Thanks to Gary Gillman for sharing!

I miss Gritstone too.S. St. Jeb wrote:Yes, good memories of Connors Stout, and also Gritstone.
And I have to ask....how many of you young bartowellers were drinking out of baby bottles or sippy cups in 1990?
I was already old enough to have travelled, tasted better and come home to the disappointing choices (or lack of) we had.S. St. Jeb wrote:
And I have to ask....how many of you young bartowellers were drinking out of baby bottles or sippy cups in 1990?
Wellington was well-established by then, and their County Ale and, to a lesser extent, Arkell Bitter were the best beers available for a brief period in Toronto (IMO), especially when served cask conditioned at the long lost and lamented Hop and Grape ("Hope and Grope") on College just west of Yonge.Tapsucker wrote:I was already old enough to have travelled, tasted better and come home to the disappointing choices (or lack of) we had.
Thinking back to those days, this is all of the menu I remember.
- The already mentioned Connors Stout, and also the decent Bitter
- Upper Canada and their Rebellion line
- Yes, Gritstone
- Stuff on tap at Dennison's, Amsterdam/Rotterdam, Spruce Goose (pretty poor) and the up and coming Granite
- Creemore
- I can't recall when Formosa as well as Wellington came on the scene, but I vaguely guess it was about then.
- Hart was a bit later, but got my attention with Dragon's Breath
Hell, even some of the President's Choice stuff was a break from the swill of the day. Ironic for a spokesman who didn't drink.
Earlier still, Northern and Brick had a few offerings to get me through college and they were often cheap too. How many good (or at least drinkable) but affordable student beers have you come across?
Haha...ya....it was a few years after this event when I had my first beer. Never a fan of root beer floats though...just straight up root beer.Craig wrote:I was big into root beer floats in the summer of 1990. I was also six.