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I am fortunate to be able to travel the world and experience some the greatest cities on the planet. Therefore I do have a list of amazing restaurants, hotels and of course bars. I love revisiting fabulous epicenters of mixology where wizards conjure up cocktails on a high level but often I find myself in uncharted (by me) territory and have to recon the area for an appropriate watering hole. I used to make an assessment based on ordering a drink and see how it rates. In more recent times I have developed a sure fire test that will reveal in a matter of seconds if I'm in the right place without wasting time and money.
1) First I make visual inspection. Which bourbons, scotch and rye do they have. If they have rye at all , it is a good sign.
2) Then I ask the bartender which sweet vermouth are they using. If I get the deer-stuck-is-the-headlights look and they ask what is sweet vermouth or they're not sure where it is, then escape immediately before something terrible happens. If they walk over and pull out a bottle Cinzano, I say thank you and walk away. Gallo is poor too but I rarely see it. The least acceptable answer is Martini and Rossi. Dolin shows effort. Noilly Prat is good. If they extract a bottle of Carpano Antica Formula from the refrigerator, you've struck gold. Have a seat and prepare for a proper drink.
The amazing thing is that Rossi is just one dollar more than Cinzano! For a mere buck more it would vastly improve their drinks. It's a shame a bar will invest is decent stock of scotch and bourbon and mix it with bargain basement vermouth. That's like buying a Ferrari and putting cheap little tires from Walmart on it. A lot of it depends on their clientele. If their customer doesn't know quality then the bar is just offering the lowest common denominator.
Although they're are fabulous hotel bartenders at The Savoy in London or at The Roosevelt in Hollywood, I find the majority to be sub par. They receive very little training if any. Rum and coke, margaritas and bloody mary is about the extent of their ability.
Sweet vermouth doesn't make a bartender great but it will separate the mixologist from the mechanics.
Enjoy!
1) First I make visual inspection. Which bourbons, scotch and rye do they have. If they have rye at all , it is a good sign.
2) Then I ask the bartender which sweet vermouth are they using. If I get the deer-stuck-is-the-headlights look and they ask what is sweet vermouth or they're not sure where it is, then escape immediately before something terrible happens. If they walk over and pull out a bottle Cinzano, I say thank you and walk away. Gallo is poor too but I rarely see it. The least acceptable answer is Martini and Rossi. Dolin shows effort. Noilly Prat is good. If they extract a bottle of Carpano Antica Formula from the refrigerator, you've struck gold. Have a seat and prepare for a proper drink.
The amazing thing is that Rossi is just one dollar more than Cinzano! For a mere buck more it would vastly improve their drinks. It's a shame a bar will invest is decent stock of scotch and bourbon and mix it with bargain basement vermouth. That's like buying a Ferrari and putting cheap little tires from Walmart on it. A lot of it depends on their clientele. If their customer doesn't know quality then the bar is just offering the lowest common denominator.
Although they're are fabulous hotel bartenders at The Savoy in London or at The Roosevelt in Hollywood, I find the majority to be sub par. They receive very little training if any. Rum and coke, margaritas and bloody mary is about the extent of their ability.
Sweet vermouth doesn't make a bartender great but it will separate the mixologist from the mechanics.
Enjoy!