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Kevin Kos: Engineering Modern Cocktail Education
Most bartenders today meet Kevin Kos on a screen before they ever meet him at a bar. You’re between shifts, scrolling, and a calm Slovenian voice starts explaining how to get more juice from one lemon, or how to batch an Old Fashioned so it pours perfectly every time.


The Savory Edge: Building Cocktails with Bell Pepper Juices
Bell pepper juice is one of the cleanest ways to bring savory freshness into cocktails—without relying on tomato, brine, or heavy spice. Done well, it adds a modern culinary edge while staying approachable for guests.


Panettone Old Fashioned: A Christmas Twist on a Classic (Holiday Special)
If you want a December cocktail that feels instantly festive without being complicated, an Old Fashioned is the perfect canvas: strong, warming, and built for slow sipping. This version borrows its signature aroma from panettone—the classic Italian Christmas sweet bread, buttery and soft, usually dotted with candied citrus peel and dried fruit.


How to Cost a Cocktail: A Practical Guide
Costing a cocktail is not just an Excel exercise. It decides whether a best-selling Negroni pays the rent or slowly erodes the bar’s margin over a season.
Two drinks can look identical on the menu but behave very differently in the P&L.Without precise costing, decisions about price, garnish or promotions are based mostly on instinct.With precise costing, they become controllable levers.


From First Drink to Regular: How Bars Really Build Guest Loyalty
months later, the same guest knows half the team by name, brings friends, and texts ahead to check if there’s space.
That transformation, from stranger to regular, is not magic. It is design.
Guest loyalty does not come from vibes alone, or from one superstar bartender who is “good with people.” It comes from a pattern of small, repeatable behaviors that a well-run bar can train, track, and protect. Consistency matters because the guest experience is built through signals t


The 10 Fundamental Bar Tools Every Bartender Should Master
Recipes get the spotlight, but tools quietly decide whether a cocktail is average or memorable. Without the right equipment, even a perfect recipe struggles to survive a real service.


The Dreamer: A Herb-Driven Gin & Tonic Twist
Most Gin & Tonics start from the same place: a dry gin, a standard tonic, a citrus wedge. The Dreamer keeps the classic structure, but changes where the flavour work is done.


The Art of Dehydration in Mixology: Techniques, Tools, and Flavor Transformation
Dehydration is one of the most practical and transformative techniques in modern mixology.Whether used for garnish aesthetics, shelf-stable infusions, or to concentrate the flavor of fruits and herbs, learning how to dehydrate ingredients correctly can elevate your cocktail presentation and deepen its aromatic complexity.


The Double Strainer | Year One: Mixology Techniques, Recipes & Bar Systems (Free)
I started The Double Strainer because too much know-how lives in back offices and paywalled PDFs. This project exists to keep the craft open, practical, and free — from milk washing to menu engineering — so you can bring clarity to prep, service, and training. Today’s post is both celebration and instruction: a precise recap of the year, the people who inspired us, and the practical guides, worksheets, and recipes you can put to work tonight.


Modern Bar Leadership: A Practical Guide to Team Excellence and Operational Success
Great bars aren’t run on intimidation or “rock-star” egos. They’re built by leaders who set standards, protect culture, and help people do the best work of their careers—night after night.This article translates modern leadership research and bar management practices into a practical guide for Head Bartenders, Bar Managers, and Beverage Directors.


Homemade Herbal Tonic Water: The Easy Upgrade for Sparkling Cocktails
This is a bright, green, garden-forward tonic built from tarragon, basil, and lemongrass—carbonated to service pressure in a siphon. It’s designed for speed (blend-strain-filter-charge), clarity (fine strain + coffee filter), and stability (cold extraction + low oxygen). Below you’ll find why it works, how to nail it every time, and how to use it across cocktails, low-ABV, and zero-proof serves.


The Ultimate Guide to the Classic Daiquiri: History, Technique, and the Art of Balance
The Daiquiri is widely considered the ultimate benchmark for a bartender’s skill. Far from the frozen, fruit-laden slushies often found in tourist traps, the authentic Daiquiri is a sophisticated trinity of Cuban rum, fresh lime, and sugar. It is the distilled essence of balance—a cocktail where there is nowhere for low-quality ingredients or poor technique to hide.


The First 30 Seconds: Crafting Unforgettable Impressions at the Bar
Guests decide what kind of bar they are in long before the first sip. In the first 30 seconds, a room communicates its standards through dozens of signals: the welcome, the pace, the atmosphere, the smell in the air, the confidence of the team. Done well, those moments create instant trust and comfort, the kind that turns a walk-in guest into a loyal regular. Done poorly, no perfect Negroni or Espresso Martini will fully reset the mood.


Milk Punch (Milk Washing): How to Clarify Cocktails for Crystal-Clear Results
In the ever-evolving world of mixology, few techniques balance tradition and modern precision like Milk Punch, also known as Milk Washing. Mixing milk with spirits sounds counterintuitive until you see the result: cocktails that pour clear and bright, drink remarkably smooth, and carry a soft, rounded texture that is difficult to achieve with dilution and chilling alone.
Milk washing is not a gimmick. It is clarification with purpose: stripping harsh edges, tightening flavor


Lynchburg Lemonade: The Highball Born in Tennessee
When it comes to crowd-pleasing highballs with American roots, few drinks are as instantly refreshing and approachable as the Lynchburg Lemonade. A citrus-forward long drink that balances sweetness, acidity, and spirit, it’s a staple on many bar menus—and for good reason.


Simone Caporale: From Artesian to SIPS, a blueprint for modern hospitality
There are bartenders who follow trends. Then there are those who create them. Simone Caporale belongs firmly in the second category. If you’ve ever poured a drink with a story, crafted a cocktail with intention, or thought of hospitality as more than just service, chances are you’re walking a path he helped pave.


The Sound of Hospitality: How to Master Music in a Cocktail Bar
When you walk into The Dead Rabbit (New York), you immediately feel the hum of Irish folk blended with modern rhythms. At Nightjar (London), a live jazz trio whispers through the room, matching the sophistication of the glassware and the complexity of the cocktails. At Atlas (Singapore), the grandeur of Art Deco interiors is amplified by classical and swing playlists, giving every sip of gin a sense of timeless elegance.


The Lager Whiskey Sour: Elevating Classics Through Beer Reduction
The Whiskey Sour is a timeless cocktail, beloved for its balance of spirit, citrus, and sweetness, crowned with a velvety froth of egg white. But in today’s era of creative mixology, classics are meant to be reimagined. Enter the Lager Whiskey Sour - a twist that merges the malty bitterness of beer with the familiar structure of the sour, resulting in a drink that is complex, refreshing, and modern.


The Essential Guide to Cocktail Bitters: History, Varieties, and Professional Use
Bitters are frequently described as the "salt and pepper" of the bar world. Despite being used in minute quantities, their impact on a drink’s final profile is profound. These concentrated botanical infusions provide the structural "skeleton" of a cocktail, balancing sweetness and acidity while adding layers of complexity that would otherwise be impossible to achieve.


How to Clarify an Ingredient with Agar Agar (Beginner-Friendly Guide)
Crystal-clear ingredients are not just about looks. In cocktails, clarification is a prep technique that removes suspended solids, so flavors read cleaner, textures feel smoother, and liquids pour with a more refined finish.
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