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  2. Horse's neck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse's_neck

    The horse's neck became popular in the wardrooms of the Royal Navy in the 1960s, displacing pink gin as the officers' preferred drink. An early reference to this is made in the 1957 film Yangtse Incident , in which a naval officer is shown drinking a horse's neck in 1949.

  3. Horsefeather (cocktail) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horsefeather_(cocktail)

    The drink is an iteration of the classic horse's neck cocktail and is similar to a Moscow mule. [3] A horsefeather is traditionally rye whiskey [4] or blended whiskey, ginger beer, three dashes of Angostura bitters, and a little lemon juice. [5] A highball glass is filled 3/4 with ice. [6] The ingredients are then poured into the glass and ...

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  5. Horseneck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horseneck

    Horseneck or Horse's Neck may refer to: Horseneck, Pleasants County, West Virginia; Horseneck, a former name for the Greenwich Avenue Historic District of Greenwich, Connecticut; Horseneck Beach State Reservation, a public recreation area in Westport, Massachusetts; Horseneck Tract, an area in Essex County, New Jersey; Horse's neck, an American ...

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  9. Horse meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_meat

    Archaic humans hunted wild horses for hundreds of thousands of years following their first arrival in Eurasia. Examples of sites demonstrating horse butchery by archaic humans include: the Boxgrove site in southern England dating to around 500,000 years ago, where horse bones with cut marks (with a horse scapula possibly exhibiting a spear wound [3]) are associated with Acheulean stone tools ...