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RoryQ

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Posts posted by RoryQ

  1. I've been going back to my roots and drinking a lot of stout lately, as the winter months close in.

    Now, Guinness is our best-known stout export. The truth is that it's a shadow of its former self - once they started pasteurising it and serving it hooked up to the lager coolers (extra cold) it stopped being the drink our fathers drank, and became some watered-down mass-market bastardisation. If you want to drink Guinness your best best is the stronger alcohol 'special' bottle which is made for the African market (Guinness is huge amongst Nigerians and the like).

    If you really want serious contemporary stout from Ireland then luckily there are more than a couple of craft offerings that will hit the spot. These are mostly classic dry Irish stouts, served at cellar temperture ideally.

    First up: Wrasslers XXX from the Porterhouse. Our London and NYC brethren will be able to try this in the Porterhouse Brew Co. pubs in their cities. Other than that it's available in bottles reasonably widely (perhaps even the U.S?). The 'Wrassler' name comes from the nickname of Michael Collins, an Irish revolutionary figure, who was a big stout drinker.

    porterh-wrasslersXXXX.jpg

    Another good one is Dungarvan brewing company's Black Rock stout. Dungarvan is one of a new generation of breweries that was set up by a guy and his brother-in-law in conjunction with their wives. It's a little lighter and not as much of a syrupy mouth-feel as you'll get with some stronger stouts.

    IMG_0171.JPG

    But my favourite stout at the moment, an absolute stonker with 6% alcohol content, unusually high for an Irish stout, is Carlow Brewing Company's O'Hara's Leann Folainn (gaelic for 'wholesome brew' / 'wholesome stout'). A lot of people think this is the best craft beer which has been made in Ireland over the past number of years.

    smallirelandmarch2011-1243.jpg

    Mostly the Dungarvan and Leann Folainn are only available in bottles. But from time to time you see various craft stouts from Irish breweries offered on tap in some pubs. Mostly they're hooked up to conventional taps (meaning they have nitro cannisters attached, and some people reckon that fundamentally changes the taste), but occassionally they'll be there on a keg and hand pump.

  2. Not exactly a secret in European tattooing, but I've always though Hexa from Precious Tattoo in Finland is one of the most versatile tattooists I've come across.

    Seems to be able to do several styles to a high level. In an interview I read the explanation was that it's a small country and there was a need to be versatile to handle all kinds of clients.

    That said, the traditional stuff is my favourite ... A good bit of humour and the occult injected in there. Maybe a little like Deno?

    170566_139045279492102_100001598925419_270800_5160615_o.jpg

    for1.jpg

    This has always been a favourite tattoo of mine (not sure why)-

    cosmo.jpg

  3. 'The Wire' is awesome - still the most accurate police show I have ever seen, in terms of the atmosphere / attitudes.

    'Game of Thrones' I haven't started watching yet - I want to finish reading the novels first.

  4. You guys who like the T.V series, I hope you've checked out the original graphic novels (they're up to 14 volumes now in trade paperback, I think?) ... Even darker and more compelling than the T.V show, I think.

    When I watch the T.V series I can't get my head around the fact that the guy playing Rick is an obscure U.K actor who was in this 90s show called 'This Life'. Really bizarre to see him breaking the U.S now. I see him and I just think of him in a flat with Daniela Nardini and everyone on ecstasy.

  5. A few years ago I ended up with free bottle of a product called 'Mama Haze's Tattoo Tonic'. It was from the sort of operation described above, containing mainly natural oils. I believe the company producing it was run by the girlfriend of my then tattooist. It came in a small bottle, like an essential oil.

    I don't think it did me any major harm (in fact it was probably as if I had used nothing at all) for the one time I tried to use it, but I abandoned it because I was pretty sure it was inferior to alternatives like Bepanthen.

    For me personally if I apply a product like Bepanthen for the first few days (lightly) then I don't any heavy drying of the skin or scabbing - just some light peeling. When I applied the oil to the skin it just didn't seem to have the same firepower - the skin would be dry and cracking ten minutes after it was applied.

    I googled Mama Haze to see if they were still in business ... It appears not.

  6. Yeah, it won't go any further down than in the pic. Recovery has been grand. I did a day, then rested, then another day for the sittings in Belfast. Then when I started flying out to Milan (which I did twice) we did two days back-to-back. Not quite full days, but 3-4 hours and 4-5 the next. I'd have preferred to leave a day in between - that worked really well. Back to back sessions are more gruelling - the swelling was noticeably worse.

  7. A few pages into Stephen King's 'Under the dome'. So far so good. Simple concept, it seems - town trapped under impenetrable dome degenerates as resources become scarce (I'm just trying to not think of 'The Simpsons movie').

    I'm a sort of fairweather fan of King's, in many ways. I really like some of his (now) older novels like 'The Stand' and 'Salem's Lot'. He lost me for a bit then up until he restarted 'The Dark Tower' series and pulled off the amazing trick of managing to pull his entire back-catalogue into one huge mythos.

  8. Many of you might know this tattoo studio, and it was some LSTers who recommended it to me.. I simply must get my next tattoo at this place, their work is just incredible!

    .:: King Carlos Tattoo ::.

    Calle from King Carlos does some of the most amazing Japanese style work I've ever seen. He was one of the people I considered for my backpiece but in the end it didn't look like it was going to work out. A combination of the waiting list at the time, mechanics of going back and forth to Stockholm (he doesn't travel because of his back, AFAIK)...

  9. From a work point of view anything on my hands, fingers or above a shirt collar would be a no-no.

    I've still been debating about getting a piece that goes between my chest panels and fits up onto the lower part of my neck. I am thinking something that would fit like a sort of inverted triangle (like a bat or bird, head in the centre, wings rising on either side). I guess it would have to terminate under the collar of a buttoned-up shirt. If I didn't go onto the neck then just between the panels probably wouldn't be worthwhile in terms of the space offered I guess.

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