27 February 2011

Ralph Laurens RR Launch at Liberty's



Drink factory continues to go where the cocktails go. This time round we were at Ralph Laurens new vintage/denim range launch at Libery's in London. The night played out to old school swing, and country tracks which made us feel like we were in some magical world situated somewhere between the wild wild west and Gangs of New York with a friendlier less angry group of gangs mulling around.


Cocktail were classicly faced with pefectly balanced and traditionally made Mint Juleps, consisting of ice smashed using a wooden mallet and a muzzlin bag, adding to the show and creating the perfect ice to serve this drink in. Also present were Sazeracs which took a small amount of coaxing but to our surprise were greeted with looks of pleasant surprise by all first timers, either not familiar with the drink or those not a big fan of bourbon. Rounding off the drinking was Tiger Milk. Served in a glass milk bottle complete with prohibition-esque paper straw this drink grabed peoples attention for more than it's intriguing appearance. Consisting of Kigo Shochu, almond milk and a hint of apple juice this drink went down well amongst fashions elite.





18 February 2011

Nowness.com The Selby meets Tony C.

A stunning insight into the philosophy and mind set of cocktails and an individuals approach.

Paul Tvaroh Interview

PAUL TVAROH

After 10 years in London running other people’s award winning gastro pubs and celebrity Hampstead hangouts, there was nothing Paul wanted more than to open his own place. His greatest achievement? Fulfilling this dream. On November 1st 2007 Paul opened Lounge Bohemia. Paul harks back to another era, seemingly more at home in the prohibition age than our whilst his drink remain comtemporary with obvious classic influences.

1. What is the first cocktail you ever made?

Most likely new years punch made with the help of my granny at the age of 10 - czech "rum", white wine, tinned tropical fruit cocktail, tinned clementines and pineapple, plus all the juices. Served in a glass with a green glass monkey hanging on the side. Memories, hmmmm.


2. What are your 3 favourite drinks? With recipes if you have them; old, new and your own.

The two favourites from my own recipes have to be Sgt. Pepper - black pepper infused vodka, elderflower liquor & cordial, lemon juice and Old Castro - cuban cigar infused havana barrel proof rum with madagascar vanilla and orange bitters served over vanilla candy floss from a chilled cigar tube. A favourite from other people's recipes is Bohemian Iced Tea which creator, Alex Kammerling, has kindly let me have on my menu for the last 3 years - lemon vodka, Becherovka, Krupnik, peach liqueur, earl grey tea, lemon juice.


3. Tell us about a new flavour you have discovered recently.

Black cardamon. It has a nice smokey flavour.


4. If you could pass just one thing on to an apprentice bartender, what would it be?

Don't be afraid to experiment.


5. What does the future hold for yourself, and what do you see happening in the future within the industry?

I hope the future will be as kind as the past and I continue to have the opportunity to work in collaboration with people from other industries on creative projects, like my work with Hostem and the Gorilla Perfumers. Some say a tough economic climate can foster creativity and counter culture, it would be nice to see little more of that in the industry.


6. What has been your biggest satisfaction from working behind the bar?

Positive feed back from the other side of the bar.


7. If you were to have a conversation with a cocktail (and presuming it could talk back to you and tell you its past), which cocktail would it be and why?

An Old Fashioned, it must have seen a few things whilst all that stirring was going on...


8. What influences your drinks from outside the industry?

Most of my influence comes from outside the industry, it can be anything from food to architecture.


9. If you were to break a bartending golden rule, what would it be?

All of them, I don't believe in rules!


10. Outside of flavour and the craft of the cocktail, what in your opinion affects the appreciation of cocktails the most?

Presentation is key, people love a bit of theatre and surprise.

11. If you were to champion a cocktail, which would it be?

A well made Tommy's margarita. Because my wife loves it.

12 February 2011


Hold on tight Drink Factory Fans. We are undergoing a bit of a revamp and will be coming at you with stacks of new content, interviews, drinks recipes, the whole lot very soon.........

Keep coming back and thanks for all the support so far!!!

02 December 2010

Stage program begins at 69 Colebrooke Row

The bar with no name at 69 Colebrooke Row and Drink Factory are very pleased to offer the unique opportunity of a Stage position within the bar and the lab.

The positions will be open to both bartenders and students of Cocktail and Food Science, and will offer periods of time to work alongside Tony C and the award winning team of 69 Colebrooke Row aiding and shadowing the research and development- giving an exclusive insight into this unique setting.

Apprentices will not only be trained on the happenings and equipment within the lab, they will also get the opportunity to see these realized within the bar environment.
This will provide a rare view of the unique process of concept formation, development and implication of ideas.

The position will provide a rare opportunity to learn from leaders in the field of cocktail science, be involved within pioneering projects, and will help the understudies develop a unique set of skills and gain invaluable experience.


Apprenticeship duration will last one to two weeks.
More details to follow shortly

Buchi Rotovap offer



Buchi are happy to present to friends of Drink Factory this exciting offer!

Drink Factory Interview - Dale DeGroff





















Dale is rightly accredited with rejuvenating the cocktail culture of the present day- encouraging a generation of bartenders to re-evaluate the past and its bounty of great classic drinks. Author of the seminal 'Craft of the Cocktail' and Founder of The Museum of the American Cocktail, he still remains an authority on the world of cocktails and continues to teach of its wares.

1. What is the first cocktail you ever made? Rum and Coke…that was the go-to entry level drink for my generation

2. What are your 3 favourite drinks? With recipes if you have them; old, new and your own. Dry Martini 2 parts Beefeater to one part Noilly and a dash of orange bitters …olive and a twist. Valencia: 3 parts Tanqueray No,10 1 part Emilio Lustau fino sherry flamed orange peel garnish. Dry Sazerac (one sugar cube ) made NIOLA style in two old fashioned glasses BUT with ½ rye and ½ cognac

3. Tell us about a new flavour you have discovered recently. Sweet and dry sherry combined with whislkies or unaged brandy like pisco

4. If you could pass just one thing on to an apprentice bartender, what would it be? Like the work…it is hell if you don’t

5. What does the future hold for yourself, and what do you see happening in the future within the industry? At this point waking up every morning! … the craft bartending profession is back and will only get better … assuming of course the rest of the world doesn’t self destruct …politicians need more cocktail hours with well made drinks good company and some nice salty canapés!

6. What has been your biggest satisfaction from working behind the bar? Spending the evenings in generally pleasant surroundings with my fellow creatures.

7. If you were to have a conversation with a cocktail (and presuming it could talk back to you and tell you its past), which cocktail would it be and why? Gin Martini … gin makes people talk and imagine the conversations

8. What influences your drinks from outside the industry? Small band classic Jazz … the musicians improvise nightly and take chances … but there ain’t much of it around these days

9. If you were to break a bartending golden rule, what would it be? I got into bartending to get away from “golden rules”

10. Outside of flavour and the craft of the cocktail, what in your opinion affects the appreciation of cocktails the most? The surroundings … and that includes yours truly the BT! And that does not mean a million dollar build out or any of those kind of trappings although they can also be part of it…what it means is surroundings of substance whether it be a hole in the wall joint or a fifty foot bar… surroundings of substance are hard to define … but not hard to feel.

11. If you were to champion a (another!) cocktail, which would it be? The simple daiquiri Good rum that tastes like cane sugar and fresh lime juice… when made well it of floral … bright … fresh … limey … and all round ambrosial.

Drink Factory within the Royal Society of Chemists Newsletter



27 November 2010

New Dry Martini Bar, Madrid




Joining Luca Anastasio behind the bar, Tony assisted in making some drinks too for the assembling guests at the new Dry Martini bar in Madrid. Sister to the well known Barcelona site, it is set to make an impact on the Madrid scene.

Belmondo Bar, Madrid


Tony was on a recent visit to Madrid and amongst his travels stopped in at Belmondo Bar - a new bar headed up by the talented Francesco Cavaggioni

25 November 2010

Drink Factory takes delivery of Centrifuge!
















Our newest addition to the lab family comes in the form of a giant spaceship- a refrigerated centrifuge. Using a high speed motor to separate compounds according to density, it can clarify and break up mixtures. A much awaited new member!

05 November 2010

Drink Factory interview- Gaz Regan


The one and only Gary Regan surely needs no introduction (for those who need a further taste of his wit, charm and brilliant idiosyncratic take on the drinks world- and have not already done so- read his books)


1. What is the first cocktail you ever made?


Whisky Mac (scotch and green ginger wine) Prince Rupert pub, Great Lever Council Estate, Bolton, Lancs, circa 1966.

2. What are your 3 favourite drinks? With recipes if you have them; old, new and your own.

Manhattan (gaz regan's Fave)
90 ml (3 oz) Evan Williams Black Label bourbon*
45 ml (1.5 oz) Noilly Prat sweet vermouth**
6 dashes Angostura bitters***
Build over ice in a large Old-Fashioned glass. No garnish.
*Unless someone sends me some other kind of bourbon or straight rye--if it's free, I'll drink it. If I have to buy it, I buy Evan Williams Black Label
** Unless someone sends me some other kind of sweet vermouth-- if it's free, I'll drink it. If I have to buy it, I buy Noilly Prat
***No substitutions. And it's been a long time since they sent me any freebies . . .

East Ender
Recipe by gaz regan.
“When my book, the bartender’s GIN compendium, was about to be released in 2009, I realized that I had to find a gin-based session drink, because I couldn’t go around promoting this book while drinking my usual Manhattans. This is the drink I came up with, and it’s a pretty good quaff, I think. Robert “DrinkBoy” Hess, though, pointed out that it’s not a far cry from a sweet Martini, circa 1900. I created a classic drink, then, just over a century after someone else'd created it!” gaz regan.
90 ml (3 oz) dry gin
30 ml (1 oz) sweet vermouth
5 dashes Angostura bitters
1 flamed (optional) orange twist, as garnish
Build in an ice-filled old-fashioned glass, stir briefly, and add the garnish.

Negroni
The incredible aspect of the Negroni that not everyone understands is that it works every time, no matter what brands of gin or sweet vermouth you use. And you can slap my wrist and call me Deborah if it doesn't also work no matter what ratios you use, too. Seriously. Go up on the gin, go up on the Campari, go up on the vermouth. These three ingredients are soul mates, and they support each other no matter how you try to fool them.
45 ml (1.5 oz) Campari
45 ml (1.5 oz) sweet vermouth
45 ml (1.5 oz) gin
1 orange twist, for garnish
Pour all of the ingredients into an ice-filled old-fashioned glass and sir briefly. Add the garnish.

3. Tell us about a new flavour you have discovered recently.

Chai tea. I’ve been drinking it for years, but only recently have I been using it in cocktails. Very complex — it brings a lot to the party.

A Very Cooperative Cocktail
Recipe by gaz regan.
Created for the Cornwall Community Co-Op, New York, for a benefit featuring John Charles Thomas on trumpet, and Bari Mort at the piano, July, 2010.
30 ml (1 oz) aged rum
30 ml (1 oz) Cherry Heering (or other cherry brandy)
30 ml (1 oz) cold chai tea
15 ml (.5 oz) simple syrup (1:1 ratio)
1 lemon twist, as garnish
Stir over ice and strain into a chilled champagne coupe. Add the garnish.

4. If you could pass just one thing on to an apprentice bartender, what would it be?

You’re job is to serve your guests. Serving cocktails is secondary. (God I’m getting bored of spouting that, but . . . )

5. What does the future hold for yourself, and what do you see happening in the future within the industry?

More and more and more teaching for me, I hope. I’ve been learning from 21st-C bartenders for a decade now, and I think I have something to give back.

The industry will hopefully pause to take a breath, get its priorities in shape, then start pushing the envelope some more.

6. What has been your biggest satisfaction from working behind the bar?

Being in the moment (when you’re in the weeds), It’s the Zen of bartending.

7. If you were to have a conversation with a cocktail (and presuming it could talk back to you and tell you its past), which cocktail would it be and why?

The Manhattan, my fave drink. I’d like to find out exactly where it was born, and who gave birth to it.

8. What influences your drinks from outside the industry?

The tastes of friends who have nothing to do with the booze game. It’s fun to figure out what they’d like to drink, etc.

9. If you were to break a bartending golden rule, what would it be?

Talking politics and religion while behind the stick
Drinking on the job

10. Outside of flavour and the craft of the cocktail, what in your opinion affects the appreciation of cocktails the most?

Gulpability. How easily does that drink glide down the throat?

11. If you were to champion a cocktail, which would it be?

Need I say it?

An old favourite that should have been posted some time ago!