From wine-in-a-can to pre-filled PET wineglass, packaging for one of Australia's most popular beverages continues to evolve. We spoke to David Messum from Just The Drop about the latest wine packaging trends.
U.S. customs officers have found almost 500 fake state drivers' licenses in international cargo shipments destined for Philadelphia in operations since May, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced Thursday.
A recently launched app via Amazon Echo has sought to increase the wine and food pairing ability of Alexa, the company’s virtual personal assistant service.
WASHINGTON, Ohio – U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown announced Wednesday that the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) has awarded a $125,000 grant to the Montgomery County Prevention Coalition to address the county’s drug crisis and prevent substance abuse in youth.
Monday, 9/3/ at 2PM-Alcohol: Tonic or Toxin? -- As Canada and other locations move towards legalization of marijuana, Ideas looks at that other drug that many of us already have in our homes and use on a daily basis: alcohol. (Audio)
BOULDER, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--To educate beer lovers about the craft brewing community and what it means to be independent, the Brewers Association...is launching a new national awareness campaign, “That’s Independence You’re Tasting.”
Perhaps this will save the video rental industry yet! The very last Blockbuster store in America, located in Bend, Oregon, is coming out with a new product: Beer.
On May 13, 1806, the Balance and Columbian Repository of Hudson, New York, answered a reader’s query as to the nature of a cocktail: “Cocktail is a stimulating liquor, composed of spirits of any kind, sugar, water, and bitters—it is vulgarly called a bittered sling.”
CATASTROPHE SWEPT OVER THE SMALL city of Pripyat, in Northern Ukraine, in April of 1986. At the nearby Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, a botched safety test resulted in an earth-shaking steam explosion at Reactor 4—the facility, with its bio-hazardous contents, was violently cracked open.
SYDNEY, N.S. — A psychology professor at the University of Massachusetts has a new app out that might help you determine if you should get behind the wheel after a few drinks or a joint.