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Homemade
Homemade prep and recipes


Lapsang Souchong Soda: Easy Recipe, Carbonation Tips, and Bar Uses
A smoky soda can add depth to a drink without the weight of a full smoked syrup, a peated spirit, or a heavy spice build. That is where Lapsang Souchong soda becomes useful. It brings a clean smoky note, light tannin, and a dry finish that can sharpen a highball, lift a low-ABV serve, or work as a standalone soda over ice.


How to Make a Shrub: Easy Drinking Vinegar Syrup for Beginners
Shrub is a sweet and tart syrup made with fruit, sugar, and vinegar. It is used like a flavor concentrate. Add a small amount to soda for an instant non-alcoholic drink, or use it in cocktails as a fast way to build fruit, acidity, and aroma in one ingredient.


How Do You Make Foam for Cocktails? A Beginner Guide to Methods and Troubleshooting
Foam is not just decoration. Done well, it adds aroma at the rim, changes mouthfeel, and can rebalance a drink by softening sharp edges or carrying a top-note flavor into every sip. Done poorly, it collapses fast, tastes “eggy” or bitter, and makes service inconsistent.
This guide explains what cocktail foam is, why it forms, the main foam styles used in bars, and how to make foam reliable in real service. It is technique-only and focuses on stability, workflow, and troubles


Tepache Explained: What It Is and How to Make Fermented Pineapple Tepache
Tepache is a lightly fermented drink traditionally associated with Mexico. Most modern versions are made by fermenting pineapple peels with sugar, water, and often cinnamon. The result is sweet, gently tangy, and usually lightly fizzy.
For new bartenders and beginners, tepache is useful for two reasons. First, it is an approachable introduction to fermentation. Second, it works as a flavorful mixer that brings pineapple brightness plus a soft, “funky” edge to highballs, spri


Mango & Ginger Foam for Cocktails: Quick Guide, Recipe, and Fixes
Mango and ginger foam is a fast, high-impact topper for cocktails. It adds aroma, sweetness, gentle heat, and a creamy mouthfeel without changing the drink’s liquid volume too much. When it is done well, it dispenses smoothly from a siphon, sits as a neat cap, and stays stable long enough to serve and enjoy the drink.


Citrus for Cocktail Bars: Types, Yield, Storage, and Perceived Acidity (A Practical Overview)
Citrus is not “the sour part.” In a cocktail bar, it is a production input that affects balance, aroma, speed of service, waste, and menu consistency. Two identical specs can taste different simply because the fruit changed.
This guide is a practical playbook for bar teams and menu developers. It covers citrus profiles, yield as an operational KPI, storage and freshness discipline, and why perceived acidity can disagree with what a spec seems to “promise.”
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