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  • MONDAY SEPTEMBER 8 2008 6:00 AM

Scott Ian's Food Coma: Cheers Beyond Beer

“Beer, the cause of and solution to, all life’s problems.”

That quote is from one of the world’s most famous philosophers; Homer…Simpson. And who better to take advice from? If I would’ve known this as a teenager life would have been so much easier!

My relationship with booze is an odd one. In the throes of my youth, booze was what my mom drank before she would turn into the Wolf Man and break my G.I. Joe stuff and howl at the world. She’s since worked all of that out and we get along fine. Love you mom!

As a post-Bar Mitzvah now you’re a man without a clue (with that never-been-shaved dirty upper lip) at 14 in NYC in the 70’s, my first forays into drinking were clumsy and strange. My friends and I would forage through our parent’s liquor/drug supplies and imbibe on the city bus at eight in the morning on the way to school.

There would be crappy weed (although at the time what did we know?) and some idiot would always bring cough medicine with codeine or a random pill. I stayed away from this stuff. I later found out that the pills were Quaaludes. The real Rorer 714 Ludes of legend. I never tried one because the guys that were taking pills were already known as the “burn-outs.” 14-15 year-olds sleepwalking through junior high listening to the Dead was way to mellow for me man.

The booze usually showed up in a Tupperware container. I would steal my moms Chivas Regal and pour it into a plastic salad bowl and put it in my backpack. Drinking straight Scotch at eight in the morning on a bumpy city bus packed with kids from vinegar-scented Tupperware was the perfect way to teach me not to drink.

The few times I tried beer, good’ol brands like Rheingold and Schlitz. It tasted like the dank smell of the old-man bars in my neighborhood where the fathers of my friends would drink from their failure mugs until it was time to go home and be dad. And by “be dad” I mean pass out on the couch in a dirty wife-beater (literally) and don’t make any fucking noise or you’ll catch a serious beating!!!

Yay beer! I tasted all that from just a few sips. My palate was very advanced even at such a young age. On my eighteenth (that was the legal age then) birthday I drank so many Screwdrivers (Popov vodka and Tropicana) I puked on the girl I was making out with, puked all over my friend Richie’s bathroom and ended up with alcohol poisoning.

“An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools.”
Ernest Hemingway

I spent the rest of the 1980’s sober. So when I say my relationship is an odd one it’s because I started my band Anthrax in 1981 and through all those formative and then insane years, I wasn’t drinking. People think I must have been out of my mind back then when it was the absolute opposite. I wasn’t straight-edge by any means, I just didn’t like booze. All of my friends in other bands were maniacal drinkers and once in a while I would have a few drinks, mainly the far superior beers, when we were on tour in Europe, but it would always end up with me feeling like ass. I didn’t see the upside.

In the early nineties I drank socially, weak tasteless vodka drinks that did nothing more than give me a headache and acid reflux. I tried the martini thing. That ended badly and gin holds a grudge. Hanging out in NYC clubs, that were then the Tao’s, Pure, and Bungalow 8’s of today, it was a time filled with superficial experiences of the highest order and I never made any connection to going out and drinking and actually having fun. I just didn’t get booze. And then the epiphany…

“There can’t be good living where there is not good drinking.”
Ben Franklin

In 1993 we had a tour manager named Michael “Curly” Jobson who was a wine aficionado. He introduced me to the first alcoholic beverage that tasted like I always imagined it should taste. White Burgundy. Pouilly-Fuisse to be exact. It tasted exciting, arousing, fresh, timeless, and, most importantly, it tasted good. Wine to me was Manischewitz Extra Heavy Malaga. Wine was something to be tolerated at Passover to keep my grandfather happy. Not any more. Curly opened the door for me into a new world and I never looked back.

I dove into wine headfirst. I learned by drinking. Burgundy, Bordeaux and Riesling. Expanding my palate I crossed the sea to California and drank my way through Napa and Sonoma, finding a particular affection for Pinot noir (makes sense considering it was Burgundy that started it). I crossed the ocean again and started an affair with Italian reds that still burns red-hot today. Would it be too much to name my first-born Gaja? I lost my soul to a bottle of 1989 Chateau d ‘Yquem. Sauternes were truly baby angel’s tears gathered by wizards. There’s no other explanation.

From wine I moved into beer, discovering the glory of Guinness which, when properly poured, is all that is right in the world in a glass.

My next epiphany came in 1997 when Anthrax and Pantera toured together. Pantera were the opposite of what Anthrax was drinking-wise. These guys were notorious drinkers on a level frequented by few and survived by fewer. Their drummer Vinnie Paul had (and still has) a swimming pool in the shape of a Crown Royal bottle. The hot tub is the top and the bottom of the pool is painted exactly like a Crown Royal label except it says “the official drink of Vinnie Paul.” Commitment.

Crown was the drink of choice and they created a shot called the Black Tooth Grin. Shot of Crown, splash of Coke. When you were with Pantera you drank. You drank Black Tooth’s. Their guitar player Dimebag Darrell, bless his amazing soul, would pour them ten at a time and had a litany of rules that went along with drinking them, the most important being “drink it or wear it.”

I was not a whisky drinker. Nor was I a whisky wearer, so it was a bit of a conundrum for me. Spirits were not my thing. I considered myself a wine snob and above the rabble of cheap booze.

Not for long. The first Black Tooth went down so easy and the next 7000 or so on that tour even easier. I came home after two months of Bukowskian excess (without the whores and ponies), dried out for a week and started my courtship with whisky. Crown Royal quickly gave way to the best small-batch bourbons and single-malt Scotch’s, although I still get my pull on a Black Tooth frequently.

“I feel sorry for people who don’t drink. When they wake up in the morning, that’s as good as they’re going to feel all day.”
Frank Sinatra

As I sit here typing this I’m sipping a Ron Zacapa 23 year-old rum from Guatemala. It goes down like melted butter with honey and it will fuck you up.

“They talk of my drinking but never my thirst.”
Scottish proverb

Over the last eleven years my palate has made friends with all booze (except gin, oh why do you mock me so gin??) and I’m always on the hunt for something new. I’ve been on a crazy Amaro kick of late. It’s like Jager and absinthe but it tastes nicer and the blackouts add so much excitement!!

Don’t drink and drive my friends.
Cheers,
Scott

www.myspace.com/scottian
www.anthrax.com
www.ultimatebet.com/scott-ian/?ubAffilID=73329

Scott Ian is Suicide Girls’ monthly Food Coma columnist. Click HERE for more of his musing on sustenance and libations. He plays guitar for revolutionary metal band Anthrax and also for Pearl.

 
Comments
JOVANKA

JOVANKA

Toronto, ON
October 2002

SEP 08, 2008 06:22 AM

Ah, the Black Tooth Grin.



I had a blast getting corked on wine with you and Pearl when you got yours!!!! Miss you guys,
JV

Maudite

Maudite

Mesquite, TX
March 2004

SEP 08, 2008 10:29 AM

I'm a beer lover (or snob if you prefer), My time with liquer was short and sweet, but we were not right for each other. I do wish to get to know wine better, someday.

adam_vincent

adam_vincent

Austin, TX
November 2002

SEP 08, 2008 10:50 AM

I'm a Gin man myself, but all my friends are beer drinkers. This leads to a lot of unwanted beer consumption when I'm not posted up at the bar. If you liked Amaro, give Fernet-Branca a sip sometime. In shot form, with a ginger ale chaser. skull

Weatherpunk

Weatherpunk

Japan
June 2008

SEP 08, 2008 12:15 PM

My entrance into the bar scene began over in Japan, and the easiest drinks to order for a white devil like me were all gin-based.

I love this liquor above all others, and when I am not having a pint with the boyos, a smart gin & tonic can usually be found in my hand.

Gin DEFINITELY is an acquired taste, but once it hits you, it hits you hard. ^_^

cplp

cplp

Seattle, WA
October 2005

SEP 08, 2008 02:40 PM

Seeing Anthrax an Pantera with Coal Chamber at The Mercer Arena in '97 was one of the best shows I've seen.

I still don't get gin. Why do I want a mouth full of tree?

GeorgeLiquor

GeorgeLiquor

Seattle, WA
June 2007

SEP 08, 2008 11:58 PM

You know I have to say.
I'm reading this article 2 minutes before I turn 21.

It brings me joy to read this, and reminded me, how baddly I need to drink popov on that day. That foul vodka has been fucking my life up for years. I need to experience in a legal sense.

SnakePlissken

SnakePlissken

Corvallis, OR
December 2002

SEP 09, 2008 01:13 PM

I'd like to recommend Tilburg's Dutch Brown. Not only is it delicious, the label is pure fucking metal.

m0ngrel

m0ngrel

USA
OLD SKOOL

SEP 09, 2008 04:34 PM

very nicely written.

Here's a tip for added flavor:

step one:
~go to bevmo
(santa monica n la brea will do)
step two:
~get bottle of Powers Gold Label Whiskey
step three:
~dare your self not to finish it in a weekend
step four:
biggrin

redhat

redhat

Netherlands
August 2008

SEP 09, 2008 07:36 PM

I'm a beer lover, wine connoisseur and a guy who gets invited to parties because he had a mobile cocktail bar. My favourite tipple has always been the Belgian Beers, from the fruity Kriek to the heavy Triple Trappist beers. My current favourite is the Triple Karmeliet uses a blend of three grains - wheat, oats and barley. And has a pure golden clarity.

However much I love good beer or wine, I hate not noticing you are getting drunk until you stand up.

raybell

raybell

I'm lost
March 2005

SEP 11, 2008 02:56 PM

I used to live right in whisky country, just up the road from Glenfiddich, and where they blended Chivas Regal, up in north east Scotland. The best whisky, I reckon though, is Talisker, which comes from a small place on the Isle of Skye off the west coast.

The nastiest whisky I had was from Israel of all places!!! It smelt like nail varnish remover. I got offered some when I visited there about seven year ago.

Beer - hate to say it, but the majority of North American beer is terrible. If you want decent beer, northern Europe's the place - England, Ireland, Scotland, Belgium, France, Germany, the Czechs etc...

Cider - never go for the cheap stuff. Nasty. (Same rule for vodka) English cider is the best I reckon.

Wine - too much snobbery with wine. I'll drink it abroad, but not here. You're expected to know too much.

There's all the other weird stuff - Retsina and ouzo from Greece, could never get into them, sake (acquired taste, but quite like it), Brennavit from Scandinavia (deadly!) and this stuff I had in Nepal which was deadly too...

Still, you got to be careful. I got into trouble with the police the other day. Got my first criminal record. I'm too old...

p.s. Anthrax rock!

raybell

raybell

I'm lost
March 2005

SEP 11, 2008 02:59 PM

I used to live right in whisky country, just up the road from Glenfiddich, and where they blended Chivas Regal, up in north east Scotland. The best whisky, I reckon though, is Talisker, which comes from a small place on the Isle of Skye off the west coast.

The nastiest whisky I had was from Israel of all places!!! It smelt like nail varnish remover. I got offered some when I visited there about seven year ago.

Beer - hate to say it, but the majority of North American beer is terrible. If you want decent beer, northern Europe's the place - England, Ireland, Scotland, Belgium, France, Germany, the Czechs etc...

Cider - never go for the cheap stuff. Nasty. (Same rule for vodka) English cider is the best I reckon.

Wine - too much snobbery with wine. I'll drink it abroad, but not here. You're expected to know too much.

There's all the other weird stuff - Retsina and ouzo from Greece, could never get into them, sake (acquired taste, but quite like it), Brennavit from Scandinavia (deadly!) and this stuff I had in Nepal which was deadly too...

Still, you got to be careful. I got into trouble with the police the other day. Got my first criminal record and in the cells overnight. I'm too old... Never a good idea to be cheeky to the police, they make you pay for it later.

p.s. Anthrax rock!

irate_vermin

irate_vermin

Bellingham, WA
March 2008

SEP 12, 2008 01:33 AM

I had those tupperware days in my youth... grab bags full of oddly shaped boxes of booze. Then legal drinking came and I decided to know something about what I drink. Eventually I had to choose just beer, I love me some whiskey but I can't afford to get to know another form of alcohol biggrin I think beer is a best drink to learn because the best beers in the world can be bought for less than $20 per bottle!

Fitzee

Fitzee

Chicago, IL
November 2007

SEP 13, 2008 01:41 AM

Every article you read is the best thing about booze or food I've ever read. All the snobbery I'd want from the wall street journal and all of the black outs and debauchery I'd want from Mr. Bukowski et al.

Thanks. Cheers.

NotoriousCAT

NotoriousCAT

Atlanta, GA
January 2004

SEP 13, 2008 06:04 AM

nice article!
i guess it makes me truly a child of the eighties that rather than tupperware we rinsed out non-aerosol hair-spray bottles to carry our purloined alcohol in.biggrin
i just had to pass on one of my favorite drink-related quotes.
"Work is the curse of the drinking class." biggrin
Oscar Wilde

rfantana

rfantana

Southern Pines, NC
August 2008

JAN 06, 2009 01:36 PM

aye. whiskey has put my dick in the dirt a number of times. GOT A ?. whats the best way to drink absinthe? i've recently just started drinking a little, and though the buzz is killer, i don't like the taste at all. any recommendations? thx man puke