Most (and least) overweight states in the United States
The latest data might surprise you.
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
The latest data might surprise you.
Here’s where potatoes are grown the most in the United States:
Go get a cheap donut!
Hey! It’s not National Donut Day or anything like that, but you can get Krispy Kreme donuts for a very low price on Friday, July 12, 2024.
How is that possible? We’ll explain!
It’s apparently the donut chain’s 87th anniversary, so in honor of that, if you buy a dozen donuts at full price or a 16-count of Minis, you can get an 87-cent donut. If you’re ordering online, you just have to use the code BDAY to redeem it.
There you have it! Go enjoy a very cheap donut on Friday, which seems like a pretty sweet deal. Here are the details:
https://www.instagram.com/p/C9UfhdCt1A7/?hl=en
A light honey of honey with my whiskey sounds great. This is not a light touch.
Welcome back to FTW’s Beverage of the Week series. Here, we mostly chronicle and review beers, but happily expand that scope to any beverage that pairs well with sports. Yes, even cookie dough whiskey.
Tullamore D.E.W. exists in a weird spot for me. I know it’s Irish whiskey. I know it’s *pretty good* Irish whiskey. But it lacks the recognition of Jameson or even Powers here in Wisconsin.
On top of that, Irish whiskey tends to lag behind the other whiskeys in my life. I love bourbon. I really love Scotch. But I only like Irish whiskey, which is smooth and entirely drinkable on ice or with a mixer but often escapes me.
Thus, it seemed like a good time to try the pride of Tullamore, Ireland’s latest offering. Tullamore D.E.W. Honey is exactly what it sounds like; a honey-infused take on the distillery’s classic blend. On paper, that’s an easy win. Mix Drambuie and Scotch and you’ve got an iconic cocktail. Put it all in one bottle and you’ve got the rusty nail taste in half the steps.
Of course, Tullamore D.E.W. Honey would like to be more than that. Let’s see if it pans out.
It pours mahogany brown. It smells boozy and warm, with the sweet honey and vanilla apparent right off the top. It’s very clear this isn’t a typical whiskey but a liqueur, but I love a good rusty nail so I’m on board.
Wow. This is more saccharine sweet cocktail in a bottle than a whiskey. It’s soft and… yeah, sugary. That washes away any heat from the 35 percent ABV within. I’d say that makes it easy to drink, but there’s a certain syrupy aspect to it that makes it at least slightly difficult to come back to.
It’s not subtle or complex. It’s honey and a little vanilla and citrus, but mostly honey. There’s a little warmth at the finish, but the aftertaste is slightly gritty sugar. It feels like it would benefit greatly from the thinning influence of a little ice, so…
The ice dulls the heat slightly, but the smell off the top still gives off a “fancy coffee creamer” vibe. A couple cubes does thin it out slightly, making it the superior way to drink it. It’s still a bit formless, a little sloppy, but it’s fine.
With the ice, it feels more like a cocktail than a half-formed shot. It’s not perfect, but it’s less syrupy and more pleasant on your tongue. I’m getting the distinct feeling this was meant for either chilled shots or as a component in bolder cocktails. Ah, well, it’s still OK.
This is a pass/fail mechanism where I compare whatever I’m drinking to my baseline cheap beer. That’s the standby from the land of sky-blue waters, Hamm’s. So the question to answer is: on a typical day, would I drink Tullamore D.E.W. Honey over a cold can of Hamm’s?
I’d happily rip a shot of it if someone was celebrating an occasion, but there are better whiskeys out there. And if you want a touch of honey with your whiskey, a rusty nail is always going to be superior.
Time to rank the best salads of all time … or in this case, re-rank.
Editor’s Note: This story was originally published in July, 2022. It has since been updated.
The year was 2017.
I was but a younger writer for this website, and I decided one slow July sports day to rank the greatest salads of all time. Why? Because salads are great and who doesn’t like to rank stuff and debate about it?
But here’s the catch: In the past year or so, I shared these rankings with my fellow For The Win colleagues.
And, like a veggie that’s going in a hot salad, they roasted me. And it didn’t stop then. Whenever food takes came up in our work chat, inevitably some form of “Well at least they’re not the salad rankings” would be uttered.
So I’m here to redeem myself. And this time, we’re opening the rankings up to ALL salads, by name OR practice:
Here’s how to get a free Slurpee on Thursday, July 11 2024.
Hey! It’s Thursday, July 11, 2024! That can also be written as 7/11, which should remind you of 7-Eleven and their Slurpees.
It’s no coincidence that it’s Free Slurpee Day 2024, which means you can get one of those frozen drinks for free from 7-Eleven. How do you do it? Good question! You’ve come to the right place.
Simply walk into a 7-Eleven, bring your Slurpee cup to the front counter and that’s it! It’s one small cup per customer. And if you’re a rewards member, you can get one more free!
That’s all we’ve got. Go get your free Slurpees and enjoy them.
What is the favorite flavor of ice — exempting vanilla — in each of the United States?
Joey Chestnut is at it again.
Professional eater Joey Chestnut might not have participated in the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest last week, but he did one better for all the people enjoying Buffalo Wild Wings’ all-you-can-eat boneless wings.
Chestnut devoured 200 BWW boneless wings in under 38 minutes on Monday, which extends the restaurants’ all-you-can-eat boneless wings and fries promotion on Mondays and Wednesdays through Aug. 14.
The professional eater called it a “record for generations” on Twitter (X) before taking on the challenge, which we’re sure filled him up quickly and made him not want to eat boneless chicken wings for a good while.
What a meal for Chestnut to devour, which benefits us all in the end.
Man of the people. All you can eat boneless extended to 8/14 https://t.co/2VClVREF0O
— Buffalo Wild Wings (@BWWings) July 8, 2024
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Go get some free or discounted fried chicken on Saturday!
Hey! It’s National Fried Chicken Day 2024! What a day to celebrate!
That’s right, friends, it’s time once again for the day to celebrate the dish, and this time it’s on Saturday, July 6, 2024.
Why is Saturday, July 6 National Fried Chicken Day? I have no idea, but free or discounted fried chicken is the important thing here, and we want you to get that as soon as humanly possible.
So let’s stop writing about the why and get to the important stuff here: A partial list of joints that we’ve found who will give something away or sell you something for less than the usual price:
If you’re in their loyalty program, you can get six free boneless wings if you spent $10.
They have buy-one-get-one free fried chicken sandwiches if you dine in.
If you’re in their loyalty program, you can get a free chicken sandwich if you spend just $1 or more.
If you’re in their loyalty program, you can get a free Royal Crispy Chicken sandwich if you spend just $5 or more.
Are you a rewards member? You can get a free Taste of KFC meal when you buy something online.
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Elysian’s new hazy pale ale adds orange to the Space Dust formula. It works.
Welcome back to FTW’s Beverage of the Week series. Here, we mostly chronicle and review beers, but happily expand that scope to any beverage (or food) that pairs well with sports. Yes, even cookie dough whiskey.
Elysian is a national circle of trust brewer. That means they’re a) big enough to be found just about anywhere and b) made enough good stuff for me to purchase a six-pack of their beer, regardless of style, without concern.
While some of their beers are better than others (and one smells exactly like weed), Elysian brings a baseline of care and quality to their lineup. That applies most to their pale ales. Space Dust is the headliner; a bitter, complex brew that hides its high alcohol by volume (ABV) behind lush flavor.
That put Elysian in a solid place to contend for tap space in a shrinking market of beer, but not without innovation. While light lager macrobrews remain America’s favorite, the top selling craft beer in the nation is New Belgium’s Voodoo Ranger imperial IPA — a beer that delivers bold flavor at a high ABV (9.0 percent). That’s signaled a trend toward beers that provide more booze for your buck.
Elysian’s newest brew, Juice Dust, steers another trend into that one. Hazy pale ales have grown in popularity over the last five years, emerging from regional breweries to become a staple from coast to coast. Juice Dust grafts fruit to the floral bitterness of the company’s flagship beer to create a big, boozy and juicy India pale ale.
A sitdown with brewmaster Chris Murakami shed some insight on how Elysian jumped in to an exploding market of hazies and imperial IPAs. He started with beer-mosas (beer and orange juice), then leaned into Elysian’s space motif by brewing with Tang — creating a beer that smelled great and tasted awful. That led to the orange juice that imparts the juicy flavor of Juice Dust.
That’s all pretty standard, but I had to ask: with consumers more conscious of how much alcohol is in each can, was there pressure to turn the ABV game into an arms race?
“I don’t have an interest to go much higher,” said Murakami. “8.2 is a sweet spot.”
“Is that the category you want to play in? Or do you want to be craft [brewers]? The plus-nine percent trend is a wild spend, but a lot of the market coming from that is coming over from Hurricane, Steel Reserve, other high ABV, malt liquor brands.”
Juice Dust definitely isn’t malt liquor. But does it hold up to Elysian’s high standard?
It pours an orchard gold with a fluffy white head that lingers for a bit before slowly melting back into the beer. Despite the promise of hazy juice, this is still very hop forward when it comes to smell. You get some pine-y bitterness that reminds you, right away, that you’re dealing with Elysian and what they do best.
While the fruit is there beyond the minor notes you’d get from the Citra hops of its forebearer, it’s not excessive. There’s a solid balance between bitter and sweet citrus, the latter of which is noticeably a little smoother than Space Dust. There’s a see-saw between the two, then a dry finish to wrap everything up with a light orange aftertaste.
It doesn’t feel like an 8.2 percent ABV beer, but it’s a little more dense than a typical pale ale. Murakami notes that’s due to the rolled oats, which make up about 20 percent of the malt load. This is also significantly heavier than the original Space Dust in terms of total hops, per Murakami, but not nearly as bitter as you’d expect.
Despite the addition of orange juice early on, Space Dust and Juice Dust have the same calorie content, which is a pleasant surprise. Taking on a lunch’s worth of calories in two beers is a perpetual downside to big, boozy pale ales.
All in all, it’s another upper tier beer from a brewery with tons of them. Hazy IPAs aren’t always my thing, but I can appreciate them a six pack at a time. And Juice Dust is a worthwhile sixer, both when it comes to taste and ABV.
This is a pass/fail mechanism where I compare whatever I’m drinking to my baseline cheap beer. That’s the standby from the land of sky-blue waters, Hamm’s. So the question to answer is: on a typical day, would I drink Elysian’s Juice Dust over a cold can of Hamm’s?
Yep. I’d probably alternate between the two on a hot day because hazy IPAs tend to be more of a slow sipper, but there’s no denying this is another win for a brewery filled with them.