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It’s not OK, what’s a person to do? So yes, we live in New York, and having a couple cocktails here can be a costly undertaking.. What is a Poor Working Guy or Working Girl to do??? Well Boys and Girls, let’s Thank God for that great thing of wonder and the Bars and establishments who so graciously and kindly serve it, The $3.00 PBR, That’s right, a $3.oo Beer in The Land of The Over-Priced $16.00 Cocktail, Manhattan, New York, NY….. It’s quite Sad, Greedy too, not to mention “Ridiculous Ludicrous and Insane.”
Copyright 2008 Daniel Bellino Zwicke
PLACES To GET A $3.00 PBR in NEW YORK
BLUE & GOLD BAR in the East Village, on East 7th Street between 1st and 2nd Avenues. Blue & Gold has long been a favorite of mine ever since I lived in the East Village from 1982 to 1994. It’s just a cool ol normal old style bar with a pool table, standard 50’s 60’s Bar Decor, and Best-of-All $3.oo PBR’S and $6.00 Cocktails. I love it.
7B a.k.a. The Horseshoe Bar, also in the East Village, a bastion of cheap and fare prices in Manhattan and Land of The $3.00 PBR and other $3 and $4 Beers. 7B is located on the corner of Avenue B at 7th Street ..
And SECRET RECIPES
Lucyās Bar is the most aptly named bar in New York. For Lucyāthe quiet and small and sweetly proper Polish owner with the well-coifed gray hair and floral blousesāis who youāll see when you go there, and Lucy is the one who will serve you. If there are other employees, theyāve hidden themselves somewhere in the back.
Though Lucyās is undeniably a dive (and one of the last in the neighborhood), it feels more like your auntās aging rec room, a place where youād never think of disrespecting the houseās hospitality. Itās also one of the last vestiges of the Polish community that was once made up a significant part of the East Villageās character.
Ludwika āLucyā Mickevicius moved from Poland to New York in the late 1970s and soon got a job at Blancheās, a bar on St. Markās Place run by another Polish woman. She became such a fixture that people began to think of the bar as Lucyās, and, when Blanche retired, she sold the placeāby then located on Avenue Aāto her bartender.
Lucyās life doesnāt range much further than the twin poles of her joint and Poland, which she visits regularly, shutting up the tavern at a momentās notice and disappearing for weeks at a time. Most nights, she stations herself at the far end of the bar near the ancient cash register. (Itās cash only here.) One recent evening, the Halloween balloons hadnāt yet been taken down. Then again, assorted Thanksgiving and Christmas decorations were already out. Maybe none of the decorations are ever packed up?
Lucy doesnāt budge much behind the bar, but she keeps herself busy for a woman in her mid-70s. She will draw you a pint or a glass of tequila. And, if she likes you, she might pour you a shot of żubrówka, a Polish bison grass vodka, on the house. When the place gets stuffy, sheāll swing open the door to let some fresh Avenue A air in; just as quickly, sheāll close it if it gets chilly.
The clientele ranges from a less-intense sort of downtown hipster, who exchange a few friendly words with Lucyāwho, even all these years later, still speaks in broken, accented Englishāand then retire to their personal conversations, to old Polish regulars. In fact, on another recent night, a young couple came in to show Lucy their young child. All four spoke entirely in Polish and a delighted Lucy let the little scamp climb atop the pool table. As they left, she handed the kid one of the old Halloween balloons. For those few minutes, Lucyās was a family bar.
NEW YORK NY
GOT ANY KAHLUA ?
The BIG LEBOWSKI COOKBOOK
Daniel Zwicke
Lower East Side
If Clockworkās happy hour special seems too good to be true, youāve got a little good old fashioned neighborhood competition to thank. Located right around the corner, 169 has been in operation since 1916. And its 11:30am-7:30pm HH is among the best in the city. $3 will get you an āOld Man Can/Bottleā of beer (PBR, Carling Black Label, Schaefer, Genesee Cream, High Life/Miller Lite) and any well shot. Subtly New Orleanian environs (window shutters look like theyāre fresh off a Creole cottage; beads are strung here and there; thereās crawfish on the menu) evoke genuine good times.
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