Saturday, January 30, 2010

FRANK ROBERT CARROLL JR. 1956-2010

Friends of Frank Carroll gathered at The Parrot this morning to raise a glass and join in spirit with his family's memorial service  being held at the same hour in New Jersey.
The gathering which was nearly spontaneous, was extremely well attended and a testament to the good will and love that Frank constantly displayed in life. We apologize to anyone who did not hear about it in time to attend and we understand there will be a more formal service in the near future
.
Frank, God Bless You, we love you and travel well.



















Friday, January 29, 2010

Kevin opens for Locos por Juana at The Green Parrot friday Soundcheck

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Locos por Juana presents xperimento at The Green Parrot bar in Key West

This is just a sample of what locos por juana will be doing all weekend at The Parrot

Chambeyronia macrocarpa

The aptly named flame-thrower or red spear palm did it's thing this morning.



Wednesday, January 27, 2010

The New Old Way to Tote Your Beer

Growlers — 64-ounce glass vessels that look like a moonshine jug — have become the beer accessory of the moment. And the jugs, filled at taps in bars and stores, are not just the toys of the bearded, flannel-shirt, beer-geek set.


Liz Thorpe, vice president of Murray’s Cheese, said she had two to four growlers at home at any given time. “Good beer makes everything more special,” Ms. Thorpe said while stocking up for a recent National Football League playoff game. “I like me some football, but I don’t like me some Coors Light. So I’m ensuring I will be happy this afternoon.”

Here's the entire article from this morning's New York Times
Todd Heisler/The New York Times

BY midafternoon on a recent Saturday, Bierkraft, the beer emporium and grocery on Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, Brooklyn, was half-filled with customers, many of them parents with babies or toddlers in tow. They were browsing the more than 1,000 varieties of bottled beer or surveying the listing of selections available on the 13 taps and 3 cask lines. Some carried a good-sized satchel.

They drink it there or take it out. Offerings change daily.

At the Whole Foods on Houston Street, growlers make up half the beer store’s business.
Diaper bag? Gym clothes?
No. It was a tote for their growlers.

Growlers — 64-ounce glass vessels that look like a moonshine jug — have become the beer accessory of the moment. And the jugs, filled at taps in bars and stores, are not just the toys of the bearded, flannel-shirt, beer-geek set.

“In the beginning we tried to figure out, ‘Who’s going to be our market?’ ” said Ben Granger, 32, an owner of Bierkraft, which began filling growlers in spring 2006. “We thought, mullet-heads and beer-bellied dudes. But the first run was ladies with strollers. They will tell you they’re buying them for their husbands. Three weeks later, they’ve got two. One’s his and one’s hers. The next one that caught me by surprise was dads coming in with their kids. Then there’s the beer crowd who’ll rush in to get on this or that before it’s gone. There’s no age limit.”

Michael Endelman, a journalist at Rolling Stone, is one of those growler-loving fathers. “I don’t go to bars too much anymore,” he said, gesturing to his baby daughter Mimi. “It just seems like a great way to be a beer geek without going out.”

Some customers appreciate growlers for reasons of economy (refills range from $8 to $20 or more) or ecology. And as more craft brewers choose not to bottle their products, many fans like the idea of getting fresh beer that until recently was sold only in specialized bars.

Liz Thorpe, vice president of Murray’s Cheese, said she had two to four growlers at home at any given time. “Good beer makes everything more special,” Ms. Thorpe said while stocking up for a recent National Football League playoff game. “I like me some football, but I don’t like me some Coors Light. So I’m ensuring I will be happy this afternoon.” Barely a week has passed in recent months without some bar or beer store in New York City trumpeting the arrival of growlers, which are typically embossed with the name of their business. Even the Gristedes grocery chain has gotten in on the act; the University Place store in Manhattan began carrying them in November.

Offerings can change daily, even hourly.


Some new growler users believe they’re getting in on the latest thing, but beer lovers know better.

“Growlers have been around since Christ was a child,” Mr. Granger said. “We’re not doing anything new.”

In the late 19th century and the early 20th century, both The New York Times and The Brooklyn Eagle regularly published contentious stories about the containers, which then took the form of small galvanized pails. The articles cataloged the complaints of saloon keepers, who thought growlers cut into their profit, and those of temperance groups, who hoped to curb home drinking.

“Rushing the growler,” connoting children hustling pails of beer for adults from bar to table, was a common expression. The curious name is thought to be inspired by the rumbling noise escaping carbon dioxide made as the beer sloshed about in the pail.

In more modern times, growlers could be found at brew pubs like Heartland Brewery, which has served beer to go since opening in 1995. The jugs — which, according to the New York State Liquor Authority, have always been legal at both retail outlets and bars — have proliferated lately, said Heartland’s founder, Jon Bloostein, because there are more interesting beers to go in them.

“People’s palates have become more sophisticated,” Mr. Bloostein said. “Look at the number of beer bars in Manhattan, and especially Brooklyn. And the offerings at regular bars are leaning toward craft beers.”

The Whole Foods beer store on Houston Street began its program in 2007. The chain’s first to carry the vessels, it has done as much as any store to introduce New Yorkers to growler culture. The manager, Jeff Wallace, said he saw other reasons for the trend.

“It’s basically a really good way to promote recycling, because you bring back your jug,” Mr. Wallace said. “And it’s a cheap and affordable way to get fresh draft beer.” He said growlers made up half the beer store’s business. Whole Foods stores in TriBeCa and on the Upper West Side also offer beer for growlers.

That much-vaunted freshness, however, depends on how the bottle is filled.



“There’s always the possibility that someone may not fill the growler properly,” said Shane Welch, founder of Sixpoint Craft Ales brewery in Brooklyn, which sells its products in stores in growler form. Most stores and bars run the beer straight from the tap to the bottle. “If you don’t fill it to the top, if you don’t purge the air out of there, when you close the container it will be stale beer,” Mr. Welch said. “You probably have to drink it that night.”

Mr. Granger, who says growlers constitute a large percentage of his sales, has tried to avoid that possibility. He has a system in which bottles are filled under pressure through a plastic hose to keep out oxygen. Filled that way, he said, they could stay fresh for months unopened, and three to five days when opened.


“Ergo, no flat beer,” he said. “No oxygen in the bottle, no foaming beer, no waste."

No bar tab, either.

Brew by the Jug

Here are places in New York for growler lovers:

AMERICAN BEER DISTRIBUTING COMPANY 256 Court Street (Kane Street). Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, (718) 875-0226, americanbeerbuzz.com.

BIERKRAFT 191 Fifth Avenue (Berkeley Place), Park Slope, Brooklyn, (718) 230-7600, bierkraft.com.

BROOKLYN BEER & SODA 648 Washington Avenue (Dean Street), Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, (718) 622-8800.

THE BRAZEN HEAD 228 Atlantic Avenue (Court Street), Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, (718) 488-0430, brazenheadbrooklyn.com.

THE GINGER MAN 11 East 36th Street, Midtown, (212) 532-3740, gingerman-ny.com.

RATTLE ‘N’ HUM 14 East 33rd Street, Midtown, (212) 481-1586, rattlenhumbarnyc.com.

WHOLE FOODS 95 East Houston Street (The Bowery), (212) 420-1320, wholefoodsmarket.com/stores/bowery/beerroom.php.


Sunday, January 24, 2010

Damon Fowler covers Merle Haggard's "Swinging Doors" The Green Parrot Bar in Key Westa

Saturday, January 23, 2010

How Parrot Patrons Can Contribute to the Haitian Relief Effort


Here's our Kenny as he prepares yet another cocktail with Barbancourt Rum.
 It was Kenny's idea to figure a way to use the Haitian-produced rum to generate funds for the Haitian relief effort so we decided, simply enough, that  the proceeds for every Barbancourt we pour will become  a donation to Paul Farmer's Partners in Health.

Stepping up to the bar and ordering a Barbancourt shouldn't be too much of a hard sell for Parrot patrons. 
Double distilled, and using a process similar to that used to produce cognac, Barbancourt rums are regarded as some of the finest in the world.

 Stock Island Boy signals his approval to both the concept and the cocktail. 
Kenny's got one waiting for you.

And also, BUY ART, SAVE LIVES.
  It's still no too late to buy a raffle ticket to win a major piece of art from one of eight artists at The Lucky Street Gallery, including john Martini and Roberta Marks, who are donating major pieces to aid the relief effort. The drawing will be held tonight (Sunday, Jan. 24th) at 9 PM at the Studios of Key West and tickets can be purchased at,  among other places,  The Green Parrot or The Lucky Street Gallery.

Damon Fowler at The Green Parrot Bar in Key West part1

Damon Fowler at The Green Parrot Bar in Key West part2

Damon Fowler at The Green Parrot Bar in Key West part2

Friday, January 22, 2010

Damon Fowler Does Friday Soundcheck


The Spam Allstars at The Green Parrot in Key West

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Sugar Shack - Damon Fowler Group

This weekend at The Green Parrot. Shows at 5:30 and 10 PM Friday and Saturday.

Sugar Shack - Damon Fowler Group

This weekend at The Green Parrot. Shows at 5:30 and 10 PM Friday and Saturday.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Dancing scarlet macaw at The Green Parrot Bar

Monday, January 18, 2010

The Spam Allstars




Friday, January 15, 2010

The Blue Vipers of Brookyln





Monday, January 11, 2010

Toubab Krewe

Friday, January 08, 2010

EOTO

EOTO




Wednesday, January 06, 2010

If You Ever Want to See Your Weed Again...


Marathon - Monroe County Sheriff’s Office Special Investigations detectives employed an unusual tactic to arrest a suspect who was growing marijuana. They left a note in place of the plants asking him to call; in return for cash they offered him his plants back.

“Thanks for the grow! You want them back? Call for the price…we’ll talk,” the note read, with a phone number.

The plants were found after a tip from a citizen that marijuana plants were growing on a wooded lot off of Coco Plum Drive in Marathon. When detectives arrived, they found six large plants and confiscated them as evidence, leaving the note in their place. About ten minutes later, 48 year old Steven Alan Locasio called the number asking what he would have to do to get the plants back. He offered $200 for the safe return of the plants, which detectives agreed to.

They loaded up the plants and met Locasio at the corner of Coco Plum Drive and Avenue H. He handed over the cash and he was arrested in return.

A search warrant was obtained for Locasio’s apartment at 140 Coco Plum Drive, #2. The search turned up 20 more marijuana plants, four pounds of freshly harvested marijuana and several 80 milligram Oxycontin pills. They also seized $1,380 in cash – most likely proceeds from drug sales.

Steven Locasio and his wife, 50 year old Christine Locasio, were both charged with cultivation of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and sale of marijuana. They were booked into jail.


Our old friend Brita, pictured here on her Green Parrot Tradesman's Pass writes on Facebook:

"I was feeling lonely so I went down to the airport and got scanned and padded down...was a nice date but no dinner, nice uniform.

yeah it's good dating spot - for the first time in a longtime my date asked me questiions about my life, where I grew up, my family, my plans, if I owned firearms...it made me feel like for once he was listening to my needs...not just y'know blabbing on about his car and harley..."

Too Funny, I wonder if she used this for her ID...

Monday, January 04, 2010

Sleepy LaBeef Delivers a Soundcheck of Seismic Proportions.

Here's the post from Sleepy's last Parrot show,in December of 2006.

Sleepy LaBeef climbed onstage for the afternoon soundcheck and delivered a set of seismic proportions.
Covering tunes by everyone from Bob Wills to Rockin' Sidney, the songs were flying by like white center lines on Thunder Road, with hardly a breath between them, it was a stream of consciousness of Americam music: Waltz Across Texas, Faded Love, White Lightning, Okie From Muskogee, Maybeline, Josephine, Tonight the Bottle Let Me Down, Today I Started Loving You Again, From a Jack to a King, Detour, Folsom Prison, Pork Salad Annie, Six Days on The Road. Leaving no musical stone unturned or no vein of American roots-rock to obscure to mine, it was Duane Eddie's Twang, Nancy Sinatra's Boots, Johnny Ace's Christmas, Ernest Tubbs' Two-Step, Merle Haggard and George Jones climbing in and out of bottles, the subterannean baritone of Johnny Cash ...
But Most of All.
It was Sleepy LaBeef.



Sleepy enjoys a sharing the spotlight with his band and takes over drumming duties.


Ever the gentleman, Sleepy signs a poster for a fan,

Vicki and legendary Wrigleyville barkeep Floyd enjoy the show


Kelly and Oscar enjoy the show too.