Category: Other

  • The Week One Roundup

    The Week One Roundup

     

    The Ice Ship

    Week 1 at Make Cocktails at Home

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    It’s now the end of the first week of the blog and I’ve got to say I’m pretty happy with how things are going so far.

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    A quick review of what we’ve covered this week:

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    Training – Fundamentals

    Essential Home Bar Equipment

    Essential ingredients for your home cocktail bar

    Easy Guide to Alcohol pt 1: Fermentation, Distillation and Spirits

     

    Cocktail Recipes

    Vodka – Moscow Mule

    Whiskey – Sweet Manhattan

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    Coming up

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    There’s plenty more to come over the next few weeks, including pt 2 of the Easy  Guide to Alcohol, this time focusing on liqueurs. There will be guides to deconstructing the cocktail, and lessons on taste and balance.

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    Also, the first of the video series should be up soon. These videos will cover the more practical sides to making cocktails with the ingredients and tools you have at home, so look for guides to mixing methods (including shaking and stirring), making syrups and liqueurs, and a few more that I’m keeping to myself for now!

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    As always, if you have any questions, comments or suggestions then let me know, and make sure to join the newsletter or like me on Facebook to get news of the updates as they’re posted.

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    Happy mixing,

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    / David

  • Cocktail Recipes – Vodka – The Moscow Mule

    Cocktail Recipes – Vodka – The Moscow Mule

    Key ingredients for the Moscow Mule

     

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    Moscow Mule

    Time for the first drink recipe! And a quick and easy one to start, with the cocktail that helped truly bring vodka into bars in the USA for the first time, the Moscow Mule.

    A bit of history

    The Moscow Mule has been around since 1941, with its invention credited to John G Martin, of Heublein Brothers Inc (an American spirits distributor who had recently obtained the rights to Smirnoff Vodka), and Jack Morgan, who owned a popular bar in LA called the Cock ‘n’ Bull Tavern. The world of cocktails was a very different place in 1941, with the war in Europe raging on and prohibition in the USA only recently coming to an end. Vodka as a spirit was relativly unheard of in North American bars and distillers and distributers were looking for a way to help it break into this lucrative market. Time for Martin and Morgan.

    Morgan had recently started making his own ginger beer and Martin was trying to get his Smirnoff brand into bars. Together the two came up with the vodka/ginger beer combo, making perfect use of each others products. In a great marketing move they named this drink the Moscow Mule and served it in a copper mug; Martin set off around the country promoting the cocktail (and thus, the main ingredient, Smirnoff), and low and behold, vodka had finally got its long awaited entry into American bars.

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    Making the Moscow Mule

    You will need:

    • Highball glass/ Collins glass
    • 50ml Vodka
    • 25ml fresh Lime juice/limes
    • Ginger Beer
    • Angustora bitters*
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    Mixing method

    Method: Build.

     

    Take your highball glass and use your measure to pour in 50ml Vodka (the brand is unnecessary, although I’d avoid using anything you’ve paid a lot for as it will be lost in other ingredients). Next, grab your citrus press and squeeze in 25ml of fresh lime juice (the lime juice is key – it will add a necessary sour character to the drink).

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    So far we have vodka and lime; if you were to taste the cocktail now it would be what we describe as unbalanced, in that the sweet:sour ratio would be off. Therefore, it’s time for the sweetener. Many cocktails we’ll make use a sugar syrup or liqueur to get the sweet component to the sweet:sour balance but for the Moscow Mule we’re going to get our sweetness from the sugar in the ginger beer instead.

    So fill your highball with ice (as much as you can fit – the more ice you have, the colder the drink will be. It’ll melt slower as well!) and top up with your ginger beer. The quality of your ginger beer is going to have a big effect on the taste of the overall drink so try and avoid the bland store-brand varieties if you can – we want that nice, spicy kick from the ginger.

     

    Garnish with a nice big lime wedge and a straw.

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    Done!

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    * Many bars will add Angustora bitters to a Moscow Mule, it certainly adds to the overall flavour of the cocktail so after you’ve made this first version try remaking the drink with a couple of dashes of  bitters and see which one you prefer (and now you have two drinks… for science!). Be careful not to add to much as aromatic bitters have a very strong taste, as with all ingredients, it’s better to add a small amount and then add more if necessary.

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    Happy mixing,

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    /David

  • Introducing make cocktails at home.com

    Introducing make cocktails at home.com

    Hej Hej (as the Swedes say) and welcome to my new blog!

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    I’m David and I’ve been working as a cocktail bartending instructor and bartender in New Zealand, Canada, and for the bulk of my career, London. I’m passionate about cocktails and most importantly, how they taste, and try to pass this on while I’m training bartenders. I want them to really think while they are constructing drinks;  why are we using certain methods and techniques in the drinks creation? How will the ingredients we use will effect the overall taste of the drink?

    Afterall, if all it took to be a chef was the ability to follow a recipe, then almost anyone could be one – instead we know that a chef is trained to properly understand the ingredients and methods they are using when making a meal. Making drinks is the same, a base knowledge will go a long way in helping you create cocktails that are balanced and taste good.

    So, the blog!

    During the past few years I’ve meet many non bar-industry people who’d like to learn how to make cocktails like the ones they drink in their favourite bars, but most books and sites tend to just list recipes and as I’ve just explained, these don’t really show the how or why. I’ve wanted to make an easy guide to making cocktails at home, kind of like a simplified version of what I teach bartenders but living in London I never seemed to find the time – recently however I’ve moved to Sweden and found I have a lot more time on my hands, so I’ve decided it’s the perfect time to finally get the blog going.

    You can expect  an ongoing series of home cocktail training including guides to fundamental methods and techniques ,  and lessons on a range on more in depth subjects. Each lesson will cover a specific topic that is useful for cocktail making, with background info and a guided exercise that involves you making some example drinks . Some I have planned include Shaking vs stirring – proper dilution in drinksHow to achieve proper balance in cocktails, A guide to taste, and more I’ll tell you about later.

     

    Lastly,  you’ll find a mix of bar reviews, spirit and liqueur reviews and pretty much anything else industry related that interests me.

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    Make sure to check back often as I’m adding new content all the time, and if you have any questions or feedback, feel free to get in touch.

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    Otherwise…

    Happy mixing.

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    / David Turnbull, Sweden