Ask someone on the street to name Canadian whiskies. There’s no doubt that Crown Royal and Canadian Club would be first names out of the gate. After that, it may get a bit murky. Admittedly ...
at a diplomatic event And by "grand Canadian welcome," I mean a tiny-ass red carpet. A man in a suit and tie stands next to a woman in a coat at an outdoor event, looking toward the camera Here it ...
Lawson Whiting, CEO of Brown-Forman, the maker of Jack Daniel's, said the removal of his company's whiskey from Canadian store shelves was "worse than a tariff." Pulling liquor, alcohol products ...
All the corn for Red, White & Blue is grown on the distillery property, making this about as close to an estate whiskey as you can get. (Since the barley and rye have to come from a malting house ...
Below him, the Bibas children, Lifshitz and an unknown body were shown covered in red. Writing in English referred to Netanyahu as a “war criminal.” The caskets were loaded onto Red Cross ...
In 1892, the British Admiralty officially allowed Canadian commercial ships to fly a red flag that was known as the Canadian Red Ensign, with the Union Jack in one corner and a smaller shield of ...
In the face of tariff threats from the United States — and retaliatory tariffs and restrictions on the sale of U.S. alcohol — ...
When it comes to whisky (and that's whisky with no "e"), Canada knows what it's doing. Known for smooth, easy-drinking blends and rich, complex flavors, Canadian whisky has been a staple on bar ...
A whiskey river wasn't on Austin Contegiacomo's mind when he found an ocean of it — a Prohibition-era stash, to be exact — washed up on a New Jersey beach while he was walking his dog last month.
Patrick Kane spent part of his time in Mexico watching hockey. How could he not. He was one of many Detroit Red Wings who took advantage of the NHL pausing for the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament to ...
Or sign-in if you have an account. First Reading is a daily newsletter keeping you posted on the travails of Canadian politicos, all curated by the National Post’s own Tristin Hopper.