Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 31, 2011

Another Engagement Cocktail

Last night Lori and I gathered with some friends to celebrate our engagement at The Passenger. Little did we know, but some of our friends had commissioned a cocktail for the celebration. Bartender Alex Bookless came up with a great drink, inspired in part by the cognac diamond in Lori’s engagement ring, called the Matt & Lori.

Matt & Lori

0.75 oz Calvados
0.5 oz Domaine de Canton ginger liqueur
0.25 oz lemon juice
Splash grenadine
Champagne

Stir calvados, Domaine de Canton, lemon juice and grenadine over ice. Pour into a champagne glass or coupe. Top with sparkling wine and a cherry. Enjoy!

This was a really delightful cocktail and not just because it had been made especially for us. It was rich and flavorful, light and tart. Thanks to Alex for making it for us and all our friends who came to enjoy it with us!

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 30, 2011

Tropic Lightning

I recently bought a bottle of Trader Tiki’s Vanilla Syrup. If you’re not familiar, Trader Tiki’s line of syrups are hand-crafted with an eye towards enabling both bartenders and home enthusiasts who don’t have the time or ability to make some of the critical ingredients for classic and modern Tiki drinks. Each syrup includes on its label a recipe that features the syrup, which is a great way to immediately have a use for your newly-procured ingredient. The recipe that accompanies the Vanilla Syrup is for Tropic Lightning.

Tropic Lightning

1.5 oz light Jamaican rum
0.5 oz Trader Tiki’s Vanilla Syrup
0.5 oz lime juice

Shake briefly with ice and strain into a champagne flute, top with 3 oz Champagne, garnish with a lemon peel.

First, this is just an awesome, awesome cocktail. The vanilla Daiquiri base becomes light and even more refreshing with the addition of Champagne.

But more importantly, this is going to be a cocktail that I remember and drink happily for the rest of my life because it’s what I made for my girlfriend Lori while I asked her to marry me and what we continued to drink after she said “Yes,” and we shared the good news with family and friends.

Trader Tiki’s Vanilla Syrup & the Tropic Lightning: Helping cocktail bloggers get hitched since 2011.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 29, 2011

Derek Brown & Barack Obama

Derek Brown of The Atlantic (and Passenger/Columbia Room) gets interviewed, ahem, by The Atlantic. I do like this exchange though:

What do you say when people ask, “What do you do?”

It’s always a struggle to put it in the right words: I drink for a living. My favorite response came when I was privileged enough to make cocktails at the White House, and I was introduced as the mixologist. President Obama responded, “Isn’t that just a bartender?” I guess booze nerd may be the most accurate. Still, I think bartender works pretty well. As President Obama added after his question, “Well, being a bartender is a lot like being the president: everyone thinks they can do it but they can’t, can they?” [Emphasis added]

Heh, indeedy.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 28, 2011

What James Bond Didn’t Know: A Martini Primer

My latest column at PRZman.com

What James Bond Didn’t Know: A Martini Primer

Let’s get this out of the way right up top: Everything you learned about Martinis from James Bond is wrong.

A proper Dry Martini should have gin, not vodka. It should be stirred, not shaken. And while there’s certainly a modern version with olive brine and olives for garnish, orange bitters and an orange peel is a more suitable given the history of the spirit.

The roots of the Martini date back to the mid 1800s, when a precursor called the Martinez was popular. Made with Old Tom gin (a stronger, sweeter kind of gin that has only recently become available again in the United States) and an even greater measure of sweet vermouth, this cocktail also included orange bitters and Maraschino liqueur.

By the turn of the 20th century, a version of the Dry Martini had emerged. Gone was the Maraschino. Sweet vermouth was replaced by dry vermouth. And Old Tom gin was replaced by London Dry gin (most popular brands like Beefeater or Bombay are London Dry style gins). The cocktail was elegant in its simplicity: 2 parts gin, 1 part vermouth, 1 dash of orange bitters.

This is a true Dry Martini. Everything else is an evolution of taste. From the early 1900s to the 1950s, the Dry Martini changed to include less and less vermouth—eventually almost none.

One of the reasons for the reduction of vermouth in American Martinis was the arrival of vodka to the U.S. market. A true Martini is a cocktail defined by the balance of gin and vermouth. But while gin is full of flavor and can play with vermouth, vodka is a neutral spirit and doesn’t hold up to much vermouth. As a result, Vodka Martinis had increasingly small amounts of vermouth in the glass and eventually becoming nothing more than a huge glass of vodka with an olive or two dunked in. Sadly, this extended to Gin Martinis, which now are also often large, cold glasses of gin with olives.

There’s nothing wrong with sipping a glass of vodka or gin. People should drink what they like. But the Dry Martini is a specific cocktail, made with gin and dry vermouth. If you’ve never had a Dry Martini with a real measure of vermouth in it, I suggest you try it. You’ll be surprised how light and crisp it is (in contrast to that full glass of booze you’re used to). My preferred version of a Martini has equal parts gin and dry vermouth, with a dash of orange bitters and orange peel.

Dry Martini (Fifty-Fifty variation)

  • 1.5 oz London dry gin (Beefeater)
  • 1.5 oz dry vermouth (Dolin Dry Vermouth)
  • 1 dash orange bitters (Regan’s Orange Bitters No. 6)

Stir ingredients in an ice-filled mixing glass until cold and crisp (about 30 strokes). Strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Spray with zest from a freshly cut orange peel. Drop the orange peel into the glass.

Note that I stir my Martini. Contrary to James Bond’s tagline, both shaking and stirring “bruise” a cocktail (a term that refers to how the ice melts and dilutes the drink). Shaking adds water to a cocktail faster than stirring. For an all-booze cocktail like a Martini, you want to slowly chill the drink and keep a silky-smooth consistency, which is why stirring is best.

One closing thought: the word “martini” is not a synonym for the word “cocktail.” Please do not refer to your girlfriend’s Sour Apple Glass of Sugar as a Martini.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 17, 2011

A Cocktail for St. Patrick’s Day

My latest column at PRZman includes a recipe for a great cocktail for St. Patrick’s Day.
St. Patrick’s Day Cocktail Recipe
Bushmills

No other holiday offers as much built-in reason to enjoy beer and spirits as St. Patrick’s Day. From Guinness and Harp to Jameson and Bushmills, the Irish have given us more than their fair share of great spirits.

But what can you drink on St. Paddy’s Day if you want a well-crafted cocktail? Here’s a favorite drink of ours, the St. Columb’s Rill by Philip Ward, one of America’s best mixologists.

As most drinkers of Bushmills know, St. Columb’s Rill is the stream on whose banks the Bushmill distillery was first built and which provides the fresh water that goes into their whiskey. It’s a boozy drink for sure, but one that we really like

St. Columb’s Rill

  • 2 oz Bushmills
  • 3/4 oz vermouth bianco (Dolin or Martini Rossi)
  • 1/4 oz Luxardo Maraschino
  • 1/4 oz Green Chartreuse
  • Dash Bittermens Xocolatl Mole Bitters*
    Combine ingredients and stir over ice. Strain into a chilled coupe glass. Do not garnish.

*Bittermens is a great brand that produces really unique flavors. The Xocolatl Mole Bitters add a great chocolate complexity to any drink and they work phenomenally well in this drink. If you can’t find these or other chocolate bitters (Fee Brothers Aztec Chocolate Bitters are on Amazon), you can substitute a dash of classic Angostura Bitters, though the drink is superior with chocolate bitters.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 16, 2011

Doug Winship’s Basement Bar

I’ve written about Doug Winship of The Pegu Blog’s Basement Bar series in the past, but I’d never gotten a comprehensive look at it. Fortunately, a recent visitor to his basement bar shot a video of Doug making a Mai Tai that really highlights the awesomeness of his personal cocktail pantheon. While the brushed aluminum and neon accents really aren’t my style, the space itself is pretty inspiring. From the large wine rack to cabinet storage on sliding drawers for bottles of spirits to a bitters section to under-counter refrigeration, ice storage, and a sink, it’s hard not to be overwhelmingly jealous of Doug’s set-up. I’m sure Doug worked really hard to get to have such a nice bar and I’m really happy for him and all…but jealous nonetheless. It really makes me want to have not only a home with a basement, but a home with a basement that’s renovated to be a private craft cocktail bar of my own.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 15, 2011

Beer in Madison, Wisconsin


I was in Madison, Wisconsin this past weekend for work – I’d never been to Wisconsin before (other than passing through the Milwaukee and Appleton airports a few times). It didn’t take long for me to get why Milwaukee’s baseball team is called the Brewers. While I’m obviously familiar with Milwaukee as the home of Miller and their associated brands, my familiarity with Wisconsin’s microbrews was limited. Thanks to a rare shipment to Ace Beverage, I was able to try New Glarus Spotted Cow a couple years ago. I’d heard good things from friends who’d gone to school at UW-Madison and ended up really enjoying it.

The first thing that I can say about Madison is that there are a lot of bars. It’s a college town, as well as the state capital, and being Wisconsin, there’s a strong appreciation for good beer. Bars tend to have huge selections of Wisconsin microbrews, at very low cost. Most pints are $3-4. It’s hard to get a High Life in DC at that price, let alone a high-end craft brew.

When I travel and go to a craft cocktail bar, I often have the experience of being overwhelmed by the size and scope of a joint’s menu of original cocktails (Smuggler’s Cove is a perfect example of this). Rarely do I have that experience when going to a bar that has a wide selection of beer, in part because I got into drinking fine spirits at the (now defunct) Brickskeller in DC, with their 800+ beer list. But things were different in Madison. The lists of brews were dominated by tiny Wisconsin microbrews from breweries I’d never heard of.

Starting off at The Old Fashioned, right on the Capitol Square, I was met with a 30 beer tap list. The choices were overwhelming, so I had a New Glarus Spotted Cow. Sure, I wasn’t breaking new ground, but I needed more time to process the beer list before I’d be able to forge into virgin territory. The Spotted Cow is a light and fruity farmhouse ale. It’s dominated by it’s yeast, which isn’t filtered out and adds a lot of layers. As much as I enjoyed Spotted Cow, it turned out to be one of the less interesting beers I had in Madison, simply because it sort of pulls its punches, to quote Erik Ellestad in the comments, is “an uncomplicated beer for days”. That wasn’t the case when  I tried the Evil Doppleganger Double Mai Bock by Pearl Street Brewery in La Crosse. This beer doesn’t pull any punches, with an 8% alcohol content and a lot more hops than I’d expected from a maibock. Still, it’s rich and has a nice sweetness and was a great example of a Wisconsin beer that wasn’t fooling around with flavor.

The next night I had dinner with friends at a great bar and restaurant, The Weary Traveler. There I got to try another offering by New Glarus – a Belgian-style ale called Stone Soup. I thought this was as great an example of an Abbey ale I’ve ever had that wasn’t actually from Belgium. Clean and refreshing, with a nice maltiness and light spice, it paired really well with the infamous Bad Breath Burger (featuring cream cheese, roasted garlic, and other fun things). After dinner we moved to The Paradise Lounge, a dive bar in the truest sense, yet still packed with good craft beer offerings. I found a beer I liked there and stuck with it all night: Capital Brewery’s Maibock. Despite it’s 6.2% ABV, it tasted light and was an easy-drinker, putting malt and a light hint of hops fruitiness on the finish. I really liked the complexity of this Maibock.

The Washington Post is currently running their annual Beer Madness bracket. It’s interesting to see their choices, which are heavily tilted towards breweries in the Mid-Atlantic. There are some great beers in the contest, but after this last weekend in Madison, I could imagine Wisconsin dominating a final four given a few of the entries I had this weekend. The WaPo bracket is interesting, though, for their openness to user voting, which is then fully ignored as their panel makes the decisions about who advances each round. Oh well, at some point I’m sure the Post will get this contest right and find a way to have a really well rounded field and genuine user input. I’d suggest they have a much wider field that helps determine which 64 beers make it into the tournament, then allot at least 30% of the votes for each match-up to the majority choice of users. That would make the whole thing more inclusive of audience participation for something other than wracking up page views.

But I digress… As you can tell, I had a great weekend enjoying fine beers in Madison. Between the daunting selection of Wisconsin microbreweries, the quality of the beers they’re making, and the rock-bottom price point for drafts at bars and restaurants, I will definitely look forward to visiting Madison again.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 9, 2011

Wine Adventures in Chile

Originally posted at Huffington Post

Wine tourism in Chile is, as the concept suggests, about two things: wine and tourism. While there’s no shortage of phenomenal Chilean wines waiting to be discovered, my recent tour of Chilean wineries was a success not because of the standout bottles of wine I sampled, but my holistic experience of visiting Chile to explore their wine regions. I wanted to share my favorite experiences from my tour of Chile, particularly my memories of drinking, eating and relaxing in some of the nicest places I’ve ever visited.

My girlfriend Lori and I flew into Santiago, but immediately transferred to La Serena, three hundred miles north. After a slight problem with our luggage, we went east from La Serena, towards the Andes and the Elqui Valley. While Elqui has been a producer of grapes used in pisco for a long time, it’s a relatively new front in Chilean wine making. Going to Elqui Valley was a great decision – people in the valley were surprised that American wine tourists had thought to come so far beyond the traditional valleys and people everywhere else were impressed that we had broken the mold with a stop in Elqui Valley.

Beyond improving our reputations, the experience in Elqui Valley set the tone for our entire trip. The very first winery we visited was also the smallest: Cavas del Valle. An organic winery, Cavas del Valle produces all of their wines in a single room and ages them in a small cellar in the next door. Our 9 a.m. tour was quick, but included some really interesting wines. Unfortunately they don’t export to the US, but their Syrah Gran Reserva and Cosecha Otoñal, a late harvest wine made with pink muscatel grapes, are almost worth the trip to Chile on their own.

The real reason I wanted to go Elqui Valley, though, wasn’t wineries like Cavas del Valle or Falernia. No, the real reason was I wanted to see some stars. No, I don’t mean Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral, though we did visit her museum in Vicuña. I mean the incredible night sky. The Elqui Valley’s elevation and lack of light pollution make it one of the best spots on the globe to see constellations. In fact, some of the most important research telescopes in the world line the ridges of the Elqui Valley. We visited Mamalluca Observatory, which is geared for tourists, and got to see the wonder of our universe first hand. To take further advantage of the beautiful night sky, while we were in the valley we stayed at a hotel, Elqui Domos, whose unique geodesic domes opened in the top and allowed us to view the night sky from the warmth of our bed.

My favorite winery tour came the day we left the Elqui Valley, flew back to Santiago, and drove north again to the Aconcagua Valley to Errazuriz. Sure, this was because four of my ten favorite wines from the trip were made by Errazuriz. But the wine was just part of the winery tour – their history, their design, their food, and their staff made it a success. We started with a four-course meal on the patio outside the main building, which includes their bottle storage, blending, facility, and some cellar space. The food was typically phenomenal and each course was paired with a new wine. What made the lunch memorable, though, was the view. From our seats we could see the vineyard, which stopped only a few feet away from our table. The view was spotted with palm trees and the slopes of the vineyard alternated between grapes and Haas avocados. The meal was only the start – when we finished our lunch, our guide Rene lead us down the sloping ramp into their old wine cellars. Tradition practically oozed from the walls; the Errazuriz family has produced ton of wine over the last 140 years, not to mention multiple Chilean presidents. Things got really cool when we moved on to their new, state of the art cellar, which really belongs in Architecture Digest. A stunning glass, steel and stone building surrounded by a moat that served to cool the interior, it is a purpose-driven work of art.

Being a winery, the tour really reached its peak when we sat at the large bar in the main house and tasted Errazuriz’s wine with Rene. Lori and I had hit it off with Rene and before long he was breaking out some of their Icon wines: Don Maximiano Founder’s Reserve 2006 and Seña 2007, the former a 94 point wine according to Robert Parker, the latter a 96 point wine. I’m not an expert on scoring wines, but there’s no doubt in my mind that these two are simply brilliant, among the best I have ever tasted. To cap our visit off, Rene gave Lori and I a bottle of their Estate Sauvignon Blanc and a couple of glasses for us to enjoy from the top of the vineyard with a view of Aconcagua Valley. It’s hard to imagine a more perfect visit to a winery anywhere in the world.

While the service we received from our guide at Errazuriz was phenomenal, one thing that impressed us throughout the trip was the quality of service offered by staff at restaurants, hotels, and wineries. One night at Termas de Jahuel, a hotel with a hot spring and spa in Aconcagua Valley, we were watching the sunset on a secluded patio when I turned to Lori and said, “The only thing that could make this sunset better is if we had Pisco Sours.” An instant later one of the hotel staff came upon us and asked if we’d like Pisco Sours while we watched the sunset! The timing was almost as good as the cocktails, which, incidentally, are a must-have while in Chile.

Great hotels were a theme throughout the trip. One of our favorites was Hotel Casa Real, which is located on the grounds of Viña Santa Rita in the Maipo Valley. It only has sixteen rooms and has the feel of an intimate bed and breakfast, despite the fact that it’s a massive mansion dating from the 19th century. The grounds have a regal quality to them and the food was some of the best that we ate on the trip. Toss in a stately game room with a giant billiards table and Hotel Casa Real succeeded in making me happy.

Our other favorite hotel was The Aubreyin Santiago. Located in the popular Bellavista neighborhood, The Aubrey is a new hotel at the foot of Cerro San Cristobal Hill, adjacent to the entrance to the park’s funicular. This place has tremendous character – each room is different – and a remarkably helpful staff. Our room was on the top floor of the hotel, with a great view of The Aubrey’s sleek and sexy swimming pool.

Bellavista is my kind of neighborhood. It’s young, hip, and casual, with scores of great restaurants and bars. After dropping our stuff off at The Aubrey, we went to eat lunch at a very authentic Chilean restaurant, Galindo. The food was memorable, though I had a bit of language miscommunication: I’d thought I was ordering a Pernil sandwich, but ended up with a regular order of Pernil, which was a huge order of roasted pork leg. Fortunately, the pork was delicious and I had no reason to complain. Another food I fell in love with at Galindo was Pure Picante, which are basically spicy mashed potatoes. We had them in a lot of restaurants around Chile, but the Pure Picante at Galindo was the best we found in Chile.

When we arrived in the early afternoon, many dive bars around Bellavista had set out tables and chairs on the sidewalk. While there were already plenty of people enjoying a few beers on a sunny Saturday afternoon, by Saturday night the whole neighborhood was jumping. Since it was our last night in Chile, Lori and I did some bar hopping, visited an art gallery, and made friends with a stray puppy or two. The raucous nightlife of Santiago moved at a much faster pace than the stops in wineries and luxurious hotels that we’d made over the last week and before we knew it, we were ready to head back to The Aubrey and call it a night…and a trip.

Disclosure: I won my trip to Chile from the Wines of Chile and their Tweet, Tweet, Chile contest.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 7, 2011

Understanding the Speakeasy

Originally posted at PRZMan.com

During Prohibition, Americans were forced to seek out drinks at speakeasies, the hidden bars that continued to operate outside the reach of the law. Since federal Prohibition agents were always on the hunt for illegal bars to close down, patrons were urged to “speak easy” and keep their voices low when enjoying illicit spirits.

Fast forward about 80 years. Most American cities have at least one bar that specializes in making great classic cocktails. Moreover, as the craft cocktail scene has emerged, many of the most prominent bars have styled themselves after Prohibition-era speakeasies. Some go so far as to have hidden entrances (PDT in New York City’s door is through a phone booth in a hot dog shop) or require a new password every day to gain entry, like Bourbon & Branch in San Francisco. The styles and customs of craft cocktail bars can be a bit intimidating, so here are a few pointers to successfully navigating a modern speakeasy.

  1. Trust the bartender. The menu may be big and include a lot of cocktails with spirits, bitters and syrups that you’ve never heard of. But trust me; many of them have been around 100 years or more, and they probably wouldn’t have a place on the menu if they weren’t worthy. No one is trying to steer you wrong, so have faith and drink something new to you.
  2. Sit at the bar. Modern mixologists (a term for bartender that has been around since the 1860s) are incredible to watch. If you want to understand why your drink tastes so good or why it takes a while to make, sit at the bar and watch the process of building balanced cocktails.
  3. Go on a journey. A craft bartender can make you drinks you’ve never heard of before. Talk to them about what you like and they’re bound to open your eyes to cocktail possibilities you didn’t even know existed.
  4. Be patient. Each drink is made to order and ingredients are poured with precision to ensure that every time that drink is made, it tastes the same. Using jiggers isn’t a sign of an amateur bartender, but of someone seeking to make you the best drink possible.
  5. Dress the part. No, you don’t have to wear a bowtie, vest and have rolled sleeves that reveal a smattering of sailor tattoos. But most good cocktail bars expect their customers to look respectable. Dress as if you were going to a decent restaurant and you should be fine.
  6. Know the costs. Depending on where you are, cocktails are likely to run between $8-15. You’re paying for quality, so you’re getting your money’s worth.  Tip 18-20% for good service and more if you had drinks comped.
  7. Don’t order vodka. You may love Ketel One on the rocks or a Grey Goose and soda, but you’re missing the point if that’s what you order at a craft cocktail bar. Remember to trust the bartender and try something new—you won’t regret it.
Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | March 4, 2011

Jack Rose is coming

Great news from Fritz Hahn:

Jack Rose, the whiskey-centric bar from the owners of Bourbon and Breadsoda, is set to open in Adams Morgan’s old Third Power Fitness building on April 15. Look out for three outdoor decks facing three different directions, an extensive bourbon menu that includes several pre-Prohibition selections and a cozy speakeasy-style basement bar.

I’ve been watching the construction at Jack Rose on a daily basis since last summer (it’s on my daily commute to work). It’s going to be huge. Plus I’ve been able to go to a few of the preview dinners that owner Bill Thomas has been hosting at Bourbon – the food and cocktails plan to be great. The bar will also host what promises to be one of the finest collections of bourbon and Scotch whisky in not only Washington DC, but likely anywhere in these United States. Seriously: I can’t wait.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | February 17, 2011

The Highball Dilemma

My latest cocktail column is up at PRZMan, “The Highball Dilemma.” It’s a variation on a post I’d written here a couple years ago, “Getting Past the Highball at Parties.” The text of the column is below the fold. Read More…

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | February 16, 2011

The Wormwood Bible

The name comes courtesy of @ogsocial on Twitter, inspired by the bitter wormwood in Maraska Pelinkovac and the Arcade Fire.

 

The Wormwood Bible

3 oz Beefeater 24
0.75 oz Maraska Pelinkovac
0.75 oz Dolin Dry Vermouth

Build in an ice-filled mixing glass and stir until nice and cold. Strain into a chilled coupe glass

A nice, modern twist on a Perfect Martini, with a bitter element complementing the tea flavors of the Beefeater 24 well.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | February 14, 2011

Bold Choices

“Bold choices take you where you’re supposed to be.”

This is a really great, creative ad that happens to be for Jim Beam. I’m not sure that it works unless you buy that Jim Beam is, in fact, a bold choice. I like it better as an ad for how you should live your life than an ad for bourbon.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | February 7, 2011

Getting Geeky on Dilution and Ice

Via Doug at The Pegu Blog, Giuseppe Gonzalez of Painkiller in New York City has an exhaustive post up on his exploration of how he and his colleagues arrived at a Frozen Daiquiri recipe for their relatively young Tiki-style bar. It’s really a geeky look at how to account for the speed at which ice dilutes a cocktail with water and how much the volume of water needs to change with each recipe variation for a particular drink (from changing ingredient ratios to changing spirit brands). Not surprisingly, recipes that work perfectly as shaken Daiquiris do not translate perfectly once they are blended in a blender. Since Painkiller serves some blended drinks, it was critically important that Giuseppe understand how recipes need to be changed for a blender and what level of dilution is necessary to make balanced blended drinks. The process causes him to fundamentally challenge assumptions he’d built over years as a craft cocktail bartender and the process is quite remarkable to watch. It’s also a testament to how hard today’s craft bartenders work to provide their customers with complex, balanced, enjoyable drinks.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | February 4, 2011

PRZ Man

A couple months ago I was approached by a friend of a friend who was starting a new online men’s magazine called PRZ Man. The concept is that unlike many men’s magazines that are targeted towards guys who are already pretty stylish or fit or socially savvy, PRZ Man would seek to appeal to all guys. From food to style to relationships and cars, the idea was to provide approachable content. I was asked to be their in-house cocktail columnist. My first post at PRZ Man, “My Martini Isn’t Blocking Your Shot,” is now online.

I don’t have a set posting frequency, but I’ll hopefully have a post up every week or two. I’ll also be doing occasional podcasts. Check out the column and the rest of PRZ Man – they’ve been live for a couple weeks and have a ton of content up already. A reprint of my first piece is printed below the fold, though it is a modified version of a post from 2009 called Expanding Horizons.

Read More…

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | February 2, 2011

Novo Fogo Organic Aged Cachaça

Novo Fogo is an organic, microdistilled cachaça from Morretes, Brazil, with two bottlings – a Silver that is aged in steel barrels and the Gold, which is aged in 50 gallon oak barrels that previously housed bourbon for at least two years. While I really like the Silver and will quickly admit that it’s probably my favorite cachaça these days, I thought the Gold would be more interesting for a review, as aged cachaça is something of a novelty in the US market.

Whenever I’m trying an aged spirit, I look for something that can be both enjoyed straight or in a cocktail. Novo Fogo Gold suits this bill. The oak barrel imparts a vanilla and caramel scent on the nose, with a bit of tropical fruit as well. On the palate you get more of the vanilla, with honey and some light baking spices, as well as banana and tropical fruits. The finish is long and quite smooth, with a bit of oak-driven spice. It’s smooth enough to drink neat or on the rocks, but it also works very well in cocktails, as we’ll see below.

But beyond the quality of the spirit, my favorite thing about Novo Fogo is that they thoroughly get the value in promoting their bottlings with high quality, craft cocktails. As regular readers of this blog know, I hate spirit company PR that includes recipes with sweet & sour mix, flavored vodka, or super-sweet liqueurs. I like getting ideas for cocktails that I would actually want to drink, as opposed to cocktails that 20 year old club goers from Strong Island want to drink. Very few brands use their high-end bartender brand ambassadors as the source for the recipes they use to promote their spirits, but Novo Fogo does (Jacob Grier of Portland works with them now and his Crystal Caipirinha is pure brilliance). Novo Fogo’s mixology section is full with interesting cocktails that I actually want to make. But this is my favorite so far:

The Cornerstone

2 oz. Novo Fogo Organic Aged Cachaça
1/2 oz. Trader Tiki’s Hibiscus Grenadine (I used Employees Only Grenadine)
1/4 oz. Fernet Branca
2 dashes orange bitters

Place all ingredients into a mixing glass. Fill with ice. Stir and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with orange peel.

I’m always looking for interesting ways to use Fernet and boy is this one of them. This is a really awesome cocktail. It rich and boozy, but very complex. What I really love about it, though, is it is a good alternative for me when I don’t want a gin, rum, or whiskey based booze-driven cocktail. Check out Novo Fogo’s mixology section – there really are a lot of other good recipes that show the range of uses of both bottlings.

Disclosure: This post was made possible because I received free bottles of Novo Fogo Silver & Gold for the purposes of sample and review.

[Update, 2/3/11]:

After I posted this review, Dragos Axinte, proprietor of Novo Fogo, emailed me to relate the history of The Cornerstone. Here’s his telling, reprinted with his permission:

I’d like to give you the story of The Cornerstone. Just a few months ago I had no idea what Fernet was, but found by following the right people on Twitter that it was something I needed to know. I decided that I would make a cocktail with cachaça and Fernet, but first I had to figure out what it was. I went and bought a bottle, took it home, opened it, sipped a shot, then actually shot the next one (looking for that warm stomach feeling) and instantly I knew what my cocktail would be. I had the proportions on the first try; that’s usually what happens, as I compose the cocktails in my head first.

Then I needed a name. I did a little contest with Seattle bartenders, asking them to name my cocktail. That really surprised them – that’s not usually how it works! (which is why I did it…) The prize was a pair of Sounders tickets. Jay Kuehner of Sambar, one of our most talented, suggested something to do with Foz do Iguaçu, where Brasil and Argentina meet (and also Paraguay). But the winner was Andrew Bohrer of Mistral, equally talented man, with The Cornerstone. He thought that the drink was good enough to become my cocktail cornerstone. He is rooting for me to obtain my mixology credibility.

Dragos included a new set of Novo Fogo-based cocktails which continue the trend of being interesting, complex, and, at the bottom, things I would want to drink. While many are originals by Dragos, Jacob Grier, Evan Martin, and Thomas Bondesson also contribute to the selection. I’m definitely going to try some of them out at home, though many include syrups and tinctures that I’ll (or you) will have to make from scratch.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | January 28, 2011

Defending Whisky Bloggers

My friend Mike C. at Whiskey Party has a must-read post blowing up the strawmen of whisky blogger hating journalists. I think the key part of the long and thoughtful post is this:

According to Forbes (ironically a whisky blogger himself for online retailer The Whisky Exchange), whisky bloggers are social misfits harboring grudges and hurling insults from the bowels of their parents’ basement. Yet they are also “shameless bootlickers” happy to write a good review in exchange for free samples and a chance to climb their way into the industry. They are disproportionately powerful techno-geeks capable of warping the Google rankings for their own nefarious purposes. Yet they are also insignificant know-nothings, and a flash-in-the-pan best ignored by our betters.

They are self-styled digital emperors, unfairly breaking the industry’s tidy monopoly on criticism & marketing, in which, “only a few years ago there were only a few people to keep happy: a long-established coterie compromising a handful of 5-star hotel managers and a few highly-qualified specialist journos.”

That is a galling quote from Forbes, and one that hints at a profound laziness on the marketing end of the whisky industry. But all bluster and hyperbole aside, Forbes’ rather schizophrenic rant isn’t really about whisky bloggers. It’s about the way technology is changing the relationship between brands and consumers, and how distilleries are managing that transition.

Swap a few words and the critique offered by Forbes isn’t terribly different from what political reporters have been saying about political bloggers for the last eight-plus years.

The rest of the piece is too rich to warrant easy summary, so I’d suggest you just go give it a read.

I won’t be surprised if, at some point, cocktail journalists start getting twisted up about cocktail bloggers in similar fashion. I haven’t seen anything quite like the attack from Forbes on scotch bloggers, but don’t doubt the sentiments could be shared on the cocktail side of professional journalism. The most obvious thing, at the end of the day, is that there isn’t some magical difference between someone who writes about scotch or cocktails professionally and someone who does those things as a hobby. The quality of the writing will be judged by the readership and audiences will fluctuate accordingly.

The only other comment I’d make about whether or not bloggers become a problem for spirits companies is that this is less about the opinions of bloggers in these fields than it is about (1) the actual merits of the products these companies sell and (2) the amount of resources these companies have put towards educating the blogging public about the merits of their products. If spirits companies are genuinely concerned about what bloggers are saying about them, they should be spending money on staff capacity to interact with these communities full time. Maybe your boutique PR firm isn’t cutting it with their press release spam to bloggers. Maybe bloggers don’t really care about your label redesign after all. Maybe the top ten cocktail or whisky bloggers online merit the same attention as the top ten professional journalists in those fields. And maybe, after all, you just make a mediocre spirit that has gotten where it is because of tens of millions of dollars of advertising convincing people that they will be beautiful and sophisticated for drinking your product; that is, maybe it’s time to make something good instead. Unless and until spirits companies put meaningful resources and meaningful strategies behind the outreach they do to spiritous bloggers, they really don’t have a right to complain about the consequences for poor reception from these same bloggers.

At least, that’s my two cents.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | January 27, 2011

10 Favorite Wines from the Tweet Chile Trip

I just got back from a fantastic seven day trip to Chile, sponsored by the Wines of Chile, as a prize for their Tweet Chile contest. It was an even better trip than I could have possibly hoped for prior to going. Chile is a phenomenally beautiful country and the people there are friendly and hospitable. We got to stay at some fabulous hotels and eat at great restaurants (many at wineries). In the end, we visited even more wineries than we’d initially planned: Cavas del Valle, Vina Falernia, Errazuriz, Santa Rita, Montes, Bisquertt, and Lapostolle. We also got to visit Pisquera ABA, a pisco distillery in Elqui Valley.

I was accompanied on the trip by my beautiful and brilliant girlfriend Lori. Neither of us had ever visited a winery before and frankly neither of us are particularly big wine connoisseurs. But we both enjoy good drinks and have a big background in tasting fine cocktails that we thought would be a good baseline for tasting wine. We’d also never been to Chile before, so the trip was going to be a whole boatload of new for us.

I’ve thought a lot about how I wanted to present information from my trip. I was tweeting throughout the experience, as was Lori. The #TweetChile hashtag is a pretty good live record of the vacation, including our winery visits and food experiences. Part of me wants to do a write-up for each winery we visited, but frankly I don’t think I have that much energy in me.

In the end I decided a Top Ten list of my favorite wines from the trip made the most sense. This is just a list covering the wines I tasted on the trip. It doesn’t cover all Chilean wines. It doesn’t even cover every wine made by each winery we went to. For the most part, we were tasting between three and seven wines at each visit; but most of the wineries we went to made between eight and twenty wines. Take this list with a grain of salt, as it’s just my opinion about which wines were my favorite from the trip. Lori would definitely have some different opinions.

Without further ado:

  1. Seña 2007 (Errazuriz): Seña is a project of Errazuriz’s Eduardo Chadwick and Robert Mondavi. It was recently given a 96 point score by Robert Parker. This was the best structured and most complex wine I tasted in Chile. It had a big body and a long finish. On the nose there was red fruit, red pepper, light leather, currant, and oak. The taste started with sweet fruit, sour cherry, light peat, spearmint, pink peppercorn, coffee and chocolate. It evolved and revealed layers with each sip. I’d never had a 96 point wine before, but this made me understand what a truly great wine could be.
  2. Don Maximiano Founder’s Reserve 2006 (Errazuriz): Another Errazuriz wine, the Don Maximiano has aromas of cherry, cassis, blackberry, along with wet leather and green olives. The palate is bold, with lots of light spice and round tannins. There are tastes of light red fruit, pomengranate, clove, as well as scorched earth and minerality. It has a very long finish, with a fresh, rich mouth feel. It too received a high score from Robert Parker: 94 points.
  3. Casa Real Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 (Santa Rita): We enjoyed this wine with dinner at Hotel Casa Real, on the premises of the Santa Rita winery. I think this was the only Cabernet Sauvignon we had on the trip, but it was incredible. It was a big wine, with intense ripe plum, blackberry, and vanilla on the nose. It had many layers and expanded over time, with a chewy mouth feel and a long finish. It tasted of dark fruit, oak, vanilla, and earth. I was probably more surprised with this wine than any other I tasted on the trip.
  4. Clos Apalta 2008 (Lapostolle): The 2005 version of this was rated the best wine in the world by Wine Spectator in their 2008 rankings. I have no doubt this vintage is also incredible, but in the ten minutes I had to taste this wine it remained quite closed. I know there was more to it, but based on what I tasted it, this is where it stacked up. I would have loved to have it with more time, but so it goes on a winery tour. On the nose there was red pepper, oak, leather, and tobacco. The palate was plum, very robust blueberry. It has a medium mouth feel and has a long finish. It pretty much stuck to my cheeks it was so chewy. There was a great sweet/dry balance. Again, I’d love to try this with an hour to let the wine breath first.
  5. Carmenere Reserva 2007 (Falernia): A deep purple color is met with green pepper, red fruit, plum, and chocolate on the nose. On the palate, there are great fruit and oak notes, with some spice. It’s very rich, with good chewiness. One of my favorite carmeneres.
  6. Ecos de Rulo Carmenere 2008 (Bisquertt): Deep purple wine. Purple fruit, red pepper, and leather on the nose. The mouth feel is medium-rich, with a long but soft finish and mild peppery notes. There are soft, round tannins with cherry, chocolate and tart oranges on the palate.
  7. La Joya Reserva Syrah 2009 (Bisquertt): An opaque purple wine yields a nose of leather, tobacco, blackberry, light oak, and vanilla. After about fifteen minutes, the nose brought out graham cracker and chocolate, which was delightful. The wine had a very thick, rich mouth feel, with cherry, black pepper, blackberry, gold rum, and vanilla on the palate. It also evolved some smokiness.
  8. Sauvignon Blanc Single Vineyard 2010 (Errazuriz): This clear straw colored wine has strong notes of honey, citrus, green vegetables and olive oil on the nose. It has a very fine mouth feel with light bubbles. The palate brings mild citrus,  green apple, good minerality, and complex vegetal notes. It’s very balanced and was probably my favorite Sauvignon Blanc on the trip.
  9. Casa Apalta Sauvignon Blanc 2010 (Lapostolle): Mild yellow color with tropical notes, banana, green apple, rosemary, and a flash of green grape on the nose. The palate brings peach, lime, savory spices, toffee, and a mild pepper on the front of the tongue, with crisp minerality. A very complex wine, with good structure.
  10. Sauvignon Blanc Late Harvest 2009 (Errazuriz): I’d never had a dessert wine made from Sauvignon Blanc before and it knocked my socks off. This had a golden yellow color, with elderflower, honey, and passion fruit on the nose. These aromas carried through to the palate, which had bright notes of elderflower, vanilla, and honey, with a very rich, thick mouth feel.

While I could easily give four or five more descriptions of wines that I really loved, I’m going to stop at ten. But the other notables on my list are:

  • La Joya Reserva Sauvignon Blanc 2010 (Bisquertt)
  • Pinot Noir Wild Ferment 2009 (Errazuriz)
  • Syrah Reserva 2007 (Falernia)
  • La Joya Late Harvest Gewurztraminer 2007 (Bisquertt)
  • Montes Alpha Chardonnay 2008 (Montes)
  • Medalla Real Reserva Chardonnay 2009 (Santa Rita)

As you can tell, I was the most impressed with the wines from Errazuriz, from their top of the line icons to their more entry level offerings. In most places there were a number of wines I liked and others I didn’t like. Only at Bisquertt did I truly enjoy every single wine I tasted. I credit this to the fact that every Bisquertt wine I had was incredibly balanced, a great statement of the talents of their wine maker Joana Pereira.

The only other thing I’d like to note is that I’m primarily a white wine drinker. Gruner Veltliner, Viognier, and Riesling are my favorite varietals. But it wasn’t until this trip that I really began to appreciate how great great reds can be – in terms of their depth, complexity, structure, and layering. As I wrote this list, I was shocked how dominated it was by reds. This wasn’t because Chilean whites are lacking – far from it, they were incredible. But my new found appreciation for Carmenere, Syrah, and Pinot Noir won out.

Between the hospitality of the people we met and the outstanding wines we drank, I see myself as a convert to Chilean wine and an enthusiastic one at that. Go out and try some of the wines I’ve listed above. They range in price, from under $20 to over $100, but all should be available in the US. And if you have trouble finding them online, I’d say it’s worth the trip to Chile to have them in person. Seriously.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | January 26, 2011

Destilacion

destilacion

I really love this sign from Pisquera ABA, a family-owned pisco distillery in the Elqui Valley of Chile.

Posted by: Matt Browner Hamlin | January 14, 2011

Tweet Chile: Days Away

I leave for Chile tomorrow with my beautiful and charming girlfriend Lori. The trip is the grand prize for the Tweet, Tweet, Chile contest, which I was fortunate enough to win this fall (thanks to everyone who voted for me).

Here’s the deal. Lori and I will be traveling for seven days all around Chile. We arrive in La Serena on Sunday and head towards Valle del Elqui, where we will visit the Aba Pisco distillery and Vina Falernia Winery. On Tuesday we’ll head back to Santiago, then drive north to the Aconcagua Valley, where we will visit the Errazuriz Vineyard. On Wednesday, we head south to the Maipo Valley, where our destination will be the Santa Rita Winery. We’ll stay the night right at the vineyard, at the Casa Real Hotel. On Thursday we leave the Maipo Valley and head down the Pan-American Highway towards the Colchagua Valley. We’ll spend two nights in the Colchagua Valley, visiting first the Montes Winery on Thursday and the Bisquertt Family Vineyards on Friday. We’ll be back in Santiago on Saturday and return to the States on Sunday night. It’s a whirlwind trip, but I cannot wait for it to start.

While I’m traveling, I will be tweeting up a storm. Follow me on Twitter @mbrownerhamlin. I’ll also be using the hashtag #TweetChile.

I really want to thank The Wines of Chile Experience for this incredible opportunity and thank, once again, everyone who took the time out of their lives to vote for me to win this trip.

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