Putting the Romance back into Cocktails

Categories:  Cocktail Lists
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When I talk about romancing cocktails, keep in mind I’m not referring to the names of the ‘Between the Sheets’, and ‘Flirtini’s of the drink world. Instead, romancing is an often overlooked art of creating cocktail menus for bars and restaurants. Back to the business aspect of running a bar, “knowing your customer” recognizes that, unless you work in the super-speakeasies and cocktail lounges of the world, the majority of your guests don’t understand a lot of flavour combinations hiding behind your bar.

Because of this, a simple listing of cocktail ingredients will no longer suffice in selling your creations.

wine-glasses

For food, a simple listing of ingredients still has a place, as the average customer has a fairly complex understanding of the flavours of many culinary ingredients. How many of your guests have tasted Green Chartreuse and Galliano together before? Have they even heard of both liqueurs? The name of ingredients becomes less important in describing cocktails as guests will more easily recognize the flavours of herbs, spices, anise, and vanilla.

Quality cocktail lounges are rare in the world, and so too are the guests who will have a deep understanding of the quality ingredients us bartenders are working with on a regular basis. Sure, the cocktails on my menu contain Rhubarb, Celery, and Boker’s bitters (and of course, Angostura), but they have no place on a cocktail menu where their appearance would simply confuse my guests.

If the guest is curious to learn more, the bartender would be more than happy to go further into depth about our ingredients and our approach to creating quality cocktails, but for the ones who stick strictly to reading the cocktail menu, here are a few tips to put the romance back into your cocktails.

Emphasize flavours, rather than names of products. As I stated before, your guests are more familiar with flavours then they are with specific spirits and liqueurs. It may be very easy for them to recognize vanilla flavours, but they might not have ever heard of Navan before.

Offering something unique? Tell me About it. Maybe your bar has begun to explore the caviars and foams of the molecular mixology world. Great. Does your guest know what you’re talking about when you say “topped with raspberry caviar” ? If I think you’re talking about fish eggs, that sounds pretty repulsive to me in a cocktail.

There’s a specific opportunity in cutting edge techniques that requires you to go further in depth in explanations, and even embellish. Try,

“To finish your cocktail, our bar scientists have worked tirelessly to trap fresh berries in spheres that burst with flavour in your mouth”

I think that sounds a lot more enticing in the description of that cocktail.

Does calling by name and listing ingredients serve your best interest? While flavours are the most important in romancing your cocktail, if you’re offering a unique or rare spirit or ingredient in your cocktail, it’s presence in the description makes it just as important. By remaining vague on other ingredients, it leaves you open to tinker and perfect your cocktails as time passes, without the need to reprint.

If the cocktail’s good enough to make it on a list, be proud of it. Gloat. Your guest has chosen your bar for a specific reason, and it could very well be that your “Cara Mia Strawberry Sour” is the best cocktail they’ve ever had. If you are confident enough to put a particular cocktail on your menu, your description of that cocktail should mirror that confidence. It gives your guests piece of mind when choosing their drink, and your bartender’s a level of excellence to aspire to.

For an example of cocktail romancing in action, I’m very proud to present Johnny Rocco’s New Cocktail Menu.

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