Posted by: Professor Gregory Allan Bass, DoGA, PhD (Hon)

In honor of our drinking podcast…
This design was suggested to me by Gentlemen Jesse and Lee. During their travels abroad, they discovered a sign featuring the staff with a snake intertwining it that symbolizes medicine or pharmacies (the Rod of Asclepius, although the Caduceus is also occasionally used) and both mistook the staff for a martini glass. Read into that what you will, but both agreed that the healing powers of the martini surely exceed anything available over the counter.
As regular listeners and/or readers have no doubt noticed, the League strongly supports drinking with both leisurely and adventurous activities. With that, I now present what we here at the LGA have deemed, “The Hippocratini”. The symbol of approval for drinking as the cause of, and solution to, many of life’s problems.
Posted by: Sergeant at Arms
In this second discussion on the subject of drinking, the Gents explore the intricacies and minutiae of the consumption and enjoyment of alcoholic beverages.
On the Agenda:
- Opening Toast, by Mr. Gregory Bass, (or equivalent)
- Open Discussion on the subject of “Drinking”
- Advice from a Gentleman: Mr. Bass advises on the subject of escape plans
- A Gent Recommends: Mr. Lee Dunteman has some advice on the subject of mixers
- Closing toast, lead by Mr. Hunter Hunstock
Posted by: Capt. Dr. Jesse Frydenlund Keller, GA, DoGA
Yesterday I toured the Guinness Storehouse, on the site of the St. James Gate Brewery, where most of the world’s Guinness
is produced. It was your basic flashy, A-list tourist attraction, with multimedia displays taking the visitor step-by-step through the history, production, and distribuition of the black stuff, and ending with a free pint at the bar at the top of the building. And I have to report that it does indeed taste just a bit better here in its home.
Aside from the basics, here are a few things I’ve learned about Guinness Stout while here in Ireland. Some I leaned in the tour, some elsewhere.
- Arthur Guinness started the business in 1759, and signed a 9000 year lease on the location. This being the 250th anniversary of Guinness, that leaves them another 8750 years of brewing in their present location.
- Many Irish people will only drink Guinness in their own country. I have had more than one Irishman (including a 6’6″ rugby-playing bartender, whose pub I ducked into to avoid an altercation with a group of drunk Eastern Europeans I had somehow inadverntently slighted) tell me, “It doesn’t travel well.”
- One of the Duke of Wellington’s officers, after being seriously wounded fighting Napoleon’s troops at Waterloo, wrote, “when I was sufficiently recovered, I felt the most extraordinary desire for a glass of Guinness, and I am confident that it contributed more than anything else to my recovery.”
Posted by: Capt. Dr. Jesse Frydenlund Keller, GA, DoGA

Following up on the beginning of our most recent podcast:
The liquor store we mentioned, which appears to be your basic dirt-merchant dive on El Cajon Blvd, but which has a phenomenal selection of obscure beers, is called Pacific Liquor. I stopped there for a six pack of Leffe recently, and noticed that the gueuze that had for sale was in fact produced by the Cantillon brewery, which Lee and I visited when we were in Brussels. Small world.


Posted by: Sergeant at Arms
Drinking
In this Second Official Meeting of the League of Gentlemen Adventurers, the subject at hand is Drinking, something beloved by Gents far and wide.
On the agena are:
- Open discussion among the Gents in Attendance.
- We Highly Recommend: Andy, our non-drinking Gent, recommends Sparky’s Root Beer
- Words of Advice: Lee recommends that you Always be Less Drunk than your Date
- We Highly Recommend: Jesse recommends the only dry vermouth worth a damn, Noilly Prat.