enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of bartenders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bartenders

    A bartender (also known as a barkeep or a mixologist) is a person who serves alcoholic beverages and other drinks behind a bar, typically in a licensed establishment.

  3. Bartender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartender

    Bartender, Skyline Hotel Malmö, 1992. A bartender (also known as a barkeep or barman or barmaid or a mixologist) is a person who formulates and serves alcoholic or soft drink beverages behind the bar, usually in a licensed establishment as well as in restaurants and nightclubs, but also occasionally at private parties.

  4. Legal working age - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_working_age

    (21 to work as a bartender or to sell alcohol in a liquor store; 19 to serve alcohol in a restaurant if supervised by someone 21 or older) Work hour restrictions: Under 16: Minors under the age of 16 may maximum work: 3 hours on a school day. 18 hours in a school week. 8 hours on a non-school day. 40 hours in a non-school week.

  5. Lynnette Marrero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynnette_Marrero

    Lynnette Marrero is an American bartender, mixologist, and philanthropist known for co-creating the world's first all-female speed bartending competition, "Speed Rack." [1] She is widely regarded as one of the pioneer female cocktail-specific bartenders in the industry, and is based in New York City.

  6. Drink Masters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drink_Masters

    Twelve innovative mixologists face each other in a cocktail competition. They compete in a series of high-stakes cocktail challenges to win a life-changing prize and the title of "The Ultimate Drink Master".

  7. Molecular mixology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_mixology

    Molecular mixology is the process of creating cocktails using the equipment and techniques of molecular gastronomy. Spherification and foam techniques in a single cocktail called Sparkling Watermelon

  8. Which companies have the most employees on H-1B visas? - AOL

    www.aol.com/companies-most-employees-h-1b...

    The tech industry has long pushed to expand the number H-1B visas granted by the government to bring skilled workers to the U.S. from India, China, Canada, Korea, the Philippines and other countries.

  9. Drinking culture of the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_culture_of_the...

    According to Demeterio, early Visayans made five different kinds of liquor namely; Tuba, Kabawaran, Pangasi, Intus, and Alak. [4]Tuba, as said before, is a liquor made by boring a hole into the heart of a coconut palm which is then stored in bamboo canes.5 Furthermore, this method was brought to Mexico by Philippine tripulantes that escaped from Spanish trading ships.