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Bonjour BNIC!

8 Jul

On our trip to Cognac I learned many things about Cognac and its production. One aspect i found very interesting was the regulation of cognac its governing body the BNIC. The Bureau National Interprofessionnel du Cognac is the regulating body that is payed for and supported by the cognac distillers and merchants involved in its production. Located in Cognac France the BNIC employees nearly 100 people to regulate, market, and educate on all things Cognac. From the picking dates of the grapes, to what your allowed to print on the label(V.S, V.S.O.P, etc…) the BNIC regulates. All distilling houses and merchants pay a fee to support the BNIC. These members vote among themselves to see who sits on which boards that set the many cognac standards. These standards are then implemented and enforced by the BNIC. Board members are not payed to sit on these boards though they do have an active voice on the future direction of the product.
From the grape picking period, labeling statements, aging period standards, educating, and marketing of cognac(though not the marketing of each individual brand) the BNIC is involved. For more information on cognac and the BNIC, these web sites may be helpful. WWW.cognac.fr, www.encyclopedie.cognac.fr, and www.conference.
A special thanks to Laurine Caute of the BNIC for an interview.

Absinthe: what’s in a name

7 Jul

Fairy, goddess, muse. The personification of absinthe into a powerful female spirit speaks volumes of the spell it casts over its drinkers. To most, absinthe conjures visions of wispy, green vapor rising from a glass, translucent, sultry nymphs, and hallucinations of emerald fairies. With such eccentric connotations and a tumultuous history, one might believe that absinthe is indeed a magical, hallucinatory spirit only fit for poets or lushes.

Albert Maignan's The Green Muse

Simply enough, absinthe is the distilled maceration of plants and botanicals, much like a gin or a flavored vodka. What makes this spirit so special is its primary ingredient, wormwood, a bitter shrub with a silvery-grey sheen. The latin term for the plant is artemisia absinthium, with the word “artemisia” referring to the ancient Greek goddess Artemis, the huntress. Perhaps the once popular nickname for absinthe, “green goddess” refers to this Hellenistic goddess in particular, who is also associated with wilderness, childbirth, and curing disease, especially in women. Wormwood has indeed been used as a popular remedy for certain diseases and ailments, dating all the way back to Ancient Greece. Absinthium is a Latinized version of the ancient Greek word apsinthion, which some claim means “undrinkable” or “unenjoyable”, presumably referring to wormwood’s bitterness. Medicinally, a brewed tea of wormwood had been used to treat a broad spectrum of ailments, from headaches to labor pains. Absinthe’s popularity was sprung from similar roots, having been used as an anti-malarial for French troops stationed in Algeria.

Absinthe is classically known as popular amongst bohemian French culture; however, during its 50 year heyday during the latter part of the 19th century, it was a popular drink amongst everyone: rich and poor. Bourgeois and proletariat alike would congregate in cafes during l’heure verte, or “the green hour”, to enjoy a few glasses of absinthe. Painters, poets, and writers would drink it to induce creativity, la muse verte (the green muse) at their fingertips. The absinthe louche ritual became known to artists as unleashing the green fairy, or la fee verte. These endearing nicknames imply that there is indeed something sacred about absinthe; for there has yet to be a cognac hour or a wine fairy.

La fee verte is unleashed through the louching of the suspended oils in the absinthe

An absinthe fountain at the Moulin Rouge

Scientifically, thujone, the predominant chemical in wormwood, is classified as a convulsant. It’s molecular makeup, however, is similar to that of THC, the essence of marijuana. Analysis has shown that in large doses, the psychoactive effects can be quite similar, however any given bottle of absinthe is almost 100% thujone-free. Chemical analyses have been performed on the other herbs that season absinthe, and have shown that in large doses, anise can provoke drunkenness, convulsions, and opium-like euphoria. Hyssop injected into rats induced convulsions. Again, the amounts of these chemicals in a bottle of absinthe are certainly negligible, although small traces of said molecules are present in every glass.

Were these essences responsible for Van Gogh’s green-tinted, halogenic paintings? Verlaine’s lurid poems? Wilde’s sardonic epigrams? There has yet to be a definitive answer, yet it is known that absinthe has been the muse for these poets and other bohemian artists of the time. A surprisingly poetic description of an absinthe stupor was posted in the American Journal of Pharmacy in 1868: “You seem to lose your feet, and you mount a boundless realm without horizon. You probably imagine that you are going in the direction of the infinite, whereas you are simply drifting into the incoherent.” Perhaps there is something inexplicably magical in absinthe, something that opens the boundaries of the mind, something that fosters creativity and self-expression. Or perhaps it’s the 140 proof alcohol mingling with the liver of its imbiber. The specific effects are better left unanalyzed and to the imagination, for as long as absinthe remains shrouded in mystery, it will continue to be a goddess, fairy, and muse.

 

A Different Kind of Process

5 Jul

cellar

I can pinpoint the exact moment when I decided my blog topic reflecting our adventures of this trip. I’ve been on many distillery visits before, and I’m beginning to know the lay of the land pretty well. Any among us who are interested enough to read a detailed blog entry on the production of cognac can probably say the same. We can all spot a column still from a mile away, and have laid eyes on many a mashing tank.

When we entered the Frapin facility I had no idea what I was looking at. The closest thing to it I’d ever seen was a dressed up race car engine, except this was several times larger than the race car itself.

We’ll return to our mystery equipment in just a moment, but it was then I realized that cognac production differed from all other processes I had ever seen. And not just at points, but at every single step of the way. Let’s start at the beginning.

 

(more…)

The Comeback of Absinthe

4 Jul

Prior to taking this class I knew the basics about absinthe. I knew some of the history and why it was “banned” but never really gave it much thought after that. Now that I have experienced the true method and taste of a real Absinthe drink I am convinced with the right marketing it can be the popular drink it once was all those years ago. Consumers want to feel special, stand out from the crowd and they want attention. You don’t go to a nightclub and order a $500 bottle of liquor and sit at the table in middle of the dancefloor if you don’t want attention. Imagine if you were at a nightclub or cocktail lounge and saw the “Absinthe Drip” being employed at a center table or on the bar? Wouldn’t you be intrigued as a consumer? Wouldn’t you want to know “what the heck is that thing?” and “How do I get one?” I know when I first saw the drip I was excited to try it out. I wanted to use the slotted spoon with the sugarcube and try this drink that was banned for so many years. I found like most people it is quite a lovely drink, with subtle flavors of licorice, anise and an herbal delightfulness… Keep an eye out, for I think that we are at the dawn of a new trend.

The Absinthe "Drip"

 

Slotted spoon with a sugar cube as water "drips" into the glass of Absinthe

Do you know mold?

4 Jul

Most of us think of mold as a bad thing. When talking Cognac it turns out its a good thing, rather a necessary thing. In fact the French believe that the mold found in Cognac cellars aids in health and longevity. In the microcosm that makes up a Cognac cellar mold plays an intergral part in the final eau de vie. The mold, called black velvet, feeds on the alcohol vapors that escape through evaporation as the liquid ages. Two percent of the Cognac evaporates every year from the barrels which in turn makes the remaining Cognac better. This loss is known in the Cognac world as the “la part des anges” or “Angel’s share”.  Though this roughly 20-27 million bottles of lost Cognac is a hefty price to pay it is necessary for the final product.

Frapin Cellar

Inside one of the cellars at Frapin

 

One of the barrels used to age the eau de vie

 

Some of these buildings have been used for over 300 years!

 

Watch where you lean... or you'll get an armful of mold....

 

 

 

 

“Be Chicago”

25 Oct

 

Someone once told me that the sheer quantity of knowledgeable bartenders that Chicago holds is on par with London, San Francisco and New York; Chicago just downplays it.

Is this why cities smaller than ours hold “Cocktail Week” and are being recognized for their innovative cocktails and bar culture?
Our humility is what sets us apart, but it is also our achilles heel.

I believe we can show the world what we have to offer without a boastful attitude or any off-putting pretention; we can show it by just being us.

As Bridget says, “Be you. Be Chicago.”

So who are we and what sets us apart?

We are Chicago: the only city in the world that offers an Advanced Academy class and as far as I can tell, one of the few city whose focus is not on itself or how good it looks in the spotlight but on how it can build and educate those around it.

We’ve spent so much time educating ourselves that sometimes I think we don’t know what to do with all of that knowledge. After all, we know full well that if a guest wants a beer then she wants a beer and it’s not our place to tell her that what she really needs is a digestif. Either way, that’s just not us and besides, we all know we love our beer.

Still, we face a dilemma: we want our patrons and our coworkers to know as much about spirits as we do but we haven’t figured out a way to strike a balance of informing (i’m talking large scale) without sounding pretentious.

Telling a coworker to squeeze fresh limes rather than use pre-made syrup is an offense to their ego. They know how to do their job; they’ve been doing it this way for the last ten years and their guests have been just fine.
And yet, we know deep down that it’s not about judging an individual bartender (after all, we were once them), it’s about standing firm in our beliefs of quality. We ALL know how much more enjoyable Mezcal is when you can see the entire process or how disturbingly unnatural pre-made sweeteners and syrups can be when you know how to make them fresh.

I believe we can transform Chicago bars from the inside out. Rather than begin by telling just our patrons about spirits, let’s start telling our fellow bartenders. Let’s let them in on our little secret to happiness behind the bar; caring about the bar.

The Chicago (unassuming) part of me was reluctant to share The Fresh Pledge with coworkers because it felt odd and random to share a pledge in the middle of bar-opening. I reminded myself that the bar was beyond myself and that if I really cared about opening up people’s eyes to a whole new way of appreciating their bar, then I would have to start looking at the big picture. I would have to stop telling them how to store certain items or serve others; it was futile if they couldn’t understand why it was important.

So here’s the Fresh Pledge because this is what it means to be Chicago. This is what we are working towards.

THE FRESH PLEDGE
By Natalia Cardenas

I pledge to have a fresh attitude:
“I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”
― Maya Angelou

The experience of the bar is not about me, it is about the guest. I pledge to challenge myself to re-direct the little voice in my head that urges me to
think more about myself than the people in front of me.
The busier the bar, the harder it gets…but I like challenges so
bring it!

I pledge to have fresh ingredients:
No one actually wants corn syrup, blue 1, sodium benzoate
or any other synthetic preservative in their drink; Fresh just tastes better!
I pledge to remember that every time I’m pressured
to take the easy route in bar set-up.

I pledge to have fresh skills:
I pledge to seek out and attend seminars, tastings and classes
whenever possible.
If friends are the spice of life and knowledge is power,
then I’ve got it all at my fingertips with Chicago!

I pledge to have fresh tools:
I pledge to speak up for the bar. To speak up for my fellow bartenders.
To never allow the bar to wane by playing second fiddle to
a busy kitchen.
We are a kitchen. I pledge to have clean, sharp tools
and to educate my peers on their importance.
No stitches mid-shift!

And finally,
I pledge to have a fresh memory:
I pledge to remember that most people don’t know what’s in their drink,
and that people still drink pre-made cocktails in plastic bottles. I pledge to remember that there are still bartenders that steal, overcharge and pour well spirits when asked for top shelf. That most people don’t know the difference between 51% Agave and 100%. And That most people don’t know how to taste spirits but that we can help change all that.
I pledge to remember that we, Chicago bartenders, are lucky to live
in such a great city and can make a difference in the bar world.

I pledge to always remember what I’ve learned in this course.

I believe in Chicago.
I believe Chicago can transform our industry with
a movement, a pledge

And that is why I am..

and pledge to always be

Chicago!

A Spirited World.

14 Oct

The Advanced Mixology and Culinary Academy has been a very educational and enriching experience for me, both professionally and personally. It has been an experience that has taken me to meet the people and experience the place that imbibe our lives. It has been an experience that has given me skills practical, intellectual and spiritual. It has been an experience that has changed my perspective and opened my eyes to a diversity of opportunities and possibilities. It has been an experience that has provided me friends and memories to last a life time. It has been an experience that has been one hell of a good time. It has been an experience that has exposed me to a spirited world.

My journey delving into the spirited world began twelve weeks ago. I was riding on the blue line to O’hare early on a sunday morning, preparing myself to embark on a week long extranvaganza across the Atlantic Ocean to what some would argue is the heart of the whisky or whiskey (depending on your vernacular) world, Scotland. A well planned bottle of savignon blanc brought by my travel buddy for the train ride was a decided aide in the travel preparations for the day.

Long flight. Longer Layover. Short Flight. Bus ride through the Scottish countryside. Boat ride across Loch Ness. Attempted Nessie sighting (to no avail) with Talisker in hand.

Finally we arrive at the Glenmorangie House. Four days filled with experiences and educational opportunities that would have not otherwise been possible. From our first evening of nectar d’or old fashions, dessert eating expositions and wearing wellies to the seaside late night to earn out new adopted “Mac” names, I was in awe. Days were filled with tours and tastings.

Personal highlight…drinking from the Glenmo water source. The light effervescence of the crisp, mineral enriched water that morning helped to cool the whiskey fueled fire in my soul. It focused my attention away from dionysian revelry of nights before and focused my attention on the experience that was unfolding in front of me.

My attention turned away from the products I had used as tools for mere imbibing entertainment and toward all that goes into crafting these spirits that fuel my debaucherous exploits.

The people and their heritages of passion. The craft, so beloved and sacred, that it has been passed down with guarded reserve from generation to generation. The spirit, that is on one hand spiritual and the other hand tangible.

It was an experience that excited me through a personal revelation of the depth of opportunity possible. It was an experience that humbled me out of the reverance felt toward all those generations before me whose collective efforts provided the opportunity for this moment to exist.

Similar experiences of revelation and reverance would continue to reveal themselves. Week after week, my mind and spirit alike would be educated my academically, philosophically and emotionally.

Academically, I learned how to brew beer, professionally handle knives (THAT’S MY ROOMMATE!), barrel age cocktails, run a solera system and understand the inner workings of distillation, coopering and aging.

Philosophically, I was introduced to the concepts of ” bar zen” and “one chance, one encounter”. I have been granted the perspective to see the spirited world beyond the tappers and shakers and truly embrace everything it is and can become.

Emotionally, I had the opportunity to spend time and experiences with 30 people who I barely knew prior to embarking on my journey into the spirited world, but that I now consider friends.

For this I am blessed and grateful.

I know that even though this session of the AMCA is over, my adventures are just beginning.

The possibilities will continue to expand, the opportunities will continue to multiply and the destinations will be continually changing. But through all of this, I sincerely hope that the faces don’t.

If you ever need to find me, I will be belly up.

Cheers.

 

 

 

Kentucky

14 Oct

Hey folks, here are some very belated pics from our Kentucky trip! Pics from the chefs garden are soon to come…

 
DSC_0889 copy

To Jig or Not to Jig?

12 Oct

To Jig or Not to Jig?
By Dante LoPresti

To jig or not to jig? That is the question.

In the short 3 years I have been a bartender, with all of its issues–strange hours, relationship woes, the great capacity for self destructive behavior–one tiny device is the cause of the biggest question I have encountered. There are things that bug me about this relatively new world I’ve been living in. I have many questions, big questions. Is this career I’ve chosen sustainable?

Back in 2004 when I graduated college, I began a career in residential real estate in Phoenix, AZ. Everyone was drunk on what I like to call “the juice”. They were teaching that the real estate values historically have always been on the incline and that there was no end in sight. Everyone was getting their real estate license. Everyone became an investor, and banks were giving money away to everyone. Then around 2006, people started saying, “uh oh. This is not sustainable”. And it wasn’t; the party was over. Now we are left with the proverbial hangover.

This could be personal speculation and based on good ol’ common sense, but I wonder, is the same thing true of our industry? I hear people say all the time that our industry stays strong despite economic conditions, basically that it will never fail. As the economy has worsened, the migration of college educated, late 20, early 30 somethings into the bartending profession is astounding. Simultaneously, restaurants and bars keep opening despite the moanings of a collapsing economy, and I ask myself once again, is this sustainable?

At this point, you may be asking yourself, what does a bad economy have to do with a tiny tin object? Simply, based on my experience over the last few years and conversations with bartenders from all over the country, I can say without much doubt in my mind that the cocktail renaissance, while it has flourished, has grown in some ways that alienates the very people it claims to serve. The biggest criticism is that it takes too long to get a cocktail, or that cocktail lists are unapproachable, and many times, that the bartender himself is equally as aloof. If this continues, at some point the well will go dry, and cocktail bars will become irrelevant or obscure.

As of now, the pendulum is still swinging in our favor. Our drinking culture is still coming out of the dark ages. The age of bottled sour mix, blue drinks, bastardized cocktail recipes–all things that at the core, were designed to make a bartenders job easier, faster, and more profitable–is being called into question. In 2011, we craft bartenders are at the helm of the cocktail enlightenment. People everywhere are waking up and demanding quality behind the bar. Bartenders are educated once again, and now they are in turn, educating the masses. People are listening! The bartender is restored to a position of reverence that it once deserved. They are juicing fresh, they are making syrups in house, they are involved in procuring the best made spirits on the market–every possible action to take control and improve the cocktail to it’s original glory is being taken. It’s beautiful. Sometimes, it is awe inspiring, but once again, there is a great danger. The devil is in the details, and in this case, it doesn’t mean what you think it means. It means that the devil is the detail.

And so, this brings me to the jigger. “So much depends upon a red wheelbarrow” says poet, William Carlos Williams. And so I say,

So much depends
upon

the stainless steel
jigger

glazed with tap
water

beside the boston
shakers.

The jigger. The symbol of balance. All the world seems to rest on this one tiny tool. Every drink is now measured. Consistency and quality are king. Order is once restored to a chaotic world full of free pouring and a total lack of regard to accuracy, right? Two plus years of bartending with a jigger screams a resounding “yes!” I was taught never to make a drink without it, and I have even trained other bartenders and consulted on the opening of two bars and taught with religious-like zeal that the jigger was never to be abandoned. Highball? Sure free pour, but if it’s a “real” cocktail, it deserves the courtesy of being measured everytime, without fail.

However, at some point in my journey, my reasoning began to crack. If there was ever a free pour contest during a slow bar shift, I lit up. If there was a speed competition, I was like a little kid again watching the big kids play. I wanted to be accurate as a Samurai warrior, and fast like a Ninja behind the bar. The prospect of performing like an athlete behind the bar excited me, but it never reconciled with the craft bartending world. I treated them like two separate planes, never touching each other–parallel existences. But as I grew up as a bartender, I started to see things that didn’t make sense. I saw older, talented bartenders free pouring–Dale DeGroff, for example. I also heard the grumblings of other talented bartenders scoffing at the jigger like it was some kind of insult. Though, the big turning point for me was this year at Tales of the Cocktail in New Orleans. There was an event called “Rematch”, where bartenders from all around the country, talented ones, were competing for who could make 10 craft cocktails in the shortest amount of time. Some were inexperienced, taking longer than the allotted time, and others blazed through the exercise like Vishnu, the Hindu supreme deity. Not only that, many of them used “working” flair. I was in awe. These guys were masters behind the bar. Still, I didn’t taste their drinks, so I wasn’t convinced, but I was open to the idea that a barman didn’t need to measure every pour with a jigger.

Two plus years in, working in a high volume craft cocktail bar, banging away at jiggering every single cocktail, training other bartenders to do the same, I find myself questioning the whole craft cocktail movement. I love it. I’m passionate about it, but at the same time I have never felt more inclined to go work at a night club. I have found time and time again that I could often make the same tip making a vodka soda, versus a seven ingredient cocktail shaken with Kold Draft ice cubes. That alone hasn’t deterred me though. I’m passionate about well thought out, well executed craft cocktail, but at what cost? At what point does quality have to submit to economic viability? Though it’s completely subjective, for me, I’m not getting any younger, and my bank account isn’t getting much bigger. Something has to give. There has to be a way to make quality cocktails faster and more efficiently, but how? The craft cocktail movement and the speed bartending movement, or whatever it’s called, are diametrically opposed. Aren’t they?

October 5, 2011, Chicago, Illinois, Advanced Culinary Mixology Academy. It’s the very last class of the series, “Zen Bartending.” Twenty some bartenders–mostly all “mixologist” types–jigger worshippers. Wink, wink.

Enter Tobin Ellis, barman extraordinaire. The man has done everything behind the bar that I have done 10 times over and then some. He’s seen the pendulum shift from the excesses of flair bartending to the numbing temperance of technical bartending. I have to admit that I haven’t gotten this pumped up since my first class with Bridget Albert’s Academy of Spirits when we made a whisky sour using bottled sour mix versus fresh sour. It’s not very often that your whole paradigm of thinking completely shifts. These are days to be remembered.

I was so excited for this class. Throughout my journey as a bartender, I’ve hungered for a seminar like this. Lately, I’ve felt heavy on the expository side of the business–history, production methods of spirits, and all the things that we craft bartenders tend to “geek” out over. For years, I was dissecting and explicating everything behind the bar, but only superficially exploring service philosophy and technique. And though I thought myself a savvy bartender, I never put a big emphasis on refining those skills. Most of what I learned technique-wise, was learned by watching other more seasoned bartenders, reading some articles, or my own trial and error. The idea of covering these almost secretive subjects all in one day was almost too much. As it turned out it was! We only made it halfway through all the subject matter. Honestly, we could have filled an entire semester with what we intended to cover that day.

And so it began. Not far out of the gate once class began, Tobin admitted how excited he was to take on 20+ mixology oriented bartenders. We began with pouring methods. Kids stuff. We’d all poured almost everyday of our bartending lives, yet, these simple techniques proved challenging for us all. We were spilling everywhere!

“All drops are gold,” he said.

I’d never realized how little attention I had paid to all the tiny drops that I had spilled behind the bar. I remember fleeting moments where I justified the tiny drops lost between shot glasses as “angels share.” Never again.

Next we covered counting our pours–a method I had learned during my first bartending job–long before the sacred jigger ever entered my life. However, this time, there was proper instruction and accountability measures involved. Not only that, we were testing our jigger pours against our free pours, and much to our surprise, our jigger pours were highly inaccurate compared to our free pours.

The lightbulb.

I realized that since my jiggering days began, I had never stopped counting in my mind while I poured drinks. Here I was, all this time, perfecting my counting accuracy with the help of the jigger. It was as if I learned how to ride a bike years ago, but never trusted enough to take the training wheels off. Not only that, there wasn’t anyone telling me I could! I wasn’t upset. I knew that just moments ago, most of us were having the same epiphany.

Next, we were confronted with a wonderful freedom. The hand that held the jigger was now empty! What do you with it? All of a sudden the world was round, and the earth revolved around the sun, and it was unsettling. We were all trying to reconcile ourselves to this newfound freedom. It was horrifying, and at the same time, it was absolutely comical. We were trying things we had never tried before–pouring two, three bottles at once! We were thinking about what came next, like a chess game–the shortest amount of moves to beat your opponent, the clock. I have to admit at that point not all of us were good at  being accurate. Some of us got carried away, though some of us were more cautious, but given some time and training, we could be perfect our skill. By the end of class, I was thirsting for more. A couple of times during class Tobin had to reign me in. It was like back in those days as a kid playing basketball when I realized I could sink a three pointer. I would’ve stayed until they shut the lights off.

The Conclusion of the matter. Jiggering:

The Pros:
1. Jiggering is great learning tool. I think it is essential for bartenders who are training.
2. In the absence of fast pours, the jigger is very useful.
3. Allowing that the bartenders at a bar are all using the same jigger, it does provide relative consistency across the board.
4. In certain bars, the jigger does carry a certain amount of comfort to the guest that they are receiving a well crafted cocktail.

The Cons:
1. Jiggering drinks is highly inefficient. Not using a jigger could improve speed up to at least 50 percent.
2. Jiggering, though ensuring relative consistency, is still highly inaccurate.
3. Jiggers are not created equal.
4. Bartenders rarely pour accurately into a jigger.
5. In some applications, jiggering is seen as cheap to the customer.

The Pros carry some weight, but in my opinion, the applications for using a jigger are temporary or isolated at best. Though there is always the question of accuracy with free pouring, the jigger offers no better results, if not worse. In conclusion, my belief is that a well trained, practiced bartenders pour is far more accurate and efficient.

From a profitability perspective, if a bartender can be potentially 100 percent more productive without a jigger, there isn’t room for question. The point is moot. And with regards to sustainability of a business, craft cocktail bars really need to step back and take a good look at themselves. With a shaky world economy, the first bars to fold will be those that are less profitable. Let’s not forget, we haven’t even addressed the issue that most of the population is either ignorant or ambivalent toward craft cocktails, and in some instances, hostile. The “mixologist” has developed a reputation of pretension among some that is highly detrimental to its survival. I highly doubt that those establishments will survive for very long. The bar of the future is one that embraces the highest quality service possible with respect to a sustainable, profitable business model. To jig or not to jig? I say no!

The question remains for you then: to jig or not to jig?

Perhaps Hamlet’s famous soliloquy will be of help to you.

“To be, or not to be: that is the question:

Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer,

The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,

Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,

And by opposing end them? To die: to sleep;

No more…”

Are we to suffer with the jigger, or should we just end the suffering, and take on the mysterious world of free pouring? Thankfully, the question is not so gravely serious as Hamlet’s but it serves as a great metaphor. For me, the bar that I will be working at will probable never endorse my willingness to take arms against my sea of troubles. For now, I will have to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous “mispouring.”

JIGGER vs FREE POUR or TOBIN ELLIS, part lll

11 Oct

JIGGER vs FREE POUR or TOBIN ELLIS, part lll

 

Recently I assisted a class given by Tobin Ellis at Bridget Albert’s Advanced Academy here in Chicago. The class was not about “mixology” or spirits…it was about efficiency and service behind the bar.

I don’t think there really is any debate on giving good service to ones customers, just a growing emphasis on the lack of it in the bar industry in general and especially the pretentious nature of many of the “craft” cocktail bars that have grown along with the cocktail renaissance.

But, the subject of free pouring and using a jigger behind the bar came up and this caused a ruckus. I have wanted to write on this subject for quite a while now, and this class gives me the perfect opportunity to weigh in on this subject, and agree with and support many of the the assertions made by Tobin, that jiggering is not as accurate as one would think, that jiggering at any speed is not as accurate as a trained free pour, and that it doesn’t offer any special service, in fact it offers slower and even less service in busier bars. This also has the effect of lower bar rings, lower bar tabs, and less money being made by everyone.

I have been in many debates with colleagues over the use of jiggers at bars, especially at busy bars. After having worked in this industry in many varied venues for over 10 years here in Chicago, I can’t think of any reason most bars…busy or not…would employ the use of jiggers to make the bulk of their cocktails and other drinks.

The standard argument for the use of jiggers comes in two forms: They are more accurate and consistent, and they offer a better show or service to the guest.

Let’s look at the idea that they are more accurate and more consistent a little deeper.

On face value it seems to be obvious that a jigger would always be more accurate than free pouring, and it would be more accurate if it was up against a person that wasn’t trained in free pouring. But let’s look at the problems we will encounter in the real world of bartending. Cocktails that use all kinds of measures from 1/4 oz to 3 oz. Standard jiggers have 2 sides that can vary from 2oz/1oz, 1.5 oz/.75 oz, and many other combinations. Small graduated measuring cups are also often employed that allow a little more freedom than non graduated sides.

The accuracy problem with this is threefold. The first is that under stressed/busy conditions, mistakes are prone to happen searching for the correct jigger measure to use. The other is the temptation to start guessing, e.g when you only have a 1.5 oz side, only need an ounce, and just pour to where you think an ounce is. The other is when you do need 1.5 ounces and fill it to the top, making some spillage almost a certainty, or not filling it to the top, to avoid spillage, thus making the pour low. And, finally, the issue of grabbing the wrong jigger in the first place and not catching your mistake. If you have 5 jiggers, and they are only different by .25 or .5 oz, the closer ones start to look pretty much the same, and under stressed conditions mistakes, again are very likely. And, once one starts guessing at all, it makes the entire accuracy and consistency argument moot. In this case the pour is either under or over. losing money for the house if it is over, and cheating the customer if it is under, making the drink inconsistent, and, again, in all cases inaccurate.

To address the issue of these inevitable mistakes, the jiggering process must have a speed limit that can quickly be overwhelmed in busy bar situations or will not be able to keep up with the orders.  That issue will be addressed.

The show and service part of jiggering a drink also doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. A bartender can still take his/her time to stir a cocktail and free pour it. In fact, they have more time to attend to the customer and add the truly important steps to building a beautiful cocktail. It still is also a bit of an insult in many circles to jigger a drink for a customer as it looks like you are demonstrating the inhospitable step of measured pouring, ala the Berg System (Berg System Auto Pourer). The level of this indignation is debatable in many places, I grant you, but not the fact that it doesn’t exist to a degree that should be taken in to consideration by any bar owner or bar staff member. Jiggering in a service well, when the bartender is not serving guests, does not make sense from a service stand point again, when the only thing that counts in the well is speed and accuracy of the cocktail.

From the free pour point of view, the first non-truth that jiggering is more accurate is clearly that, not true. Again, at first glance to the layman or untrained free pourer, it looks like a measured pour using a jigger would be laughably more accurate than the “non measured” and unregulated free pour. With a closer look, though, measuring 1.5 oz in a 1.5 oz side of a jigger does not always give you 1.5 oz. Why would that be? In part it is because the measure has to go to the top. This, as I stated earlier, is very difficult to carry to the mixing glass, and if done over the glass, has the effect of nearly forcing the bartender to over pour and spill pour into the glass (by flipping the jigger while still pouring), or under pour if they become aware of this. To get your pour to the top exactly, and on a non flat surface, is not easy at a slow pace, let alone a fast one. But, at any level of speed, free pouring by a trained bartender (it must be a trained professional bartender) is at worst on par with a jigger, but in most real life situations, far more accurate than the jigger. Not only is it more accurate, but it is multiple times faster in busy and chaotic situations, allowing for the bartender to tend to customers and transactions much faster while maintaining that accuracy, and have a more natural flow of service that can easily be accelerated when necessary. It is just so much more natural.

The speed of free pouring is very important to maintaining the bartender’s natural level of concentration and not be a bottleneck that jiggering so often is.

Another question is trust in the free pouring bartender. That again is made moot by the fact that jiggering bartenders can be just as shady or incompetent as any free pouring bartender on giving away the house.

Of course the free pouring bartender must be trained, and tested from time to time. But isn’t this what should be expected of a professional bartender in the first place?  Especially in bars where they are looked at as craftsmen. But, unfortunately, the opposite is more often true.

One question keeps popping up to me about this whole issue. Where did this jiggering thing come from, anyway, when most bars were free pour trained 10 years ago? I believe it came from the influx of truly untrained bartenders from the back of the house i.e. cooks, chefs etc.. laymen owners of the new bars who have the same lack of training and knowledge, and the pre-prohibition/craft/mixology cocktail trend and new cocktails with laundry lists of ingredients. It is also an obvious control issue to those who do not understand free pouring or the business of running a busy bar. This is pure speculation, but it comes from a lot of experience in this business.

At the very least, as a fail safe, bartenders should be trained to free pour, even if they work at a jigger only bar. This will allow them to know the accuracy of their pour, even if they are pouring into a jigger…and then they do not ever have to guess what an ounce is in a 1.5 oz jigger.

Free pouring doesn’t have to conjure visions of spring break bartenders, 4 deep bars making buttery nipples and jager bombs, it is for nearly any bar and any clientele.  There are always exceptions and places where things may work or not. Every location is unique in taste, image, and environment and clientele.  But, that goes for the Berg measured pour system as well. High volume and high bartender turnover would be one place I could think of immediately for that system. But the Berg is even not as fast as true free pouring. Blindly inflicting a jiggering system on your staff and clientele without weighing these details is not good business. But blindly inflicting any system, jiggered, free pour, or Berg, is the wrong way to go as well. If you know you cannot consistently have trained free pouring bartenders behind the stick, then another system…jigger or Berg…is necessary from a pure business standpoint.

As for me, after free pouring for 10 years, I absolutely could not work in a bar that was jigger only. It would be like putting training wheels back on your 10 Speed, and would be utter frustration.

This really has been a subject in need of deeper investigation and debate, and I welcome all comments and rebuttals.

 

TODD APPEL

Piranha Bros Cocktail and Cocktail Event Consultants

www.toddappel.com