Monthly Archives

September 2023

IT’S BACK!! Nassau Paradise Island Wine & Food Festival, 2024

By | Mixology News

The Best of Food and Wine!! Nassau Paradise Island Wine & Food. Festival is back—March 13-17, 2024!

The annual Nassau Paradise Island Wine & Food Festival returns to Atlantis March 13th-17th with an even bigger lineup of celebrity chef talent, culinary events, and exclusive activates.

Tickets are on sale now – so mark your calendar!!

Experience the beauty of Paradises, the warmth of The Bahamas, and the World’s best wine and food at the 2nd Annual Nassau Paradise Island Wine & Food Festival, hosted and produced by Atlantis.

Celebrity chefs like Duff Goldman, Robert Irvine, JJ Johnson, Nobu Matsuhisa, Alon Sharya, Martha Stewart, Michael White and Andrew Zimmern are among the star-studded line up along with the local talent and celebrity music entertainment.

The five-day festival will showcase the talents of the world’s most renowned wine and spirits producers, chefs, and culinary personalities.

Dine with Celebrity Chefs

From Michelin stars to Food Network legends the best of the best of the culinary world will attend this year’s NPIWFF! Walkaround tastings, meet-and-greets, cooking demos, and more!!

Food and fun, fun, fun — get a taste of what’s in store for NPIWFF 2024.

The post IT’S BACK!! Nassau Paradise Island Wine & Food Festival, 2024 appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

5 Best Vodkas for a Vodka Tonic

By | Mixology News

One of the most common drinks ordered at any bar in the United States is the Vodka Tonic. It’s simple and refreshing with a slight botanical finish.

Although the ingredients are basic enough, some vodkas are much better suited for the unique flavor notes of tonic water. These are a few that complement this cocktail in the most optimal way.

Ocean Vodka

Ocean Vodka can be described in one word, effervescent. The finish is almost bubbly as it dances on your tongue. This vodka is distilled using Polynesian Kokea or “White sugar cane” grown in the Hawaiian sun, combined with deep ocean mineral water drawn from 3,000, ft. Water at this depth is found to be rich in calcium, magnesium and potassium. The result is an incredibly flavorful and grainy finish that is almost “salty”. This texture is perfect to cut into the boldness of the Quinine flavor of tonic as well as flawlessly fade into the carbonation.


Kettle One Vodka

With 330 years of distillation history, the Nolet Family has put their heart and soul into making Kettle one. Although 11 generations of Nolet family have worked for the distillery, the tenth generation was the one to create this vodka. Kettle One is triple distilled and made from winter wheat, which tends to produce the softest bite of all the wheat varieties. Using a combination of modern distilling techniques with traditional copper pot stills, they’ve produced a clean, crisp finish with a slight citrus flavor. The citrus is only enhanced by a lemon or lime garnish.


Broken Shed

Broken Shed vodka has one of the most unique distillation processes in the industry. The flavor profile of this vodka is just as good as their carbon footprint. Distilled from whey and pure water. Broken Shed has a similar finish to premium gins. Since Gin was Tonic’s original dance partner, this small-batch, single distilled vodka is perfect for this drink.

Broken Shed Vodka, bottle on white


Absolut Citron

Absolut will always reign supreme when it comes to flavored vodka. Their flavors are never syrupy sweet and the viscosity tends to be thinner than heavy sugared vodkas. Their second flavor ever released, Absolut Citron, quickly gained popularity in the late 1980s and has never waned. It reached an Absolut Hollywood peak when it was used as a base for the Cosmopolitan in Sex and the City. Distilled from grain using continuous distillation, Absolut Citron is incredibly smooth with a lemon kick at the end. The finish fades into the drink as the zest stays prominent. This vodka doesn’t change the flavor of the tonic too dramatically, but naturally enhances the flavors that already exist.


Square One Organic Cucumber

Square One is made with 100 percent organic Montana- grown rye combined with pristine watershed from the nearby Teton Mountains. Infused with “essence” of organic cucumber this spirit is both fresh and aromatic. The flavor doesn’t overwhelm your pallet, it just lightly coats the top of your tongue. The cucumber flavor blends in beautifully with the botanical notes present in Tonic Water. This vodka is for the consumer who likes a unique flavor finish in their classic cocktail.

The post 5 Best Vodkas for a Vodka Tonic appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Johnnie Walker and Japanese Chef, Kei Kobayashi Launch Blue Label Elusive Umami

By | Mixology News

Johnnie Walker is excited to introduce Johnnie Walker Blue Label Elusive Umami a limited-edition release crafted by Johnnie Walker Master Blender Dr. Emma Walker and world-renowned Japanese Chef, Kei Kobayashi.

The new blend encapsulates the enigmatic taste of umami, a Japanese word used to identify the ‘fifth taste,’ a flavor that possesses mysterious qualities.

Umami is an enigmatic flavor and only one in 25,000 casks made the cut in the search for this elusive flavor profile—each expression of whisky was hand-picked to create an umami profile and bring the unique character of this innovative whisky to life.

In an exercise to decode the flavor, the two masters, Walker and Kobayashi, unlocked a beautifully balanced Blended Scotch whisky of sweet and savory flavors, with notes of blood oranges and red berries with sweet wood spice, a touch of smoked meat, a hint of salt and pepper with a long, sweet fruit finish.

Best served neat alongside caviar to unlock the full depth of the unique sensory experience.

The post Johnnie Walker and Japanese Chef, Kei Kobayashi Launch Blue Label Elusive Umami appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Queen’s Park Swizzle

By | Mixology News

Created at the Queen’s Park Hotel in Trinidad back in January of 1895. The Queen’s Park Swizzle represents the essence of Trinidad with the only rum and bitters brand produced and manufactured in the country.

Celebrate 200 years of the House of Angostura turning drinks into cocktails with the infamous Queen’s Park Swizzle!

Queen’s Park Swizzle

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz Angostura® 7-Year-Old Rum
  • 1 oz Demerara Simple Syrup
  • 1 oz Fresh Lime Juice
  • 12-14 mint leaves
  • 6-8 dashes of Angostura® Aromatic Bitters

Garnish: Mint Sprig

Preparation: Build in a highball glass; muddle mint leaves in lime juice and simple syrup then fill glass with dry crushed ice. Pour rum over crushed ice and swizzle well until glass is ice-cold and frosted. Pack glass with more crushed ice and top with Angostura aromatic bitters.

The post Queen’s Park Swizzle appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Celebrate Mexican Independence Day with Tequila Komos, Mix a Cantarito Cocktail

By | Mixology News

¡Viva Mexico! Celebrate Mexican Independence Day with the perfect cocktail, the Komos Cantarito.

Komos Cantarito

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz Komos Añejo Cristalino
  • 1 oz fresh squeezed orange juice
  • 1/2 oz fresh squeezed lime juice
  • 1⁄2 oz fresh squeezed lemon juice
  • Pinch of sea salt
  • Top with Mexican grapefruit soda

Preparation: Add all ingredients except soda over ice in your preferred vessel (preferably a jarrito de barro) and stir well to combine. Top with Mexican grapefruit soda.

The post Celebrate Mexican Independence Day with Tequila Komos, Mix a Cantarito Cocktail appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Join Virtual Training with Global Ambassador, Daniyel Jones and Angostura Bitters

By | Mixology News

Join Global Ambassador, Daniyel Jones and Angostura Bitters for 1-hour virtual training on September 18, 1PM CST (2PM EST/11AM PST) for Masters of Mixology!

At this exclusive, bartenders-only event, join Daniyel to learn a little history and a whole-lot of artistry for a brand that’s been revolutionizing cocktail cultures across 95 countries for nearly 200 years with premium bitters, rum, and more.

RESERVE A SPOT NOW

THIS EVENT WILL FEATURE:

  • A look into the history of ANGOSTURA bitters and ANGOSTURA Rum
  • New techniques to elevate your bartending craft
  • ALL attendees will be entered into winning a $200 e-gift card!

Please RSVP via EventBrite; attendees will be emailed a Zoom link in advance of the event. We look forward to “seeing” you there!

#angostura #angosturabitters

The post Join Virtual Training with Global Ambassador, Daniyel Jones and Angostura Bitters appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Check Out the Winners in the Bartenders Society Cocktail Competition

By | Mixology News

The Bartenders Society Cocktail Competition brings bartenders from all over the globe together to compete for the title of Best Bartender.

The U.S. Qualifier Competition is the gateway to compete in the Global Finals held in Paris, France in November 2023. Each bartender was challenged with creating a unique cocktail inspired by the theme: Bringing a Local Twist to a Classic Cocktail from the Past.

Thank you to all the participating bartenders. We hope to see you again next year. Congratulations to the winners, Norton and Amy! Good luck in Paris!

1st Place: Two bartenders win a trip to France to compete in Global Finals

Norton Christopher – Plum Happy

Amy Windland – What the Fizz?

2nd Place: Two bartenders win $500 each.

Nadine Medina – Grown Up Candy

Lance Bowman – Creole Evolution

3rd Place: Two bartenders win $250 each.

Heidi Wittekind – Hotel California

Jenna Athey – Forbidden Fruit

The post Check Out the Winners in the Bartenders Society Cocktail Competition appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Check Out Pop-Ups at Bar Convent Berlin, 2023 Highlighting Bar Trends

By | Mixology News

From October 9th through the 12th, the bar community will be reunited again for three days at the German capital. This year Bar Convent Berlin will again attract visitors with exciting exhibitors, a versatile continuing education program and, of course, bar teams and top bartenders.

This autumn, the Berlin exhibition halls are set to become the international gathering point for the bar community. Across six exhibition halls, distillers and beverage producers from around the globe will converge for three days. The BCB Team eagerly anticipates the presence of approximately 500 exhibitors hailing from 50 countries. Additionally, this year’s show is expanding its offerings to encompass Hall 15, known as the “Rotunde,” featuring an added food area.

Beyond the enticing array of spirits, there’s a world to explore.

In recent years, internationally acclaimed bars have dazzled at Bar Convent Berlin with captivating pop-ups. This year two vibrant Bar Hotspots within the exhibition grounds will shine a spotlight on two prominent trends: Low and No ABV and the world of agave spirits.

Fully focused on Agave with ‘Barro Negro Athens‘

Tequila and mezcal are currently trending in the bar community. BCB therefore wants to set the scene for the special properties of agave and the many possibilities to create drinks with it by installing a dedicated pop-up bar on the exhibition grounds. To this end, BCB has joined forces with the Barro Negro Athens bar team to jointly create the BCB Agave Embassy. In addition to the possibility of tasting drinks in a bar atmosphere for three days, there will also be an Education Area where experts share their knowledge about agaves.

“The Cambridge Public House” sets the Scene for Low & No Drinks

But there is more to be discovered: visitors can look forward to another special area with ‘The Cambridge Public House’ bar team from Paris. This Bar Hotspot is all about Low & No. For the three trade show days, the French bar team will conjure up unique cocktail creations with little as well as no alcohol.

Three days filled with a great program

At BCB 2023 there will also be a diverse continuing education program on five stages, where well-known bar personalities will share their knowledge with the audience. But that’s not all: In the evening, BCB guest shifts with top-tier bar teams will lure you into Berlin’s nightlife. We’re excited!

Get your Bar Convent Berlin Tickets Now! Click here.

The post Check Out Pop-Ups at Bar Convent Berlin, 2023 Highlighting Bar Trends appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Check Out The Deep Eddy Vodka Craft the Fun Semi Finalist in Atlanta

By | Mixology News

The craft cocktail movement has raised the standards of drink making. This has produced innovations, talents, and recipes that have elevated the industry. Though we welcome this raising of the craft, one aspect of cocktail culture often gets forgotten—cocktail making is supposed to be fun!

In the spirit of the craft, Deep Eddy Vodka invited bartenders to create an original cocktail recipe featuring Deep Eddy Ruby Red Grapefruit Vodka. The inspiration for the cocktail was to be balanced, delicious, creative, exciting, and of course, FUN!

A total of four bartenders, one from each U.S. regional competition (Denver, New York City, Atlanta, and Chicago) will be chosen to compete as semi-finalists in Austin, TX, and receive $1000K each.

During the final competition, one Grand Prize Winner will receive $5000K and the opportunity to be featured on the Deep Eddy Vodka website, social media, and ad announcing the winning Craft the Fun cocktail.


Congratulations to the Atlanta Winner

Ashley Sarkis – Charlotte, North Carolina

Winning Cocktail

Sparkling Texas Ruby

The post Check Out The Deep Eddy Vodka Craft the Fun Semi Finalist in Atlanta appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Inside Manska’s Mind: The Comfortably Numb Whiskey Drinker

By | Mixology News

We go inside the mind of George F. Manska for a look at the “comfortably numb” whiskey drinker.

Each person has a slightly different approach to their favorite drink. If you want to build loyalty and bar tips, you serve clients’ drinks to their preferences. If they prefer bottled soda to the gun, or crushed instead of cubed, fresh juice over canned, you make special note of those preferences, and they become familiar faces because you pay attention. It’s easy with cocktails, but not so easy with neat whisk(e)y. Why are cocktails so popular? Because mixers, soda, fruit juice, ice hide ethanol pungency of all spirits.

Nobody likes pungency, neat whiskey drinkers put up with it because they think they have to. NEAT drinkers exist in fewer numbers than cocktailers, but they need attention, too, and the bartender doesn’t have the same easy-to-change variables that accommodate cocktail drinkers. Many neat whiskey patrons know little about whiskey, most can’t tell brands apart. How do they choose their favorites?

  • Emotional Choices: Most drinkers choose a favorite brand through emotional connections and perceived value
  • Marketing Presence: Powerful magazine ads, social media connections or television makes a lasting impression, pretty bottle or label
  • Status Symbol: Competition medals, the Queen’s seal, Official drink of the (fill in the blank) group.
  • Relationships/Hero worship: Same whiskey as boss, dad, girl/boyfriend, favorite quarterback, actor, or rapper
  • Significant Event: Dad’s last drink, had it at the Kentucky Derby, Superbowl
  • Location: Hometown distiller, favorite city, tried it on a memorable vacation
  • Erroneous Value Equation: Proof (or alcohol by volume) divided by Price ($). Higher is better, More ethanol for less bucks.

Spirits marketing is based on feel-good, memories, self-esteem, accomplishment, status and recognition, and we all identify. Now there’s a new way to cater to neat drinkers; show them how to enhance enjoyment and make better choices. It’s a break from tradition.

Priorities of Whiskey Drinkers

  • Priority 1: Personal satisfaction of emotions, dreams, memories, desires, escapes
  • Priority 2: Sense of belonging, fraternal kinship, must use tulip glass, beloved universal icon of the whiskey fraternity.
  • Priority 3: Sensory experience of appreciating the full aromas, flavors, mouthfeel of the spirit.

Three is distant and usually gets no consideration once ethanol is detected. That’s where most whiskey drinkers stop searching for character flavors or nuances, as it seems pointless through the ethanol fog. The tulip is an inverted funnel which shoves concentrated anesthetic ethanol up the nose on first whiff, cancelling olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs). No wonder so few can describe flavors and aromas.

Manufacturers support tulips because flaws and blending errors are disguised by pungent ethanol. Comfortably numb, sensory-dumb whiskey drinkers can learn a game-changing lesson from wine drinkers.

Historical Lesson: The surge in wine sales in the 1970s, spurred on by 1976 “Judgment of Paris,” validated California wines on a global scale. Riedel becomes the most popular wine glasses ever. Spirits follow similar cyclical trends, and 2005-2015 is the “sales surge” decade for whiskey, spurred by a proliferation of craft distillers, and Glencairn and tulips become glasses of choice. Both industries are steeped in chemical and physical sciences to produce exceptional expressions, yet sensory science falls drastically short.

Shape Is Important: Riedel glasses create a large headspace for the nose, and the now well-accepted sensory science of wine is born. Tulips and Glencairns derive from the Spanish copita, designed for 16-22% ABV fortified wines, and 40%+ ABV whiskey in the tiny tulip creates a nose-bomb, numbs ORNs and pungency detracts from flavor detection. Flavor = 90% smell + 5% mouthfeel + 5% taste (sweet, sour, salty, bitter, umami only). The tulip eclipses sensory becoming a barrier to flavor detection, product differentiation.

Learn more and enjoy full flavors and aromas of great spirits. Toss tulips and snifters; wine drinkers threw away the tiny 6 oz glass poured to the rim in the ‘70s. Whiskey drinkers should choose wide glasses to move olfactory beyond anesthetic ethanol and into the subtle nuances of whiskey. Tumblers work well. Become a SWD (serious whiskey drinker), no pungency.

In 2002 Arsilica, Inc. discovered a solution to the whiskey sensory problem by dissipating ethanol away from the nose to avoid sensory receptor anesthesia (application of Graham’s Law of gaseous diffusion). Ten years of scientific research is summed up in a peer-reviewed open access MDPI Beverage Journal Paper published in 2018. Type in search bar https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5710/4/4/93.

Snap QR for comparison study

NEAT glass release date, February 2012. NEAT is the Official Spirits Judging Glass of 40+ competitions annually. Get your nose into action, break with “tradition,” get NEAT, enjoy a whiskey, put on some Pink Floyd, remember when you were Comfortably Numb. What could possibly be more important than learning a new idea, passing it along, building your business, and helping someone squeeze more enjoyment from great spirits?


About George Manska

George is an entrepreneur, inventor, engine designer, founder, Chief R&D officer, Corporate Strategy Officer, CEO Arsilica, Inc. dedicated to sensory research in alcohol beverages. (2002-present). He is the inventor of the patented NEAT glass, several other patented alcohol beverage glasses for beer and wine, (yet to be released). Director ongoing research into aromatic compound behavior, and pinpointing onset of nose-blindness. George is a professional consultant for several major spirits competitions, has been published in the MDPI Beverage Journal Paper, is the founder or member of over seven different wine clubs for the past fifty years, is a collector of wines and spirits, has traveled the world, and is an educator and advisor of multiple spirits sensory seminars.

George F Manska, CR&D, Arsilica, Inc.  Engineer, inventor of the NEAT glass, sensory science researcher, entrepreneur.

Mission: Replace myth and misinformation with scientific truth through consumer education.

Contact: george@arsilica.com, phone 702.332.7305. For more information: www.theneatglass.com/shop

The post Inside Manska’s Mind: The Comfortably Numb Whiskey Drinker appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News