Thursday, July 27, 2017

NEW DINNER ITEMS 7/26/17 (sides and rabbit rotolo)

Heirloom bean salad
radishes, lemon, sour sourdough bricole
Heirloom Beans:  There are five varieties of dried beans in the salad.  They are soaked overnight in water cooked in water seasoned with salt, garlic, thyme, rosemary, onion. (From Osbourne Family Farm in Charleston Maine)
Yellow eye beans, Marfax, Jacob’s cattle, Low’s champion bean, Soldier bean
Vinaigrette:  Raw shallot, garlic, roasted red pepper, anchovy, cooked egg yolk, olive oil, red wine vinegar
The cooked beans, chopped parsley, and shaved, raw shallots are tossed in the vinaigrette. Finished with lemon juice, alleppo pepper, olive oil
Bricole: Italian for crunchy bread crumbs
Allergies: legumes, nightshade, allium, gluten, fish


Patate Fritte  
Fried Natascha Gold New Potato, Parmesan, Pecorino, Rosemary, Aleppo pepper
Natascha Gold new potatoes are grown on Sparrow Arc Farm in Cupcake, New York. The characteristics are yellow in color and when cooked creamy on the inside. The potatoes are going to be cooked in water seasoned with salt, vinegar, thyme, black peppercorns.  They are cooled, smashed and fried.  Seasoned with Parm, Pec, rosemary, salt, lemon juice, aleppo pepper.
Allergies:  dairy, cross contamination fryer gluten, nightshade
Vegetarian


Roasted Zephyr squash
Controne chili conserva, pine nuts, mint, ricotta salata
Zephyr squash is a varietal of zucchini that is grown at Sparrow Arc Farm. We roast the squash in the pizza oven until charred and tender.  We garnish with chopped, preserved controne chili, chopped pine nuts, mint and ricotta salata.
Controne chili conserva:  Controne chilis that are grown in Campagna they bring slight smoke and moderate heat. They are held in olive oil and vinegar.
Allergies: Nightshade, seeds, dairy  


Rabbit Rotolo
Speck, Rabbit belly and loins are wrapped around rabbit farce.
Farce: Ground Rabbit leg meat, Pork fat, liver, fine herbs, mace, coriander, bay leaf orange zest, white wine shallots.
Allergies: allium, pork

Thursday, July 20, 2017

Next on Tap: Ommegang Hennepin, Night Shift Whirlpool, Sloop Confliction Dry Hopped Sour, Fiddlehead IPA

OMMEGANG HENNEPIN
Style:  Saison
Abv: 7.7%
Price Size: Large $7.50

Ommegang in many ways set the bar for what an American saison should taste like when they released the Hennepin years ago.  Bigger, higher abv, with the same fluffy, lovely texture that is associated with saisons from France and Belgium.  This particular beer is brewed with grains of paradise, sweet orange peel, and coriander for a delicately spiced, lightly citrus flavor over the wheat.  Infinitely crushable a la a patio pounder, try not to let the abv smack you in the back of the brain as they can definitely sneak up on you!

NIGHT SHIFT WHIRLPOOL
Style: American Pale Ale
Abv.: 4.5%
Size Price: Large, $7.75

The Whirlpool Pale Ale is one of Night Shift’s staples, staying available year round for a brewery that spends much of its production time and energy on unique seasonals, one-offs, and barrel aging projects.  The Whirlpool is very soft on the palatte for an American Pale Ale, with hints of ripe peaches and citrus.   

SLOOP BREWING CO. CONFLICTION
Style: Dry-hopped Sour
Abv: 5.5%
Size, Price: Large $7.75

Sloop Brewing is a relatively small operation based in an old barn up in Hudson Valley, NY.  They’re all about the land and water that go into their brews, working extensively with a local farmer and orchard owner to source the raw materials for their beers.

Confliction is aptly named.  From the brewers:
The conflict of flavors in this dry hopped sour ale combine to create a truly unique beer. Our house lactic culture creates a tart, sour base, contrasted with an intense citra and galaxy dry hopping. The aroma showcases citrusy, fruity elements and the finish tastes of freshly squeezed grapefruit juice.  The I Ching tells us heaven and water go their separate ways. We would beg to differ.

Sign me up!

FIDDLEHEAD IPA
Style: American IPA
Abv: 6.2%
Size, Price: Large, $7.5

Fiddlehead Brewing Company is located in Shelburne, Vermont, and only recently started distributing to Massachusetts.  Their mission is to produce full flavored beers with “the true beer connoisseur” in mind, by focusing on depth of flavor, freshness of ingredients, and incorporating local products when possible.  Brewmaster and owner Matthew Cohen (known industry wide as Matty O) is on a continual quest to craft the perfect pint and has been heading craft breweries for 15 years.  Fiddlehead IPA is their flagship brew.  It is medium bodied with a golden glow.  The brewer uses a combination of 3 strains of hops, giving it potent citrus notes on the midpalatte and a crisp, dry finish.

Now on Tap: Nimble Giant, Exhibit A Demo Tape 11 Side B, Trillium PM Dawn, Citizen The Dirty Mayor

TROEGS NIMBLE GIANT
Style: Double IPA
Abv: 9%
Size, Price: Large, $7.75

This a crazy coveted release from Troegs. Initially released on June 12, I have no idea how we still have any of this available to us.  Dope!  Referred to as “the new Great White Whale of Beers,” Troegs says their giant double IPA “gracefully boasts grapefruit rind, pineapple, and honeysuckle notes with a hint of earthy forest floor.”  For the layman, that means a big ol’ high ABV IPA that drinks far easier than it should with a rare balance of fruit, funk, and bitter compared to other beers in the category.  Highly recommended.

EXHIBIT “A” DEMO TAPE 11 SIDE B
Style: DDH Wheat Beer
Abv: 4.2%
Size, Price: Large $7.75

The Demo Tape series from Exhibit A is their testing round for potential new brews to hit the market.  If something is really well received, they start making it on the large scale and give it a name.  If it’s a bit of a flop, well, at least they know ahead of time and those that tried it got to be a part of the grand experiment that is beer development.  This is their 11th round of Demo Tapes, side B indicating that they’ve tweaked the recipe a little since the initial release.  Gotta love where beer nerdery and Bootleg Phish Tapes nerdery intersect…

This particular iteration is a wheat beer featuring Warthog Wheat from the team at Valley Malt, a small grain purchaser/malter who focuses on sustainability and transparency in the beer manufacturing chain.  The wheat beer is then dry hopped with Mosaic and Ekuanot hops, which impart bright citrus and tropical aromatics, and finished with raw Northern Vermont honey from Barr Hill by Caledonia Spirits.  It all comes full circle.

TRILLIUM PM DAWN
Style: American Stout infused with Cold Brew
Abv: 9%
Size Price: Small $8.75

In another exciting collaborative effort with Trillium’s neighbors, Barrington Coffee Roasters, we bring you a bold American stout infused with cold-brewed coffee. PM Dawn exhibits an earthy, freshly roasted coffee bean and dark chocolate/mocha nose. The flavor profile consists of vanilla, hot chocolate, and caramel along with rich espresso. With a medium to heavy body, luscious mouthfeel, and light bitterness, PM Dawn is balanced and full, smooth with a drying roast character.

CITIZEN DIRTY MAYOR
Style: Ginger Cider
Abv: 5.2%
Size Price: Lg $7.50

So cats up at Citizen Cider in VT are some funny dudes.  I think reading what they have to say about their beer is one of my favorite things, and the Dirty Mayor doesn’t disappoint:

We offer this cider to the honorable and fully infamous mayor of the only non-town in America, Fort Ethan Allen, USA. The mayor likes his cider with a ginger nip, so in our current effort to ensure local harmony and diplomacy we offer this cider up to the mayor and his fellow citizens.

Fresh, zippy, and wicked crisp.  The apples are grown and pressed in Middlebury, VT.

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Dinner Menu Changes 7/18/17


Corzetti 10/17
mushroom broth, cloumage cheese, rye crumbs


Corzetti is a pasta shape that comes from Liguria.  Corzetti meaning “ coin”. This pasta is made of 00 pasta flour, whole eggs, water, salt and olive oil.  Traditionally, and in the slow food movement, the pasta is pressed with a stamp that is unique to each village. We use a gnocchi paddle to imprint cross hatches that helps adhere the pasta to the sauce.


The mushroom broth is made from cutting cremini mushrooms in the meat grinder. It is then placed in a pan with salt and cook gently allowing them to release their natural liquid.  The mushrooms are pressed with weight overnight to obtain more liquid.  The pressed liquid is put into a pan at service and reduce by half so it is fortified and coats the Corzetti.


Cloumage cheese is pasteurized cow’s milk from Shy Brother’s farm.  Westport, Ma.  Tangy and acidic. The cheese garnishes the top of the pasta with the crumble.


Rye crumble is from Iggy’s bread. It is toasted, ground and sifted for the larger crumbs. It is then fried in the fryolator


Allergies:  Gluten, mushroom, dairy. This pasta is vegetarian, cannot be made vegan as there are eggs in the dough.


Grilled strip loin 21
salsa verde, crispy potatoes, pecorino


Grilled strip loin from our beef purveyor Andy Carbone.  He works with Double J Farm.  The breed is Roto Devon.  Strip loin is well-marbled and offers a great texture and chew.  
Grilled to Medium Rare.


Salsa Verde:  This is a northern italian condiment found in Piedmont, emilia romagna, Lombardy.  This green sauce is made with chopped, parsley, mint, chives, scallions, anchovies, capers, raw garlic, raw diced shallot, chili flake, lemon zest, olio verde.


Crispy potatoes:  We are going to use fingerling potatoes to start, but transition in Sparrow arc creamer potatoes.  We are going to blanch the potatoes in water seasoned with salt, rosemary, peppercorns, and white vinegar until overcooked.  Strained and cooled. At service we will fry the potatoes until crispy and toss in salt, chopped rosemary and pecorino cheese.  


The 8 oz steak will be grilled and garnished with Salsa Verde and potatoes on top.

Allergies:   Allium, fish,  cross contamination gluten in fryolator.

Saturday, July 15, 2017

New Dinner and Red Sauce Items

Dinner Changes 7/15/17


Linguine Alle Vongole
Countneck Clams, Garlic, Chili, Lemon
Replacing the rigatoni on Dinner menu and replacing the linguine vodka sauce on Red Sauce Sunday


A traditional pasta dish from the Region of Liguria.  Linguine meaning “small tongues” are similar to fettuccine but thinner.  Vongole means “small clams”.   


The pasta is made with egg yolks and 00 flour.  The sauce is going to be built with confit onions and garlic, countneck clams, white wine, chili flake, parsley, scallions, finished with butter and lemon juice. Final garnish will be toasted bread crumbs.  
(Allergies:  Shellfish, dairy*, gluten*, allium*)


Burrata
Crispy Garlic, Bottarga, Olive Bread


We will be purchasing the burrata from “ The Mozzarella House” in Peabody MA, which has been in operation since 1989. The owner, Giuseppe Argentieri, is native of Puglia, home of burrata. He uses local Jersey cows, and pasteurized milk. The burrata is filled with soft mozzarella curds and cream, has an outside shell of pulled mozzarella, the flavor is sweet and fresh. We will be garnishing the burrata with maldon salt, mullet bottarga, crispy garlic, chives and espelette pepper, capezana olivie oil. Toasted olive bread will accompany the dish. (Allergies: Dairy, gluten*, allium*, seafood* )


Red Sauce Changes 7/16


Pork Marsala
Mushrooms, Charred Onions, Thyme
(replacing the sausage on main course)


The chicken Marsala dish dates back to the beginning of the 19th century in the town of Marsala, Sicily.  The origins are rooted to English settlement--Marsala wine is a fortified wine, made in both dry and sweet styles.
The Salty Pig’s preparation starts with  a 7 oz pounded thin piece of pork cutlet,  found in the hind leg of the pig.  We will dredge the cutlet in flour and pan fry till cooked through.  Oyster mushrooms and maitake mushrooms will be sauteed in the same pan along with charred onions and deglazed with Marsala wine, pork stock, and butter. Thyme sprigs will also be used to flavor the dish. (Allergies: gluten, allium*, alcohol)


Linguine Alle Vongole from dinner menu will be replacing the linguine vodka sauce on Red Sauce Sunday

Italian Grape Pronunciation Project

Here's an awesome project with a ton of Italian producers pronouncing the name of Italian grapes. It makes me ridiculously happy so I figured I would share! A couple of examples are below, but the whole thing is at this link!

https://dobianchi.com/italian-grape-name-pronunciation-project/




Sunday, July 9, 2017

Red Sauce Pastas Change: Rigatoni Bolognese, Linguini alla Vodka, Spaghetti All'Amatriciana

We have a couple of small changes to the Red Sauce Sunday pasta lineup. We are 86 alfredo, subbing in the Amatriciana from the dinner menu. Also, the pasta shapes on the bolognese and vodka dishes have changed.

Linguini alla Vodka
Linguini pasta (durum, 00, eggs, egg yolk).  We're using pureed san marzano tomatoes, along with our crushed tomato sauce (san marzano tomatoes, garlic, olive oil basil), pancetta, additional garlic, chili flake, vodka, and creme fraiche (classically yo
u would use heavy cream but the creme fraiche brightens the dish up a bit). The sauce is finished with parmesan, basil, and olio verde.
Allergies: gluten, dairy*, allium

Spaghetti All’Amatriciana
guanciale, pecorino

Amatriciana Sauce:
Smoked Nueskie bacon braised with sweated onion, carrot, garlic, San Marzano tomatoes, and Aleppo pepper. The braise is milled to a smooth consistency. It is finished at service with lemon and olio verde. Garnished on the plate with pecorino, oregano, and crispy guanciale.
The noodle: extruded Semolina, durum, 00 flour
Spaghetti Amatriciana is a traditional dish of the region of the town of Amatrice in Lazio.
Allergens: Gluten* Allium

Rigatoni Bolognese
Rigatoni (short ridged cylinders, durum, semolina, 00, water), is tossed with a traditional bolognese style ragu, made from pork, beef, house lardo, mirepoix, tomato paste, white wine, stock, nutmeg, and cream. Finished with parmesan cheese, butter, and olio verde.

Allergies: gluten, egg, dairy*

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Dinner Menu Change 7/8/2017: Spaghetti All'Amatriciana, New Butcher's Cut Set

Spaghetti All’Amatriciana


Amatriciana Sauce:
Smoked Nueskie bacon braised with sweated onion, carrot, garlic, San Marzano tomatoes, and Aleppo pepper. The braise is milled to a smooth consistency. It is finished at service with lemon and olio verde. Garnished on the plate with pecorino, oregano, and crispy guanciale.
The noodle: extruded Semolina, durum, 00 flour
Spaghetti Amatriciana is a traditional dish of the region of the town of Amatrice in Lazio. (Allergens: Gluten* Allium)


Butcher’s Cut
A rotating selection from the Salty Pig’s Butcher Department.
Pilacca Sauce:  Grilled fresno chilis, chopped to a paste muddled with a mortar and pestle with confit garlic, red wine vinegar, olive oil, chopped oregano.
Roasted red onions:  Onions that are roasted meat side down in the pizza oven.  Seasoned with salt and pepper olive oil.  
Roasted and chopped almonds.
Pilacca Sauce is a condiment that originates from Puglia that comprises fresno chili, roasted garlic and olive oil.  The chili’s seeds and veins have been taken out so the heat is not overwhelming but gentle.   (Allergens: Nuts*, Allium*)


Allergens marked with a * can be omitted.

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

New Sandwiches, live Thursday 7/6/2017

Salumi Sandwich
Italian Salumi, Provolone, Controne Marmelatta
This is an americanized Italian Grinder on a Ciabatta Roll. Sliced Mortadella , Prosciutto di Parma, Prosciutto cotto, salami milanese, aged provolone, gem lettuce, and a Controne Chili Marmelatta (Red wine vinegar, Controne chili, olive oil). Allergens: Gluten*, Dairy*


Giardino Sandwich
Grilled Zucchini and Eggplant, Pesto, Cloumage
Black olive bread, Grilled and marinated eggplant and zucchini (garlic, oregano, parsley, chili flake, olive oil, balsamic), gem lettuce, pesto (pea green, pine nut, pecorino, parmesan, olive oil), fresh tomato, cloumage cheese (cow’s milk, pasteurized, very spreadable, tangy)Allergens: Gluten*, Pine nuts/ Seeds*, Dairy*


Pollo Sandwich
Smoked Chicken, Avocado, Tomato, Pimenton Mayonnaise
Sourdough bread, Sliced smoked chicken breast (deli style, American cheese, Avocado, pimenton mayo (pimenton paprika, egg yolk, grape seed oil, lemon juice), gem lettuce and tomato.  


Manzo Sandwich
SP Roast Beef, Gruyere, Mustard, Pickles
Rye bread, Roast beef (beef top round, cured in house, roasted and smoked to a Medium temperature) gruyere cheese, salty pig pickles, lettuce, tomato, whole grain mustard (whole grain, dijon), mayonnaise (yolks, grape seed oil, lemon juice)Allergens: Gluten*, Dairy*, Egg*


Polpette Sandwich
SP Meatballs, San Marzano Tomato, Ricotta, Basil

Cibatta roll cut on the top not the side. Pork and beef meatballs with garlic, parsley, pecorino, parmesan, and panada  (egg, breadcrumb, and half and half), 3 to an order served in a crushed tomato sauce (tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, basil), fresh basil, parmesan, ricotta Allergens: Gluten, Dairy, Egg

Sunday, July 2, 2017

Current Cocktail Descriptions -- Complete

Current Cocktail Descriptions

Note:  All portions in parentheses are for large format drinks

Jamaica Farewell $12
2 oz Amaro di Angostura
.5 oz Orgeat
.75 oz lime
.25 oz Averna
Shake.  Dbl strain over ice to rox glass.  Cocktail parasol

This cocktail is a play on the Trinidad Sour, invented by Giuseppe Gonzalez in New York.  The Trinidad Sour is an odd duck as it’s primary spirit base is actually Angostura Bitters (yes, those puppies are alcoholic, clocking in at 100 proof).  From there, the classic citrus and sweet combination of a sour holds, with the use of orgeat to create the creamy, soft texture associated with the egg whites in traditional sours.  Orgeat itself is an almond and orange blossom syrup found in a variety of classic tiki drinks.  We make ours here in house from real almond milk.  Please be aware of that allergen existing on our back bar!  Angostura recently released an amaro to the market, which we are using instead of the bitters because it captures the same flavors of the bitters with some darker, richer tones.  The final cocktail is dry, richly textured, with a hint of limes and cherries for an awesome patio cocktail.  The name is the title of a song by Harry Belafonte, dubbed the “King of Calypso.”  He was instrumental in popularizing Calypso and Caribbean music in the US in the 1950’s.

Counterfeit Collins $10
2 oz White Vermouth (8 oz)
1 oz Benedictine  (4 oz )
.5 oz lemon (2 oz)
3 dash Orange Bitters (10 dash)
1 dash Hopped Grapefruit Bitters (3 dash)
Soda.

This little gem originated as a Chrysanthemum: a classic cocktail made with white vermouth and Benedictine, martini style.  I thought it sounded delicious, tried it with our white vermouth, and it just didn’t work texturally.  So I added a little citrus to brighten it up, some bitters for a bit of depth, And a splash of soda.  And realized I made a collins-style cocktail that isn’t a collins.  It’s a counterfeit.  Note that in the large format, the amount of bitters added to a pitcher is not proportional to the scaling up of the rest of the ingredients.  This is because bitters tend to intensify as you add them.  If you put the full amount in a large format, they’ll take over and smother the rest of your flavors.


Ferdinand’s Flowers $12
2 oz Pisco
1 oz Fino Sherry
.5 oz Green Tea Oleo Saccharum
.5 oz Lemon juice
Shake.  Double strain, coupe.  No garnish.

We brought PIsco onto the back bar due to popular request amongst our bartenders.  Pisco, for those of you unfamiliar with it, is a grape brandy native to Peru.  It has some briny, funky aromatics, and a fruity yet dry core.  The rest of the cocktail was inspired by capturing the bright, leafy quality of spring.  Fino sherry adds great depth to cocktails.  Oleo saccharum is a traditional base for punches; some experts argue that without oleo, whatever large thing you’re making is not a punch.  It means “oiled sugar,” and you make it by extracting all of the citrus essence from the peels of citrus fruit (orange and lemon, in our case) into sugar.  We then take that intensely aromatized sugar and turn it into syrup by adding a double-strength green tea. Our powers combine, and you have a lovely, floral, leafy, spring concoction.  We have ingredients from Spain, Peru, and Japan, so the name is a nod to Ferdinand Magellan.  It’s also a nod to Ferdinand the Bull, because all I want to do is just sit and smell this cocktail, much like he wanted to sit and sniff the flowers in the bullfighting ring.

The Paramount
1 oz GTD Angelica
1 oz Green Chartreuse
1 oz Carpano Antica
1 dash Angostura

Stir.  Strain to coupe.  Flamed orange twist

A Brief History of the Bijou:

In the cocktail renaissance of the last decade, many classics have been exhumed, polished, and updated for modern palates. Some have taken hold and are now as common on bar menus across the country as the gin-and-tonic. The Bijou is not one of them.

Which is a shame—the drink has a bright sweetness up front that soon gives way to a velvety mouthfeel and wonderfully complex bold herbal and bitter notes on the back end. The original 19th-Century recipe for the Bijou—which calls for equal parts gin, sweet vermouth, and green chartreuse (a sweet, herbal, and pungent liquor with a high alcohol content that has been produced for centuries by French monks), a dash of orange bitters, a twist of a lemon peel over the glass before discarding it, and a cherry—embodied a new direction for cocktails. "Beginning in the early 1880s, American bartenders, seeking to cater to a more sophisticated, cosmopolitan clientele, turned to vermouth and other European aperitifs, digestifs, and cordials to broaden the range of colors on their palettes," says David Wondrich, cocktail author, historian, and longtime Esquire contributor. "These proved to be the keystone that capped the structure of the classic mixologist's craft."

The Bijou had a decades-long run of popularity. But while its famous contemporaries, the Manhattan and the martini, continued to thrive post Prohibition, the Bijou—perhaps because it was never updated to reflect evolving tastes—faded into obscurity with only weathered cocktail-recipe books serving as proof it ever existed

So what’s in a name? Broadway’s original Bijou Theater opened in 1880 on the site of what had been a bar run by Jerry Thomas, the creator of the Bijou cocktail!  The original Bijou used the layout of the bar within the design of the theater.  The Paramount Theater in Downtown Crossing is one of the oldest in the city, recently restored to it’s art deco prime when purchased by Emerson College.  Bijou Cocktail → Bijou Theater → Bijou Cocktail variation → The Paramount Cocktail.
Shot Across the Bow
1.5 oz Cynar (6 oz)
.5 oz Ancho Reyes  (2 oz)
.5 oz lime (2 oz)
Lager

Dry shake all ingredients.  Strain to iced collins glass and top with lager.  Garnish with an orange swath.

We’re playing with beer and making it into a cocktail!  Most of these citrus/herbal/beer concoctions are lumped together under the category of shandies.  From Saveur magazine:

Beer is arguably America's national drink, and we tend to like ours just as it comes out of the bottle or the tap.  The English, however, whose beer-drinking history goes back considerably farther, have a long tradition of mixing beer with other drinks or other types of beer: consider the snakebite (beer and hard cider), the dog's nose (beer and gin), the half-and-half (half porter, half beer), or the black-and-tan (half stout, half lager). For my money, the finest of these British hybrids is the shandygaff, often called a shandy: equal parts beer, usually an ale, and ginger beer. The origins of the drink are murky. Some accounts attribute the invention to Henry VIII, who purportedly came up with the concoction as a tonic during his matrimonial difficulties; others trace it to the 18th-century novel Tristram Shandy. (The "gaff" in the name is thought by some to be a contraction of ginger and half-and-half.) In a 1918 compendium of essays collected, appropriately enough, under the title Shandygaff, the American novelist and poet Christopher Morley wrote, "[It's] a very refreshing drink…commonly drunk by the lower classes in England, and by…newspaper men, journalists, sailors, and prizefighters."

We’re getting that herbal, spicy backbone associated with gingerbeer from the combination of Cynar and Ancho Reyes.  The cocktail is spicy, sweet, dry, and refreshing.  Grab me a pitcher and a straw!  The name comes from an 1800’s naval reference: when sending a warning from one ship to another to cease and desist, a shot was fired across their bow instead of directly at the opposing ship.  This cocktail is a Shot Across the Bow because it tastes super light and refreshing, but there’s danger in those waters.  

Division Bell
1 oz. Del Maguey Crema de Mezcal
3/4 oz. Aperol
3/4 oz. Luxardo Maraschino Liqueur
3/4 oz. lime juice
Shake, double strain, coup.  Garnish with a grapefruit peel.

This is a Last Word variation named after the Pink Floyd album that helped Phil Ward get through his NY city restaurant Mayahuel’s five-month build out.
Del Maguey is a 20 year project by Ron Cooper to source, bottle and export Single Village Mezcal. The Crema de Mezcal (which warns “For Women Only… And a Few Strong Men”) is made by combining Miel de Maguey (unfermented agave syrup) with Mezcal San Luis del Rio. Double distilled from agave Espadin.
For a very thorough article on the differences between Tequila and Mezcal, see this awesome article: http://mezcalphd.com/2012/08/tequila-vs-mezcal/

French Chameleon
1.5 Lillet
.75 yellow chartreuse
.75 lime
.25 lavender simple
Shake, double strain, coupe, no garnish.
Named after a famous impersonator, Frédéric Bourdin (born 13 June 1974) who is a French serial impostor the press has nicknamed "The Chameleon". He began his impersonations as a child and claims to have assumed at least 500 false identities, three of which have been actual teenage missing persons.  Delicate, floral, and deceptively potent.

Pimm’s Cup
2 oz Pimm’s No 1 (8 oz)
¾ oz Lemon Juice (3 oz)
½ oz Simple Syrup (2 oz)
Shake, collins. Top with ginger beer.  Garnish with a lemon wedge

Pimm’s No. 1 is a gin-based potation made in England from dry gin, liqueur, fruit juices, and spices. Served with lemon soda or ginger ale, it becomes a Pimm’s Cup. Pimm’s No. 1 was created in the mid-18th century by English oyster bar owner James Pimm. The recipe is still a secret; supposedly, only six people know exactly how it is made. It has a dark, golden brown color, a medium body, and a taste of quinine, citrus fruits, and spice. Its low alcohol content of only 25 percent has made Pimm’s a drink to have when you are having more than one.
Aperol Spritz

2 oz Aperol  (8 oz)
1 oz soda soda  (4 oz)
Top with sparkling wine

Build and serve in wine glass (or pitcher) full of ice. Garnish with orange slice.


The Spritz originated in Northern Italy as a still wine and soda mix.  As bitters, amari, and vermouth grew in popularity in the late 1800’s, the bitter spritz was born somewhere around the Veneto (like all things Italian, exactly where is fiercely debated).  Sometime around the 1960’s prosecco replaced the still wine after its production experienced a boom.  Aperol became ascendant as the bitter used only in the late 80’s and early 90’s, largely due to good marketing.  Regardless, Aperol is now synonymous with the Spritz, and it’s the best selling cocktail in Italy and wildly popular in the US as well.  It tastes like summer in a glass.