Learn How to Grow Your Own Cocktails June 1
Summer is approaching and that means it’s time to enjoy spending time outside, maybe near your own backyard garden. But if anything makes a summer evening a little bit nicer, it’s a delicious cocktail. How can you turn the stuff from your garden into stuff you put into a cocktail? This June, go to the Garden to Glass Workshop and learn how you can use the stiff from your garden as cocktail ingredients to create delicious summer drinks.
Garden to Glass
A garden expert will lead this workshop that will show you how to use fruits, vegetables and herbs you can grow in a home garden to create cocktails you can drink during any summer evening. Freshly grown produce is a staple of summer, and it truly adds a delicious boost to anything you’re eating or drinking.
The workshop lasts from 6 to 7:15 pm and it’s being held at the glorious Waterfront Botanical Gardens. This beautiful waterfront garden is a perfect setting to inspire you to grow all sorts of things in your home garden that you can use to flavor foods and drinks of all kinds.
The Waterfront Botanical Gardens are at 1435 Frankfort Avenue. That’s in Butchertown, a neighborhood with a long history of having beautiful home gardens and an active nightlife. If that sounds like you. Butchertown might just be the perfect place for you.
Eat up the Sights of Butchertown
Butchertown has the look of a city neighborhood because that's exactly how this community began. In the 1800s, Butchertown was a very lively neighborhood full of shops and important people. Thomas Edison lived here as a young man, as did the two sisters who actually wrote the "Happy Birthday" song.
This neighborhood's roots as an urban area are evident in the beautiful brick buildings that still remain in Butchertown. Along with plenty of hot little nightspots, local attractions, restaurants and places to shop, Butchertown is a beautiful residential community with lovely shotgun homes that showcase the earliest days of the area.
These brick shotgun homes are actually larger than they may at first appear, because they are narrow but long, and they represent some of the city's most unique housing. You will find lots of historic and highly modern elements in these homes. Pretty brick accent walls, hardwood floors and fireplaces look amazing next to modern lighting fixtures, custom cabinets and stainless steel.
See Butchertown this June and think about the future you'd like to grow.
About the Author: Joe Hayden is the Team Owner and Manager of the Joe Hayden Real Estate Team - Your Louisville Real Estate Experts!
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