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The Cocktail Corner

Summer is here, along with our new seasonal cocktails! This season, we’re crafting bright, colorful, tasty, and fun drinks sprinkled with a dash of healthy ingredients from Asia and Italy—tea and aperitivo liquors.

Tea can be a delightful addition to cocktails. It offers a depth of flavor that complements various spirits, adding complexity and richness to the drink. Depending on the type of tea used, whether black, green, or herbal, it can impart subtle nuances ranging from earthy and floral to fruity and spicy. Tea contains antioxidants and other beneficial compounds that can contribute to a cocktail’s perceived healthiness. Overall, incorporating tea into cocktails adds an element of sophistication and depth to the drink.

To sample our offerings this season, try: the Green Confusion, which contains matcha (green tea); the Smoking Jacket, which has Lapsang Souchong (black tea); and the Paddy Melt, incorporating chamomile (herbal tea).

Aperitivo liquors are renowned for their ability to stimulate the appetite, aid digestion, and promote digestive health. These spirits, often characterized by their bittersweet flavors and lower alcohol content, serve as a perfect base for refreshing and light cocktails. Popular aperitif liquors bring a unique blend of herbal, citrus, and botanical notes, adding complexity and depth to our cocktails.

We wove these liquors throughout our seasonal cocktail menu! Here are a couple we love: the Rascal cocktail incorporates Yellow Chartreuse, which is sweeter with floral and citrusy notes; and the Blossom cocktail, which includes Campari and Misty Meadows, incorporating the herbal, floral, and spicy Green Chartreuse.

 

A Look At The Red Cardinal

If you’ve ever lived in the eastern half of the United States, chances are you’ve seen the red cardinal. Also called the northern cardinal, this prolific bird can be seen in backyards, parks, forests, and wetlands.

Males feature a bright red plumage and beak, accompanied by a distinguishing tuft of feathers sticking almost straight up from the top of his head. A male’s wings and tail feathers form a richer and darker red than the rest of his coloring, and a shock of black around his red beak provides the bird’s signature contrast.

While male cardinals are easier to notice, the females are no less beautiful. A soft gray-brown covers most of her frame, though her wings and tailfeather are a warm, muted pink. Hints of orange highlight the tiny feathers around her eyes and coral beak, and a light tan runs down her chest. She, too, has a tuft of feathers forming a sharp angle on her head, tipped with the same subtle color of her wings.

From the middle of spring through the summer, you can find cardinals nesting in bushes, trees, and thickets. Both the female and the male cardinal care for their babies, with the offspring growing fully self-sufficient after 45 days. Sometimes, a pair of cardinals may raise up to two or three batches of young in a year.

Like many parents, they divide up their tasks. When you hear a female cardinal singing from her nest, her songs potentially serve as a reminder to her partner, letting him know that the hatchlings are hungry for dinner.

Like many parents, they divide up their tasks. When you hear a female cardinal singing from her nest, her songs potentially serve as a reminder to her partner, letting him know that the hatchlings are hungry for dinner.

Lakeside Reading At Its Finest

Summer in the mountains is a special time. What a perfect backdrop to the journeys you’ll take in the books of your choice, be they in fictional worlds, or non-fiction learning and growth.

Seven Cherokee Myths by Keith Parker

Does our interview with local resident Keith Parker leave you wanting to learn more? Order his book to examine seven myths that grew out of Cherokee culture, looking at how they emerged to explain archetypal issues.

Unraveling: What I Learned About Life While Shearing Sheep, Dyeing Wool, and Making the World’s Ugliest Sweater by Peggy Orenstein

In this lively, funny memoir, Peggy Orenstein sets out to make a sweater from scratch—shearing, spinning, dyeing wool—and in the process discovers how we find our deepest selves through craft. Orenstein spins a yarn that will appeal to everyone.

Whale Fall by Elizabeth O’Connor

Debut Author O’Connor paints a portrait of a community and a woman a remote Welsh island, forced to confront an outside world that seems to be closing in on them after a dead whale washes up on the shore.

Real Americans by Rachel Khong

This exhilarating novel of American identity spans three generations in one family and weaves a profound tale of class and striving, race and visibility, and family and inheritance—a story of trust, forgiveness, and finally coming home.

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley

This genre-bending book is the hit of the summer, incorporating a time travel romance, a spy thriller, a workplace comedy, and an ingenious exploration of the nature of power and the potential for love to change it all.

Brevard Music Center, From Then to Now

Every summer, the Brevard Music Center’s Summer Institute & Festival brings musicians and listeners alike to the small mountain town of Brevard. The Music Center came to town by chance in 1944 when James Christian Pfohl, who founded the Davidson Band Camp for Boys, came across the future site. According to President & CEO Jason Posnock, “Pfohl happened upon an abandoned camp on the outskirts of Brevard, and he knew he had found his new home.”

The Davidson Band Camp for Boys eventually became the Brevard Music Center, featuring musical lessons and performances. This decision to relocate to Brevard was monumental, both for the Music Center and for the town.

Nearby community members have long been the Music Center’s fiercest champions, attending concerts, donating to scholarship funds, and volunteering with the organization. The town, too, has influenced the music itself. “Brevard’s love of bluegrass and folk music has encouraged us to expand our concert offerings,” Jason explains. The Brevard Music Center, which once solely taught and performed classical music, now features music of all genres, such as jazz, bluegrass, and opera.

Just as Brevard has shaped the Music Center, so too has the Music Center shaped the town. Thousands flock to Brevard every year to attend the Summer Institute & Festival concerts, not to mention all the musicians who travel there to teach, learn, and play their music. “We help attract active and interesting people to Brevard to vacation and move here, make it possible for some wonderful restaurants to serve our town year-round, and are a huge part of the exciting live music scene that has emerged here over the past decade,” Jason says.

While most wouldn’t think a music center of this magnitude would flourish far from a big city, this location and community has led the Brevard Music Center to thrive. “A world-class classical music teaching and performing institution tucked into a town of 8,000 people in the Blue Ridge Mountains. The odds were probably not in our favor,” Jason acknowledges. “But our community has embraced us overthe decades and welcomed classical music, along with all the other genres we offer, into their hearts.”

To see this summer’s concert lineup, visit brevardmusic.org.

Lake Toxaway’s Indigenous History: Keith Parker

 

G. Keith Parker, PhD, is the author of Seven Cherokee Myths: Creation, Fire, the Primordial Parents, the Nature of Evil, the Family, Universal Suffering, and Communal Obligation. He graciously answered several questions regarding the indigenous history of Lake Toxaway. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Can you give us a brief overview of the history of Native Americans in the Lake Toxaway region?

“The Toxaway area was inhabited exclusively by the Cherokee people, which made up the largest tribe in the Southeast. They were located in eight present states and dominated this part of Western North Carolina, upper Georgia, and upper South Carolina. They were a mountain tribe, called such by other tribes.”

Prior to colonization, what was daily life like for Native Americans around Lake Toxaway?

“They lived peacefully in small family groups, scattered over areas to allow farming, fishing, hunting, and sports with nearby groups. They grew together ‘the three sisters’ (corn, beans, and squash) as their main food since the crops grew on the same ground. Most likely, the main staple was corn. ‘Selu,’ or corn mother, was a major spiritual figure in their powerful myths. They were marksmen with their blowguns that they used for smaller animals and birds, as well as competitive target shooting. Special preparation was necessary to take big animals since they were considered kin. They were to be thanked for their sacrifice to feed humans.”

How did their lives shift over the course of colonization, including the Trail of Tears? 

“The arrival of Europeans was a disaster immediately and long range. In 1738, a century before the forced removal named the Trail of Tears, over half of the Cherokee people died of European disease — mainly smallpox. The inability of their own Cherokee rituals to cure this helped pave the way for eventual missionaries from Europe with medicines.

All treaties with colonists were broken, even with the Colonial Governor Tryon who let them ‘keep’ the land west of Tryon Mountain in today’s Polk County before the Revolutionary War. The worst, however, was the forced removal of over 16,000 Cherokee from their homes ordered by President Jackson. In my lifetime, many modern Cherokee would not use twenty-dollar bills with Jackson’s image on it. More than 4,000 men, women and children died on that forced march to the territory now called Oklahoma.

A Cherokee pastor, Rev. Busheyhead, buried thousands and ministered as he could. His Busheyhead descendants are still active leaders in the old homeland. The late Rev. Robert Busheyhead, who helped revive and restore the Cherokee language for the Eastern Band, also helped give Cherokee names to roads and locations in Transylvania county locations, such as the Connestee Falls Development.”

How has Cherokee history been passed down and preserved through oral tradition?

“Cherokee history and culture have been passed down in re-learning their language, once forbidden by the government and in their schools. The Museum of the Cherokee People is excellent, very modern, and tells their old story, as does the outdoor drama Unto These Hills. Notable is the work of former Principal Chief Joyce Dugan, who also wrote a forward to my book. She was in education before becoming chief and really strived to have their history told and taught. James Mooney was part Native American and a member of the Bureau of American Ethnology. He lived with the Cherokee, learning their language so he could record their oral tradition and stories. His work is the standard for seeing those: History, Myths and Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees.”

Find Keith’s book, Seven Cherokee Myths, here.

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