Alcohol consumption is very much a holiday tradition. Whether at parties, business events, or when entertaining at home, there is the expectation that some form of alcoholic beverage will be served. Then there’s the social expectation that one will partake.
With the end of 2019 right around the corner, it’s likely that you’re starting to hear constant New Year’s resolutions chatter. “I’m going to eat more vegetables,” says a coworker. “I’m going to cut down on coffee,” adds another.
Drink Baby Yoda cocktail, you will—but only for a little while longer, hopefully.
The 2010s saw many ill advised drinking trends, ones the average bar denizen will be happy to see the back of.
Craft brewing’s increased popularity is causing hop production to expand to new regions, researchers from the University of Toledo and Penn State University argue in a paper recently published in the Journal of Wine Economics.
The Center for Disease Control's (CDC) latest survey found that an increasing number of Americans are taking the wheel under the influence of marijuana, according to a new report released on Thursday.
Cider is a beverage prepared from fermented juice of apples that is usually alcoholic in nature. There are specific apples grown for preparing a cider beverage in order to give it a specific taste to the product.
Each year, as the calendar turns from December to January, millions of people make resolutions. And each year, surveys show, many of those self-promises relate to wellness, whether it’s losing weight, eating better, exercising more or simply getting healthier.
WANT TO AVOID GETTING YOUR FORMULA SENT BACK FOR CORRECTION? One of the most common problems we see on wine, spirits, and beer formula applications is that the applicant did not supply adequate information about one or more of the ingredients listed in the formula.
Drivers who lack the self-control to resist getting behind the wheel while under the influence of alcohol, drugs or a combination of both, and do so repeatedly, are highly resistant to changing their behavior and pose an elevated crash risk.
WASHINGTON, D.C. (NEXSTAR) — Drive sober or get pulled over. That’s the message from the U.S. Department of Transporation as the holiday party season approaches.
Nearly 10,000 people died last year in alcohol-related crashes, and now the DOT is hoping a new ad campaign will remind people to be safe.