50% off (Sale price $42.50, Reg. Price $85.00) :: After purchasing this deal, you will need to visit the website listed on your voucher to complete redemption.Prohibition Tour Admission $42.50 for one person ($85 value) $83 for two people ($170 value) $165 for four people ($340 value)Tours are available 4:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m. on Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays, and Sundays.This tour includes the following: Starting location in front of The 21 Club and ending in Hells Kitchen 2 Drink samples included 1 Snack included 3 drinking locations including an original speakeasy (full drinks are not included) a rich history of midtown manhattan with a focus on: -prohibition -the womens rights movement -alcohol in America -Irish and German immigration Duration 3.5 hours 1.5 miles walking distance speakeasy. Old Fashioneds: A Muddled HistoryMixology may be a modern term, but its practice is downright historical. Check out our guide to the old fashioned for some insight into one of the industrys oldest creations.“I have heard of a forum, of phlegm-cutter and fog driver, of wetting the whistle, of moistening the clay, of a fillip, a spur in the head, quenching a spark in the throat, of flip c, but never in my life, though I have lived a good many years, did I hear of cock tail,” wrote a saucy citizen to the newspaper of Hudson, New York, in 1806. At the dawn of the 19th century, mixology was almost unknown. But by 1895—when someone first thought to write down the recipe—barbacks from Kentucky to New York City were slinging a drink made with American rye whiskey, a semidissolved sugar cube, and a couple dashes of Angostura bitters, garnished by a lemon peel or maraschino cherry. This was the old fashioned—a libation so venerable that it that had been known simply as a “whiskey cocktail” before newcomers such as the manhattan compelled a more distinctive name. In its original form, the old fashioned was a potent, simple drink—“strong, square-jawed, with just enough civilization to keep you from hollerin like a mountain-jack,” wrote cocktail historian David Wondr
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