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Most bartenders treat cocktails like a vocabulary test. Memorize 200 specs, drill the classics, hope the right one surfaces under pressure on a busy Friday night. It's exhausting, brittle, and a losing skill to keep training. Sadly, this is how I learned.
Michael Ruhlman, the writer behind The French Laundry Cookbook with Thomas Keller and the cult-favorite Ratio, argues the entire hospitality industry has been drilling the wrong muscle for decades. Cocktails aren't recipes to be memorized. They're families governed by ratios. Once you see the underlying math (two parts spirit, one part vermouth, dash of bitters) you stop memorizing the Manhattan, the Rob Roy, the Martinez, the Palmetto, the Star. You generate them. This episode is the missing layer between recipe collecting and real fluency behind the bar, anchored in the fundamental ratios that quietly govern almost every classic on a menu.
Expect to Learn:
Links:
Service starts now.
Follow the show: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube
I talk to people in and around the service industry space. I'm looking to hear from the people I wish I could have talked to when I was coming up in bars. Said another way: I am trying to make sense of this wild, beautiful mess that can be a life working in bars, and help others that are feeling similarly confused and/or lost. Check out the Podcast Website Here and get in touch with me!
Classic Episodes You May Like:
As always, I’m just here taking notes, trying to figure out what it all means.
Cheers
By Andrew RoyMost bartenders treat cocktails like a vocabulary test. Memorize 200 specs, drill the classics, hope the right one surfaces under pressure on a busy Friday night. It's exhausting, brittle, and a losing skill to keep training. Sadly, this is how I learned.
Michael Ruhlman, the writer behind The French Laundry Cookbook with Thomas Keller and the cult-favorite Ratio, argues the entire hospitality industry has been drilling the wrong muscle for decades. Cocktails aren't recipes to be memorized. They're families governed by ratios. Once you see the underlying math (two parts spirit, one part vermouth, dash of bitters) you stop memorizing the Manhattan, the Rob Roy, the Martinez, the Palmetto, the Star. You generate them. This episode is the missing layer between recipe collecting and real fluency behind the bar, anchored in the fundamental ratios that quietly govern almost every classic on a menu.
Expect to Learn:
Links:
Service starts now.
Follow the show: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube
I talk to people in and around the service industry space. I'm looking to hear from the people I wish I could have talked to when I was coming up in bars. Said another way: I am trying to make sense of this wild, beautiful mess that can be a life working in bars, and help others that are feeling similarly confused and/or lost. Check out the Podcast Website Here and get in touch with me!
Classic Episodes You May Like:
As always, I’m just here taking notes, trying to figure out what it all means.
Cheers