.  Are you kidding me a liquor store?  No, because if you do it right, a business/owner can connect and market well enough to secure your loyalty, build friendships, increase your knowledge, and well, get you drunk too.

My first stop was actually late in 2008 when I got my curiosity up about the little liquor store at the Blatz.  Like everyone’s first time I had a hard time finding it, and wasn’t expecting a selection to meet “my taste’s”.  A year later, it’s a weekly (or more) stop to see just Joe Woelfle (the owner), Adam, or Pete and a multitude of old and new friends that share the love of craft beer, wine, etc.  Also the selection was good the first time, and has evolved into the best place downtown to get even the rarest of libations.  Joe will order it if possible, and keeps the prices at a minimum too.

Blatz Liquor is home to the “Blatz Cave” where part of the old brewery’s production existed.  You can walk into a cream city brick cooler filled with ice cold beer ready for your party at home.

Joe has been the master of marketing and has used unconventional tools to bring in and keep customers.  I knew Joe long before Twitter and has had and continued to have tasting nearly every Thursday of the month where you can sample an array of wines, liquors, or seasonal or brands of beers.  On Twitter, Joe has used his personality, not his business so much to connect with his massive following.  He’s your good friend , jerk friend, funny friend, stupid friend, smart friend, but most importantly your alcohol enabling good times friend that you can always count on.

Considering I have a local store within a block of home with a pretty awesome selection of craft beer, and I still opt to always go 4 miles round trip out of my way (by bike) to go to Blatz Liquor is my thank you.  Building sales into loyalty, loyalty into friends, and friends into a community has what has made Blatz Liquor the success and destination its become today.

Stop on in! Tell ‘em @jeffmke sent ya!

1121 N Broadway, Milwaukee (between Highland & Juneau in the Blatz Condos)

Lemon Lounge (2)

Posted in community, local business, new places, wine with tags , , , , on December 3, 2009 by jeffbedel

[Last winter/spring I went here a lot, basically too much. I've made one visit in the past 6 months. I still like it, but it's better with company. More later.]

Oh lemon lounge.  What a cozy little place. I first bumped into you when I went to check out Exotic Milwaukee and it wasn’t quite “open” yet so I got a drink next door and found this wonderful establishment.

The beers were not the reason I went.  It was Michael and Clair that listened to my sob stories, my excitements, my  letdowns, my drunken tirades, my sob stories, repeat. The stories told, the music shared, the Forrest Gump-esque lives if the sequel spanned recent decades came alive there.

I made an intimate spot into a private watering hole for myself and wanted to bring something more intimate back to it.  Once I did a couple times, it wasn’t mine anymore.  The place is buried in my heart with the life I lived in those cold months of 2009. When I resurrect in 2010 I hope I can share stories with the owner, a SAG for you film buffs, the glory of those months, but with the right company; in the love nest, with wine. :-)

2846 N Oakland Ave., Milwaukee

Dear Me,

Posted in beer, community, Just me, local business, new places, world, writings with tags , , , , , , , on December 30, 2008 by jeffbedel

I currently sit in the Riverwest neighborhood of Milwaukee on a vacation day I had to take or I’d forfeit at the end of this year, 2008.  There are two opportunities here at the Art Bar at the corner of Burleigh & Fratney: one, a two for one special that I will definitely be partaking of shortly, and second; a magnetic board of envelopes and letters that you can personally fill out and the bar will mail to you one year from now.  Each letter is started with “Dear Me,”.  I came here to write but have been sipping on a latte and surfing the web instead but I decided to get a bit nostalgic about my year and write my letter to myself here instead.

Dear Me, a year ago you were still that guy that you introduced yourself as “I just moved to Milwaukee” and it seemed to have a lot of short term clout.  Well one year later you can’t use that line anymore but you have learned more about your city than those who have lived here their entire lives.  You can navigate, suggest, and appreciate what a unique and beautiful city you live in.  You have experienced one of if not the worst winters in Wisconsin history, and have and not only adjusted but embraced it as well.  Living on the east side may be the best side and you’re ever so grateful still that you don’t have a car.  You can walk, bus, and bike this city with ease and it certainly is better than having to worry about parking rules and the nazi’s that patrol them whilst the snow worsens the issue by at least 10 fold.

It hasn’t been easy as some early friendships took some unexpected turns for the worse but by time the spring came you started to find your way and your comfort zones.  In an election year of historic proportions you most importantly found a group that supported your ideals and a man who would be elected President, Barack Obama.  It was a surreal and like living in another country when people celebrated in the streets of Milwaukee the night of his election.

Through the forementioned group you found community even if it wasn’t in your neighborhood.  Bay View has been your destination on a number of occassions for food, beer, coffee, haircuts, theatre, music, and even a bike pub crawl.  You can even plunge your bike into Lake Michigan on Thursday if you feel so inclined.  Your friend and co-host in liberalllllism, Jason, resides there as well, not in the lake of course.

Love has never been kind and is still the elusive trump card in this thing called life.  You had your brushes with it and had your imagination wounded with it too.  Turning 35 and having a deja vu milestone breakdown nearly put you down for the count again but you rebounded and took your shots, and still, basketball’s not your sport.

Postponing photography indefinitely is still pretty definite.  You only attended a few live music shows and never took a picture.  You decided that the thing that led you to photography in the first place is what you are tinkering with again now, writing, even if the blogs are cheesy and nobody is reading these.

Work has been a successful struggle.  You still don’t feel like you’ve hit your stride but management keeps telling you how well you are doing and your paycheck keeps getting bigger while the unfortunate part is that most of it has went to your waistline.  Hello 2009, we have to get to work on that.  You did by a trainer to help you with that, but hopefully after the new year you’ll hit your stride with that.

(Goes and gets another beer while having a deja vu moment)

Most recently your biggest problem has been your relationship with the family. The holidays seem to enhance the severity of it but taking a trip home to to improve or makeup for living far away seems pointless.  You were home for a week for Thanksgiving and 4 days for Christmas and you hardly talked to or caught up with your siblings to no fault of your own.  You traveled a long way and time with them was cut very short.  To top it off is those who wish at the end we had more time as my trip is over.  How much more time do you need?  There are two things you cannot change, one, you cannot go back and live in a such a small, rural, and conservative community.  Living in Indianapolis didnt make it any better so don’t even suggest that (you still f’n hate that city anyhow).  Second, you have accepted that your siblings having kids changes the whole spectrum and they changed that without you.  No more staying up late playing games and drinking, etc.  Your family has a clock now and when it approaches lets say 10pm the lights need to go out, it’s BST, bedroom standard time.  Maybe you need to grow up?  Maybe that just enforces that reason that kids are not in your future?  Maybe you’re happy?  Maybe not?

You thought up until recently you hated Christmas, and probably so more now than ever.  It’s strange the people who are religious that make this holiday a joke, not the ones who shun it.  They’ve made a mockery of their own holiday and somehow blame those outside of themselves for commercialism and consumerism.  You spent more this year on the holiday in recent history and yet you’re the bah-humbug type.  You spent about $300 this year (about $200 than last year) and your siblings couldn’t spend much more than 6 hours spilling over all the presents they received instead of you.  You enjoyed two Christmas plays at two independent Milwaukee theaters this past month and you enjoyed that more than the nightmare trip, gift opening, and fighting the flu that was no more than a personal obligation.

Dear me, not next year.  Please read this before you book a trip home next year.

I wonder if the Art Bar has a printer?!

Romans’ Pub

Posted in beer, community, local business, new places with tags , , , , on December 24, 2008 by jeffbedel

Milwaukee is the brewing Capitol of the world supposedly but unfortunately the only beer most identify the city with is Miller. There are though several quality microbreweries and brew pubs here which keeps me more than happy here.

Another thing of note about Milwaukee is being the home of the corner bar. Most usually carry a good selection of beers even if it’s the old standby, New Glarus’ Spotted Cow. I have run across a few select bars that have a passion for serving hard to find and delicious beers. One is the Sugar Maple which hosts my favorite event, Drinking Liberally, and my newest find Romans’ Pub.

Down on KK bordering St Francis (3475 S KK) in Bay View is a small easy to miss pub that the only thing the owner, Mike Romans, is more passionate about than beer is his loyal customers.

I first learned about the Pub a few months ago and it was on my to do list for way too long. My reward though was just so happened to drop in on the 30th anniversary/Christmas party a few weeks ago. Not only did I get to indulge in a Bell’s Christmas Ale from the beer engine among others but a full blown spread of food that included brats, BBQ chicken, pulled pork, and the Jambalya which was made by my new friend, Melva. Santa (AKA Mike) made an appearance just as I was leaving. I heard he was a hit (the floor).

I did make it back for another round and expect to make it a frequent stop especially to warm my bones on these cold Wisconsin winters.

The list almost changes daily and you can even see it change before your eyes at romanspub.com/beersel.htm

See you there!

Cory the Bike Fixer

Posted in community, local business, new places with tags , , , on December 23, 2008 by jeffbedel

Upon leaving Indianapolis, one thing I was really sad to leave behind was my bike mechanic. Our relationship had been short but the care and expertise to his customers was more about being a friend and a integral part of the community first.

Soon after moving to Milwaukee I had some time for a much needed consultation into purchasing a new bike. Cory’s has been the first and only place I’ve been since for all of my cycling needs. The selection and knowledge of the sales team made it easy and the 2 year service plan makes it a no excuse way to keep your bike in top shape. The service team keeps the lingo simple and doesn’t make you feel like a dummy if you’re not a seasoned veteran like me.

My last visit was to buy a trainer so I could keep on spinning through the harsh Wisconsin winter. They gave me a great deal and I even settled in to eat my lunch with one of the techs.

Cory’s is located on the east side at 2410 N Murray and have huge deals during the winter months.

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