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July 2021

Must Mix: Summer Cocktails from SMOKE LAB

By | Mixology News

Summer Aniseed Mule

Made from Basmati rice SMOKE LAB is one of the first homegrown vodkas to come out of India.

After their initial success in the US, the brand launched their Aniseed expression––a refreshing and smooth vodka with notes of fennel and licorice with sweet and delicate notes of fennel blossom.

SMOKE LAB ANISEED Flavored Vodka is a unique expression of India and our culture. Since we launched in the U.S. this past January, our newest vodka is getting tremendous buzz and winning many impressive awards including the top-of-class Master Award from the London-based Asian Spirits Masters Competition and gold medals at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition, SIP Awards and Bartender Spirits Awards.”
– Varun Jain, SMOKE LAB Founder & CEO

Jain added, “We are thrilled with the reception of both SMOKE LAB ANISEED Vodka in the U.S. We encourage bartenders and consumers alike to mix up one of these delicious cocktails or create their own concoction and experience our mystical aromatic spirit for themselves. Here are a few of our favorites:”

Summer Aniseed Mule

Summer Aniseed Mule

Summer Aniseed Mule

Ingredients:

  • 2 parts SMOKE LAB ANISEED Vodka
  • 1/2 part Blue Curacao
  • 3/4 part fresh lime juice
  • Ginger beer

Preparation: Combine all ingredients in a mule cup or mason jar filled with ice. Garnish with a mint sprig, orange wedge and cherry.


Aniseed Strawberry Mojito

Aniseed Strawberry Mojito

Aniseed Strawberry Mojito

Ingredients:

  • 2 parts SMOKE LAB ANISEED Vodka
  • 3/4 part fresh lime juice
  • 3/4 part simple syrup
  • 4 fresh strawberries
  • Mint leaves
  • club soda to taste

Preparation: In a tall glass, muddle 3 strawberries, mint leaves, lime juice and simple syrup. Add SMOKE LAB ANISEED Vodka and crushed ice and stir to combine. Top off with club soda and garnish with a strawberry and mint leaves.

The post Must Mix: Summer Cocktails from SMOKE LAB appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Bandits Opens with Pop-Culture Cocktails & “Dressed-Up” Beers

By | Mixology News

Bandits Bar, interior, featured image

Raccoons usually den in man-made structures like attics, sewers, and sheds—trespassing human homes like a true bandit.

In urban areas, they occupy multiple dens within a one-mile range for different dozing during the day and storming drains and dumpsters at night.

During the dark pandemic period, Den Hospitality crept into the untenanted Daddy-O space, on the corner of Bedford and Leroy, to mark a “raccoon saloon” in the West Village neighborhood of New York City.

Interior

Interior

Screech Bandits, a brand-new yet old-school diner ‘n dive tributing its ringed-tail mascot, Rocco (whom Den Hospitality regulars know and love). The 900-square-foot “den” provides the same allure of their trendy Garret Bars with an atmosphere accommodating guests – both inside and out – for all-American fare and artisanal cocktails from noon through late night.

All-day inhabitants can nestle in large booths surrounded by warm 70’s elements like a whimsy disco ball, yellow-frilled lightboxes, and traditional diner-style stools atop a black-and-white checkered floor. It’s basically grandpa’s basement bar of yesteryear where time (nor DUIs) doesn’t matter – hence retro clocks, hourglasses, and a “Stealing Time” neon sign.

Corner

Corner

Pockets of nostalgia certainly cite vintage New York – bringing back cultural aspects of the ‘70s (cue Dolly Parton’s “Jolene”).

“People are using some of those stylistic and cultural choices; iconic fashions of the era are all over social media – it made perfect sense to design a bar that acts as a love letter to that time.”
Beverage Director, Max Stampa-Brown

Behind the wood-paneled bar, Stampa-Brown and the Bandits bartending team build boozy cocktails connected to prominent New York moments in pop culture. Riffs on Carrie Bradshaw’s preferred pink Cosmopolitan, White Russian, and espresso martini set the stage. “[At Bandits] we’re doing them with modern and culinary-inspired twists that are a little bit out there but still make sense together,” he remarks.

Spotlight on…

  • Bradshaw on Bedford, a cousin of the Cosmo combining rose hips, rhubarb, and sun-dried tomatoes for Sex and the City feels; a rhubarb ribbon replaces the classic lemon twist.
  • Truth or Pear, a sweet ‘n smoky mezcalita formed after a 12-hour mezcal, chile de arbol and pasilla peppers infusion; rimmed with (leftover) dehydrated blueberry turned salt.
  • I Drink Your Milkshake, a diner-style “milkshake” with cold brew vodka, coffee and chocolate liqueurs, and five-spice rice milk; crowned with a delightful Prioline wafer cookie.
Truth or Pear

Truth or Pear

“When building out the cocktail menu, we considered things like: ‘How do we get glassware that resembles and evokes the same design elements that are in the space?’ ‘How do we present things so that they are still within the realm of the reality that we’re building, but without being too kitschy, and still tasting lovely?’”
– Beverage Director, Max Stampa-Brown

I Drink Your Milkshake

I Drink Your Milkshake

In addition, the menu presents a couple of Everyday Tiki cocktails like Jimmy’s Jungle Juice, a blend of rums, juices (apple, orange, pineapple, grapefruit, lime), ginger, cinnamon, and a flaming lime on top, and Dressed-Up Beers – three beer cans coated in homemade sauces inspired by the city’s “street meat” carts, including:

Dressed-Up Beers

Dressed-Up Beers

  • Halal Cart, lightly-hopped Shiner Bock lager decorated in Bandits hot sauce, white pepper-herbed yogurt swirl, fresh dill, and celery salt.
  • Dosa Cart, golden Montauk Summer Ale dressed in mango coconut curry hot sauce, curry leaf, and salt.
  • Taco Cart, blond Monopolio Clara lager decked in tomatillo jalapeño hot sauce, pickled watermelon radish, and tajin.

The loaded cans are not a “delicate event.” Boozers should approach it the same way they would a stacked Bloody Mary at brunch—slowly tilt the can and lick the sauce. “I encourage people to eat anything that is on the beer because all of the garnishes are edible. For example, folks can take a bite of the mint leaf, then drink a sip of beer, lick the sauce, or try each component individually. I’ve also seen a lot of people ask for more sauce, and you can totally do that, too! Never-ending sauce!” Stampa-Brown suggests.

The folksy sauces show up on the Bandits food menu with four corresponding Have it your way TOTS. “Dressed-up” too, the heavy tots are topped with the works to fill up beer bellies. “It’s been really fun to see people who are having a Halal Cart beer and then an order of Dosa Tots. The Dosa Tots were actually inspired by the Washington Square Park institution, ‘NY Dosas,’” he mentions.

Other offerings include deluxe diner and deli-inspired classics like Jersey Ripper, a New Jersey-style deep-fried hot dog, and Steak & Tots served with Trois au Poivre sauce and duck fat taters. For mod vegetarians: Chickpea “Tuna” Melt featuring fresh chickpea salad and herby pesto vinaigrette with a traditional pickle and chips side; and Bandit Fried Cauliflower Wings with various… sauces.

“I thought a lot about who our [Bandits] customers would be – basically, I want everyone! It’s a West Village bar, and we prioritized hiring POC and people from the LGBTQ+ community. We wanted to make it possible for anybody to feel like they could walk in and sit down; have a steak and tater tots, a bone-dry martini; watch the Yankees whip the Red Sox and go home with a huge smile on their face because they danced to Tina Turner into the night. It’s supposed to have all of the things that would make a welcoming New York neighborhood bar, where there’s something for everyone and everyone has something to walk away with!”
– Beverage Director, Max Stampa-Brown

Bradshaw on Bedford

Bradshaw on Bedford

Bradshaw on Bedford 

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Vodka
  • 3/4 oz. Lemon
  • 1 oz. Rose Rhubarb Sun-Dried Tomato Syrup*
  • 4 Basil Leaves

Preparation:Shake lemon juice, rose rhubarb sun-dried tomato syrup, vodka, and basil leaves; double drain into a coupe, and garnished with a ribbon of rhubarb,” Stampa-Brown finishes.

*Rose Rhubarb Sun-Dried Tomato Syrup

  • 6 stalks of Rhubarb, cut into sections
  • 950g Sugar
  • 950g Dried Rosebuds
  • 950g Water
  • 650g Sun-dried Tomatoes

Preparation: In a large high walled pot combine ingredients. Bring mixture to a boil for two (2) minutes. Lest rest for ten (10) minutes. Strain.

The post Bandits Opens with Pop-Culture Cocktails & “Dressed-Up” Beers appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright

By | Mixology News

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright, featured image

Gabriella Wright is an actress, model, activist, and motivational speaker with long-standing humanitarian engagement.

Her next big role is set in the Lionsgate film The Hitman’s Wife’s alongside Salma Hayek, Antonio Banderas, Ryan Reynolds, and Samuel L. Jackson. Gabriella portrays the only female assassin ‘Veronika’ in the action-packed comedy directed by Patrick Hughes. The film is the sequel to its successful predecessor The Hitman’s Bodyguard (2017).

As a lifelong thespian, Gabriella has an equal passion for humanitarian causes. She developed Never Alone, a mental well-being and suicide prevention initiative of the Chopra Foundation, which she currently oversees as co-founder alongside Deepak Chopra and Poonacha Machaiah. She is also the innovator of the Mental Hygiene Toolkit, a collection of mind-cleansing and self-awareness tools that help individuals nurture their bodies, minds and spirit, while developing inner guidance to consciously choose the best path for their lives. Born from the tragic passing of her sister who took her life in 2018, Gabriella’s mission in life has expanded to provide free services to those struggling, and to promote healing for those touched by suicide.

She will soon also be seen starring in the indie feature film “I Am Never Alone” in partnership with the Never Alone initiative, which will be making film festival rounds in 2022.

Chilled sat with Wright to learn about her bartending past and get a better understanding of her lifestyle off-screen.

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright

Photo by JSquared Photography

Tell us about the projects you are working on.

The recently released film The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard; action comedy alongside Salma Hayek, Ryan Reynolds, Tom Hopper and Antonio Banderas. It has been 3 years in the making and the release couldn’t have been at a better time as we transit from the strict Covid protocols to a more relaxed environment.

With your busy schedule, what do you like to do with your downtime?

Meditate and go on hikes. Prior to the pandemic I would just jump on a plane and go discover a new place, a luxury certainly.

When you go out to eat, where do you like to dine?

In Los Angeles I love going to Crossroads, fine vegan cuisine. Another place that I love is Nicolas Eatery in Malibu, French cuisine.

What types of dishes do you typically order?

Anything with avocado here in LA. Seriously… I love a French onion soup and a vegetarian spaghetti carbonara from Crossroads.

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright

Photo by JSquared Photography

Any favorite bars?

I love the bar at the Chiltern in London.

What drinks do you order when out? Favorite drink?

I do not really drink anymore, but when I travel to France in the summer, I have a local rosé wine from the South of France called rosé du domaine du Val d’astier.

Do you prepare drinks at home?

No, but I do prepare teas and lead tea ceremonies. I have teas from all over, different types of Pu’er tea from China, green teas from Japan, and Ayurvedic herbal teas from India.

Tell us about your home bar. What is it stocked with?

Only pink French champagne for anyone who visits.

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright

Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright

Photo by JSquared Photography

Have you ever been a bartender?

Yes, and I probably was the worst bartender in human history. I was too overwhelmed and was pathetic in giving back quick change to customers. It was a summer job at my extended family’s nightclub bar called Mooseheads in Canberra, Australia.

If you could share a drink with anyone, who would it be?

I hesitate between my all-time fascination William Shakespeare and ask him about how he was able to write these evergreen masterpieces that transcend time and Audrey Hepburn on how she navigated life, Hollywood, her humanitarian desires, and her personal life.

The post Chillin’ With Gabriella Wright appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Swap It Out: Update Your Classic Cocktail with Rum

By | Mixology News

Island Old Fashioned, featured image

Getting bored with your classic cocktails? Swapping out spirits can make a surprising amount of difference.

Rum is the spirit of the season, and as the market grows with premium and craft offerings, it’s time to give rum a serious update. Gone are the days of hiding a sub-par spirit under layers of overly sweet, tropical flavors. Modern rum stands its ground against fellow brown spirits like whiskey and scotch. Even whiskey and bourbon enthusiasts are switching up what’s in their glasses.

Good rum has always existed for those who knew where to look, but with the rise in premium spirits across the board, rum has had a true chance to flourish. What has rum got over whiskey? In short, variety. Thanks to the decentralized nature of rum production, there’s an incredible level of versatility within the spirit. This versatility is readily apparent when you use a premium expression in a classic cocktail—particularly minimalist cocktails. Cocktails that only have a few ingredients are the perfect place to showcase how much flavor and quality rum brings to the table.

Next time you’re setting up a classic mix, give rum a try!

Tropical Negroni

Tropical Negroni

Tropical Negroni  

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Aged Rum
  • 1 oz. Campari
  • 1 oz. Sherry

Preparation: Add ingredients to a shaker with ice and shake until cols. Strain into a tumbler with fresh ice and garnish with an orange peel.


Rum Mule

Rum Mule

Rum Mule  

Ingredients:

  • 1 oz. Rum
  • 2 oz. Ginger Beer
  • 2 dashes Angostura Orange Bitters

Preparation: Build ingredients in a glass with ice, top with two dashes of bitters and a hearty squeeze of lime. 


Island Old Fashioned

Island Old Fashioned

Island Old Fashioned  

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Rum
  • 2 dashes Angostura Cocoa Bitters
  • 1 Sugar Cube

Preparation: In a glass add the sugar cube and bitters, muddle with a bar spoon. Add the rum and a large cube of ice. Gently stir to combine before expressing an orange peel garnish over the top.

The post Swap It Out: Update Your Classic Cocktail with Rum appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Bartender Spotlight: Javier Ramirez

By | Mixology News

Bartender Javier Ramirez, featured image

Las Vegas based bartender Javier Ramirez has been working in the food and beverage industry since the age of 14.

While Ramirez was growing up his parents owned a restaurant where he worked in the back helping to wash dishes, clean tables, and prep food. This early job led him on the path to bartending. When the restaurant closed he continued work in restaurants, eventually working at Dos Caminos in the Palazzo on the Las Vegas Strip.

Bartender Javier Ramirez

Bartender Javier Ramirez

What inspired you to become a bartender? Tell us about your background.

I started in the F&B Industry at a young age. My parents owned a restaurant while I was growing up and I learned to work for them at the age of 14 washing dishes, cleaning tables, and prepping food. This started me on the path to a bartender without evening knowing it. The restaurant closed down, but I kept working in restaurants. My first casino job on the strip was Dos Caminos in the Palazzo years ago. I worked my way up and down the strip, until I became a bartender and fell in love with it, and kept learning and studying for it to be where I am now.

Where do you tend bar now?  What makes it unique?  Distinctive drinks, décor, a certain vibe?

I work at Oak & Ivy at Downtown Container Park on Fremont Street in Las Vegas. We were voted 2nd best whiskey bar by Yelp in the states. Since then, we have been trying to keep that status with our craft cocktails and unique whiskey collection. We have a small bar area, but we make it up in great service and amazing cocktails to match.

Who has been most influential in your development as a bartender? A mentor, a parent, a fellow bartender, and why?

My mentor, and dear friend, Eric Smith, was also one of the best men at my wedding. He was the one that gave me the chance to get behind the bar and taught me how to be a bartender and cocktail creator. He is the person I thank more than anyone. He was the reason I’ve met so many great bartenders, such as Tony Abou-Ganim and Dale Degroff. They showed me the real bartending and cocktail world, but without Eric, it couldn’t have been reached.

Do you have any advice for novice/at home bartenders? 

My advice for bartenders in training is to work your way up as a bar back and figure out what kind of bartender you want to be. There are many types, such as gaming bartenders, craft cocktails, and sportsbook bars. Decide what you like or are more attracted to, then study, study, and study. This industry is always growing, and the more you learn, the better. For the bartenders that started at home: I’ve noticed that many start with a certain spirit and spread to others, and little by little, you learn more about it and the flavors and how it’s made. Showing you some classic cocktails and not so classic at the same time.

What is your favorite ingredient right now and why?

GINGER! I love ginger. It can be both overpowering and also have a soft back-end note that lingers in cocktails. It can be so versatile—candied, syrups, and powder. It can mix well with all spirits as well.

How do you go about creating a new cocktail? Is there a specific process or simply a moment of inspiration?

There really is no process to it, in my opinion. I have a list on my phone of rad cocktail names but no cocktails and a list of cocktails with no names.

Do you have a special technique you use or a tip for making a particular drink?

Depending on what cocktail you’re making, there is always a solid technique, whether it be Ramos Gin Fizz or a simple Espresso Martini. The one I stand for is the reverse dry shake with egg white sour cocktails. To me, dry then ice shake doesn’t connect right in my mind. The way I explain is fluffing up a nice pillow to lay your head down, but right before you set it down, you smash it down with books (ice), building all the fluff just to destroy it makes no sense.

Where do you see the bartending/cocktail culture headed?

Bartending trends are going back and forth. I see a lot of high-tech and scientific techniques and also going back to the classics and deconstructing them. I love seeing a classic daiquiri and a snow cone sherbet daiquiri. This is what I love about this industry, you can have the same cocktail and so many variations of it by so many people.

Como La Flor By Javier Ramirez

Como La Flor

Como La Flor   

Ingredients:

    • 2 oz. Illegal Mezcal
    • 1 1/4 oz. Fresh Cucumber-Lime Juice
    • 1 oz. Marie Brizard Elderflower
    • 1/4 oz. Jalapeno Simple Syrup 2:1
    • Garnish with a flower

The post Bartender Spotlight: Javier Ramirez appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Global Sip: How To Use Passion Fruit

By | Mixology News

Mixing with Passion Fruit featured image

Native to Southern Brazil through Northern Argentina, the stunning passion fruit is a current favorite in cocktail-making.

As one of the predicted flavor trends for 2021, passion fruit has been popping up in cocktails all summer long. While the odd-looking fruit has always been a favorite, it’s safe to say we’re seeing it more frequently this summer. The sweet, tart, and lightly citrus flavor pairs well with a wide range of spirits and makes for a fun and refreshing cocktail.

Passion Fruit Flower

Passion Fruit Flower

There are two varieties of passion fruit—the larger golden passion fruit and the smaller, purple passionfruit. The purple varietal is more common, as it is less acidic and has a more dynamic flavor and aroma. Both the flowers and the flesh of the passion fruit plant are dramatic to look at and make for excellent garnishes, however the fruit has loose seeds so note it can be tricky to work with. Thanks to its long-lived popularity, there are a wide range of ways to add passion fruit to your cocktails if you cannot find whole fruit. Most grocery stores with a large import section will have cans of tinned passionfruit pulp. Additionally, its available in liqueurs, syrups, and even frozen purées.

When creating a cocktail, try using the juice as is or made into a syrup. One of the most common spirit pairings is rum, but agave-spirits and even whiskey can make for interesting flavor combinations.

Give one of these passion fruit cocktails a try and then mix up a version of your own!

400 Rabbits

400 Rabbits

400 Rabbits

Goosefeather at Tarrytown House Estate

Mezcal contains an aromatic compound called terpenes. This compound has been found to have a positive effect on mood and stress levels.

Ingredients: 

  • 1 oz. Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Mezcal
  • 1/2 oz. Ancho Reyes
  • 1/4 oz. Velvet Falernum
  • 3/4 oz. Lime Juice
  • 1/4 oz. Passionfruit Juice
  • 3/4 oz. Carrot Juice
  • 1/4 oz. Cinnamon Syrup

PreparationShake and serve in a Collins glass with a mint sprig and a slice of carrot.


East Coast Kali

East Coast Kali

East Coast Kali

By Catch LA

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Jalepeño-Infused Tequila
  • 1 oz. Orange Passionfruit Cordial
  • 5 oz. Yuzu
  • 1/4 oz. Grand Marnier
  • 1/4 oz. Campari

Preparation: Dip a Half-rim rocks glass with water then sugar to form a sugar rim then fill glass completely with ice. Pour shaken beverage over ice and Enjoy!


chase your passion cocktail

Chase Your Passion

Chase Your Passion

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Friday Kahlo Blanco Tequila
  • 7 Blueberries for Muddle
  • 3/4 oz. Lemon Juice
  • 1/2 oz. Liquid Alchemist Passionfruit Syrup
  • 1/2 oz. Blue Chair Coconut Rum

Garnish: 3 Blueberries

Preparation: Place 7 blueberries in tin with the with the 1 1/2 oz. of Friday Kahlo Blanco Tequila, muddle till all blueberries are smashed. Pour lemon, passionfruit syrup, and coconut rum in the same tin, add ice. Hard shake for 10-12 seconds, double strain into chilled coupe. Garnish with 3 blueberries on a pic.

The post Global Sip: How To Use Passion Fruit appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Why You Should Make Your Own Kombucha & Our Favorite Recipe

By | Mixology News

Kombucha Scoby, mason jars, featured image

Tart, fizzy, and lightly sweet—Kombucha has become a favorite of bartenders, health-nuts, and casual beverage enthusiasts alike.

Kombucha’s history starts in Northeast China in around 200 B.C. where it was first prized for its supposed healing properties. The drink made its way along trade routes, and was even popular throughout Europe as early as the 20th century. After tea and sugar shortages caused a popularity dip during WWII, the 1960s brought a new wave of interest for kombucha when a study in Switzerland showed its impressive health benefits.

Kombucha Scoby

Kombucha Scoby

Why Use Kombucha In Cocktails?

Let’s start with some background—Kombucha at its base is sweet, caffeinated black tea that becomes lightly fermented. This base mixture can be flavored with a wide range of fruit, herbs, florals, additional sugar, and more. You can get an incredibly diverse range of flavors all with the background of black tea in a lightly tart and fizzy format. Not only is this often healthier than bottled juices and mixers, but it can also help build your layers of flavor in a more interesting way. Additionally, because it’s less sweet, you have more control over your flavor profile. Essentially, using kombucha as your secret ingredient can help you make better cocktails faster.

Kombucha Cocktail by Taylor Nix

Kombucha Cocktail

Kombucha pairs with just about every spirit, but it works particularly well with gins, vodka, and even some whisk(e)y. It all comes down to the flavor of the blend you’re working with; a grapefruit and jalapeño kombucha, for instance, would pair with a mezcal, while an elderflower and cucumber kombucha would pair with a gin. The versatility, especially with homemade kombucha, is endless. Two things to note when building cocktails—always taste your kombucha before mixing a drink. Because it’s a living creature, your flavor can change from one day to the next, getting less sweet and more carbonated. When crafting cocktails, you want to be sure to give it a taste test so you can adjust for sweetness and acid accordingly. Also note that kombucha should always be added to the glass last to preserve the bubbles.

Kombucha Scoby

Kombucha Scoby

Why Make Your Own Kombucha?

How it’s made and how soon you use it will affect the carbonation and sugar levels dramatically. Your brew can be sweeter, tarter, dryer, and more or less carbonated depending on what you want. Kombucha’s tart and unique flavor profile already make it an idea cocktail ingredient, but when you make your own you can use it to its full advantage. Like with shrubs, Kombucha can be a great way to make the most of seasonal or less than perfect produce. During the secondary fermentation process, you can add pureed or sliced fruit to add flavoring. Once you have your master kombucha made, creating flavor options is easy, and can be part of your weekly specials. Your “mother” will have its own jar with a scoby.

Basic Kombucha

Ingredients:

  • 3 1/2 qt Water
  • 1 cup Sugar (white granulated)
  • 7/8 bags or 2 tbsp. Loose Black or Green Tea (caffeinated)
  • 2 cups Unflavored Starter Tea or Unflavored Store Bought Kombucha

Preparation: Prepare a clean, sanitized one gallon jar by labeling with a name and date. Gather a clean, dry tightly woven cloth or filter and rubber bands to keep the opening of the jar covered. In a large stock pot, heat the water enough to stir in and dissolve the sugar. Remove from heat. Add tea and let steep as the liquid returns to room temperature. Once at the right temp, strain your tea into your jar and add your starter mix, cover with cheesecloth. Coffee filters and paper towels can be used in place of cheese cloth, just be sure no fruit flies or debris can get through the weave.

Let your starter sit in a cool but not cold, dark space where it won’t be jostled around for several weeks. At the one-week mark, you may notice your scoby beginning to grow, you can use a sanitized straw to grab a small amount of liquid below to taste. Once the taste is to your liking, you can begin to bottle.

The post Why You Should Make Your Own Kombucha & Our Favorite Recipe appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits Promotes Laura DePasquale 

By | Mixology News

Southern Glazer Wine & Spirits Announces Promotions, featured image

Preeminent distributor of beverage alcohol, Southern Glazer’s Wine & Spirits, announced that Laura DePasquale has been promoted to the role of Senior Vice President, Sales & Commercial Operations, Artisanal Wine Division.

The new role will have DePasquale overseeing the national artisanal wine selling division for Southern Glazer and their enhanced customer service SG+. She will be building and managing support functions and sales leaders to optimize productivity across the Artisanal Wine commercial organization.

Laura DePasquale

Laura DePasquale

“Laura has always set the bar the highest imaginable”
– Cindy Leonard, Executive Vice President and General Manager, Fine Wine

“Southern Glazer’s is extremely proud to have such a brilliant Master Sommelier and demonstrated leader among its ranks. Her level of knowledge and experience in the artisanal wine category is unmatched, and I know her expertise will bring great value to our suppliers and customers in this space.”

Southern Glazer Wine & Spirits Announces Promotions

Southern Glazer Wine & Spirits Announces Promotions

Previously, DePasquale held the role of Vice President and General Manager of the Artisanal Fine Wine Division at Southern Glazer’s Wine & Spirits – Florida. As an engaging wine educator, DePasquale has a Master Sommelier Diploma and is only the 13th woman to achieve the title. After being elected to the Board of Directors of the Court of Master Sommeliers in 2010, DePasquale served the board for a total of five years and spent three years as the first female Vice-Chair. Currently, DePasquale is a USA Board Member for the Piedmont based Wine Educational Board’s Collisioni Food Project. She also is a member of the Board of Directors for Best USA Sommelier Association’s (BUSA) Competition and a Certified Italian Wine Expert.

The post Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits Promotes Laura DePasquale  appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Drink in History: The Penicillin

By | Mixology News

Making a Penicillin, featured image

The penicillin cocktail is so well-known on the global drink scene that most assume it’s a classic.

It does follow the traditional pre-prohibition recipe format (less than four ingredients). The only clue that it’s a recent creation is the use of an exotic sweetener.

Made of two kinds of scotch (a peaty and blended one), lemon juice, and honey-ginger syrup and served in a rocks glass, Penicillin is a smoky riff on a Whiskey Sour. Although medicinal penicillin was first discovered in 1928, the world would have to wait nearly a century later for its namesake libation.

The Discovery

In 2005 at New York City’s Milk & Honey cocktail lounge, while experimenting with The Peat Monster (a scotch by Compass Box), Australian bartender Sam Ross made an interesting discovery. He mixed in some ginger juice and floated the Islay Malt atop a Gold Rush cocktail, another whiskey-based modern classic invented at Milk & Honey. Eventually, he named it Penicillin and put it on the menu.

What’s in a Name

Because the drink uses not one, but two types of scotch, was the name a nod to the Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming, who discovered the world’s first antibiotic? That may have been a factor, but according to Ross, the name is a tongue-and-cheek reference to its cure-all properties.

Rise of Fame

Once it landed on the bar’s menu, it became an instant hit with clients and bartenders alike. Word quickly spread as Milk & Honey (now shuttered) was one of America’s most influential bars in the craft cocktail movement and speakeasy revival. But it wasn’t until a few years later that it found its permanent place among go-to drinks of all time. In 2007, Ross headed to Los Angeles to help open a few bars. The easy sipper’s popularity spread even faster, with bars on both coasts adding it to their cocktail menus.

“Friends send me pictures of Penicillin on the menu from all over,” Ross said in a 2013 Time interview. And there have been many Penicillin riffs since; in fact, it’s been heralded as the “most riffed-on modern classic.” The Medicina Latina, created by Marcos Tellos in Los Angeles, substitutes lemon with lime and the scotches with mezcal and tequila. London’s The Shrub & Shutter added molecular elements with charred honey, oak smoke, and egg white. Over the summer, Atlanta’s AMER served Penicillin Pops, swapping ginger syrup with ginger beer, and Brooklyn’s Diamond Reef offered frozen “Penichillins” from a slushie machine. Slushy Penicillins were the favorite drink over the summer at Bible Club Pdx in Portland, too.

Making a Penicillin

Making a Penicillin

It’s a comforting thought that the drink that cures what ails is readily available across the globe in so many variations.

Ready to try it out? Check out the original Penicillin recipe.

Penicillin Cocktail

Penicillin Cocktail

Penicillin Cocktail 

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Blended Scotch Whisky
  • 1/4 oz. Smoky Islay Single-Malt Scotch Whisky
  • 3/4 oz. Fresh Lemon Juice
  • 3/4 oz. Honey Syrup
  • 2-3 slices of Fresh Ginger
  • Candied Ginger (for garnish)

Preparation: Muddle fresh ginger in shaker and add remaining ingredients, except Islay whisky.

Fill the shaker with ice and shake to chill; double-strain into an ice-filled rocks glass. Float whisky on top and garnish with candied ginger.

The post Drink in History: The Penicillin appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

4 Things You Didn’t Know About Scotch to Celebrate National Scotch Day

By | Mixology News

Whisky in Glasses, featured image

As early as 1494, whisky was being distilled in Scotland. With such a long legacy, there’s plenty of history to explore.

In celebration of National Scotch Day, and to give you a few fun facts to share with your guests and friends, we’re sharing a few of our favorite pieces of scotch trivia. As with many old, distilled spirits, there’s always more to learn and uncover.

Scotch Being Poured

Scotch Being Poured

During Prohibition Doctors Could Prescribe Whisky

There were a few ways that drinkers with some extra cash could get their whisky fix during American Prohibition, one of the legal options was to get a prescription. While alcohol was used as a treatment for several issues at the time, savvy physicians looking to make some extra money would sell prescriptions for spirits to just about anyone. One of the most notable partakers was Winston Churchill, who’s card read, “This is to certify that the post-accident convalescence of the Hon. Winston S. Churchill necessitates the use of alcoholic spirits especially at meal times. The quantity is naturally indefinite, but the minimum requirements would be 250 cubic centimeters.”

Scotch Does Well In The Cold (And On Adventures)

When Ernest Shackleton was planning his 1907 expedition to the South Pole, he ordered 25 cases of Mackinlay’s Rare Old Highland Malt Whiskey. This addition (along with several other spirits) was considered a necessary staple to help keep morale high on the difficult, and at times boring, trip. When the crew was forced to abandon their plans and make an escape, they left behind several crates. In 2007, 11 of the remaining bottles were found frozen but intact in the ice.

Whisky in Glasses

Whisky in Glasses

Distilleries And Cats Go Together

In a distillery full of barley there’s going to be mice, and what better way to deal with them than having a few cats around? Just like how many ships and other businesses employed felines for their superior pest control capabilities, distilleries have had many furry staff members. Several distilleries have even had semi-famous cats that make it into their brand history. One particularly skilled hunter named Towser made The Guinness Book Of World Records after annihilating an estimated 28,899 mice during her 24-year career at Glenturret.

Scotch Has A Long History Of Tax Evasion

Starting in 1644, Scottish Parliament realized that there was a profit to be made off the burgeoning spirit industry and began levying heavy taxes. Almost immediately, distillers turned to smuggling—using a range of ingenious tactics to keep their spirits hidden from the excisemen. Even members of the church were known to help hide bottles of scotch under their pulpits. Right before the passing of the Excise Act in 1923—which made producing scotch legally profitable—up to 14,000 stills a year were being confiscated.

Have a favorite scotch fact we missed? Share it in the comments below!

The post 4 Things You Didn’t Know About Scotch to Celebrate National Scotch Day appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News