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By Carey Jones for DETAILS.
(photo: Getty Images) "What bartenders geek out about takes years to trickle down to the consumer," says Brad Thomas Parsons, the author of Bitters: A Spirited History of a Classic Cure-All. For the past five years, that's been elaborate homemade concoctions like ginger-peppercorn syrup and habanero bitters--basically, anything that ups the ante on a craft cocktail. Now, instead of keeping those bottles behind the bar, they're selling them (online, mostly) to enthusiastic customers who are eschewing liquor-store stalwarts. Here, the best bartender-made secret ingredients to buy. • • • Bitters Jack McGarry, co-owner of The Dead Rabbit in New York City, wanted bitters to match the 19th-century-style drinks he serves (cocktails in the 1800s were less sweet, more of the put-hair-on-your-chest variety). "I read a book from 1884 that talked about Orinoco bitters and how they were superior to Angostura," he says. "So I started researching." His Orinoco bitters mix Christmas spices (allspice, clove, vanilla) with cardamom and sharp, biting angostura bark--which, ironically, the eponymous product no longer uses. $25 Also try: Bittercube, which is based in Milwaukee, produces seven varieties, including the rum-friendly Jamaican #1 and #2. $10 to $22 Read more: 5 Cocktails Everyone Should Know How to Make Syrups Tiki drinks are notoriously complex to perfect: You need obscure-sounding components like orgeat, velvet falernum, and "Don's Mix"--which no one made to the standards of Blair Reynolds, who owns Hale Pele tiki bar in Portland, Oregon. "Then I realized, why shouldn't I?" he says. His B.G. Reynolds line includes orgeat, an orange-almond syrup that's key to tropical drinks, notably the mai tai. $12 to $21 Also try: Small Hand Foods, veteran bartender Jennifer Colliau's Bay Area line of pre-Prohibition-cocktail building blocks, offers pineapple gum syrup for pisco punch and tonic syrup (just add soda). Starting at $10 Mixers Bottled mixes get a bad rap, and for good reason. But Bittermilk, from the proprietors of the Gin Joint in Charleston, South Carolina, takes the just-add-booze concept off the supermarket shelf. Formulas include a Oaxacan Old Fashioned and a Smoked Honey Whiskey Sour. "If we gave people a recipe using smoked honey, they'd try to do it at home, and they'd do it at too high a heat," says co-owner MariElena Raya. $15 Also try: The Violet Hour in Chicago is launching a series of "sauces" that nail the proportions of classics. Mix the Original Sauce--scorched demerara sugar, bittering agents--with a brown spirit and you've got a professional-grade old-fashioned. More from DETAILS: 11 Ways to Master Any Wine List Brad Pitt Is Back and Sexier Than Ever The Best And Worst Booze To Drink If You Want To Lose Weight Shirtless Nick Jonas Explains How He Got His New Buff Body 14 Healthiest Snack Foods to Buy The Lazy Person's Guide to Cocktails -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |