Browsing Tag:

Ireland

Beers to try in each European country.

Europe is a beer connoisseur’s dream. Between the beer festivals, the pubs, the ruinbars, the beer tents, the craft brews, the liter mugs, and the endless supply of Guinness – Europe is by far one of the best places to go for some good ol’ fashion beer.

Are you going to Europe and wanting to be adventurous with your beer? Here is a list – one for one – one of the top beers for each European country.

Things you can do with this list:

  • Make a 3 month “Beers Around Europe” trip and hit as many breweries as possible.
  • Try to pronounce all of these beers.
  • Go to the country, drink the beer, then try and pronounce the beer.
  • Meet the brew masters for the local brew.
  • Go to some of the remote locations on this list to try it in the town.
  • Use it as a tool for your travels around Europe.

 

Dracula – Bad Blood

Posted in travel blog

Vampire stories are very much a part of our society. Prior to the arrival of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Twilight, The Vampire Diaries, and the other books/tv shows/movies that were made about the epic Vampire that has grown to be so much a part of our society, one word was used universally to understand the depth, the evil, and the allure of this vicious vampire community…DRACULA.

What do you associate with Dracula? Maybe Transylvania, maybe blood, maybe Halloween? What you may not know is the brilliance of Dracula actually originated in Ireland, where folklore is rich and superstitions are even richer.

Author of this epic tale Bram Stoker, was born in Clontarf on the North side of Dublin, Ireland. He was an active collegiate and athlete at my very own Trinity College Dublin, and quickly became interested in the theatre and folklore of Ireland after being exposed to this wonderful aspect of Irish culture in the theatre in which I often walk before class every day. Stoker, my friends, was genius. He traveled throughout Ireland and to Romania, England, and Scotland, incorporating tales and folklore from these countries in order to create his masterpiece. While much of his passion and motivation behind the novel derived from his love for his Transylvanian folk hero Vlad Dracul, many Irish symbols are evident throughout the novel.

It is argued that “Dracula” originates from the Irish words, “Droch Ola” which means “bad blood”. 

Sláinte Bram Stoker!