Here is some more tips on drinking, bartending and eating,
from Liquor.com:
There’s
no two ways about it: The cocktail world has been progressing ever deeper down
the rabbit hole of culinary influence for some time now. Whether a bar is
influenced by a complementary in-house kitchen or using comparatively unusual
ingredients (horseradish, turnips or turmeric, anyone?) to up its booze game,
the line between bartender and bar chef is increasingly blurry. Even garnishes
frequently resemble standalone, outlandish snacks these days. (We’re looking at
you, over-the-top Bloody Marys.)
The knowledge that can be shared
between bartenders and chefs about building flavor profiles and experimenting
with complementary (and perhaps unusual) ingredients can be an invaluable,
symbiotic relationship, offering a completely new perspective and complex,
thoughtful dimension to drinks.
Below, seven bartenders outline the greatest lessons they’ve been able to
transfer from the kitchen to the bar, from cooking in Grandma’s kitchen to a
magic ingredient that revolutionized an entire cocktail menu.
1. ALBA HUERTA ON
MOVING AS A TEAM
Julep
“There’s one particular thing I’ve
learned about building bar programs from restaurants,” says Alba Huerta, the
owner of Julep in
Houston .
“Almost two decades ago, the kitchen is where I first saw respect for the job.
Watching a kitchen team work in unison is like sitting in front of the world’s
greatest orchestra. Communication, timing and temperatures rule their universe.
Add the element of customer service, and the same rules apply to any cocktail
bar program.”
2. JOEY HOUGHTALING
ON LEARNING IN GRANDMA’S KITCHEN AND FROM THE FLAVOR BIBLE
“My background in flavor profiling
dates back to being a young child and helping my grandmother cook for the
holidays,” says Joey Houghtaling, the co-founder of Phoenix Cocktail
Club in
Milwaukee . “I
watched and learned so much from her over the years. [As an adult] I’ve tried
to learn everything I could from people around me who are successful chefs or
bartenders. I was never really the kind of person who wanted help learning, so
at first, even though I had the palate, I wasn’t sure about how to translate
that into making drinks.
“My first attempts consisted of me
going to a grocery store, buying every sort of produce and trying to make
something happen. I quickly learned that wasn’t going to work, but then I found The Flavor Bible (Little
Brown and Company, $38). Seeing the flavors in print helped make my senses open
up, and I started to understand how a lot of different flavors worked.
“It was about five years ago that
someone told me I should start matching drinks with food I loved. I had been
winning some local competitions but had a creative block. This is when I really
started to research different techniques of incorporating flavors into spirits
through methods such as fat washing, infusing, creating and mixing different
bitters and using different compound syrups. I entered a Manhattan
competition where my inspiration came from barbecue: I smoked a coupe with
cherry wood, then made a Manhattan with
bacon-fat-washed bitters.”
3. GREGORY WESTCOTT
ON FINAL TASTE-TEST APPROVAL
Hinoki
“[Our chef’s] mastery of flavors
really gives the cocktail program a culinary advantage,” says Gregory Westcott,
the bar manager at Hinoki & the
Bird in
Los Angeles .
“His feedback is always the final step in making sure the cocktails are ready
to be placed on the menu. What better palate to give feedback than a chef’s?”
4. MORGAN WEBER ON
HOW CULINARY (AND COCKTAIL) OPPOSITES ATTRACT
Haitian Divorce cocktail at Eight Row Flint
“My favorite creative moments while
developing drinks, without a doubt, always happen when I’m bouncing ideas off
our culinary director, Vincent Huynh,” says Morgan Weber, the beverage director
at Eight Row Flint in
Houston . “He
has an amazing palate and brings to the table decades of cooking and eating
experiences that have shaped his unique approach to food.
“Not having the same background in
cocktails that I do, Huynh is not encumbered by ‘too much cocktail-focused
education.’ He understands where I’m coming from with the classics but
constantly throws out ideas based on his cooking experiences. The drinks that
accidentally come out of those R&D sessions are consistently the most
interesting that make it onto our menus, like the Haitian Divorce, which came
from a discussion about how to incorporate the flavors into a Tiki-style
cocktail.”
5. CARI HAH ON
SELF-TAUGHT CULINARY CREATIVITY
“I come from the opposite
perspective, because I’m a bartender who has never had the opportunity to work
with a great chef or the benefit of having a full amazing kitchen to utilize
for the bar,” says Cari Hah, a bartender at Big Bar in
Los Angeles .
“Every bar I have worked is just a bar with bar food or a place where the
kitchen and bar don’t necessarily work in conjunction with each other.
“I wouldn’t call this a disadvantage,
because it has forced me to be creative in how I prep ingredients and work with
the space and limited equipment that I have. But I definitely have experienced
great envy when I hear my peers talk about how much their chefs help out and
offer advice on culinary techniques that I would love to learn. I don’t think
there is better or worse. There is just different. I have been able, though, to
figure out culinary techniques in a rather DIY way since I don’t have expensive
equipment (e.g., sous vide, a big range-top stove, dehydrators, vacuum sealers,
etc.), so I am very imaginative in that way.”
6. JASON STEVENS ON
SHARING BETWEEN THE BAR AND KITCHEN
La Corsha Hospitality Group’s Boiler Nine
“Before we began planning our food
and beverage menus [for upcoming locations], chef Joshua Thomas and I discuss
what is available locally, then create a deck of ingredients we both want to
focus on,” says Jason Stevens, the director of beverage and bars at La Corsha
Hospitality Groupin Austin . “We break each
ingredient down to all of its usable parts and work together on how we can use
the whole of the ingredient. The kitchen is using Rio Star grapefruits for
suprêmes? The bar can use the peels for citrus cordial. Our overall food and
beverage program has more synergy when we approach it this way.”
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