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haresfur

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  1. gallery_27569_3038_39818.jpg

    The Mule’s Hind Leg

    1/5 Gin. (1/2 oz North Shore Distiller's No. 11)

    1/5 Benedictine. (scant 1/2 oz Benedictine)

    1/5 Applejack. (1/2 oz Clear Creek 2 year Apple Brandy)

    1/5 Maple Syrup. (scant 1/2 oz Maple Syrup)

    1/5 Apricot Brandy. (1/2 oz Zwack Barack Palinka)

    Shake well and strain into cocktail glass.

    Another lovely prohibition era libation from the oeuvre of Judge Jr.

    The only possible way I could see drinking this was to use apricot eau-de-vie instead of apricot liqueur. Even then, this is pretty much a waste of perfectly good alcohol.

    Reduce the Benedictine and the Maple Syrup to a bar spoon or so. Add some bitters.

    There might be a drink worth salvaging here.

    Decided to open my new copy of the Savoy at random and make the first thing I had the ingredients for. This was it:-( As I was making it I thought, this is going to be way too sweet. Then I thought, I really should have checked what Eric had to say. I was right on both counts. I added started with 1/2 oz portions, added another oz of gin (Dry Fly), added another 1/2 oz of Clear Creek apple brandy, poured it down the sink :wacko:

    eta: That's one way to use up the liquor before I move...

  2. You can certainly learn more by listening to the don't likes... :biggrin:

    Living in Umbria, we've had to scale back our expectations quite a bit, no rye, no limes, usually no bourbon...just generic 'whiskey'. But, what's the deal with no nibbles in the States? You needto nibble something when you sip a cocktail, alcohol without food isn't a good thing.

    Wow! How civilized! :smile: I don't have a good answer to your question, though. I think U.S. bars used to have free food.

  3. Trying to use up bottles by faking Tiki drinks:

    1 oz pineapple-infused Cruzan dark

    1 oz Bacardi dark

    3/4 oz Mt. Gay

    1/2 oz Amaretto (since I don't have Orgeat)

    1/2 oz Gran Gala

    Stir with ice strain into highball glass and top with guava juice

    Garnish with a parasol spiked into a homemade brandy-Bing cherry

    I don't know much about Tiki drinks but I can't recall seeing any that use guava juice. I'm not a fan of the stuff straight but the rum is a big improvement.

  4. The list is largely just service-business common sense (maybe we need a new phrase -- it's not quite so common now). My favorite: 8. Do not interrupt a conversation. For any reason. Especially not to recite specials... Enhanced by Holly Moore's corollary: Do not interfere with diners' enjoyment of their meal by interrupting their meal to ask, "How is everything?" Even brief conversations get interrupted by that needless question. Which connects then to:

    I don't mind a name, but I don't want him/her in my mental space. The waiter is not my dinner companion.

    Years ago, checking out fine restaurants in a big new Las Vegas hotel, I saw a stark contrast. Some restaurants (Le Cirque) had high-end European-style service. Employees circulated, actively looking for things needing attention, and unobtrusively providing it -- not waiting for customers to flag them down. Others (Aqua) instead showed high-end "US-style" service. Servers would come to the table, beam at you, and talk about themselves -- and not notice missing silverware, or ask if you wanted coffee at the end. Being chatty wasn't a problem, but a symptom.

    For me, most of these "offenses" fall into the category of "I don't really care"

    Good, because as a customer you won't notice if those offenses are deliberately absent either. Everyone is happy. (Just as readers who are less word-conscious don't notice, or mind, when publications routinely edit out "in regards to," or "which" with restrictive relative clauses -- the result looks natural, both to those who don't notice and those who do.)

    Now what we need (but rarely see) is the sequel: Good practices for customers in fine dining. It seems as if many of them think ethics or decorum are concerns only for the servers or the restaurant. (Otherwise, why would we see things like loud cellphone use, or past threads here by customers who pulled something obnoxious on a restaurant, then actually became indignant when called on it? Or the replies from other restaurant customers, sympathizing with them?!?)

    Well, I think I do notice. But you are right, good service doesn't have to draw attention to itself. The article doesn't say anything about fine dining - it implies universal truth that isn't warranted. In Italy, if I asked for extra cheese I would be surprised if it came in a separate dish. And I wouldn't be surprised if the waiter made some comment to the effect of, "Are you sure?"

    There are some I do care about, particularly #2. But it is so poorly worded I'm not sure what they intend. You try to shame them into eating at the bar? Sorry, the correct question is, "Would you like a table, or would you prefer to eat at the bar?"

    As far as clearing the plate goes, I think it is cultural. I often dine with a slow-eating friend. I'd be surprised if she feels rushed because my plate is gone. If the pace is a problem, it is more my responsibility to slow my eating so it doesn't seem that I'm rushing her. Why would she care what the waiter thinks? I kind of like to have a clear path to lean attentively across the table and maybe snag a french fry (ok not fine dining :wink: ).

  5. I think perhaps cookies and candy should be separate categories.

    I agree, only because it makes this easier:

    Cookies:

    Dare lemon creams/maple creams (note how I cleverly slipped in a fourth choice?) Canada's gift to the world.

    Pims - Spongy cookie with orange marmalade and chocolate. Best when just starting to go stale so they are chewier.

    Hobnobs - you can almost pretend they are healthy

    Candy:

    Tree-Top fruit gummies. They come in a huge box of small packets from Costco.

    Snickers - but only the miniature ones frozen.

    Star-burst - ok, too sweet and too sticky but the acidity is a nice balance that you don't usually get in candy.

    I don't think high end chocolate bars meet the criteria, although I almost said Aero bars instead of Snickers. The chocolate isn't that great but I like the texture.

  6. I also agree that you should be giving people 10 in change with a five and five ones. I had a few old school bar customers set me start on that many years ago.

    Good point. How do bartenders expect to get tipped if they don't make change?

    When I was starting out I didn't do this mostly because it was something that always annoyed my father--he doesn't like having a wallet full of small bills and figured if he needed some for change, they could always be traded out later. It sort of stuck with me for a while and though it doesn't come up often where I work now, every time it does I feel a small pang of guilt for giving lots of ones back in change.

    I like getting a mix of bills, especially if the amount is in the range where the larger bill would be a slightly overly generous tip - that's presumptuous. I don't think I would mind if someone asked if I wanted some singles.

  7. I'm in a different business, but I think my advice to young pups is pretty universal, "If you're going to f*ck up, f*uck up with enthusiasm!" Or perhaps it should be, "You are going to f*ck up, so..."

    well yes, kind of makes sense, but also have some humility. chef is not going to be happy that you fucked up and if you show too much enthusiasm he may just tell you to get the f*ck out! Basically, go in, put your head down, do the best you can and PAY ATTENTION! even if you dont land the job if you PAY ATTENTION you will learn a lot!

    Yeah, I don't mean being enthusiastic about messing up, but if you are enthusiastic about your work, and trying hard it goes a lot farther than someone who is screwing up and screwing off, or just has a bad attitude.

  8. Menus with small lettering and poor contrast between the type and the background (say brown letters on tan paper). It's bad enough to have to use reading glasses but combine that with bad menu design and dim mood lighting and I might as well be illiterate :sad:

    Places where you talking is frowned on because you are supposed to be listening to the music with rapt attention - especially if the music is someone at the piano playing sing-along or a whiny folk singer. I'd rather go to a concert then for drinks after and even a good jazz bar is still a bar.

    Lousy food; expensive unsubstantial food; expensive unsubstantial lousy food.

    And my number one peeve, especially because I'm usually too wimpy to call them on it, beer poured short. The top inch in a standard 16 oz. pub glass is 1/4 of the volume.

  9. I think that "craft" is not apropos, simply because it is impossible to avoid a mental association with "craft brewing" and all the connotations that go along with this use of the word. I don't believe that craft brewing and classical mixology have a sufficiently shared philosophy or aesthetic to make this a good term.

    I really disagree with this. First, every craft has it's own aesthetics and no one has a monopoly on the term. Secondly, I believe there is a lot in common between craft brewing and craft cocktails (alcohol for one :wink: ) Other commonalities include quality ingredients, a striving for balance, a focus on delivering maximal flavor and experience to the customer along with the requisite drug-dose...

    That being said, I think classical and craft are both good terms with classical having more of a connotation of focus on similarities to historical cocktails and craft being more open-ended.

  10. In Imbibe, Dave Wondrich uses the term "Channeling the Professor", but that's a bit of a mouthful.

    How about the term "Post-Modern"? Like the art-world, it gets at the fundamental lack of meaning in any of these naming exercises.

    My niece uses a term that might fit, "Adult". As in, "Yes, I'd like a drink but nothing too adult, please." :rolleyes:

  11. Second was the Other Side of Summer: Clement agricole, Blandy's maderia, pineapple water, kirsch, lime, demerara syrup. A touch sweet with a very strong sequence of flavors hitting the tongue in succession. But very nice.

    Any idea what pineapple water is? Also curious as to what kind of Madiera is being employed here, if you happen to know. One of my favorite beverages.

    The pineapple water, whatever it is, gave a light taste, similar to my infused rum.

    Sorry, I didn't think to check for any more details about the madiera. I'm pretty sure it isn't the $50/glass stuff Andina has on their desert menu, though. :biggrin:

  12. Made it to the Teardrop Lounge in Portland. Very nice. Started with a High Hat: 4 roses bourbon, house sweet vermouth, house amer, pau d'Arco bitters (forgot to ask what they are), and green Chartreuse. Beautifully bitter and complex.

    Second was the Other Side of Summer: Clement agricole, Blandy's maderia, pineapple water, kirsch, lime, demerara syrup. A touch sweet with a very strong sequence of flavors hitting the tongue in succession. But very nice.

    That was plenty to get me ready for a trip through Powell's books.

  13. Does any bourbon maker actually use local grains?

    My sense was that distillers were just buying grain on the commodity market.

    I would expect that that is almost certainly the case. And as I noted above I'd be willing to bet it doesn't matter at any rate anyway.

    I agree, but the grain was produced more locally when the industry was developing. Not bourbon, but Dry Fly here in Washington State uses "local" ingredients which means mostly wheat for their whiskey. I think there's another year to go before the first batch will be out, though.

    The abstract focuses on the water, but my reading is even more that the taste of the water on how the water and the soils affected the settlement patterns and production. Importantly, the steady water temperature springs was important for the condensers.

    As was noted above, Kentucky isn't the only whiskey producer. There is limestone terrain (karst) in Pennsylvania. and plenty in Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia so that can't be the only factor in developing bourbon as a distinct product.

  14. Here's a talk at the Geological Society of America Meeting next week. Move over Pinot! Actually it should be well attended since there will be a Willamette Valley Pinot Noir tasting at the end of the session :biggrin: Not sure I can make it because of my presentation.

    2009 Portland GSA Annual Meeting (18-21 October 2009)

    Paper No. 270-11

    Presentation Time: 4:30 PM-4:45 PM

    LIMESTONE WATER AND THE ORIGIN OF BOURBON

    FRYAR, Alan E., Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Kentucky, 101 Slone Building, Lexington, KY 40506-0053, alan.fryar@uky.edu

    Bourbon whiskey, which is made from fermented corn mash aged in charred oak barrels, is a uniquely American spirit produced almost exclusively in Kentucky. Exports of bourbon totaled more than $700 million in 2007. Its distinctive taste has traditionally been attributed in part to the “limestone water” used in its production. Given the prevalence of carbonate rocks, corn cultivation, and alcohol consumption throughout much of North America and indeed the world, why did bourbon originate in Kentucky, and what roles has water actually played in its history? Addressing these questions requires a consideration of settlement patterns and practices and the characteristics of water in karst terrains.

    European immigrants, in whose cultures alcohol production and consumption were ingrained, began moving beyond the Appalachians in the latter half of the 18th century. Thousands of settlers were drawn to the Bluegrass region of north-central Kentucky, which is marked by fertile residual soils developed on limestone bedrock. Corn was readily cultivated and its distillation provided a high-value product that would not spoil. Consequently, production of whiskey commenced there as early as 1776. Many farms and settlements were located near perennial springs in the Bluegrass region. These springs were valuable not only because of a year-round supply of water, but also because their relatively uniform, cool temperature (~14 to 15 C) facilitated condensation of steam during distillation. Moreover, shallow groundwater and streams in the region typically have dilute, Ca-Mg-bicarbonate-type compositions with circumneutral pH, which limits dissolved Fe and promotes growth of bacteria involved in fermentation.

    The production of bourbon became standardized and industrial in the first half of the 19th century. Because of the relatively low yield of springs in the Bluegrass region, most distilleries now rely on treated stream water, but some smaller distilleries still use groundwater. Regardless of the exact source of water, its role in the taste of bourbon combines terroir and craft through the growing of grain, fermentation, and distilling.

    2009 Portland GSA Annual Meeting (18-21 October 2009)

    General Information for this Meeting

    Session No. 270

    Terroir—The Relationship of Geology, Soils, Hydrology, and Climate to Wine: A Special Tribute to George Moore

    Oregon Convention Center: B113

    1:30 PM-5:30 PM, Wednesday, 21 October 2009

    Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 41, No. 7, p. 696

  15. Is there a right way or a wrong way to clean my (home) shakers, strainers, etc? I have always washed beer glasses by hand because it is supposed to result in a better head but I have either just rinsed off the cocktail gear or thrown it in the dishwasher. Recommendations?

  16. With 3 children, my father developed a superb eye for dividing a pie in fifths. Your friend needs to work on sevenths.

    I read this and thought: does Zeno's paradox apply to pie? I don't think so. There's something about the slab turning into a slice turning into a piece turning into a crumb that doesn't happen with the more deliberately cut and structured pie, I think.

    True, pie is more, "Excuse me, I'll just clean this up for you." But the prevention is the same. Except for the selfish people who throw off the slice count because they are on a diet, too full, or whatever.

  17. I use granulated garlic for things that are going to get heated rather than cooked because it doesn't have the same harshness as fresh. Throw some on leftover spaghetti with good olive oil and Parmesan and heat just enough to warm through. It also makes a good systemic insect repellent for the horses. Which brings up another point, granulated garlic can vary quite a bit in quality/taste: My DB ordered 5 lbs to feed the geldings and they delivered 50 lbs. So that's what I used in the kitchen for the longest time. The horses finally used it up and I bought a mere Costco-size jar. Much, much better.

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