Things to Drink in Fenspace

From FenWiki
Revision as of 09:07, 4 July 2014 by Dartz (Talk | contribs) (I forgot what I was planning to achieve when I opened this last night. Woke up to find it still open. And saved the result anyway.)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Good alcohol makes for a good trade. As something that can be both enjoyed and easily transported, but at the same time requiring extensive resources, biomass and clean water to properly produce. Many of the more settled fen, with space or energy to spare may dabble a hand from time to time, with the results varying wildly from blinding, to actually blinding.

Wines are much less common, with proper vinyards requiring a large land area and good soil to properly establish. (It might be possible with a Wonderland-type setup, but hideously expensive). Grains are 'reasonably' easier to source for beers or whiskies. Further out past the Main Belt, there are those will take any source of sugar and yeast, and work with the results to try and make 'something' drinkable, with levels of success varying as much as the ingredients. Distilled spirits tend to be popular - especially at higher ABV - simply because it simplifies transport, by reducing the volume and mass required.

Some settlements frown on alcohol to a point, many banning stronger spirits, with various 'dry' stations and towns being dotted around the main belt- especially those with more puritanical settlers. Outright prohibition tends to be about as effective as it was a century ago and smuggling to dry towns is rife. [1]

Law enforcement takes a dim-view of being drunk in charge of a spacecraft - though with most people's spacecraft also being their home it tends not to come up unless someone specifically causes trouble or an accident.

There're three main sources of alcoholic refreshment in Fenspace:

  • The various homebrewers and distillers.
  • Bars and restaraunts that have their own unique styles from attached microbreweries or distillers.
  • The larger, dedicated brewing and distilling companies


Commercial

Big commercial groups that're in it for profit - and probably being courted by some of the bigger names in the mundane industry keen to step offworld.

Crystal Sapporo
Crystal Sapporo is one of the largest breweries off-Earth, though compared with some of the Earther breweries it's on a capacity-par with some of the smaller regional breweries. Rumours of an upcoming purchase by either AB InBev or Heineken Group continually surface, as do trademark concerns but thus far the brewery remains independant. Aside from producing it's own styles of beer (Dry, a strong Dunkel, a Stout ....etc..) , the Sapporo brewery also produces some common mundane beers on contract for off-Earth consumption. The Master Brewer is Jan Haur[2] - headhunted from a mundane Munich brewery as part of the brewery's expansion plans. It imports most of it's grain and hops from Earth, and has a very European character. All Crystal Sapporo beer is produced at a naturally high ABV for shipping - to reduce transport costs - before being properly diluted to the correct levels on arrival, prior to bottling or drinking. This does mean that the flavour can vary slightly, depending on the quality of the local water.


Serenity Brewing Company
Serenity Brewing Company, a Blue Sun subsidiary, is steadily growing out in Serenity Valley. One of Serenity Brewing's sidelines, past the specialty beers and whiskys, is a range of creme liqueurs. Reportedly originally requested by a special client (many of the SMOFs suspect - or know - who it was, particularly because the first shindigs it debuted at were thrown by Jupiter Mining Corporation staff), it has turned into a nicely popular sideline for those who don't care for the more common libations, but can't (or won't) justify paying the cost for wines. So far, they have Normal, Strawberry, Orange, Amarula, and Banana.


Noctis Labyrynthus Distillery
Mars-based, and one of the first commercial whiskey distilleries established off-Earth. the distillery uses lowered air-pressure to allow distillation at a lower temperature while excess water from previous distillations is recovered and recycled, minimising fuel and water use. The waste biomass is used as a cheap food supply. All this gives the resulting triple-distilled spirit a 'unique' character, different to any spirit on Earth.

Noctis Labyrynthus Distillery has already been assimilated[3] by international (now interplanetary) drinks-conglomerate Diageo. Some of the distillery's output ends up blended somewhere within the vast conglomerate, but a few of the newer bottlings from the distillery have been noted for their 'unique' Martian character when compared with Earth whiskies, and sell for far more to collectors than they should be worth in a sane world. The newly-released ten year old pure pot still is quite nice, though not worth the price it goes for.

Brewpubs and the like

In the early days of Fenspace, shipping heavy kegs of beer to orbit was, at best, bloody expensive. As a result of this, nearly every small town and settlement will have its own brewpub, offering a distinctive flavour made from whatever ingredients will be local. Quality varies wildly, with some traders being kept alive more by the fact that their beverage has become the local 'acquired taste' and part of the culture, than by virtue of being any good.

Well regarded brewpubs include:

  • Brubeks. Even if they're a little bit 'common', Brubeks is still the place to go for comfortable, familiar surroundings and flavours. Wherever you are in the universe, you'll be sure that Brubeks will be the same.
  • Restaraunts on Stellvia Hotels facilities have their own local specialities.
  • Ale Blue Dot: Selling it's own IPA, Witch Head Nebula and 307 Ale.
  • Three Broomsticks of Hogsmeade, selling Butterbeer. [4]

Homebrew and Moonshine

Then there're the home distillers and brewers - people putting out their own drink either as a form of trade good, or just something to be enjoyed and shared. Usually fen who've settled down and have the space and energy to put into brewing and distilling, either as a hobby, or just trying for something unique. Spacecraft-based fen tend not to have the space to brew or distill safely, though this still hasn't stopped some. Quality varies wildly (From the sublime and pure , to 'fermented under a warm diesel-engine block in a plastic milk jug' horrible [5] that's good only for getting drunk), as do levels of commitment, but a few consistently good names -or just plain 'unique' beverages - have become trade items in their own right. Some of the best or rarest can demand fantastic premiums. [6]

One of the more noteworthy source of good quality beer - or even good-quality ingredients for good-quality beer- would be Grover's Corners. Grovers Corners Cream is occasionally served in Stellvia's restaraunt. John Freiler on the Corners is also known for making a wicked mead.

Whisky especially is a hobby of Andy McMurdo . What does gets sold is the stuff that doesn't meet Andy's very high standards (80% of people would consider the leftover as very good themselves; there are collectors in Earth who'd pay significant amounts for certain batches). He also does small amounts of Firewhisky, which the Wizards want a lot of. Occasionally he does Vodka as well. In this case he doesn't get enough demand to put together a full time business, but what he does get is more a specialist market.

At the other end of the scale there is the just plain bizarre and unusual - one-off bottles of various liqueurs, poitins and wiskies that by accident or design may have come to include various wave-effects, unusual ingredients or just plain bat-shit reputations. Most fade quickly into obscurity, but a few have become known in their own right - divorced from whomever originally created them - becoming notorious for flavour or for side-effect. Most only ever exist as single-bottlings, made by some fan to celebrate a special occasion or just to pass out amongst friends, and only ever become known after the majority has already been enjoyed, leaving only jealously-guarded single bottles than can fetch surprising amounts considering their erstwhile humble origins.

Typical of these would be 'Rocket Fuel'... a Klatchian Coffee liqueur[7]. Produced as a one-time-only attempt at an interesting Christmas gift, and now valued more for its sheer rarity and by reputation as being an entertaining drunken blue-hair day in a bottle, than for any intrinsic value or flavour quality. Maybe only two-dozen bottles or so ever existed, though the resulting videos scattered across the interwave will survive for far longer.

There have been rumors of one of the Trekkie subfactions attempting to modify a Blood Orange tree to produce fruit that will enable the creation of a "proper" Blood Wine. To date, all it remains is a rumor, with most Trekkies vehemently denying it, and the Klingon subfaction members merely saying, "you know, that would be nice."


Non Alcoholic Beverages

For Catgirls, those driving home, or the children[8].

Anywhere there are victims of the Catgirling Machine, there you find carbonated soft drinks. However, some of the Lunar Root Beers are better known for their high sassafrass oil content. Non-catgirls will find them very earthy and old-timey. Catgirls will get piss drunk on par with a high ABV malt liquor.

The canteens of Catgirl Industries especially are known to supply a huge diversity of carbonated beverages. The catgirls always seems to have a small stock of most kind of this drinks and are normally willing to share them with visitors. A long series of blue hair days also ended with the construction of an 'universal soft drink' machine, which accepts encoded plastic cards with a recipe and produce a drink within a few moments. The machine is often a bit quirky which leads to soft drinks that are not exactly what the user had in mind.

Aside from this, are the usual fruit-extract-based soft drinks found anywhere in the world. And prone to bursting when exposed to vacuum.

Notes

  1. And lucrative. And generally ignored by all but local lawmen who can usually be bought off with a bottle or two
  2. Father of Daryl Haur
  3. We are Diageo. Your flavour and distinctiveness will be added to our own. Your malt will adapt to service us. You will be assimilated. Resistance is Futile.
  4. In Black, Brown and Grizzly flavours after some gobshite made a particularly funny typo on the original menu
  5. Exactly like a Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster, only instead of being a gold brick wrapped in lemon, it's a broken brick wrapped in an old sweaty sock
  6. It's not unheard of for some particular malt maniacs to trade a whole spacecraft, for a bottle of the best
  7. The origin of which was quickly forgotten
  8. Legally, in practice the author was regularly drinking at age 10, so....