Slider Image 1 Content
Choose best, Choose tasty
Here you can showcase the x number of Featured Content. You can edit this Headline, Subheadline and Feaured Content from "Appearance -> Customize -> Featured Content Options".
The holidays are officially here and what better way to make your spirits bright than by sipping festive beverages at a themed pop-up bar?
In recent years, a growing number of bars have gone the way of Clark Griswold, decking the halls with an almost unfathomable number of holiday lights, endless strands of garland and ornaments that glitter. All the while the bartender shakes and stirs up a plethora of seasonal beverages — both hot and cold — for revelers looking to indulge on holiday cheer.
There are now so many in and around Denver, we broke this year’s down by theme. Here’s where to drink and be merry, whether you’re looking for classic Christmas vibes, a winter getaway or a holiday haunting that would give Scrooge nightmares.
miracle, perhaps the best-known holiday pop-up bar, returns to Colorado this season with five locations along the Front Range. Staff at the Terminal Bar at Union Station (1701 Wynkoop St., Denver), The Eddy Taproom & Hotel (1640 8th St., Golden), Rouge Wine Bar & Patio (7939 E Arapahoe Rd., Suite 190, Greenwood Village), Cousin Pat’s Pub & Grill (451 S St. Vrain Ave., Estes Park), and /pôr/ Wine House (701 Main St., Louisville) have decked the halls and stocked the bar for all your holiday needs. In addition to buying festive libations, like the Christmas policy and Snowball Old-Fashioned, guests can purchase thematic glassware they come in. Trust us, these shot-sized Santa mugs are the gifts that keep on giving.
Dates vary by location. Reservations required. Find more information at miaclepopup.com/locations.

Forget coal. Denverites who make their way to The Naughty List (2400 W. 32nd Ave., Denver) this year are treated to festive cocktails like flaming eggnog and other revelry designed to celebrate the problem (adult) children.
Open through Dec. 31. Find more information at naughtylistdenver.com.
McGregor Square is adding a festive twist to the phrase “slay all day” with the pop-up Sleigh Bar, which has transformed Milepost Zero (1601 19th St., Suite 150, Denver) into a holiday destination. In addition to clever cocktails like Gin-gle Bells and The Polar Espresso, this pop-up features regular events, including drag shows, karaoke, Christmas movie trivia and screenings, ice skating and more.
Open through Dec. 31. Find more information at milepostzero.com/sleigh-bar.
So sugary seasonal cocktails aren’t your thing? Head to Calls to Arms Brewing Co. (4526 Tennyson St., Denver), which is serving holiday cheer and pints of beer under the moniker Big Holiday Energy. Expect to find stockings hung by a faux fireplace, a Hanukkah display, and tinsel dripping from nearly every corner of the taproom as you participate in daily scavenger hunts, advent calendar contests and celebratory events, such as drag shows, a Krampus costume party and an ugly sweater night.
Open through Dec. 31. Find more at facebook.com/events/858760131825181.

Leave the chill of winter at the door when you step inside Sippin’ Santa, the tropical-themed holiday pop-up taking over The Arvada Tavern (5707 Olde Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada). Drinks here, like the Kris Kringle Colada and Island of Misfit Toys, aiming to transport visitors to sun-kissed days on sandy shores without the need for a plane ticket. Guests can also buy the glassware at this Miracle spinoff, so save room in your luggage for souvenirs.
Open through Dec. 31. Reservations required. Find more information at arvadatavern.com/sippin-santa; make reservations at exploretock.com/arvadatavern.
Adorned with fake snow and holiday lights, Adrift, one of Denver’s best tiki bars, celebrates the season as SNOWDRIFT. When it’s cold outside, SNOWDRIFT warms up patrons with bowls of flaming punch and other boozy beverages featuring seasonal ingredients like cranberry, thyme, and cinnamon. Stop by during special events, including ugly sweater contests and drag shows, for an extra shot of celebration.
MISSOURI – Hungry for some fast food? You might be craving a cheeseburger or chicken sandwich, but it’s as entirely possible you might “think outside the bun” in the Show-Me State.
A new study conducted by Pricelisto determined the most popular fast food restaurants in all 50 US states. The research team found Taco Bell to be the most popular fast food chain in Missouri.
Pricelisto conducted the study by analyzing Google data and search interest over the past 12 months.
According to the findings, Missouri’s top three preferences, in order, are Taco Bell, McDonald’s and Steak ‘n Shake.
In an email to FOX 2, a spokesperson added, “Fast food has become a staple of many Americans’ daily lives. Over a quarter of American adults eat fast food daily, and therefore there is such a huge number of fast-food branches spread across the state. … The vast array of cuisine available means that Americans have a fantastic choice of dining experiences to enjoy.”
As for neighboring Missouri states, some of the findings revealed the top fast-food restaurants to be…
Qhere is nothing cautious about Cooking: Simply and Well, for One or Many (4th Estate) by Jeremy Lee. I kept wondering if the editorial brief was more! More stories, more illustrations, more wit, more advice, more recipes. The abundance feels contained, though, as it does the gregarious, expert and tender writing, in an exquisitely well-crafted volume. This is the most complete collection of recipes: pies, soups, stews, salads, tarts, puddings and a dish of potatoes, butter and cabbage called Rumbledethumps. It is also a biography recounted through home and professional cooking; a meditation on ingredients and eating; and a celebration of food writers past and present. Lee notes that time spent in the kitchen is “something to cherish and celebrate”. This book is, too.

“I was the kid you saw running behind the counter,” said Angela Hui. Her memoirs Take Away: Stories from a Childhood Behind the Counter (Trapeze) is an exhilarating delight even when it isn’t – for example, when she describes the racism that Chinese immigrants are running a takeaway in the Welsh valleys they inevitably face. Her observations are clear-sighted, her writing is full of humor and life, and nowhere more so than when recounting her shy then rebellious adolescence, the fiery takeaway kitchen and the complex dynamics of private family cooking. Egg fried rice, steamed eggs, shark fin soup; recipes not only end each chapter, they tell stories, too, of longing and belonging.
I’ve been waiting for Modern Pressure Cooking (Quadrille) with trepidation, because it meant getting a pressure cooker and I’ve been resistant, with outdated preconceptions, for years. fortunately, Catherine Phipps is not only an expert advocate, but – it took two and a half paragraphs – utterly convincing. No doubt climate concerns helped, too: a book about something that cuts 70% of cooking times, uses 70% less energy and considerably less water, is hard to ignore. I did approach the maiden batch of beans like a newly qualified vet approaching a wounded wild animal, and jumped when it was hissed. But the reward was perfect beans in a quarter of the usual time. Minestrone, stock, dream dal, rice and a four-minute pumpkin puree followed: a fraction of a book that feels as much a treat on good cooking and eating as a guide to contemporary pressure cooking.
From the flicker of gas that opens the book to the ode to rum that finishes it, West Winds: Recipes, History and Tales from Jamaica (Dorling Kindersley) is captivating. It is Riaz Phillips’ second (his first was Belly Full: Caribbean Food in the UK) and it centers on a journey to Jamaica. Observations, cultural history, religion, folklore, music, poems and food are drawn together, while glimpses of his Jamaican grandmother cooking in Hackney, and other impressions of the Caribbean community in London, swell to fill the book. Phillips is skilled, his writing is evocative and sharp; reading I yearned for ackee, breadfruit, salt fish, spiced patties, red-pea soup, hardo bread and ginger beer, the latter two of which I made immediately. Phillips’s hope is to illuminate the legacy of an intellectual and innovative Jamaican food culture, and he does so, amply.

Understanding and humor are good qualities in a book. The Joy of Snacks (Headline) by Laura Goodman has an abundance of both. The premise is simple: snacks, whether a folded crisp, pickle, warm biscuit or cheeseball, are some of life’s greatest pleasures. A chapter on crisps, nachos and popcorn is followed by dips, which are chased by things on toast, the soothing power of a hot, buttered crumpet, and instructions for a no-knead focaccia. Other chapters cover cheese, pickles and snacks to go with coffee and wine. Deft storytelling ensures momentum, while deep research and real wisdom about how we actually eat flash brilliantly. There was a chance that recipes among the flowing text would feel lost. But clever design ensures they don’t; instructions for chickpea-flour socca, crumbly biscuits, golden latkes and warm donuts form a seemingly seamless part of the whole.

Inspired by a train journey between her parents’ home towns of Kolkata and Chennai, IndianExpress (Square Peg) is a collection of 75 south Indian and Bengali recipes, and Rukmini Iyer’s seventh book. The first thing I made from it was Chingri Macher Malai, spiced prawns