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*Official* B1G In-Season Thread

Good news: Just got a dozen wings and threw a nice rub on there, getting the smoker going, and cracked open a Founders Breakfast Stout to help kick this hangover.

Bad news: Iowa basketball is on TV, and I need to pick up some lube for before this Nova game tomorrow.
 
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@jwardelt

We went out for breakfast this morning and the fvcker was wearing a Badgers sweatshirt lol. He is born and raised in Iowa.

Wtf is wrong with him?

@hawkit3113 on the left with his brother at breakfast...

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No, sorry bud, nothing specific...I know there are some weird rules about transporting across state lines...expensive to license it from what I hear.
From an article in Minnesota about two bar owners being charged a felony for purchasing 10 kegs in Wisconsin and bringing it back to Maple Grove to sell in their bar:
"Spotted Cow is described by its makers as a “traditional farmhouse ale, hand-crafted and unfiltered with complex flavors.”

The owners say they don’t want — or need — to deal with the byzantine tax and distribution systems that come with selling their beer outside their home state. “There’s no reason,” said New Glarus co-owner Deb Carey. “We’re growing so fast and it’s still hard to keep up with demand here.”

She and husband Dan have been brewing in New Glarus since 1993. They have no ambitions to expand nationally or globally. Instead, Deb Carey said, they’re “committed to brewing world-class beer and taking care of the people who work for us.”

She said they’d rather steer the conversation about beer away from the theme of constant growth and toward the appreciation of a good brew. “We want to talk about beer being a food, with a rich history,” said Deb. “About how it’s hard to make, has a wide range of flavors, is very accessible and can add pleasure to life. And that we should treat it with respect.”

And she thinks there’s much to be said for regional diversity. “From my point of view, when you get off a plane you don’t want to see one chain store after another and everything looking just like it does at home. Like everything else, I think food should have a regionality to it.”

Still, she wasn’t surprised to hear about the Maple Grove case. It’s happened before. A New York City sports bar was caught in 2009 selling Spotted Cow for $7 a bottle. Again, no license or distribution rights to get it from New Glarus to the Big Apple. The owners paid a $20,000 fine.

“Sure, I’m flattered that people like it so much, and a felony seems like a heavy price to pay, but c’mon,” she said. “They knew the rules,” she said.

Carey said New Glarus could expand wildly, and successfully, if it chose to do so. “We could be worldwide, if that was the goal. It’s absolutely in my power and it wouldn’t take very long,” she said. “But why would I?”"
 
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