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By Joe Sixpack
Posted on March 28, 2008 on Joe
Sixpack
THERE
ARE two kinds of bar fights.
The
one where a naked android from the future cracks a pool
stick over your head, then walks off with your sunglasses
and sawed-off shotgun.
And a "Bargument" - a debate
with no right or wrong answer, which must be uncomplicated
enough to discuss after three beers.
The latter is the topic of
a fun little book called "Barguments" (Simon Spotlight
Entertainment, $9.99) from Doug Hanks, a reporter with
the Miami Herald who, like me, apparently managed to
convince his editors that his weekly bar tab is a legitimate
business expense.
Where
I spend a lot of time fretting over beer, Hanks focuses
on weightier topics. Like:
•If
you could date a cartoon character, who would it be?
•Which TV show has better
acting: "Saved by the Bell" or "Baywatch"?
•Is it harder to be a pitcher
or a running back?
•You're about to move into
an apartment with extremely thin walls. Pick your
neighbor: a bass player, a sex addict or a parrot
breeder.
•With $1 million on the line,
would you rather shoot a free throw or flip a coin?
•And, perhaps most importantly,
who would win in a fight: a bear or a lion?
That last one is the fateful
riddle that prompted Hanks to tackle this book. He and
one of his drinking pals noticed a tap handle that looked
like a bear wrestling a lion and someone wondered: Who
would win?
It's the
kind of question that gets an entire tavern talking.
While boring, sober people ponder the merits of Hillary
and Barack, or the Phillies pitching staff, half-looped
bar patrons can spend all night arguing over the mad
fighting skills of zoo animals. (The lion wins, obviously.
Unless it's a grizzly. With a gun.)
Hanks warns that you shouldn't
dismiss this kind of talk as mere idle chatter. As he
smartly notes: "A bargument shreds small talk and quickly
divides people into opposing camps."
Forget about where the guy
at the end of the bar stands on the death penalty; you
can tell a lot more about him by asking who he likes
better: James T. Kirk or Jean-Luc Picard?
To me, the importance of a
"bargument" is that it has no winner. It's pure entertainment
that could only happen over beers in a bar.
•What's
better: chocolate or cheese?
•Who wins in a mob fight:
Tony Soprano or Michael Corleone?
•What's better, beer or wine?
That last question is the focus
of another new book, "He Said Beer, She Said Wine" (DK
Publishing, $25). Written by Dogfish Head Brewery's
Sam Calagione and Philadelphia wine maven Marnie Old,
it's essentially a debate over what pairs better with
food, grape or grain.
The two fight like an old married
couple.
On what goes better with cheese:
She says, "There are no more
perfect partners in the realm of food and beverage pairing
than wine and cheese."
He says, "What do you drink
with pizza when your friends come over to watch the
game? I'll give you a hint: it isn't wine."
On pairing with kung pao chicken
or jambalaya:
She says, "Light, off-dry whites
calm the flames, while aromatic reds can provide a complex
counterpoint to layered flavors and seasonings."
He says, "The carbonation,
maltiness and alcohol content of beer makes it the perfect
partner for even the spiciest dishes. To be fair, though,
I once used a Riesling to put out a grease-fire."
They could go on all night,
but between the jabs there's some tasty advice on pairings.
Allagash White with spinach and garlic? I never would've
thought of that. Grilled sardines washed down with Tio
Pepe Fino Sherry? That's how they do it in southern
Spain.
Beer vs. wine is an argument
with roots that go far deeper than food pairings, however.
Beer and wine represent two entirely different world
views. As Calagione notes, beer is down-to-earth. Wine,
even Old concedes, is snooty.
Beer comes in manly kegs; wine
is corked by Frenchies in berets.
Beer foams down the side of
your mug; wine is meticulously decanted into a crystal
goblet.
Beer drinkers chug; wine drinkers
swish, and sometimes they don't even swallow.
They're all stereotypes, of
course.
I've spent $20 on a single,
corked bottle of fine ale and bathed in a celebratory
splash of Champagne.
But unlike a good "bargument,"
there is a right answer to this debate: Beer is better
than wine.
"Joe Sixpack" by Don Russell appears weekly
in Big Fat Friday. For more on the beer scene in Philly
and beyond, visit www.joesixpack.net.
Send e-mail to joesixpack@phillynews.com.
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