Cheers

Cheers - October 2015

Cheers is dedicated to delivering hospitality professionals the information, insights and data necessary to drive their beverage business by covering trends and innovations in operations, merchandising, service and training.

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www.cheersonline.com 29 October 2015 • TURNING UP THE HEAT Grippo infuses 151 proof rum with dehydrated chili de arbol with for four to fi ve days "though sometimes we let it sit [longer], and it gets pretty spicy, but that's the point." He uses the infused rum in an Elote Old Fashioned made with Mellow Corn whiskey, which has been infused with roasted corn on the cob. In fact, Grippo keeps the arbol- infused rum around " just for something to play with," for when someone asks for a spicy cocktail, he says. Another specialty involves infusing Benedictine with raw root horseradish and letting it sit overnight at a minimum. Grippo uses this in the Improved Japanese cocktail, along with Nikka Coffey Japanese grain whisky, nigori sake, and lime, fi nished with freeze-dried wasabi powder and a lime twist. The Bowery Fix ($14) is a year-round cocktail at Saxon + Parole made with tequila and mezcal, yellow bell pepper juice—"which is so earthy and smoky," Belfrand says—lemon juice, simple syrup and two types of chili. The fi rst is a bird's eye chili that's been made into a tincture (soaked in high proof vodka for a week or two). The second is a chili oil, made with dried chili fl akes that have been mixed with olive oil and left to sit for about a week. Five or six drops of the chili oil are added to the top of the drink "which look like red pearls," Belfand says. UNIQUE TOUCHES To let customers know about the herbs and spices and how they're being used, "We try to put everything on the description that's relevant," says Blackbird's Grippo. "And often those are great selling points, because they're something people are universally familiar with. It also creates talking points and there's a little more mystery." Grippo likes to use chicory, which "is a fl avor you don't see in a lot of things." He makes a chicory tincture with 151 proof rum as a base for his New Orleans Coffee cocktail ($10). The drink, which also includes bourbon, cold-brewed coffee, simple syrup and water, is made in a keg and carbonated and served tall on ice. "It's almost like coffee exaggerated with a cocoa thing going on," Grippo says. "It's burnt and roasted in a very pleasant and interesting way." Herbs and spiced garnishes can also add fl avor and visual appeal to a cocktail. Mills Tavern's springtime sip called The Ruby, made with strawberry- and rosemary-infused Tito's vodka, Pavan, Aperol and fresh lemon juice, is served in a glass adorned with a rosemary sugar rim. "The rosemary adds some depth to the drink and a really nice mouthfeel," Dietz says. Dietz also candies herbs such as lavender, rosemary, thyme and sage for garnishes. She dips the herb sprigs into simple syrup to coast, then shakes them in a bag of dry sugar, and puts on a rack to dry. The candied herb garnishes help sell the drinks, she notes. "People enjoy herbaceous and spiced notes because it gives them a sense of place, or triggers a memory of something they enjoy," Dietz says. "I think it helps sell the drinks, mainly because herbs and spices add fl avor, and people look for fl avor in everything they consume." Amanda Baltazar is a freelance writer based in the Pacifi c Northwest who frequently writes about food and beverages. CAFÉ 21 HERB GARDEN GOES VERTICAL Café 21 in San Diego always has fresh herbs at the ready, thanks to a living wall behind its bar. The restaurant works with Vertical Garden Solutions, which starts the herbs in a pot then transplants them to the restaurant. The herbs continue to grow along two 3' x 4' ft. panels along each side of the backbar. Café 21 features mint and basil in the garden all year and seasonal herbs, too, such as tarragon and sage. Mint used regularly in Mojitos, while the basil goes into one of the bar's most-popular cocktails, the Cucumber Basil Smash. "We smash [the basil] and add rum and agave syrup," says Café 21 owner Alex Javadov. Sometimes he grows jalapeños on the wall and uses them to infuse in vodka or tequila for about a month; the peppery vodka is for Bloody Marys, while the tequila goes into the Jalapeño Pear cocktail ($10), which also includes muddled pear, lime juice and agave. "The wall isn't a lot of work," Javadov says, "and someone comes and maintains it for us once a week." It's not cheap, however: The wall itself cost around $4,000, and monthly maintenance costs range from $1,500 to $2,000. "We can serve our guests drinks the same way we serve our food—every ingredient that can be made fresh and in-house is made in-house," says Javadov. "[Customers] appreciate the wall, and I think more people want simply know more about what they are consuming and what the ingredients are exactly."—AB 9

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