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The tool is shaped like a small baseball bat and must be long enough to touch the bottom of the glass being used. [2] The bottom of a muddler may be textured, toothed, or smooth. [2] Muddlers can be made from plastic, stainless steel, or wood. [1]
A bar spoon is a long-handled spoon used in bartending for mixing and layering of both alcoholic and non-alcoholic mixed drinks. Its length ensures that it can reach the bottom of the tallest jug or tumbler to mix ingredients directly in the glass. [1] A bar spoon holds about 5 millilitres of liquid (the same as a conventional teaspoon).
A negroni cocktail with an orange twist served on the rocks "On the rocks" refers to liquor poured over ice cubes, and a "rocks drink" is a drink served on the rocks.Rocks drinks are typically served in a rocks glass, highball glass, or Collins glass, all of which refer to a relatively straight-walled, flat-bottomed glass; the rocks glass is typically the shortest and widest, followed by the ...
Mr. Boston Official Bartender's Guide is a cocktail recipe book and bartending manual first published in 1935. The guide was once used on nearly every bar shelf in the United States. [ 1 ] About 11 million copies were printed in 68 editions, as of 2015.
A typical cocktail strainer - "Hawthorne" type A julep strainer. A cocktail strainer is a metal bar accessory used to remove ice from a mixed drink as it is poured into the serving glass.
Flair bartending is the practice of bartenders entertaining guests, clientele or audiences with the manipulation of bar tools (e.g. cocktail shakers) and liquor bottles in tricky, dazzling ways. Used occasionally in bars, the action requires skills commonly associated with jugglers .
The cocktail shaker can be traced to 7000 BCE in prehispanic Mexico and South America, where the jar gourd was used as a closed container. In 1520, Hernán Cortés wrote to King Charles V of Spain of a drink made from cacao, served to Montezuma with much reverence, frothy and foaming from a golden cylinder.