Cocktail Spotlight: Legend of the Dark & Stormy

Dark & Stormy cocktail
June
10
2024

Dark & Stormy Day occurred on June 8th.

According to cocktail lore, the Dark & Stormy was invented in the early 1920s on the sun-kissed coasts of island Bermuda, shipwreck capital of the world, when a British naval officer mixed Goslings Blackstrap rum with ginger beer. Like many early cocktails, it was intended to be a remedy for some sort of ailment. In the case of the Dark & Stormy, it was originally given to sailors who were suffering with seasickness.  

There is no proof weather it worked or not. In further exploring fueling its oceanic legacy, the cocktail supposedly got its name when a fisherman compared the hue of the drink to a “color of a cloud only a fool or dead man would sail under,” according to Goslings Rum Company.  

This supposed remedy for seasickness spread among the land-faring communities and sparked curiosity. It was no longer just a beverage for chopping waters. For most of the century, it became a staple on cocktail menus around the world, especially on Caribbean resorts, on cruises, and during the summer months. 

The tradition was to layer the Goslings Blackstrap Rum on top of the cocktail to watch the storm clouds of rums swirl around inside the glass. Today, it is hard to find a Dark & Stormy prepared this way. Goslings Black Seal rum and Barritt’s Ginger Beer were the original combination, and unlike most cocktails, this matters. Today, Goslings produces their own Ginger Beer.

Dark rum and ginger are the two key ingredients, but many add a dash or splash of lime for citrus or zip. Please note that ginger ale is not sub for ginger beer. It’s fresh and vibrant with the sweet and warming spice interplay with the thick, vanilla, butterscotch, caramelly rum. Such a clear tropical flavor that will transport you to tropical paradise. The rum provides buttery richness, flavors of molasses, toasted sugar and, depending on your rum of choice, gorgeous spice.

Did you know? The Moscow Mule cocktail is its cousin – made with vodka instead of rum and without the float.

An important question to consider – Does a Dark & Stormy have to be made with Goslings rum or can you substitute for another rum? In 1980, Goslings trademarked the name “Dark & Stormy. You can, of course, make it by using different rums, like white, gold, or spiced and playing around with ingredients, but, if you do, Goslings asks for it to be sold under a different name. You can stray from tradition and make it with any dark rum if you don’t have Goslings without any harsh penalty from the cocktail gods.

Below you will find the original Dark & Stormy recipe along with variations of it mixed up by your friendly, neighborhood liquid chef. Remember, your feedback is always welcome Enjoy!

Cheers,

Michael

Dark & Stormy

2 oz Goslings Black Seal rum

1/2 oz fresh lime juice

Fill with a quality ginger beer or Goslings (about 5 oz)

Garnish – lime wheel

Prep – Build all ingredients in an ice-filled large rocks glass. Add garnish. Stir well! Alternate – build all ingredients, except rum, two fingers from rim. Float rum on top by pouring around the rim, then garnish lime wheel.

Dark & Stormy Espresso

With all the Espresso Martini rage and coffee being a versatile and intense taste, try this version. While the original has a kick, this cocktail takes it one step further with warm spice and bitter, earthy espresso livening up the cocktail. 

1.5 oz Ron Abuelo Centuria dark rum or Kraken dark rum

1 oz or shot fresh espresso or strong coffee

3 oz ginger beer

1/2 oz fresh lime juice (optional)

Garnish – lime wheel or three coffee/espresso beans

Prep – Pour your ingredients into your rocks glass in layers. Dark rum first over ice, then ginger beer, and then slowly pour in the freshly chilled brewed coffee.

Dark & Stormy cocktail variation

Stormy Weather

Wine, particularly Shiraz, works surprisingly well in the Dark & Stormy because of the natural spice, pepper, and sweet red fruits. Shiraz complements the ginger to create a rich, fruity and vibrant cocktail.

1.5 oz Diplomatico Reserva Exclusiva dark rum or other rum
1.5 oz Australian Shiraz wine
1 oz ginger beer, to top
1/2 oz sugar/simple syrup
1/4 oz fresh lime juice (optional)

Prep – Build all ingredients in a mixing glass with half ice. Shake well with mixing tin. Strain into ice-filled tulip glass. Top with ginger beer. Garnish orange slices and/or cinnamon stick.

Rum & Ginger

1.5 oz Appleton Estate 15-yr old dark rum

3/4 oz fresh lime juice

1 tsp passion fruit puree

1 dash Angostura bitters

Quality ginger ale, to top

Prep – Build all ingredients in a mixing glass with half ice. Shake well with mixing tin. Strain into ice-filled collins glass. Top with ginger ale. Garnish lime wedge.

Weekly Spotlight: Return of the Blog & Cocktail Trends for 2024

Cocktail Sign
March
5
2024

I am back!!! It’s been almost eight months since the last post from “The Pour”. Over the past eight months, I have focused my time and energy on working as the general manager and sommelier at a high-end casino Italian steakhouse. I am excited to make this blog an epicenter for everything wine, cocktail, bar, and #beverage. Ideally, I would like the content to be driven by you, the consumer, so I encourage you to submit your questions and offer feedback on what you want to learn more about via social media posts, blog comments, or direct contact with “The Pour” by text or email. Whether it be on #wine education, local or worldly wine reviews, craft #cocktails, #trends, #bar operations/etiquette, #party/#event planning, #consultation, etc…, I am here to serve you.

For this week’s edition of “The Pour”, let’s immerse ourselves in the ever-changing world of cocktails and the trends that are popping up all around us. What’s hot !?!?!?

Carribean cocktail

The demand for fresh, well-balanced, creative, and innovative cocktails in 2024 is evident in today’s cocktail and culinary culture. It is not just reserved for big city bars, speakeasys, high-end restaurants and hotels anymore. The palates of consumers have evolved to healthier, plant-based, sugar-free/low sugar, canned cocktails, and low alcohol/alcohol-free options. Bartenders and mixologists serving behind the stick as well as those sitting at the bar or in the restaurant are experiencing this trend. If you’re looking for cocktail menu ideas for your bar, restaurant, public or private party/event, home party, or for your own weekend escapade with the guys or girls, this cocktail trend discussion will tipple your fancy.

For 2024, our cocktail shakers and glasses will be filled up with ingredients from the past (the 1990s to be more precise). The term “retro cocktails” has become fitting. Remixed classic cocktails, infusions, synergy between food and drink, smoked cocktails, fancy ice cubes, dehydrated food, etc… has become a part of the cocktail-drinking experience. These are some of the drinks you will be toasting this year!

1) Savory and spicy cocktails are becoming increasingly popular, as people are looking for more complex and interesting flavors in their drinks. Popular savory cocktails include the classic Bloody Mary or Bloody Maria and Dirty Martini, while spicy cocktails include the Jalapeño Margarita and the Ginger Basil Smash or the addition of a chipotle, tajine, or chili salt rim.ChayaandChiaSeedMargarita

Spicy cocktails have become a hit with the social elite. There is a long list of spicy cocktails to try if you want to knock your socks off!

Harvey Wallbanger

2) The 90s called and it wants its drink back… “the ‘Tini”. The espresso martini continues to be a strong favorite among those wanting a little pick-me-up during an evening out. Fresh takes on the coffee-based cocktail will include using local high-quality cold-brew coffee or espresso, adding subtle notes such as vanilla, honey, or caramel, and switching out the vodka for whiskey.

3) The Apple Martini is also making a huge comeback, a sour cocktail that will be made from fresher ingredients in 2024 than in the 90s. And if you have a ‘salt-tooth’ then perhaps the briny Dirty Martini with olive juice will be more your thing.

Spellbound smoked cocktal

4) Fancy Ice Cubes – A trend for mixologists and the home bar alike! Long gone are the small square ice cubes we use. This is the year that we get creative with ice. From giant cubes to specialty shapes, to herb or fruit-infused beauties. Ice is more than for merely keeping your trip cool, it’s a way of decorating your cocktail and adding even more flavor. Treat yourself to some quirky molds and experiment with adding flavors like lavender, thyme, lemon, cucumber & mint, or coffee to your ice cubes.

5) Experiential Cocktails – Ever heard the phrase “eating with your eyes”? Turns out we drink with them too! The experience-seeking culture of Millennials and Gen-Zs with their insatiable appetite to capture unique moments for their social media has led to the trend of cocktails becoming experiential. Cocktails have always been a thing of beauty in their presentation, but now mixologists must also think about the performance and producing a ‘wow’ moment for the drinker.

absinthegreenfairy

Be it the captivating view of the mixologists at work, or the cocktail itself, which can be achieved by mastering molecular cocktail making. Molecular mixology is the practice of mixing drinks using science to manipulate ingredients on the molecular level. It was inspired by molecular gastronomy, which employs similar techniques to food.

Cocktail trends also have a growing consumer market for delicious low-abv and virgin options which are just as satiating as their alcoholic counterparts. Expect to see a growing list on the non-alcoholic section of the cocktail menu and bartenders are putting much more thought and creativity into their taste and presentation.

Over half the world’s population abstains from alcohol. This percentage is more like a third of the population in Western countries, but significantly growing. Consumers are looking to find convivial moments in moderation throughout the year, especially as the weather warms up in the spring and summer and daytime drinking occasions are more common.”

6) Spiked Slushies – French syrup producer Monin has named slushies, Tequila and Mexican-inspired drinks as its top trends for 2024. They found that a Frozen Cosmo Slushie suggested as a possibility for dominating the vodka-based version of the cocktail, a Frozen Piña Colada fronting the rum-based category, and a Frozen Strawberry Margarita presented as a trend for the Tequila-based slushie serve. As a bartender, I hope this doesn’t become a trend lol.

7) Mixers Matter – In 2024, bartenders are paying more attention than ever to the mixers they use in their cocktails. This means that we can expect to see more house-made syrups, shrubs, and bitters on bar menus. Bartenders are also using more unusual mixers, such as kombucha and fermented juices (another nod to the general drinks trends). For example, the Turmeric Tonic is a refreshing cocktail that uses turmeric syrup and tonic water.

With so many new and exciting flavors, I hope your cocktail experiences this year exceed your expectations or just book me as your cocktail consultant.

Cheers,

Michael

The Intrigue of the Cosmopolitan

flamed classic cosmopolitan
July
11
2023

There are few cocktails more recognizable than the Cosmopolitan. The blush-pink, tart cocktail served straight up —a blend of vodka, triple sec, cranberry juice and lime—was born at a crucial time in cocktail history. At the heart of the Gay Rights movement and before the dawn of the cocktail renaissance, the Cosmo, in its tippy martini glass, was a star that went on to become a modern classic. The extent of the Cosmopolitan’s reach was unlike that of any other drink created during the 20th century. There’s a long debate over who actually created the cocktail—but what’s even more interesting is the cast of characters and fairytale circumstances that popularized it.

The most obvious source of its cultural dissemination was Sex and the City, where it was Carrie Bradshaw’s signature cocktail—the dainty, stiletto-like glass a fixture of her social outings. But before it hit HBO, it cycled through many iterations and social circles, from the gay community in Provincetown to the celebrity regulars at the Odeon, the buzzy restaurant responsible for its proliferation throughout lower Manhattan. Eventually, it caught the attention of the liquor and juice companies and leapt onto the small screen, reigniting its popularity.

During the ’80s, it was a cooler, more local crowd ordering Cosmopolitans. By the early ’90s, the drink had died down. The crowds moved on. And then Sex and the City featured it 10 years later and it just came roaring back. Everyone and their mom, tourists visiting, and sorority girls, wanted a Cosmopolitan. You could even get them at dive bars and bowling alleys. Big cities, like Paris and London, were drinking them, which is a testament to how far reaching it was.  All the while, bartender purists looked down on the Cosmopolitan and rarely recommended it to their patrons.

Ultimately, the Cosmopolitan’s audience extended far beyond and it became a fixture on menus and was adapted and replicated by four-star restaurants and Applebee’s alike (not sure of its authenticity or quality from the classic). And though its territory nowadays is more suburban and ordered more regularly by housewives and baby boomers (and those that refuse to sip a pink drink, but do it secretly), the Cosmo still lingers —a nostalgic, rose-tinted elixir of another age.

Toby Cecchini, owner of The Odeon restaurant, Tribeca, New York, is widely credited with inventing the modern-day Cosmopolitan. There was a terrible drink called the Cosmopolitan making the rounds at gay bars in San Francisco in the mid ’80s—it was cheap vodka, Rose’s lime juice, Rose’s grenadine, and it went in a Martini glass with a twist. In 1988, a girl who worked with him had friends from San Francisco visiting New York and they showed her the drink. The consensus was that it  tasted gross, but it looked pretty sparkling in the lights. He went about reconstructing it by using ingredients of a Margaritas—fresh lime juice and Cointreau. Plus, Absolut had just come out with Citron, a citrus-flavored vodka. He took the Cointreau, fresh lime juice and the Citron, and to approximate the Rose’s Grenadine, he grabbed cranberry juice from the bar, which is usually reserved for a Cape Codder (vodka and cranberry drink that was and is very popular). 

It was served to the waitresses as a shift drink. They became crazy about it. It then became the staff drink and soon the staff started turning the regulars onto it. People from the outside came in and ordered it. The Odeon at the time was a stronghold for celebrities. They would shout out, “Boyfriend! Give us more of that pink drink!” The drink was disseminated into lower Manhattan within a year.

Dale DeGroff, author of the Craft of the Cocktail, and former head bartender at the renowned Rainbow Room in New York City, put it on the menu and was responsible for popularizing a definitive recipe that became worldwide standard in the mid-1990’s. The version he encountered while in San Francisco in the early ’90s was just awful. Everyone thought it was a crowd pleaser and a hot drink. What he did to change the game with Cosmopolitans was to use an orange peel on top (later flamed). No one else had done that before and it produced nice aromatics to the drink. Today, the use of an aromatizer, kind of like a perfumer, can accentuate the orange aromatics even more.

Cocktail menus weren’t really a big thing back then. There were basic cocktails and you made whatever else you conjured up. People wanted gin Martinis, vodka Martinis, vodka sodas. Bar programs weren’t sophisticated. But because the Cosmopolitan was so trendy and popular, especially among women, establishments were putting it on their menus in some form. It also got women cocktailing again after decades of absence. One of the first variations on the Cosmo was the White Cosmopolitan, which became a very popular cocktail on the Upper East Side of NY. This version had vodka, white cranberry juice (clear and sweeter than regular cran), St-Germain elderflower liqueur (not triple sec or orange liqueur) and lime juice. Less tart, sweeter and not the signature pink hue, but a Cosmo nonetheless.  This movement was a call to action for bars to reinvent the classics once again in America.

Whether you’re a fan of the classic Cosmopolitan, never imbibed on a Cosmopolitan, or interested in trying one of the cool variations and time-tested Cosmos that I have made for parties, events, weddings, company events, and bar/restaurant customers, please see below. I have become somewhat of a Cosmo connoisseur over the years and love a good classic Cosmopolitan or specialty Cosmo from time to time. Unfortunately, when I am out, I need to specify how I would like it. Most often, I like drinking a cosmo with mandarin or orange vodka (Stolichnaya, Absolut, or Ketel One), which sometimes is not available at bars or restaurants. It is fruitier, less tart, and more balanced compared to the citrus vodka or plain vodka and the Ketel One orange vodka is very good.  When I was in the business of creating cocktail menus, many of these stood out and made it on the menu. Give these cosmos a try this summer and they are easy to make at home. A good rule of thumb is to stay true to its standard – use some kind of vodka, fresh lime juice, and orange liqueur and the rest can be a mix-n-match of flavors and combos. The Cosmopolitan recipe closely resembles drinks that came before, like the Margarita, Kamikaze, and Harpoon (crafted by Ocean Spray). Please let me know your feedback and any questions you may have. Enjoy and Cheers!

degroff cosmo

Classic Cosmopolitan (DeGroff)

  • 1 ½ oz Absolut Citron vodka
  • ¾ oz triple sec
  • ¼ oz fresh lime juice
  • 1 oz cranberry juice cocktail
  • Flamed orange peel for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish with an orange peel (veggie peeler) by lighting the skin over the glass to extract the oils and drop in. 

tony cosmo

Tony’s Cosmopolitan (the one we know today)

  • 2 oz lemon vodka
  • 1 oz Cointreau
  • 1 oz fresh lime juice
  • 1 oz cranberry juice cocktail
  • Lemon/lime peel or twist for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish a lemon/lime peel using a veggie peeler or channel knife for twist.

mandarin cosmo

Michael’s Modern-Day Cosmopolitan

  • 1 ½ oz Absolut Mandarin (if no Absolut, use Stoli Orange)
  • ¾ oz Cointreau
  • ½ oz fresh lime juice
  • 1 oz cranberry juice
  • 2 dashes orange bitters
  • Orange peel for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish the peel using a veggie peeler.

Blue Cosmo – same as above, but use blue curacao instead of Cointreau

grapefruit cosmo

Michael’s Re-mixed Cosmopolitan

  • 1 ¼ oz Absolut vodka
  • ¼ oz elderflower liqueur
  • ½ oz fresh lemon juice
  • ½ oz simple syrup
  • ½ oz fresh or bottled ruby red grapefruit juice 
  • 2 dashes of grapefruit bitters
  • Lemon or grapefruit peel for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish the peel using a veggie peeler.

sexy sea cosmo

Sexy Sea Cosmopolitan

  • 2 oz Tito’s Handmade vodka
  • 1 oz orange liqueur
  • ½ oz butterfly pea flower (amazon)
  • ½ oz fresh lemon juice
  • Edible orchid flower for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish edible orchid or any edible flower.

The Paris Cosmopolitan

  • 1 ½ oz raspberry vodka
  • ½ oz Midori melon liqueur or melon liqueur
  • ½ oz fresh lemon juice
  • ¼ oz simple syrup
  • 1 oz white cranberry juice
  • Lemon peel or twist for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish the peel or twist using a channel knife or veggie peeler. For twist, wrap around finger for 30 sec to create a spiral twist to hang off glass.

ginger cosmo

Michael’s Ginger Cosmopolitan

  • 1 ½ oz Tito’s Handmade/organic vodka or ginger-infused vodka 
  • ½ oz Domaine de Canton ginger liqueur or ginger liqueur. For infused vodka, increase triple sec slightly
  • ½ oz triple sec
  • ½ oz fresh lime juice
  • ½ oz cane syrup (2:1 sugar to water)
  • Candied ginger for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish candied ginger on a stick.

Ginger-infused vodka – time consuming peeling and cutting ginger root, but really good, especially if you love ginger. 2-3 cups of ginger root per 750ml bottle of vodka. Soak some lemon juice with vodka and ginger in a large airtight mason jar for 48 hours. Stir every 12 hours. When complete, fine strain infusion into a clean container.

pom cosmo

Michael’s Pomegranate Cosmo 

  • 1 ½ oz citrus vodka
  • ¾ oz Cointreau
  • ½ oz fresh lime juice
  • ½ oz POM pomegranate juice 
  • ½ oz orange blossom water
  • Sugared rim, optional
  • Orange twist for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish the twist using a channel knife.

Orange blossom water –

2 cups loosely packed orange flower blossoms, 2 cups distilled water. Crush the orange blossoms in a mortar and pestle until they are a paste. Let sit for 2 hours. Combine the petal paste and distilled water in a jar. Stir and cover. Let sit for 2 weeks. Strain the blossoms out of the water and then add the water to a container.

cucumber cosmo

Michael’s Cucumber Cosmo

  • 1 ½ oz Effen or Prairie organic cucumber vodka or cucumber-infused vodka
  • ½ oz Cointreau
  • ½ oz fresh lemon juice
  • ½ oz white cranberry juice
  • Splash rose water
  • 1 oz freshly squeezed cucumber juice or blender. Thin as possible
  • English cucumber ribbon or rollup and lemon twist (optional) for garnish

Shake all ingredients with ice in a shaker or mixing glass. Strain into a chilled martini/glass or coupe. Garnish the ribbon by peeling the cucumber to the third layer and intertwine over a skewer. Rollup done by rolling cucumber skin and skewering. Lemon twist using a channel knife. Great drink to batch!

Cucumber-infused vodka – 

3 cups of peeled and sliced English hothouse cucumber per 750ml bottle of vodka in a large mason jar for 24 hours. Stir after 12 hours. When complete, fine strain infusion into a clean container.

Rose water – 

2 cups fresh rose petals, 3 distilled water. Add the rose petals and distilled water to a pot and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Once the water simmers, lower the heat to low and keep the water at a very slow simmer for 30 minutes. Pour the simmered water through a fine mesh strainer. Discard the flower petals. Store in fridge when cooled.

Cheers,

Michael Nagy

Advanced Mixologist/Liquid Chef

Bar Insight for Customers

June
30
2023

Below you will find REAL stories from my experience behind the stick. Many are contained in my book. I will also reveal some bartender pet peeves.

If you are a customer (in some bar situations customers/patrons are referred to as guests), here is some insight. If you have spent time on the other side of the bar, these will seem familiar. Most people have no idea what a bartender has to deal with. Hopefully, you haven’t been one of these people described below. Do not take offense! This article is meant to educate and inform, not denigrate, and is for fun purposes.

Some nights are long. Some nights are crazy. Some nights you are still smiling when your head hits the pillow.

A disgruntled customer who was cut off earlier in the night meeting me outside after my shift in a revving truck aimed in my direction.

Closing the bar and leaving at 2:30am to stumble upon a fight between one of your angry customers and a passer-by downtown. Hanging outside until the police arrived and making a statement and explaining that the customer was not intoxicated when he left the bar. Later found out that the customer was a medical doctor who was on heavy medication.

Watching a fellow bartender lean over an uncovered running blender wearing a tie and watching him turn blue and become horrified.

Wait staff walking behind the bar and pouring themselves drinks or making drinks without asking.

Being one of two bartenders who showed up to work on a four-person shift. That lone other bartender was inexperienced.

Working at an old place without a backup generator that would have power outages during storms that would disable the register, kill the fridges, water, lights, and fans. Customers had to be removed and reservations called and cancelled.

Walkouts! Who do you think pays the bill?

Being a couples therapist. mediator in relationship disputes, and a sounding board for everyone’s troubles at work and home. As a bartender, you are inevitably a counselor to poor souls. Overseeing a blind date can be an awkward situation.

Getting a request to make a drink that tastes pink. Making a drink with a very expensive Scotch and red bull. Hennessey Cognac with Vitamin Water, gin and milk with a splash of soda, tequila and diet coke, and many other bizarre drink concoctions.

I’ll take a dark wine or red wine. OK?

Make the drink strong. You assuming that I will under-pour. Will you pay for the extra alcohol? Hook me up, I’m a great tipper. I’ll take care of you later – hours later they left without paying your bill.

What is cheap here? Better to say, “Do you have any specials?”

Employees drinking at the bar on their off days and not tipping, especially during busy times.

Can I have a beer? How much are your drinks? Surprise me? Can you be more specific?

Do not help yourself to garnishes or pour yourself a draft beer when I head to the kitchen to pickup a food order.

Last call is last call.

I love to chat and get to know you but during a busy shift I don’t have time to listen to your life story.

When you want to order a drink, please don’t snap your fingers, whistle, yell barkeep, or wave your arms to get my attention. Eye contact, facing me, and slight hand gesture would suffice. Realize who is next in line to order.

Have your drink or drinks ready, especially for larger groups. If I am finally ready to take your order and you turn to ask your friends what they want, there is a good chance that i will be gone when you turn back around. Have your drinks ready.

I have a great memory as a bartender but it’s hard to hear over the noise sometimes and ordering more than 7 different drinks is difficult. Have your money or card ready or be prepared to give me a name for your tab. Sometimes other people in your group pays the bill.

Shout out a drink order when you haven’t been approached or I didn’t ask you for your drink order.

When I smile, greet you, and ask how you are doing, you say “Manhattan”. When ordering a Martini or Manhattan, please be prepared to specify how you like it, i.e. rocks, straight, gin, vodka, bourbon, blended whiskey, dirty, stirred, shaken, etc… Learn bar lingo.

Monopolize a bartender’s time. Sometimes we are busying answering phones, ringing in orders, doing cash transactions, making drinks for the whole restaurant, restocking, cutting garnishes, cleaning glasses, etc… We often get only 5 minutes to sit down and eat something during a 10-hour shift. The third time you sent me to get you condiments just took up my bathroom break. You will probably wait for next beer.

Cheers,

Michael Nagy

Food & Beverage Operations

Bar Professional

Crumpetini cocktail
January
18
2023

Many, many years ago my former company, Raise Your Spirits, Inc. and I, had the wonderful opportunity to serve as the exclusive beverage service for a holiday theater program at the Open Stage of Harrisburg in downtown Harrisburg, PA. The comedy show and parody was titled “The Santa Land Diaries” featuring an elf named “Crumpet”. We were responsible for creating a themed signature cocktail and drink menu for the program which ran for two weeks. We were present for setup, service, and cleanup. It was a lot of fun. The signature cocktail was called “The Crumpetini” in honor of the lead character and consisted of fresh, hand-crafted ingredients and an eye-popping garnish perfect for the season and occasion. Below is the cocktail recipe and the cover image is the cocktail. If you would like this cocktail or many other cocktails used for previous events, please let me know. Check out the Raise Your Spirits, Inc page on instagram @raise_ur_spirits for more cocktails, menus, event images, and much more…..Cheers, Michael

1.5 oz Bulldog Gin

.5 oz Elderflower Cordial

.5 oz Fresh Rose & Hibiscus Syrup homemade

.25 oz Freshly squeezed lemon juice

.5 oz White Cranberry juice

top with Dry Prosecco (LaMarca)

Wild Hibiscus garnish 

Prep – Build all ingredients in a mixing glass or shaker except Prosecco. Shake over ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass or coupe. Top with Prosecco and add garnish. For syrups – simmer rose and hibiscus petals and demarara sugar water (simple syrup 1:1 ratio) together on stovetop. Steep for 30 mins.

Wine Glass

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