November 14, 2005, 05:45
CaterwaullerJust Like the Old Days
One of our local parks said they were having an "Old Fashion" bonfire. I would have said "Old Fashioned"
Is only one of these correct, or are both acceptable?
November 14, 2005, 07:11
zmježdDepends, are they burning last year's haute couture? or just doing something that's old-fashioned?
November 14, 2005, 18:20
CaterwaullerLOL - that's what I was thinking, too. They need the -ed on that word, then?
November 14, 2005, 20:37
KallehUntil this thread, I always thought the drink, the "old fashioned," was an "old fashion."
November 15, 2005, 18:42
CaterwaullerHmm - why is that drink called an Old Fashioned?
November 16, 2005, 19:59
Chris J. StrolinOld joke:
1st person - I stop a baby from crying the old-fashioned way.
2nd person - How is that?
1st person - Whenever the baby cries, I make him an old-fashioned.
November 16, 2005, 20:27
Kalleh
Funny!
CW, I looked a little for your answer but could only find recipes.
November 18, 2005, 06:15
CaterwaullerHmm - they look pretty tasty . . . ever had one?
November 18, 2005, 19:51
Hic et ubiqueThere is something about an old-fashioned
That kindles a cardiac glow;
It is soothing and soft and impassioned
As a lyric by Swinburne or Poe.
There is something about an old-fashioned
When the dusk has enveloped the sky,
And it may be the ice,
Or the pineapple slice,
But I strongly suspect it's the Rye.
- Ogden Nash (the poem includes stanzas in praise of the martini, mint julep, and highball)
November 18, 2005, 19:54
Hic et ubiquequote:
Originally posted by Kalleh: CW, I looked a little for your answer but could only find recipes.
Can I assume that you've "rounded up the usual suspects" of sources?
November 18, 2005, 21:10
KallehThanks for the kick in the pants, Hic. No, I didn't go to the mother of all resources...the OED! There it was, big as you please: "The old-fashioned cocktail is said to have been invented in the late 19th cent. at the Pendennis Club in Louisville, Kentucky. It was probably so named because of its similarity to early whisky cocktails." It apparently originated in 1895.