Bar Essentials | Basics with Babish - YouTube

Channel: Babish Culinary Universe

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Hey guys, welcome back to Basics with Babish - where this week, we're delving into the always well-stocked bar behind me.
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We'll take a look at some five o'clock essentials that will help you make a host of different cocktails for your weary co-workers and your spouse's friends.
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Let's get down to basics.
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Basics with Babish and the all-new basicswithbabish.com are brought to you by Squarespace.
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Alright guys, before we delve into cocktail essentials, we need to delve into some essential cocktail tools.
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Let's start with a muddler, essential for everything from muddling herbs to muddling fruit.
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Then a jigger, essential for measuring; some Angostura bitters - comes in handy with a great many cocktails;
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and then the components of a cocktail shaker.
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Here, we've got a large stainless-steel tumbler with which we can mate a rubber-rimmed pint glass, or we can take another smaller tumbler,
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and, giving that a quick pound with the heel of our hand, seal the two together for a good shaking,
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and then when it's time to retrieve the fruits of our labor,
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simply cock the smaller tumbler forward and pour into your desired vessel - possibly through a strainer like this
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which keeps any fruit pieces or other detritus from ending up in your glass.
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Then, it's always handy to have a few squeeze bottles around for simple syrups
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and you want to have a combination lemon zester and channel knife like this for different types of garnishes
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and then a long cocktail stirring spoon is essential for both looking fancy and stirring some of those taller cocktails.
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And you probably already got a vegetable peeler, but it comes in handy in the bar.
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So that's all the absolute essentials that you're going to need now.
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What do you say we tie one on? Let's start with a gin and tonic.
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Into an old-fashioned glass, we're pouring two ounces of good gin,
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squeezing the juice of half a lime, and topping up with some tonic water.
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Everyone's aunts favorite cocktail really is that simple. Garnish with a lime wedge, if desired, and serve.
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This is a very simple starting point, so measure and taste until it resembles that cocktail you've ordered on every nervous first date you've ever been on.
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Next up, we're moving to slightly more delicious territory: the Moscow Mule.
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We're going to need the juice of half a lime and four ounces of vodka - traditionally Smirnoff (not sponsored, just sayin').
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Add to an ice cube inside of a copper mug and then get ready for–
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get ready to add a little bit of, um–
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Oh shoot, we need the tool that I left out from the beginning: the waiter's friend.
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Now we can top this guy up with ginger beer and add a squeeze of lime.
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You'll notice that I'm measuring alcohol, but not mixers, because this is going to come down to your taste.
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This is about how much booze you want in there - you can go ahead and adjust accordingly.
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Here comes that long spoon, looking pretty cool, and serve one of these guys up on a summer day to the delight of your friends and family.
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Speaking of summer cocktails, how about one of my favorites, the Negroni?
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With this guy, we're talking equal parts; that is, one ounce each - of sweet vermouth, good gin, and Campari, which is a bitter Italian liqueur.
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Like most classic cocktails, these guys come together to form something greater than the sum of their parts.
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And they are complemented by a little twist of orange peel. Sub the gin for whiskey and you've got yourself a Boulevardier.
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But now it's time to talk one of the most classic and contested of cocktails: the martini.
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We're making both a dry and dirty martini using different combinations of sweet vermouth, vodka, and olive juice.
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For the dirty martini, I'm going with 2 ounces of vodka, 1 ounce of sweet vermouth, and 1 ounce of olive juice.
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Not how I take my martini, but who am I to judge?
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You'll also notice that we are chilling our martini glasses with ice and water while we give our martini a good shake.
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And now I can absolutely guarantee you that I'm going to make a huge– uhh– oops–
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See? I already– already made a mess.
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Dump out the ice water, clean up the inevitable spillage and pour your martini into the waiting chilled glass.
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If you're using a Boston shaker, use that strainer that we mentioned earlier.
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And of course, this lightly tinted green martini would not be complete without an olive impaled upon a toothpick.
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Why anybody would drink their martini this way,
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I don't know, but again not here to judge; here to inform. So, here's how to also make a dry martini.
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We're using three and a half ounces of vodka to half an ounce of sweet vermouth.
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As always, these amounts are going to depend on the size of your martini glass - it is the proportions that you want to keep in mind.
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And remember that you can always stir this instead of shake it, if you're not feeling very James Bond-y today.
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And to prevent any and all ice fragments from ending up in our drink, we're going to strain this one through a fine mesh sieve.
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And there you go: two different martinis for two very different types of people.
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Next up, how about we refresh our palate with my favorite drink: the old fashioned?
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We're starting with two ounces of high-quality bourbon to which we're going to add a few dashes of angostura bitters.
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If you spill any down the side of the glass like that, a tradition that I just made up says that you need to lick it with your finger
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before adding a small dash of simple syrup and giving it a stir.
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Then if you want to add a little bit more complexity and theatricality to your old-fashioned,
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simply slice yourself a thin round orange peel,
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hold over an open flame, and give it a squeeze.
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If you make sure to use a fresh orange, the essential oils will spray out and ignite in a splendor of citrus flame.
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Give it a little rub around the rim of the glass and drop into the cocktail.
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And there you go: the old-fashioned, a cocktail you kind of have to like if you have any sort of facial hair or tattoos.
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What about the cocktail that you have to like as a living, breathing, human being? For that we need to turn to the margarita.
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We are salting the rim of a glass using kosher salt and the juice of a lime, adding four ounces of high-quality tequila.
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I cannot stress high-quality enough. There's a reason that people think that tequila gives them terrible hangovers is 'cause they're drinking crappy tequila.
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We're also going to add one ounce of triple sec, which is an orange liqueur.
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You can adjust these proportions to your taste,
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but I like my margaritas with a shout of tequila and a whisper of triple sec and, of course, a full squeezed lime.
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And if you're feeling particularly wimpy, a little squirt of simple syrup.
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This is a margarita with all the bells and whistles, but bear in mind you can make a really solid margarita
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with nothing more than very good tequila and lime.
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But for our next cocktail, we need a mélange of sugar, herbs, and alcohol
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That's right, we are making a mojito.
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Cut one whole lime into slices and add to a collins glass with a bunch of fresh mint
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and either a couple sugar cubes or a squirt of simple syrup.
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And, at long last, it's our muddlers time to shine.
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The objective here is to get all the juice out of the limes and to get the mint to release its essential oils.
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Once we feel like we've done that, add some ice to the glass along with two ounces of white rum.
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Give this a good mix with your long fancy spoon to make sure that all these flavors are well incorporated
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before topping up with a bit more ice and some plain club soda.
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Make sure everybody's mingling, getting to know each other, and garnish with a wedge of lime.
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Now this is one of the many cocktails that is improved vastly with a metal straw
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They're like, ten bucks for a pack of six on Amazon and they are worth it.
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And, after all this cocktail making, I gotta say: I'm a little thirsty.
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Here's to you guys.
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