This Telegraph article has the Cocktail
Lovers listing their 10 favorite cocktail bars in London by occasion, energy
level, and ambiance. Amongst the illustrious few? The Zetter Townhouse, for
“English Eccentricity”. Naturally, Old
Boy, naturally…
30 September 2012
DAVE ARNOLD ON COCKTAIL SCIENCE
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Dave Arnold, one of Drink Factory’s
favorite enfants-terribles of the food science, (and now cocktail science)
world, breaks down EVERYTHING he has learned about cocktail science in the past
year. Dave Arnold is the man behind the excellent bar, Booker and Dax, in NYC.
24 September 2012
Microbiologist Gastronomist
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A very interesting New York Times profile
of Rachel Dutton, a Harvard microbiologist
who has become the leading resource for chefs and food scientists to get even
more involved in their food, down to the micro-organic level. Ms. Dutton’s work with microorganisms has
been used by the likes of David Chang and Harold McGee to further their own projects and research. Her career all started
with her fascination with examining the colonies of bacteria that live on hundreds of different
types of rinds of cheese.
Flavour of the Week
The flavour of
the week is Manuka Honey. Manuka honey is a honey derived from the Manuka
plant, otherwise known as Leptospermum scoparium (manuka myrtle,
New Zealand teatree, broom teatree, or just tea tree or Leptospermum). The manuka
is a shrub or small tree native to New Zealand and southeast Australia.
Manuka
plant itself has an astringent medicinal quality to its leaves and bark, and
when distilled into a hydrosol can be quite pungent. This savory, earthy,
medicinal quality translates to a robust, spicy, faintly funky flavoured honey.
Manuka honey is also normally creamier in texture than most honeys. Manuka
honey is widely used throughout New Zealand, though is not generally known off
that continent.
In
New Zealand it serves not only as a flavouring agent but is also purported to
have many medicinal qualities, among those a strong efficacy as an antiseptic. Manuka
honey is graded by its “activity levels”, meaning how active and how many
enzymes there are in the honey at the time of its bottling. Those enzymes
purportedly are what provide the health benefits of the honey itself.
Though
the health benefits of the substance are intriguing enough to seek it out, the
flavour itself is the real star. Riding a fine line between menthol and
barnyard, sweet and savory, Manuka honey has got to be one of the more
interesting sweeteners one can find. And perhaps it’s good for you, too!
Manuka
honey is best when it is not heated, which makes it an interesting choice to
use as a sweetening agent in a cocktail.
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