I'll Take an Old-Fashioned, Please

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Sunday, June 14, 2009

Regarding the June 5 Weekend article "A New Taste of Summer; 5 Drinks That Aim to Make Mojitos but a Memory":

It was a great article, and my hat's off to the creative young bartenders who come up with these innovative cocktails. It seems as if this is the future of bartending, one where you might need to visit a world market to get all the ingredients. Jerry "the Professor" Thomas, who wrote the first recipe book for bartenders in 1862, and Harry Craddock, the legendary barman at London's Savoy Hotel during the 1920s, may start shaking in their graves.

Being an old-school bartender, I often wonder: Whatever happened to just a beer and a shot? Or a classic Manhattan? Or a classic anything? These old-school cocktails will always stand the test of time. How many bartenders know that a Manhattan requires a dash of bitters?

When anyone sits at my bar and orders a beer with a shot of Grand Marnier, the first thing I ask is: "Where do you tend bar?" Nine times out of 10, I'm right. But hey, let's go with the flow. There's got to be something out there that I'd give up my shot of Jameson for.

NICK WINERITER

Washington

The writer is head bartender at Rock Creek Restaurant in Washington.



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