Happy Friday! Drinks Links 8/19/16

Eating is cheating

Friday Rules: Eating is cheating

Very good news (and pic above likely in one of those pubs) Wandsworth Council protects 120 pubs from redevelopment (Press Release)

Yes! This autumn less pumpkin, more porter! Brewers scramble to find pumpkin for seasonal ales as supply tightens (CNBC)

But gin sales are up! Travel Retail Spirits Sales Sink 4.2% in 2015 (The Spirits Business)

Great gin primer. What Exactly Is Gin, Anyway? (Ginerations)

Yes. Yes it is. THIS “GINTERNSHIP” MAY BE THE COOLEST GIG EVER (Liquor.com)

But can you open carry your blaster? DRINK LIKE HAN SOLO AT THE STAR WARS CANTINA BAR (Liquor.com)

Health Booze, meh. Big Alcohol Tries to Go on a Health Kick (Bloomberg)

One less thing to carry. Corona Extra partnership makes beachside beer delivery a reality (Chicago Business Journal)

Let’s be careful out there. The Two Words That Could Save You (And Your Career) From Burnout (Tales of the Cocktail)

DIAGEO ‘NOT WALKING AWAY’ FROM MASTERS OF WHISKY (The Spirits Business)

KYOTO DISTILLERY UNVEILS JAPAN’S FIRST GIN (The Drinks Business)

TEXSOM 2016 Takeaways (Imbibe)

 

 

Underrated Cocktails

Pegu Club Cocktail

A new article out from Liquor.com lists the 16 most underrated cocktails according to a collection of bartenders from around the country. It is not a bad list.

I was happy to see my go-to cocktail, the Negroni, was listed, though I think it is getting a lot more attention than it used to get. The inclusion of both the Vieux Carré and Sazerac is something I am in complete agreement with, particularly in the case of Vieux Carré.

In further proof of how underrated it is, the Martinez did not make the list. With the right marketing, the Martinez could easily be the most sought after classic cocktail. But since I recently wrote about it, I’ll add another; The Pegu Club.

It’s not just the current heat wave that has me thinking about this very refreshing drink, but it doesn’t hurt. This is a simple and under appreciated cocktail that easily should have made the list. I typically work off the recipe from Brad Thomas Parson’s Bitters book:

2 oz London dry gin, usually Plymouth, sometimes Bombay Sapphire (as pictured above)

.75 oz orange Curaçao

.5 oz fresh squeezed lime juice

1 dash Angostura (or Orinoco Bitters)

1 dash orange bitters

Shake, strain into a chilled cocktail glass.

And, of course, if you’re in New York, it’s always worth having a Pegu Club Cocktail at the Pegu Club.

Cheers!

Happy Hour Drinks Links

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APEROL LEADS GRUPPO CAMPARI BRAND GROWTH (The Spirits Business)

Molson Coors (TAP) Misses Q2 Earnings on Volume Decline (Zacks)

Despite craft beer boom, not much hoppin’ on Illinois farms (Chicago Tribune)

The 10 Highest Calorie Beers (Drinks Business)

Diageo CEO says too early to assess terror impact (The Spirits Business)

Anheuser-Busch, SABMiller Merger Entering Final Stages (Yahoo Finance)

DIAGEO CONFIRMS DRIZLY INVESTMENT (The Spirits Business)

 

Alright, Alright, Alright

McConnaughey and Wild Turkey!

Wild Turkey says actor Matthew McConnaughey will serve as creative director to help reintroduce the brand. Going beyond the typical celebrity endorser, McConnaughey will direct and appear in a series of TV and digital ads starting in September. An introductory video is on YouTube now, and the announcement from Davide Campari‐Milano S.p.A.(CPR.MI) – which has invested significantly in the brand since buying it from Pernod Ricard in 2009 – is here.

 

My Tale Begins with the Martinez

Martinez 2016

The Martinez

As I prepare for my first Tales of the Cocktail I began thinking about what’s putting me on that airplane to New Orleans. It’s actually easy to pinpoint where this journey began.

Although I worked in retail liquor stores for several years during and after college, and had a very brief stint as an editor at Cheers, Beverage Dynamics and Stateways magazines, it was an article in the Atlantic that really got things going. Wayne Curtis’ April 2009 piece “Cocktails of the Past” that highlighted Haus Alpenz lit the fuse. Looking back on it now I realize it was probably the first time I had heard of TOTC.

Most critically, the description of Hayman’s Old Tom Gin intrigued me enough to seek out a spirit I had not tried since a bad high school experience many years…OK, decades earlier. There are now 10 different gins in my liquor cabinet today, down a few that haven’t yet been replaced.

On the Hayman’s bottle was a recipe for the Martinez, which I discovered was about as classic a cocktail as there is. Ever the history buff, that’s where the experiments would begin. Outside of the Hayman’s, it is scary to recall the ingredients today…how old and how cheap was that vermouth? And what is maraschino liqueur? Surely the juices from the jar of bright red maraschino cherries would work.

I continued to improve my ingredients over time, quickly moving on to actual maraschino liqueur from the family run Italian distillery Luxardo (and I also dumped the store brand maraschino cherries for those from Luxardo). I had also been improving my vermouth selections. When Brad Thomas Parsons’ book “Bitters” came out I got the final pieces to a really great cocktail.

While I stuck with Hayman’s Old Tom Gin, and not the Ransom Old Tom that Thomas calls for, I added the Carpano Antica (a vermouth in the Fratelli Branca stable of products) and most importantly Boker’s Bitters. Adam Elmegirab reformulated the 19th Century Boker’s Bitters formula and it really makes the Martinez an exceptional cocktail. Dr. Adam Elmegirab’s business continues to grow (expanding in both geographical distribution and in the product line with new beard oils on the market) and any—or all—of the bitters will improve your bar.

The Martinez recipe as listed in Parsons’ “Bitters: A Spirited History of a Classic Cure-All”:

1 ounce Old Tom Gin

2 ounces sweet vermouth, preferably Carpano Antica

1 teaspoon maraschino liqueur

2 dashes Boker’s Bitters (or Angostura Bitters)

Garnish: lemon twist

Combine ingredients in a mixing glass filled with ice. Stir until chilled and strain into a chilled coupe or cocktail glass. Garnish with the lemon twist.

Tasty Brexit bargains recover nicely

Negroni

Negroni at  Harry’s Cafe NYC

A couple of weeks ago I shared a link from CNBC in which Mario Gabelli, Chairman and CEO of Gamco Investors, mentioned several buying opportunities in the wake of Brexit, including Diageo (DEO) and Davide Campari Milano (DVDCY). So far, both have recovered quite well from their Brexit dip.

Diageo is up nearly 9% from its June 27 low, closing at $112.80 on Friday. Since the UK referendum, Diageo has invested in the British non-alcoholic spirits distiller Seedlip. It is reported to be the first time Diageo—which is typically invested in 8-10 businesses according to the Financial Times—has taken a stake in a non-alcoholic beverage company. In a world of consumers growing ever more health conscious and drinking less, with UK alcohol consumption down 26% 2002-2012, it seems to be a pretty logical extension of their business. Seedlip had a nice write-up at Tales Of the Cocktail last October, and worth a read here. That announcement was made at the beginning of last week and, after a slight initial decline, by the end of the week Diageo was trading at levels last seen in mid December.

Campari finished last week at $4.80, up 6.4% from the June 27 Brexit low. Gabelli noted they had recently added Wild Turkey and were buying Grand Marnier, details of which hit around the same time. Campari stock jumped in early March and has maintained a steady range between $4.75 and $4.90 since. While the current level is about 4% off the early June peak, it remains 25% above the end of February level.

In the US, the aperitif Campari has seen growing popularity, moving from a long-standing case volume of around 50,000 to 100,000 cases the past five years, according to Fortune Magazine. No better example of this heightened interest that with the Negroni – the go to cocktail at Gin & Bitters. Negroni Week itself provides some evidence as the June week-long charity event keeps getting bigger. Started in 2013, Negroni Week last year raised $321,000 from 3,500 venues. The amount raised last month has yet to be announced, but the number of venues alone was up 71% to 6,000 in 61 countries and 47 states.

Once again, market turmoil provided some very good buying opportunities, and in this case also brought the ingredients to toast your success.

Cheers!

America in decline!

The beer anyway, the one formerly known as Budweiser (Ticker: BUD), after RBS Capital Markets downgraded AB InBev to Underperform on Wednesday. Seems they don’t see the SABMiller deal doing all that much for AB InBev. Though perhaps while they’re both focused on this deal they will leave the craft beer brewers alone for a while. While the news dropped Bud’s US shares to $128.07 (a mere .39% decline for the day) they are only down 3.6% from their 52-week high, and they have climbed 5.5% from the post-Brexit low on June 27.

Reboot

This is the post excerpt.

Two and a half years later, Gin & Bitters is back. After upheaval in the day job and a cross country move, I am getting back to looking at the business end of cocktails and craft beers, as well as where to drink them and how make some interesting ones at home.