• Barred

    Barred: Edison Place

    Photo: ManBeerLove.com

    Photo: ManBeerLove.com

    When: Friday, 12:20am

    I wouldn’t blame you for thinking Edison Place would be the type of establishment lit by its namesake filament bulbs, but pork belly and kale has yet to penetrate Glendale (despite neighboring Ridgewood now having a self-proclaimed gastropub named DISH). It’s still lollipop chicken and caesar salads in the subway-free zones.

    You would not be wrong if you guessed that Journey and Guns N’ Roses might get played. There were a lot of Amstel Light drinkers, a mix of accents (Queens-y and Eastern European), and an admirable sprinkling of non-young, yet non-elderly couples, the latter which conforms to my theory about smaller cities and more traditional enclaves. People just have kids younger so they’re done parenting and back out drinking by their 40s rather than rearing grade-schoolers.

    After a few Bitburgers (and an accidentally broken pint glass, and separately a hard stare for saying “fuck” too loudly) it was time to move on. It wasn’t until I got outside that I realized I’d been in this same space in my 20s when it was occupied by a German restaurant. The bar at Von Westerhagen was the first and last place in NYC where I witnessed overt inter-generational bonding over a dislike of minorities, sealed with honest-to-goodness sieg heils and “white power” said aloud for reinforcement. For the record, I encountered nothing of the sort at Edison Place.

    Age appropriate? Definitely. There’s a direct correlation between age diversity and the distance from lower Manhattan and gentrified Brooklyn.

  • Barred

    Barred: Ridgewood Round-up

    Gottscheer Hall, Sunday, 8:01pm

    The sweet sixteen party being held in the event space, visible (prom dresses) and audible (Alicia Keys) through the sliding accordion doors brought down the median age considerably. Bottles of wine that said Sweet White on the label were being rushed to the tables, presumably not for the kids, while the bar was mostly occupied by adult refugees. Eventually, a trio, which I assumed had to be Euro hipsters since the two young men were dressed in a confusing manner–bolo ties, flat, wide-brimmed hats, leather jackets–reminiscent of alternative guys I went to high school with, not the ‘90s revival that’s currently en vogue. They were American, however.

    Age Appropriate? The only woman over 40 was the bartender. She told us to come back on a Friday when it’s livelier.

    Polish German Club House, Sunday, 9:10pm

    Polish has long replaced the German, but the name remains. Club house is also a bit of an intimidating way to describe what is essentially someone’s living room that happens to have a bar against the wall. All patrons appeared to either live upstairs or have a connection to someone living upstairs. Outsiders can still drink beer, play with the pet chihuahua and eat homemade bagel chips, though. Even the guy, non-family, who comes in from Long Island to hang out in the old neighborhood and wasn’t crazy about gays in the St. Patrick’s Day parade, was friendly albeit misguided.

    Age Appropriate? Once again, the only woman over 40 was the bartender, but it was ok.

    No name bar, Sunday, ? pm

    Where clubs or club houses can be forbidding, forgoing signage and windows with any visibility sends a stronger signal. This uninviting establishment directly next to the Forest Avenue station’s staircase appears to be exclusively for old Romanian men. If you are not an old Romanian man you probably won’t get the evil eye, you will simply be ignored by them. The bartender, barely drinking age, straight from Hungary, appeared happy to see women. (She also already knew that Bushwick and Williamsburg are the more desirable neighborhoods to hang out in.) When she asked if we smoked, I assumed it was to bring an ashtray, but she also handed us cigarettes. The only man not sitting at the bar was alone at a table next to us. His chair began tipping to the left and then fell over completely with his body still firmly planted in the seat. There was no movement for a solid three minutes as he lay crumpled on the floor with his chair. Eventually, a few guys got up from the bar, propped him back up, and he continued to slump forward the rest of the evening with his new drink untouched in front of him.

    Age Appropriate? Age is less of an issue than being female and a native English-speaker. There is a women’s bathroom, however, at the end of a very dark, shadowy hall past the pool table. The giant rat trap next to the toilet was less off-putting than the giant tub of pink Queen Helene hair gel above the sink.

     

  • Barred

    Barred: Queens Tavern

    Ad via Boozy Branding

    Ad via Boozy Branding

    When: Sunday, not sure what time, but it was the point of the Oscars when Jared Leto was on stage, and Friday, 8pm.

    If anyone had told me in 1998 that in the future there would be a bar on Fresh Pond Road where Joy Division was on the jukebox, poetry readings occurred, the number of transplanted twentysomethings nearly balanced the amount of gruff men drinking alone and that a bartender, bearded and plaided, would be extolling the virtues of Fernet to patrons who’d never heard of it, I would’ve lumped the notion in with hovercrafts and Star Trek needle-free injections.

    But in September Caskey’s was turned into Queens Tavern by the owners of The Grand. The pool table was removed and the shuffleboard is now hung on the wall as decor, but there are still old guys drinking bottles of Bud Light at the end of the bar and belligerent men walking in off the street with their own beers and screaming when the pay phone doesn’t work. Thankfully, the neon spelling out Tavern accompanied by a glowing coupe glass is still intact (though only “vern” was lit).

    Despite the provenance of the bar’s new iteration, Williamsburg has yet to fully migrate. On my second visit, when a friend of the bartender arrived to keep her company, she exclaimed, “It’s at the end of the world!” ostensibly visiting Ridgewood for the first time. The bartender lives a mile and a half away on the Wilson L.

    Age appropriate? There’s a gap between the Sixpoint-swilling millennials and middle-aged men who start drinking at noon that could easily be filled by some nice non-young ladies.

    Was I carded? On the second visit, yes. But only because the doorman, not present the first time, said he was bored. The only other paying customer was a man of Eastern European descent who looked 50s but was probably 40s, slurring what I think was “drink.”

  • Gen X'd Out

    Tequila!

    employees onlyBen Schott has an “Op-Art” (whatever) in the Times that lays bare the secret slang used by bar staff.

    It’s not surprising to see code for communicating about hot chicks, but Employees Only breaking out hot chicks into three age levels was unexpected–and impossible to miss since the upper left hand corner is where the eye goes first in a big list.

    The real question is whether añejo means 35 or 65.

  • Barred

    Barred: Subway Inn

    HusbandDayCareCenter

    When: Thursday, 7:33pm
    What I drank: Gin and tonic (brand unknown), Maker’s Mark on the rocks ($8 apiece)

    With its peeling linoleum, bordello red glow and jaunty exterior neon, Subway Inn gives off a whiff of crusty old man hang, though that has never been the actual case on my early evening visits where it feels more like I’ve walked in on someone’s party. Or rather, clumps of parties, all made up of youthful mixed-gender groups with a lack of overtly unifying characteristics that would imply coworkers. This extends to the jukebox, which in the course of 30 minutes could play Justin Timberlake and Jay Z, initially unidentifiable metal (Memphis May Fire, thanks to Shazam) and unidentifiable-even-to-Shazam contemporary country. And the solo drinking men–too young to be so gruff and too early to be so sloshed–are twitchy about encroachment of their space at the bar.

    I am not looking to make friends anyway (and after a few drinks kinship begins to simmer). Subway Inn  serves as my pre-game option on the rare occasions when I dine in the E. 60s, the land of solid double-digit cocktails. Soon enough this dying breed may be snuffed out altogether–or who knows, repurposed by John DeLucie.

    Was I carded? No, I only noticed the bouncer on his doorway stool as I was leaving.

    Age appropriate? There’s nothing about the atmosphere that is specifically repellant to grown women who don’t mind a little dust and dishevelment, though in my limited experience I have not encountered them. Based on comments I’ve read, this is because ladies be shopping at Bloomingdales and Subway Inn is the refuge for sad and miserable husbands and boyfriends.

  • Barred

    Barred: Maggiano’s

    funeral diva

    When: Saturday, 9:30pm
    What I drank: “Handcrafted Classic Cocktail” Manhattan

    Maggiano’s brings a stage set Little Italy to the suburbs. And with it, a hard crowd to parse.  Aging happens differently in these environs; women in their 30s have already been divorced, remarried and have children old enough to drive.

    I would’ve pegged the birthday girl I sat next to–blonde, professional but weathered, all whites, nudes and beiges–to be at least early 40s, but that’s because I was using Brooklyn radar.

    “When I was 16 I wanted to work in a funeral home, ” she said matter of factly to similarly appointed friend, finishing up dessert.  Goth kid?

    “And now I’m a funeral director.” Boom.

    But she still wasn’t satisfied because she was “almost 40” and didn’t own the funeral parlor and never had time to travel. If things had gone differently, she may have never married the man she’s no longer with.

    She also said “shit’s creek,” which I’ve always taken issue with because I don’t think the phrase is meant to be possessive like Shit is an entity who owns a body of water. It’s just shit creek like a creek that’s shitty. I’m open to other interpretations, of course.

    Was I carded? Of course not.

    Age appropriate? Of course. Twentysomethings aren’t exactly flocking to Bridgewater Commons for a night out. And though the 30somethings look and act a decade older in New Jersey, there were plenty of truly middle-aged patrons.

    I can’t properly photo credit because Funeral Divas is no longer in business.

  • Screen Time

    Screen Time: Age of Consent

    scolari HBO

    Whether or not Girls accurately reflects an NYC anyone recognizes as true, I will concede that Sunday’s episode featuring Bar Matchless painted a North Brooklyn bar scene that’s pretty much the same in life as in fiction. If you’re over 25 you may as well be Peter Scolari in a pork pie and the few middle-agers clogging up the place are men only. (By the way, James Cameron Mitchell looks good for 50 and it’s telling that Alex Karpovsky, who’s definitely older than Ray’s 33, has his age missing suspiciously from his IMDB profile and was cagey about his years on earth in at least two interviews.)

    At least I got to hear my favorite New Order song.

     

  • Barred

    Barred:  Molly’s Shebeen

    Sasquatch Swag Sasquatch Swag

    When: Tuesday, 9:46pm

    What did I drink? Four (?) pints of Harp and two shots of Jameson

    Molly’s is the kind of place where 46-year-old men who consider women to be “older” at 39 will keep buying you drinks because they think you’re 33 and want to get you and your friend to come to their apartment upstairs (also the new home of a non-old live-in dog-walker found off a Craiglist ad in Pennsylvania–she won’t pick up poop but her incompetence is mitigated by doing yoga with her thong showing), men on both sides of the bar have Ecuadorean ex wives, and there are barely touched shelves of  Galliano, Midori and Rock & Rye to spark memory lane chatter. In other words, entertaining.

    Maybe it was the roaring fireplace and soft sawdust underfoot or the Jameson shots and handed off cigarettes, but closing time crept up awfully quick on a weeknight.

    I learned that the one thing older women have in their favor is that they don’t play with their phones all night. What men over 37 have going for them is that for the most part they’ve not fallen victim to the wretched beardo thing. (I hope to god that these young flanneled sasquatches are not demanding baby smoothness from the ladies; see also, the only thing I’ve ever appreciated from American Apparel.)

    Age appropriate? Though more than four hours were passed, not a single woman obviously over 39 made an appearance. The clientele ranged from the recently graduated crew one would expect in the neighborhood and solo middle-aged men, some with books, some on the make.

    “Maybe you shouldn’t be hanging out  Brother Jimmy’s,” my advice to the  misguided man finding himself far more aged than that bar’s patrons, could also be my own mantra. In its own way, my entire neighborhood is a Brother Jimmy’s. Let’s all avoid the Brother Jimmy’s in life.

  • Barred

    Barred: Night of Joy

    When: Tuesday, some time after 2am
    What did I drink? Three Brooklyn Lagers ($6)

    If you’re anything like me, New Year’s Eve is rarely joyous so the best remedy is to approach the pseudo-holiday with very low expectations coupled with the promise of un-sensible quantities of liquor. Hence, Night of Joy, one of the neighborhood bars that was licensed to sell alcohol until 8am.

    You might think that hearing The Vaselines and Orange Juice coming from a turntable on New Year’s Eve would temper any prickliness or apprehension at the passing of another year. And you would be correct–assuming the DJ wasn’t a 20something in a striped sweater and a gray wedge cut.  All of the musical and stylistic components were there, yet the age–and accompanying lack of self-awareness –canceled out any good will.

    By 3:34am I was on my way home to drink a shot of Jim Beam and watch the scene from Eastbound & Down where Kenny  goes on a coke binge to Bauhaus and Shane dies during “Walk Like An Egyptian.” Happy new year!

    Was I carded? I’m fairly certain there was a doorman performing due diligence.

    Age appropriate? At this point does the question even need to be asked when concerning Williamsburg?

  • Barred

    Two Fewer Options

    Paul Wagtouicz for Time Out New York Paul Wagtouicz for Time Out New York

    Milady’s is very much The Middle Ages-approved, even I discovered it later in life and don’t pay a visit more than once per year. Every neighborhood needs at least one holdout to provide refuge from the trendy or touristy. Soho will not be the same with this bar’s absence.

    On the opposite side of the spectrum, I have not set foot in 7A since my 20s–and it wasn’t even particularly good at the time, just open all hours–but I’m still a little sad to see it go.