The Joy of Mixology: The Consummate Guide to the Bartender's Craft - Hardcover

9780609608845: The Joy of Mixology: The Consummate Guide to the Bartender's Craft
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An original book on the craft of mixology is a rare gem. Gary Regan’s The Joy of Mixology is such a gem, one whose genius lies in Regan’s breakthrough system for categorizing drinks that helps bartenders—both professionals and amateurs alike—not only to remember drink recipes but also to invent their own.

For example, once you understand that the Margarita is a member of the New Orleans Sour Family, you’ll instantly see that a Kamikaze is just a vodka-based Margarita; a Cosmopolitan follows the same formula, with some cranberry juice thrown in for color. Similarly, the Manhattan and the Rob Roy, both members of the French-Italian family, are variations on the whiskey-vermouth-bitters formula.

In this way Regan brings a whole new understanding to the world of cocktails and how to make them. Not only will you learn how to make standard cocktails, you’ll actually learn to feel your way through making a drink, thereby attaining the skills needed to create concoctions of your own. And as Regan explains methods for mixing drinks, how to choose bartenders’ wares and select spirits and liqueurs, and the origins of many cocktails, you’ll feel as though you’re behind the bar with him, learning from a master. Plus, his charming and detailed history of mixed drinks raises this far above the standard cocktail guide fare.

With more than 350 drink recipes, The Joy of Mixology is the ultimate bar guide. Ground-breaking and authoritative, it’s a must-have for anyone interested in the craft of the cocktail.

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About the Author:
GARY REGAN is the author of The Bartender’s Bible and coauthor with his wife, Mardee Haidin Regan, of The Book of Bourbon and Other Fine American Whiskeys, New Classic Cocktails, The Martini Companion, and The Bourbon Companion. He has written articles on mixing and drinking for the San Francisco Chronicle, Food & Wine, Playboy, Wine Enthusiast Magazine, Wine & Spirit Magazine, and Cheers Magazine. Gary and his wife are the creators of the e-letter Ardent Spirits and drink experts for Amazon.com’s Kitchen & Housewares store. They live in Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
Chapter 1

the HISTORY of COCKTAILS

and MIXED DRINKS

"Variety's the very spice of life,

That gives it all its flavour."

-William Cowper, The Task, Book II, "The Time-Piece," 1785

There's nothing quite like a good cup of tea. But do you prefer Earl Grey, Assam, Keemun, Lapsang souchong, jade oolong, Formosa oolong, or Ti Kuan Yin? Or perhaps English Breakfast is more your cuppa. And how do you take your tea? Plain and strong or with milk and sugar, a slice of lemon, a teaspoon of honey, a tot of whiskey, or a good measure of dark rum? One drink with myriad variations, all dependent on the taste of the consumer. And so it is, and always has been, with mixed drinks: The base ingredient can be consumed neat, but it can also be enhanced by the addition of one or more other ingredients. Why do people choose to adulterate fine wines, beers, and spirits? For variety's sake. It's the very spice of life.

It's more than possible that the world's first mixed drinks were created in order to mask the bad flavors of the base ingredient. Alcoholic potions of our dim and distant past were far inferior to the technologically clean products we enjoy today. Archaeological evidence shows that the ancient Egyptians used dates and other fruits to flavor their beer, and that Wassail, a spiced drink originally made with a base of hard cider, dates back to pagan England-it was served to celebrate a bountiful apple harvest. We also know that the Romans drank wine mixed with honey and/or herbs and spices. The practice could have arisen from the inferior quality of the wine, but it probably also had roots in the medicinal, restorative, or digestive qualities attributed to the various ingredients. Mulled wine and spiced beer date back thousands of years and are still enjoyed in the twenty-first century.

In order to see how the cocktails and mixed drinks of more modern times came into being, it's necessary to start in the 1600s, when taverns in New England were serving some creative concoctions. Sack Posset was a mixture of ale, sack (sherry), eggs, cream, sugar, and spices such as nutmeg and mace that was boiled over an open fire, sometimes for hours at a time. When the quaffers wanted their ale hot but didn't want to leave it on the fire, they would use a type of poker, known as a loggerhead, that was heated in the fire and then plunged into the tankard of ale. If a fight broke out in the tavern, these pokers could be used as weapons-the fighters were "at loggerheads" with each other.

It's possible that there were more than a few fights in seventeenth-century taverns, too-the colonists didn't drink in short measure. One description of the daily drinking habits of southern colonists states that they started their day with mint-flavored whiskey, stopped work at 11:00 a.m. in order to partake of slings, toddies, or flips, drank whiskey or brandy with water before and during dinner, and finished their day with a whiskey or brandy without water. But overconsumption wasn't tolerated by all the colonists: In seventeenth-century Connecticut, for example, it was illegal to drink for more than thirty minutes at a time, or to down more than a half bottle of wine at one sitting. And if you dined at the Ship Inn in Boston circa 1634, you would have been allowed no more than one cup of wine with dinner.

Among the drinks consumed during the 1700s are mulled wines, sherry sweetened with fruit (such as raspberries), and juleps. We're not sure whether these were the Mint Juleps familiar to us today since, according to Richard Barksdale Harwell, author of The Mint Julep, mention of such a drink wasn't recorded until 1803. All sorts of other mixed or flavored drinks were popular with the early colonists, and some of them, such as Toddies, Slings, and an assortment of punches and mulled wines, are still made today, though probably not according to recipes that our forefathers would recognize.

Other drinks that cropped up in America around this time bear names that recall some of the cocktails we drink today. A potion called Mimbo was merely rum and sugar; Stonewall was a mixture of rum and cider; Black-Stripe was made of rum and molasses; a Stewed Quaker was hard cider with a baked apple dropped into it; and one drink, made from simmered sour beer sweetened with molasses and thickened with crumbs from brown bread, had the wonderful moniker of Whistle-Belly-Vengeance. Early American Beverages, by John Hull Brown, details a New York City restaurant built in 1712 and known as Cato's Road House. Cato was a slave who had bought his freedom, opened his own joint, and sold New York Brandy Punch, South Carolina Milk Punch, and Virginia Eggnog to accompany dishes such as terrapin, curried oysters, fried chicken, and roast duck.

Our first president, George Washington, was known to be fond of a drink or two, and sometimes more. He indulged in thirteen toasts-one for each state-during a victory celebration at New York's Fraunces Tavern, and it's said that after he partook of Fish House Punch at one of Philadelphia's fish club's, State in Schuylkill, he couldn't bring himself to make an entry in his diary for the following three days. There's even a loose connection to Washington and Grog, the mixture of rum and water that Britain's Admiral Edward Vernon introduced to sailors in 1740. Lawrence Washington, George's half brother, served under Vernon and admired him so much that he named his estate for him. Later, of course, George became the chief resident at Mount Vernon.

By the end of the 1700s people in the newly formed United States were still tippling far more alcohol than we'd tolerate today; it's important to remember that at the time, alcohol was seen not only as a social drink but also as a medicine that would stave off, or maybe even cure, all manner of illnesses. John Brown, a medical professor at the University of Edinburgh in the mid-eighteenth century, prescribed liquor for many ailments. When one of his patients had the audacity to die, Brown simply opened up his body and declared the organs to be "fresh," which was proof that his "medicine" had been working. This, no doubt, was sufficient evidence to encourage a party of eighty people at Boston's Merchant's Club to down 136 bowls of punch, 21 bottles of sherry, and a "large quantity" of cider and brandy during a dinner

in 1792.

The eighteenth century also saw Americans become enamored of iced drinks, something that wouldn't gain favor in Europe for another two hundred years. European immigrants to these shores, unused to the hot summers in America, created a demand for ice from the frozen north to be brought down to the people in the sweltering south. Initially ice was fairly expensive and out of financial reach for many people, but prices gradually dropped, and by the mid-1800s iced drinks were the norm. While ice was becoming popular, though, something else happened behind a bar in America that would change the face of mixed drinks forever: At some point close to the year 1800, somebody created the world's first cocktail.

THE BIRTH OF THE COCKTAIL

On May 13, 1806, the Balance and Columbian Repository of Hudson, New York, answered a reader's query as to the nature of a cocktail: "Cocktail is a stimulating liquor, composed of spirits of any kind, sugar, water, and bitters-it is vulgarly called a bittered sling." The cocktail had been born, it had been defined, and yet it couldn't have been very well known by the general populace, or the newspaper wouldn't have considered it a fit topic for elucidation.

Where does the word cocktail come from? There are many answers to that question, and none are really satisfactory. One particular favorite story of mine, though, comes from The Booze Reader: A Soggy Saga of a Man in His Cups, by George Bishop: "The word itself stems from the English cock-tail which, in the middle 1800s, referred to a woman of easy virtue who was considered desirable but impure. The word was imported by expatriate Englishmen and applied derogatorily to the newly acquired American habit of bastardizing good British Gin with foreign matter, including ice. The disappearance of the hyphen coincided with the general acceptance of the word and its re-exportation back to England in its present meaning." Of course, this can't be true since the word was applied to a drink before the middle 1800s, but it's entertaining nonetheless, and the definition of "desirable but impure" fits cocktails to a tee.

Another theory has it that in England, horses of mixed blood had their tails docked to signify their lack of breeding, and were known as cocktailed horses. This is true, and since the cocktail comprises a mixture of ingredients, it makes sense that the term could have come from this source; but it's somewhat of a stretch.

A delightful story, published in 1936 in the Bartender, a British publication, details how English sailors of "many years ago" were served mixed drinks in a Mexican tavern. The drinks were stirred with "the fine, slender and smooth root of a plant which owing to its shape was called Cola de Gallo which in English means 'Cock's tail.' " The story goes on to say that the sailors made the name popular in England, and from there the word made its way to America.

Another Mexican tale about the entomology of cocktail-again, dated "many years ago"-concerns Xoc-tl (transliterated as Xochitl and Coctel in different accounts), the daughter of a Mexican king, who served drinks to visiting American officers. The Americans honored her by calling the drinks cocktails-the closest they could come to pronouncing her name. And one more south-of-the-border explanation for the word can be found in Made in America, by Bill Bryson, who explains that in the Krio language, spoken in Sierra Leone, a scorpion is called a kaktel. Could it be that the sting in the cocktail is related to the sting in the scorpion's tail? It's doubtful at best.

One of the most popular tales told about the first drinks known as cocktails concerns a tavernkeeper by the name of Betsy Flanagan, who in 1779 served French soldiers drinks garnished with feathers she had plucked from a neighbor's roosters. The soldiers toasted her by shouting, "Vive le cocktail!" William Grimes, however, points out in his book Straight Up or On the Rocks: A Cultural History of American Drink that Flanagan was a fictional character who appeared in The Spy, by James Fenimore Cooper. He also notes that the book "relied on oral testimony of Revolutionary War veterans," so although it's possible that the tale has some merit, it's a very unsatisfactory explanation.

A fairly plausible narrative on this subject can be found in Famous New Orleans Drinks & how to mix 'em, by Stanley Clisby Arthur, first published in 1937. Arthur tells the story of Antoine Amedie Peychaud, a French refugee from Santo Domingo who settled in New Orleans in 1793. Peychaud was an apothecary who opened his own business, where, among other things, he made his own bitters, Peychaud's, a concoction still available today. He created a stomach remedy by mixing his bitters with brandy in an eggcup-a vessel known to him in his native tongue as a coquetier. Presumably not all Peychaud's customers spoke French, and it's quite possible that the word, pronounced coh-KET-yay, could have been corrupted into cocktail. However, according to the Sazerac Company, the present-day producers of Peychaud's bitters, the apothecary didn't open until 1838, so there's yet another explanation that doesn't work.

If pushed to pick a story that rings truer than all others, I'll go for the one mentioned in Grimes's book that cites a paragraph from

H. L. Mencken's The American Language. Cock, it explains, refers to the tap on a barrel of spirits, and the tailings were the dregs from the bottom of the barrel. The last drops of all manner of spirits used to be mixed together and sold at a reduced rate, and thus the word cocktail, in a very unappealing manner, was born.

ADOLESCENCE

Although the cocktail had been created, not many people of the early 1800s were sipping well-constructed drinks. The name of the drinking game at that time was quantity, not quality. If you divided all the distilled spirits sold in the United States in the year 2000 among every man, woman, and child in the country, each person would be alloted just under half an ounce of liquor a day. Two hundred years earlier, though, when the cocktail was a mere babe in arms, enough spirits were sold to supply every man, woman, and child then in the States with almost two ounces of liquor a day. Thus, in 1800, Americans drank nearly four times the amount of distilled spirits as the good folk at the turn of the twenty-first century. The country was full of jitterbugs.

In the early 1800s liquor was often known as jitter sauce, and jitterbug was the moniker allocated to people who drank too much. One jitterbug in particular had his 1812 tavern bill detailed in The Drunkard's Looking Glass, a pamphlet issued by the Reverend Mason L. Weems. It seems that this hardy soul drank three Mint Slings before breakfast, nine tumblers of Grog before dinner, three glasses of wine and bitters with dinner, and two "ticklers" of brandy afterward. The total of the bill was six dollars, and it included breakfast, dinner, cigars, and supper (during which more wine was consumed).

Our nineteenth-century forefathers didn't just drink plentifully; they also gave weird and wonderful names to some of their newer creations. According to Richard Erdoes, author of Saloons of the Old West, house specialties became popular in the 1820s, and various inns and taverns offered such drinks as Moral Persuasion, Fiscal Agent, and Sweet Ruination. Drinks were also named for luminaries of the time: In 1824, when the Revolutionary War hero the Marquis de Lafayette returned to the United States from his native France, he not only was treated to Lafayette Punch but was also able to sip Lafayette brandy.

During the first half of the nineteenth century, although few people really cared, a new breed of bartenders started to emerge, and by the time Jerry Thomas wrote the world's first cocktail-recipe book, How to Mix Drinks, or The Bon-Vivant's Companion, in 1862, he had collected formulas for Cobblers, Cocktails, Crustas, Fixes, Flips, Pousse-Cafés, Sangarees, Toddies, Sours, Slings, and Smashes, among others. Seven years later, when William Terrington published Cooling Cups and Dainty Drinks in London, he detailed drinks such as A Splitting Headache, a mixture of ale, rum, lime juice, cloves, cinnamon, ginger, and nutmeg, and Hour Before the Battle, a simple affair composed merely of sherry or Madeira with bitters. The cocktail front was starting to pick up steam.

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  • PublisherClarkson Potter
  • Publication date2003
  • ISBN 10 0609608843
  • ISBN 13 9780609608845
  • BindingHardcover
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages400
  • Rating

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