Wisconsin
New brewhouse at Old World Wisconsin offers a taste of history in a pint glass
You don’t should be a beer fanatic to understand Previous World Wisconsin’s latest attraction. Nevertheless it helps.
The Brewhouse in Eagle not solely brews contemporary each day batches of beer to be sampled by guests, however in step with Previous World Wisconsin’s mission as a residing historical past museum, Brewmaster Rob Novak demonstrates the evolution of various brewing strategies and applied sciences.
“My purpose is to study one thing new about beer every single day,” Novak mentioned. “And even having been round beer for some time, it is not onerous to study one thing new every single day.”
The brewery isn’t meant to duplicate breweries from any explicit period. Its objective is to display quite a lot of brewing strategies.
Novak is digging deep into the historical past of brewing and the way brewing kinds from totally different European, Native American and Black American traditions mixed and tailored once they got here to Wisconsin.
For instance, when French merchants first got here to the area, they needed to adapt their recipes to the components out there in Wisconsin, and adopted brewing strategies from native Native American tribes. English recipes underwent the same course of as they have been delivered to New England after which finally to Wisconsin.
Among the farm homes on web site have already began rising heirloom components, like hops and barley, for the brewery to make use of. As this system continues, Novak mentioned, they’re going to begin incorporating different seasonal components, reminiscent of juniper, spruce, wild rice, squash and every kind of herbs and spices.
“We’ll have a brewing backyard. Hopefully by subsequent spring, we’ll begin planting that,” Novak mentioned. “There’s loads of historic recipes on the market that use all types of fascinating crops that we are able to develop.”
Processes additionally modified over time and with new know-how. Brewing eagerly embraced industrialization, transferring away from small batches fermented on farmhouses, to the big scale productions we all know at this time.
“I am looking for at this time’s well-liked kinds — so IPA’s, sours— (and) looking for the historic roots for these and brew them so folks can style what they may have tasted like,” Novak mentioned.
Most brewing traditions don’t — and even forbid — making beer in the summertime or winter as a result of temperatures weren’t conducive. As this system grows, Novak will experiment with seasonal beers brewed within the fall for winter consumption or within the spring for summer time consumption.
“It is actually been loads of experimentation, and each batch is totally different,” mentioned Dan Freas, web site director at Previous World Wisconsin. “We’re discovering we are able to brew beer on someday and brew beer one other day utilizing the very same course of and the identical components, but when the environmental situations are totally different, it typically has an influence on the ultimate product.”
The brewhouse sits the place a 2010 twister wrecked a number of acres. Happily, harm to the historic buildings was restricted, however an estimated 2,500 pines have been cleared away. Turning lemons into lemon shandy, Previous World Wisconsin determined to transform the positioning to certainly one of Wisconsin’s favourite past-times.
“The thought of a brewery and a historic tavern had been a part of the unique grasp plan for Previous World Wisconsin that was created again within the late Nineteen Sixties, however that was a facet of that plan that was by no means realized,” Freas mentioned.
The Brewhouse will probably be accompanied by a restored tavern from the Thirties that was relocated from Ashippun and is being reworked as an interactive exhibit on the function of taverns in group life.
“When the tavern first opened in 1906, taverns have been actually male dominated areas the place the fellows would hang around. After which after Prohibition, these taverns turned way more group areas and family-oriented areas,” Freas mentioned. “So complete households would come into the tavern. They might be a spot the place you’d meet up with native neighbors and share the newest information and gossip.”
The tavern will even serve beer brewed on-site. The constructing’s second flooring will function an occasion area.
Freas mentioned they’re in early phases of planning the creation of a beer backyard. Organizers are additionally engaged on plans to collaborate with space brewers and brewmasters and maintain dinners the place brewers and cooks collaborate for a singular eating expertise.
Public response to The Brewhouse throughout the few weeks it has been open have been very optimistic, Freas mentioned.
“I feel individuals are realizing that this is a vital a part of Wisconsin’s historical past and tradition,” Freas mentioned.
Wisconsin
Better Know A Badger – 2025 three-star linebacker Cooper Catalano
Better Know A Badger – 2025 three-star linebacker Cooper Catalano
MADISON, Wis. – It turned out that Luke Fickell had no reason to worry.
The University of Wisconsin head coach was hopeful that the results on the field wouldn’t cause members of his highly ranked third recruiting class to start rethinking their commitment or, worse yet, reopen their decision-making process entirely.
From the time the Badgers’ 2024 season ended without a bowl game for the first time in 23 years to the first day of the early signing period, Wisconsin’s staff only saw one prospect de-commit. Twenty-three kids signed paperwork to join Fickell’s program, a class that ranks 20th in the Rivals.com rankings with 10 four-star recruits from eight different states.
“To see guys not waver,” Fickell said. “That faith and belief that the games and what you see on Saturday isn’t everything. For those guys to hold with us and believe in us … relationships, trust, and belief in this process still win out.”
Adding to the depth in the middle of the defense, we look at the signing of Mukwonago (Wis.) High linebacker Cooper Catalano and how his addition improves the program.
Stats
Named the Wisconsin large school defensive player of the year in 2024, Catalano totaled 178 tackles, nine TFLs, three forced fumbles, and three interceptions. He finished his career with 583 tackles, obliterating the previous state record of 462 career tackles. A three-time conference defensive player of the year, Catalano earned all-conference honors during all four seasons of high school.
“The season was really successful,” Catalano said. “We had a young team my junior year. We had almost everybody returning except one of our receivers, so we had 21 players returning. To see the growth of everybody throughout the offseason was really cool. Everybody really bought in to what our coaches were preaching throughout the year. We had our leadership group that worked really hard throughout the winter and summer, and it showed throughout the season. It was a really fun right, even though it didn’t end how we wanted.
“I improved in my game is playing more in space and trusting my instincts. I was less technical in the way I looked at football and just playing loose and having fun out there … Breaking the tackle record was a really cool thing, but that takes a whole team, a great game plan, a great defensive line all four years. It’s a team effort, but that’s something that stood out to me that I’m very proud of. It’s something I’ll hold onto for a long time.”
Recruiting Competition
The third commitment in Wisconsin’s 2025 class, Catalano had offers from Illinois, Iowa State, Kansas, Michigan State, Minnesota, Missouri, Northwestern, and Stanford.
“It’s been really quiet ever since I committed,” Catalano said. “I was able to reach out to all the programs that offered me a scholarship, get on the phone with most of them to let them know how much it meant to me that they reached out but ultimately my decision was in Madison. I am happy I went about it that way.”
Recruiting Story
Wisconsin
This Tiny Cottage Rental in a Wisconsin State Park Is the Smallest Home Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright
From his first Great Plains-inspired, Prairie-style buildings to the quiet serenity of Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd Wright defined American architecture during his seven-decade-long career with his innovative designs. Throughout his lifetime, Wright created 1,114 architectural works, 532 of which were actually constructed.
One of the least known — and the most petite among all of his structures — just might offer the most intimate experience for casual visitors and super-fans alike. The Seth Peterson Cottage, located within Mirror Lake State Park, clocks in at just 880 square feet.
And though it may be small, it’s one of the best examples of Wright’s Usonian houses, a style design intended for middle-class families that offered practical, affordable, yet still beautiful homes. But what makes the Seth Peterson Cottage even more unique among Wright’s works is that it was the first — and now one of the few — homes that are available as a vacation rental.
“Serene and energetic, the little cottage perched high above Mirror Lake is muscularly geometric, seeming at once to hug the earth and burst forth from it,” the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation says on its site.
The one-bedroom cottage sits on a wooded hill, flanked by a small wall made of local sandstone, and features some of Wright’s signature trademarks such as picture windows, a cantilevered roof, and a large, centrally located chimney,
“The flagstones used to pave the outside terrace continue inside the building as the cottage floor, manifesting Wright’s philosophy of making little distinction between the outside and inside worlds in which we live,” the Seth Peterson Cottage Conservancy says on its site.
The home was commissioned by Peterson, who was a huge fan of Wright. He applied to join Wright’s Taliesin Fellowship (an architectural school founded by the architect and his wife, Olgivanna) but was rejected. Then, he tried to commission Wright to build a home for him several times but was also denied. Finally, Peterson sent $1,000 to Wright (who promptly spent the money) as a retainer — and having burned through the cash, Wright had no choice but to accept the commission. Unfortunately, Peterson did not have enough financial reserves to complete the project and even tried to keep construction costs down by doing some of the work himself.
The building was still in progress at the time of Wright’s 1959 death, and Peterson died by suicide shortly before it was completed in 1960. And though the State of Wisconsin bought the property six years later, it sat abandoned for several years. In 1989, local volunteers formed the Seth Peterson Cottage Conservancy to restore the architectural gem — and to rent it out.
Over the course of its existence, the tiny home has hosted more than 10,000 guests from around the globe. The cottage sleeps two people and is equipped with an additional fold-out couch for another two guests. There’s also a galley kitchen stocked with all the essentials, and, if you prefer to dine al fresco, there’s an outdoor barbecue area with a grill.
The cottage’s quiet location is perfect for taking in the pastoral Wisconsin countryside — after all, Wright hoped that his designs would inspire residents and visitors alike to feel more connected with their natural surroundings. A canoe, paddles, and life preserves are included with the rental, as is a healthy supply of firewood. Popular activities in the area include hiking, biking, boating, fishing, swimming, and golfing. If you visit in the winter, snowmobiling and cross-country skiing opportunities are plentiful.
Cottage rentals go for $325 per night year-round, with an additional $30 handling fee per reservation. There’s a two-night minimum, and reservations can be made through Sand County Vacation Rentals up to two years in advance, though they book up quickly.
But for those who would prefer to simply stop for a visit, the Seth Peterson Cottage is open for tours the first Sunday of every month from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., with the final tour beginning at 3:30 p.m. Tours cost $5 per person, though children 12 and under can get in for free.
Wisconsin
Chicago tow truck driver killed in Wisconsin hit-and-run, sheriff says
WAUKESHA, Wis. (CBS) — A Chicago tow truck driver was killed in a hit-and-run crash on Christmas Eve in Waukesha, Wisconsin.
The Waukesha Sheriff’s Office said around 6:41 p.m., a tow truck operator was loading a disabled vehicle on the eastbound shoulder of I-94 east of Sawyer Road when they were hit by a blue minivan that left the scene, continuing eastbound I-94 until it exited at Highway C in an unknown direction.
The tow truck driver, later identified as 40-year-old Hussain Farhat, was taken to Aurora Summit, where he died. Farhat was an employee of Yaffo Towing out of Chicago, the office said.
East Bound I-94 from Sawyer Road to Highway C was shut down for the investigation.
The Waukesha County Sheriff’s Department received an anonymous tip on Wednesday about a possible suspect vehicle at a residence in the Village of Wales. Based on the tip, the department developed a suspect who owns a vehicle matching the description of the striking vehicle from the crash.
The suspect, a 39-year-old man, turned himself in at the Sheriff’s Department during the investigation, and his vehicle was recovered from the residence. He is being booked at the Waukesha County Jail for hit-and-run causing death.
Investigation into the incident remains ongoing by the Waukesha County Sheriff’s Department with the assistance of the Wisconsin State Patrol.
No additional information was released.
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