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M AY 2 O 1 5 | VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E 113112 VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E | M AY 2 O 1 5
***
THE VANCOUVER-BASED SAJE TRAVEL
KIT KEEPS YOU ENERGIZED AND HEALTHY
WITH AROMATHERAPY FORUMULAS LIKE
ARRIVE REVIVED AND EATER'S DIGEST
($39.95, saje.ca)
IMPERIAL
AMBITIONS
Those windows
just above the word
“Empress”? Yup,
you can stay there;
views are killer
WORLD STAGE
Pull up a pew at
Stage for thought-
fully selected
by-the-glass wines
from B.C. and
around the world
ONE RING TO
RULE THEM ALL
Empire Donuts
has been a local
secret since it
opened for delivery
only, but its cakes
are now available
at select cafés
SUDS CYCLE
A Pedaler tour hits
founding brew pub
Spinnakers. If you
make it there, order
the effervescent
new Ortega Blonde
wine/ale mashup
T H E
GOODS Nex t De s tina tions
F IE L D T R IP
Twelve tasters later, I’m ready for
a little sit-down, so bike returned,
I retreat to the Empress’s Bengal
Lounge, where a Port Authority
(Maker’s Mark, port, and bitters,
all barrel-aged) and Morgan Wil-
son’s elevated pub fare (pork sliders,
hand-cut crisps) animate the happy
hour menu. (Later, it’s all G&Ts
and Raj-era curries beneath the
mounted tiger skin.)
For dinner (sticking to the
healthy theme), I hit Foo Asian
Street Food (769 Yates St., 250-
383-3111), a more rigorous version
of hometown hero Noodlebox
adjacent to the hotel, where Indian
paneer and Thai curries sit beside
octopus salad and sweet-and-sour
pork belly, the heat and sweet
nicely handled by a curated selec-
tion of local craft brews.
I spend Day 2 browsing
through Chinatown, having a
hearty omelette at Jam Cafe (542
Herald St., 778-440-4489) in the
a half-dozen gastown app-
maker bros are selfie-ing their
way across the strait, which would
be annoying except 1)flights with
Harbour Air (harbourair.com) are
only 35 minutes long and 2)those
views. Leaving at 9, I’m still in time
for second breakfast when we drop
into Victoria’s Inner Harbour, so I
climb all of two blocks to the Gold
Lounge at my hotel, the Fairmont
Empress Hotel (721 Government
St., 866-540-4429; from $259), for
grill-your-own burritos, mini crois-
sants, and that bespoke tea blend.
Overlooking the parliament build-
ings, I consider the day’s options.
I feel ready to take on the world,
or at least 6.5 kilometres of it, in the
company of Kyra McLeod of The
Pedaler (719 Douglas St., 778-265-
7433), which owners Paul Rayman
and Rosemary Lee set up in 2013
to offer bicycle tours along culinary
and historical lines. We helmet up
for the three-hour Hoppy Hour
Ride ($89), travelling along city
streets and over the still-under-
construction Johnson Street Bridge
(hold on!) to old-school brew pubs
Spinnakers (the city’s original,
from 1984; 308 Catherine St., 250-
386-2739) and Swans (from ’89;
506 Pandora Ave., 250-361-3310),
plus Moon Under Water (circa
2010; 350 Bay St., 250-380-0706),
where owner/brewmaster Clay
Potter tours us behind the scenes.
old Herald Street Café spot, and
checking out the Victoria Pub-
lic Market (1701 Douglas St.) for
knick-knacks and Vikram Vij’s
new Sutra. Feeling adventurous I
even hit up two much-discussed
new cafés in industrial Rockland
(a sketchy five-minute drive from
downtown): Wheelies Motorcycles
Café (2620 Rock Bay Ave., 250-
995-9359), a custom bike shop
overrun for killer grilled sand-
wiches, rocket-fuel espresso, and
housemade espresso gelato sand-
wiched between brownie slabs
and rolled in candied pecans; and
Second Crack Coffee Lab (2612
Bridge St., 250-634-2680), an oh-
so-serious retail space for a whole-
sale roaster that also happens to
purvey the city’s on-trend Empire
Donuts, made by Melanie Laverick
for home delivery by the dozen.
Several brewery tastes later,
dinner. So many options, but
I elect to cab it to Stage (1307
Gladstone Ave., 250-388-4222) in
leafy Fernwood. Gold winner in
this magazine’s Best Victoria cat-
egory (see pg. 94), this cute neigh-
bourhood brasserie (exposed-brick
walls, a worn floor of narrow wood
planks) serves killer share plates
(think local charcuterie, Sooke-
caught trout with bacon and crème
fraîche, salads of purslane and
sheep sorrel) and a smart B.C.-for-
ward wine list, including a dozen
chalkboard specials by the glass.
I’m stuffed, but we have to put a
nose into the recent farm-to-table
rebrand of Ulla. OLO (509 Fisgard
St., 250-590-8795) is Chinook
for “hungry,” explains owner/bar-
tender Shawn Soole, godfather of
Victoria’s vibrant cocktail culture,
as he mixes up digestifs for our
party. Each eerily suits its recipient.
Maybe a last nightcap at
tonight's hotel, the Rialto (653
Pandora Ave., 800-332-9981),
just a few blocks up the way. A
2009 rebuild of the storied (but
deteriorated) Hotel Douglas, the
Rialto now does restful boutique
accommodations and a great hotel
bar, Veneto Tap Lounge, as smack
downtown as you could hope.
Stump gin (from Phillips Brew-
ing down the street) in hand, we
toast city founder James Douglas in
the remains of his namesake hotel. VM
ACapitalEscape
Ever dream of moving to Victoria? Start
by learning how to forage. Judging from
menus studied on a recent 48-hour
dine-around, hard-harvesting is the
new Island pursuit. Or just go: fly, and
you can still be back in time for spin class
on Monday by john burns
PART & PARCEL
Foo’s just-opened
sib has a changing
daily menu of beau-
tiful proteins (trout
tartine) and world
grains like farro ri-
sotto. 2656 Quadra
St., 778-406-0888.
Partandparcel.ca
OLO
A drink and dessert
at the bar is fine,
but on the next trip
serious investiga-
tion is required
into the modern-
ist farm-to-table
menu. 509 Fisgard
St., 250-590-8795.
Olorestaurant.com
CATEGORY 12
A mad scientist
brewer in darkest
Central Saanich?
Sign us up! 2200
Keating Cross Rd.
Category12beer.com
NE W KIDS ON
THE BLOCK
M AY 2 O 1 5 | VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E 113112 VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E | M AY 2 O 1 5
***
THE VANCOUVER-BASED SAJE TRAVEL
KIT KEEPS YOU ENERGIZED AND HEALTHY
WITH AROMATHERAPY FORUMULAS LIKE
ARRIVE REVIVED AND EATER'S DIGEST
($39.95, saje.ca)
IMPERIAL
AMBITIONS
Those windows
just above the word
“Empress”? Yup,
you can stay there;
views are killer
WORLD STAGE
Pull up a pew at
Stage for thought-
fully selected
by-the-glass wines
from B.C. and
around the world
ONE RING TO
RULE THEM ALL
Empire Donuts
has been a local
secret since it
opened for delivery
only, but its cakes
are now available
at select cafés
SUDS CYCLE
A Pedaler tour hits
founding brew pub
Spinnakers. If you
make it there, order
the effervescent
new Ortega Blonde
wine/ale mashup
T H E
GOODS Nex t De s tina tions
F IE L D T R IP
Twelve tasters later, I’m ready for
a little sit-down, so bike returned,
I retreat to the Empress’s Bengal
Lounge, where a Port Authority
(Maker’s Mark, port, and bitters,
all barrel-aged) and Morgan Wil-
son’s elevated pub fare (pork sliders,
hand-cut crisps) animate the happy
hour menu. (Later, it’s all G&Ts
and Raj-era curries beneath the
mounted tiger skin.)
For dinner (sticking to the
healthy theme), I hit Foo Asian
Street Food (769 Yates St., 250-
383-3111), a more rigorous version
of hometown hero Noodlebox
adjacent to the hotel, where Indian
paneer and Thai curries sit beside
octopus salad and sweet-and-sour
pork belly, the heat and sweet
nicely handled by a curated selec-
tion of local craft brews.
I spend Day 2 browsing
through Chinatown, having a
hearty omelette at Jam Cafe (542
Herald St., 778-440-4489) in the
a half-dozen gastown app-
maker bros are selfie-ing their
way across the strait, which would
be annoying except 1)flights with
Harbour Air (harbourair.com) are
only 35 minutes long and 2)those
views. Leaving at 9, I’m still in time
for second breakfast when we drop
into Victoria’s Inner Harbour, so I
climb all of two blocks to the Gold
Lounge at my hotel, the Fairmont
Empress Hotel (721 Government
St., 866-540-4429; from $259), for
grill-your-own burritos, mini crois-
sants, and that bespoke tea blend.
Overlooking the parliament build-
ings, I consider the day’s options.
I feel ready to take on the world,
or at least 6.5 kilometres of it, in the
company of Kyra McLeod of The
Pedaler (719 Douglas St., 778-265-
7433), which owners Paul Rayman
and Rosemary Lee set up in 2013
to offer bicycle tours along culinary
and historical lines. We helmet up
for the three-hour Hoppy Hour
Ride ($89), travelling along city
streets and over the still-under-
construction Johnson Street Bridge
(hold on!) to old-school brew pubs
Spinnakers (the city’s original,
from 1984; 308 Catherine St., 250-
386-2739) and Swans (from ’89;
506 Pandora Ave., 250-361-3310),
plus Moon Under Water (circa
2010; 350 Bay St., 250-380-0706),
where owner/brewmaster Clay
Potter tours us behind the scenes.
old Herald Street Café spot, and
checking out the Victoria Pub-
lic Market (1701 Douglas St.) for
knick-knacks and Vikram Vij’s
new Sutra. Feeling adventurous I
even hit up two much-discussed
new cafés in industrial Rockland
(a sketchy five-minute drive from
downtown): Wheelies Motorcycles
Café (2620 Rock Bay Ave., 250-
995-9359), a custom bike shop
overrun for killer grilled sand-
wiches, rocket-fuel espresso, and
housemade espresso gelato sand-
wiched between brownie slabs
and rolled in candied pecans; and
Second Crack Coffee Lab (2612
Bridge St., 250-634-2680), an oh-
so-serious retail space for a whole-
sale roaster that also happens to
purvey the city’s on-trend Empire
Donuts, made by Melanie Laverick
for home delivery by the dozen.
Several brewery tastes later,
dinner. So many options, but
I elect to cab it to Stage (1307
Gladstone Ave., 250-388-4222) in
leafy Fernwood. Gold winner in
this magazine’s Best Victoria cat-
egory (see pg. 94), this cute neigh-
bourhood brasserie (exposed-brick
walls, a worn floor of narrow wood
planks) serves killer share plates
(think local charcuterie, Sooke-
caught trout with bacon and crème
fraîche, salads of purslane and
sheep sorrel) and a smart B.C.-for-
ward wine list, including a dozen
chalkboard specials by the glass.
I’m stuffed, but we have to put a
nose into the recent farm-to-table
rebrand of Ulla. OLO (509 Fisgard
St., 250-590-8795) is Chinook
for “hungry,” explains owner/bar-
tender Shawn Soole, godfather of
Victoria’s vibrant cocktail culture,
as he mixes up digestifs for our
party. Each eerily suits its recipient.
Maybe a last nightcap at
tonight's hotel, the Rialto (653
Pandora Ave., 800-332-9981),
just a few blocks up the way. A
2009 rebuild of the storied (but
deteriorated) Hotel Douglas, the
Rialto now does restful boutique
accommodations and a great hotel
bar, Veneto Tap Lounge, as smack
downtown as you could hope.
Stump gin (from Phillips Brew-
ing down the street) in hand, we
toast city founder James Douglas in
the remains of his namesake hotel. VM
ACapitalEscape
Ever dream of moving to Victoria? Start
by learning how to forage. Judging from
menus studied on a recent 48-hour
dine-around, hard-harvesting is the
new Island pursuit. Or just go: fly, and
you can still be back in time for spin class
on Monday by john burns
PART & PARCEL
Foo’s just-opened
sib has a changing
daily menu of beau-
tiful proteins (trout
tartine) and world
grains like farro ri-
sotto. 2656 Quadra
St., 778-406-0888.
Partandparcel.ca
OLO
A drink and dessert
at the bar is fine,
but on the next trip
serious investiga-
tion is required
into the modern-
ist farm-to-table
menu. 509 Fisgard
St., 250-590-8795.
Olorestaurant.com
CATEGORY 12
A mad scientist
brewer in darkest
Central Saanich?
Sign us up! 2200
Keating Cross Rd.
Category12beer.com
NE W KIDS ON
THE BLOCK

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A weekend escape to Victoria, BC

  • 1. M AY 2 O 1 5 | VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E 113112 VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E | M AY 2 O 1 5 *** THE VANCOUVER-BASED SAJE TRAVEL KIT KEEPS YOU ENERGIZED AND HEALTHY WITH AROMATHERAPY FORUMULAS LIKE ARRIVE REVIVED AND EATER'S DIGEST ($39.95, saje.ca) IMPERIAL AMBITIONS Those windows just above the word “Empress”? Yup, you can stay there; views are killer WORLD STAGE Pull up a pew at Stage for thought- fully selected by-the-glass wines from B.C. and around the world ONE RING TO RULE THEM ALL Empire Donuts has been a local secret since it opened for delivery only, but its cakes are now available at select cafés SUDS CYCLE A Pedaler tour hits founding brew pub Spinnakers. If you make it there, order the effervescent new Ortega Blonde wine/ale mashup T H E GOODS Nex t De s tina tions F IE L D T R IP Twelve tasters later, I’m ready for a little sit-down, so bike returned, I retreat to the Empress’s Bengal Lounge, where a Port Authority (Maker’s Mark, port, and bitters, all barrel-aged) and Morgan Wil- son’s elevated pub fare (pork sliders, hand-cut crisps) animate the happy hour menu. (Later, it’s all G&Ts and Raj-era curries beneath the mounted tiger skin.) For dinner (sticking to the healthy theme), I hit Foo Asian Street Food (769 Yates St., 250- 383-3111), a more rigorous version of hometown hero Noodlebox adjacent to the hotel, where Indian paneer and Thai curries sit beside octopus salad and sweet-and-sour pork belly, the heat and sweet nicely handled by a curated selec- tion of local craft brews. I spend Day 2 browsing through Chinatown, having a hearty omelette at Jam Cafe (542 Herald St., 778-440-4489) in the a half-dozen gastown app- maker bros are selfie-ing their way across the strait, which would be annoying except 1)flights with Harbour Air (harbourair.com) are only 35 minutes long and 2)those views. Leaving at 9, I’m still in time for second breakfast when we drop into Victoria’s Inner Harbour, so I climb all of two blocks to the Gold Lounge at my hotel, the Fairmont Empress Hotel (721 Government St., 866-540-4429; from $259), for grill-your-own burritos, mini crois- sants, and that bespoke tea blend. Overlooking the parliament build- ings, I consider the day’s options. I feel ready to take on the world, or at least 6.5 kilometres of it, in the company of Kyra McLeod of The Pedaler (719 Douglas St., 778-265- 7433), which owners Paul Rayman and Rosemary Lee set up in 2013 to offer bicycle tours along culinary and historical lines. We helmet up for the three-hour Hoppy Hour Ride ($89), travelling along city streets and over the still-under- construction Johnson Street Bridge (hold on!) to old-school brew pubs Spinnakers (the city’s original, from 1984; 308 Catherine St., 250- 386-2739) and Swans (from ’89; 506 Pandora Ave., 250-361-3310), plus Moon Under Water (circa 2010; 350 Bay St., 250-380-0706), where owner/brewmaster Clay Potter tours us behind the scenes. old Herald Street Café spot, and checking out the Victoria Pub- lic Market (1701 Douglas St.) for knick-knacks and Vikram Vij’s new Sutra. Feeling adventurous I even hit up two much-discussed new cafés in industrial Rockland (a sketchy five-minute drive from downtown): Wheelies Motorcycles Café (2620 Rock Bay Ave., 250- 995-9359), a custom bike shop overrun for killer grilled sand- wiches, rocket-fuel espresso, and housemade espresso gelato sand- wiched between brownie slabs and rolled in candied pecans; and Second Crack Coffee Lab (2612 Bridge St., 250-634-2680), an oh- so-serious retail space for a whole- sale roaster that also happens to purvey the city’s on-trend Empire Donuts, made by Melanie Laverick for home delivery by the dozen. Several brewery tastes later, dinner. So many options, but I elect to cab it to Stage (1307 Gladstone Ave., 250-388-4222) in leafy Fernwood. Gold winner in this magazine’s Best Victoria cat- egory (see pg. 94), this cute neigh- bourhood brasserie (exposed-brick walls, a worn floor of narrow wood planks) serves killer share plates (think local charcuterie, Sooke- caught trout with bacon and crème fraîche, salads of purslane and sheep sorrel) and a smart B.C.-for- ward wine list, including a dozen chalkboard specials by the glass. I’m stuffed, but we have to put a nose into the recent farm-to-table rebrand of Ulla. OLO (509 Fisgard St., 250-590-8795) is Chinook for “hungry,” explains owner/bar- tender Shawn Soole, godfather of Victoria’s vibrant cocktail culture, as he mixes up digestifs for our party. Each eerily suits its recipient. Maybe a last nightcap at tonight's hotel, the Rialto (653 Pandora Ave., 800-332-9981), just a few blocks up the way. A 2009 rebuild of the storied (but deteriorated) Hotel Douglas, the Rialto now does restful boutique accommodations and a great hotel bar, Veneto Tap Lounge, as smack downtown as you could hope. Stump gin (from Phillips Brew- ing down the street) in hand, we toast city founder James Douglas in the remains of his namesake hotel. VM ACapitalEscape Ever dream of moving to Victoria? Start by learning how to forage. Judging from menus studied on a recent 48-hour dine-around, hard-harvesting is the new Island pursuit. Or just go: fly, and you can still be back in time for spin class on Monday by john burns PART & PARCEL Foo’s just-opened sib has a changing daily menu of beau- tiful proteins (trout tartine) and world grains like farro ri- sotto. 2656 Quadra St., 778-406-0888. Partandparcel.ca OLO A drink and dessert at the bar is fine, but on the next trip serious investiga- tion is required into the modern- ist farm-to-table menu. 509 Fisgard St., 250-590-8795. Olorestaurant.com CATEGORY 12 A mad scientist brewer in darkest Central Saanich? Sign us up! 2200 Keating Cross Rd. Category12beer.com NE W KIDS ON THE BLOCK
  • 2. M AY 2 O 1 5 | VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E 113112 VA N C O U V E R M A G A Z I N E | M AY 2 O 1 5 *** THE VANCOUVER-BASED SAJE TRAVEL KIT KEEPS YOU ENERGIZED AND HEALTHY WITH AROMATHERAPY FORUMULAS LIKE ARRIVE REVIVED AND EATER'S DIGEST ($39.95, saje.ca) IMPERIAL AMBITIONS Those windows just above the word “Empress”? Yup, you can stay there; views are killer WORLD STAGE Pull up a pew at Stage for thought- fully selected by-the-glass wines from B.C. and around the world ONE RING TO RULE THEM ALL Empire Donuts has been a local secret since it opened for delivery only, but its cakes are now available at select cafés SUDS CYCLE A Pedaler tour hits founding brew pub Spinnakers. If you make it there, order the effervescent new Ortega Blonde wine/ale mashup T H E GOODS Nex t De s tina tions F IE L D T R IP Twelve tasters later, I’m ready for a little sit-down, so bike returned, I retreat to the Empress’s Bengal Lounge, where a Port Authority (Maker’s Mark, port, and bitters, all barrel-aged) and Morgan Wil- son’s elevated pub fare (pork sliders, hand-cut crisps) animate the happy hour menu. (Later, it’s all G&Ts and Raj-era curries beneath the mounted tiger skin.) For dinner (sticking to the healthy theme), I hit Foo Asian Street Food (769 Yates St., 250- 383-3111), a more rigorous version of hometown hero Noodlebox adjacent to the hotel, where Indian paneer and Thai curries sit beside octopus salad and sweet-and-sour pork belly, the heat and sweet nicely handled by a curated selec- tion of local craft brews. I spend Day 2 browsing through Chinatown, having a hearty omelette at Jam Cafe (542 Herald St., 778-440-4489) in the a half-dozen gastown app- maker bros are selfie-ing their way across the strait, which would be annoying except 1)flights with Harbour Air (harbourair.com) are only 35 minutes long and 2)those views. Leaving at 9, I’m still in time for second breakfast when we drop into Victoria’s Inner Harbour, so I climb all of two blocks to the Gold Lounge at my hotel, the Fairmont Empress Hotel (721 Government St., 866-540-4429; from $259), for grill-your-own burritos, mini crois- sants, and that bespoke tea blend. Overlooking the parliament build- ings, I consider the day’s options. I feel ready to take on the world, or at least 6.5 kilometres of it, in the company of Kyra McLeod of The Pedaler (719 Douglas St., 778-265- 7433), which owners Paul Rayman and Rosemary Lee set up in 2013 to offer bicycle tours along culinary and historical lines. We helmet up for the three-hour Hoppy Hour Ride ($89), travelling along city streets and over the still-under- construction Johnson Street Bridge (hold on!) to old-school brew pubs Spinnakers (the city’s original, from 1984; 308 Catherine St., 250- 386-2739) and Swans (from ’89; 506 Pandora Ave., 250-361-3310), plus Moon Under Water (circa 2010; 350 Bay St., 250-380-0706), where owner/brewmaster Clay Potter tours us behind the scenes. old Herald Street Café spot, and checking out the Victoria Pub- lic Market (1701 Douglas St.) for knick-knacks and Vikram Vij’s new Sutra. Feeling adventurous I even hit up two much-discussed new cafés in industrial Rockland (a sketchy five-minute drive from downtown): Wheelies Motorcycles Café (2620 Rock Bay Ave., 250- 995-9359), a custom bike shop overrun for killer grilled sand- wiches, rocket-fuel espresso, and housemade espresso gelato sand- wiched between brownie slabs and rolled in candied pecans; and Second Crack Coffee Lab (2612 Bridge St., 250-634-2680), an oh- so-serious retail space for a whole- sale roaster that also happens to purvey the city’s on-trend Empire Donuts, made by Melanie Laverick for home delivery by the dozen. Several brewery tastes later, dinner. So many options, but I elect to cab it to Stage (1307 Gladstone Ave., 250-388-4222) in leafy Fernwood. Gold winner in this magazine’s Best Victoria cat- egory (see pg. 94), this cute neigh- bourhood brasserie (exposed-brick walls, a worn floor of narrow wood planks) serves killer share plates (think local charcuterie, Sooke- caught trout with bacon and crème fraîche, salads of purslane and sheep sorrel) and a smart B.C.-for- ward wine list, including a dozen chalkboard specials by the glass. I’m stuffed, but we have to put a nose into the recent farm-to-table rebrand of Ulla. OLO (509 Fisgard St., 250-590-8795) is Chinook for “hungry,” explains owner/bar- tender Shawn Soole, godfather of Victoria’s vibrant cocktail culture, as he mixes up digestifs for our party. Each eerily suits its recipient. Maybe a last nightcap at tonight's hotel, the Rialto (653 Pandora Ave., 800-332-9981), just a few blocks up the way. A 2009 rebuild of the storied (but deteriorated) Hotel Douglas, the Rialto now does restful boutique accommodations and a great hotel bar, Veneto Tap Lounge, as smack downtown as you could hope. Stump gin (from Phillips Brew- ing down the street) in hand, we toast city founder James Douglas in the remains of his namesake hotel. VM ACapitalEscape Ever dream of moving to Victoria? Start by learning how to forage. Judging from menus studied on a recent 48-hour dine-around, hard-harvesting is the new Island pursuit. Or just go: fly, and you can still be back in time for spin class on Monday by john burns PART & PARCEL Foo’s just-opened sib has a changing daily menu of beau- tiful proteins (trout tartine) and world grains like farro ri- sotto. 2656 Quadra St., 778-406-0888. Partandparcel.ca OLO A drink and dessert at the bar is fine, but on the next trip serious investiga- tion is required into the modern- ist farm-to-table menu. 509 Fisgard St., 250-590-8795. Olorestaurant.com CATEGORY 12 A mad scientist brewer in darkest Central Saanich? Sign us up! 2200 Keating Cross Rd. Category12beer.com NE W KIDS ON THE BLOCK