The Essential Home Bar
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The Essential Home Bar
Okay, a topic which you lushes may actually have some useful input on. I am stocking my liquor cabinet for the holiday season and realize that I really only do justice to drinks which I like (hint: whiskey) or cocktails, like Old Fashioneds and Manhattans. So, search your gin-soaked minds for things which you think are imperatives for a well-stocked home bar. I'm thinking:
-Bourbon
-Rye
-Irish Whiskey
-Scotch
-Bombay Gin
-Vodka
-White Rum
-Dark Rum
-Spiced Rum
-Cointreau
-Cognac
-Sweet and Dry Vermouth
-Angostura Bitters
-Simple Syrup
-Olives
-Maraschino Cherries
-Lemons
-Sugar Cubes
-Tonic
-Soda
-Coke
Of course, the beer and wine will be accounted for, glassware, etc. but if there is any equipment (shaker?) or specialty device, lay it on me slick. Help me get my wife's lady-friends drunk enough for a rough threeway under the mistletoe.
-Bourbon
-Rye
-Irish Whiskey
-Scotch
-Bombay Gin
-Vodka
-White Rum
-Dark Rum
-Spiced Rum
-Cointreau
-Cognac
-Sweet and Dry Vermouth
-Angostura Bitters
-Simple Syrup
-Olives
-Maraschino Cherries
-Lemons
-Sugar Cubes
-Tonic
-Soda
-Coke
Of course, the beer and wine will be accounted for, glassware, etc. but if there is any equipment (shaker?) or specialty device, lay it on me slick. Help me get my wife's lady-friends drunk enough for a rough threeway under the mistletoe.

"That rifle on the wall of the labourer's cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy.
It is our job to see that it stays there." - George Orwell
Re: The Essential Home Bar
Tequila
Baileys and/or Kahlua
And this might just be me, but I always keep white corn whiskey around now (Jim Beam Ghost, George Dickel #1, etc., or homebrew).
Baileys and/or Kahlua
And this might just be me, but I always keep white corn whiskey around now (Jim Beam Ghost, George Dickel #1, etc., or homebrew).
A novice is someone who keeps asking himself if he is a novice. An intermediate is someone who is sick of training with weak people and an advanced person doesn't give a shit anymore. - Jim Wendler
Re: The Essential Home Bar
You gotta tequila you like?

"That rifle on the wall of the labourer's cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy.
It is our job to see that it stays there." - George Orwell
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Re: The Essential Home Bar
Glassman and Andy like a fine can of Sterno filtered through piece of 3 day old French bread.
Arms are the only true badge of liberty. The possession of arms is the distinction of the free man from the slave.
I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.

I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.

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Re: The Essential Home Bar
I'm sorry, you said drinks for the home. Bread filtered Sterno is more of an outside drink. Best enjoyed after scoring enough loose change to buy some Indian cigs.
Arms are the only true badge of liberty. The possession of arms is the distinction of the free man from the slave.
I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.

I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.

Re: The Essential Home Bar
You look like you have it covered. Depending on the type of company (close friends/family vs. business) and the type of party (informal vs. formal); I would recommend copious quantities of each of the following:
All mid-price range bought at Cosco or Liquor Supermarket (what's on sale)
1 Irish Whiskey
1 Bourboun
1 Single Malt Scotch
1 Canadian Whiskey or Rye
1 Gin
1 Sipping Vodka
1 Mixing Vodka
1 Light Rum
1 Dark Rum
1 Sipping Tequila
1 Mixing Tequila
1 Cognac
1 Brandy
1 Inexpensive but good quality Red Wine that you like
1 White Wine (probably Pinot Grigio) for the Ho's.
Anything you know that someone you like or care about drinks, (I.E. one of my in-laws only drinks Johnny Red, I have another good friend who drinks exclusively Maker's and Coke).
To complement the above:
Soda (coke, sprite and ginger ale)
Tonic
Club Soda
Ice
Limes
Lemons
Cherries
Olives
Sour Mix
Bitters
Bottle Openers
Corkscrews
Nice but not necessary:
Ginger beer (if you can find it) - With the Dark Rum and lime = Dark and Stormy (delicious)
Apple Schnaps/Apple Pucker - For anyone (chicks) that like Appletinis
Frangelica, Bailey's, Kahlua - Mudslides, Nutty Irishmen, etc.
Creme de Menthe, Peppermint Schnaps - Candy Cane Drinks
Hurricane Mix, Margarita Mix, Pina Colada Mix
Blender
Shaker (you can use two different size cups - smaller inside the larger)
Mint
Lime Squeezer
Martini Glasses
All mid-price range bought at Cosco or Liquor Supermarket (what's on sale)
1 Irish Whiskey
1 Bourboun
1 Single Malt Scotch
1 Canadian Whiskey or Rye
1 Gin
1 Sipping Vodka
1 Mixing Vodka
1 Light Rum
1 Dark Rum
1 Sipping Tequila
1 Mixing Tequila
1 Cognac
1 Brandy
1 Inexpensive but good quality Red Wine that you like
1 White Wine (probably Pinot Grigio) for the Ho's.
Anything you know that someone you like or care about drinks, (I.E. one of my in-laws only drinks Johnny Red, I have another good friend who drinks exclusively Maker's and Coke).
To complement the above:
Soda (coke, sprite and ginger ale)
Tonic
Club Soda
Ice
Limes
Lemons
Cherries
Olives
Sour Mix
Bitters
Bottle Openers
Corkscrews
Nice but not necessary:
Ginger beer (if you can find it) - With the Dark Rum and lime = Dark and Stormy (delicious)
Apple Schnaps/Apple Pucker - For anyone (chicks) that like Appletinis
Frangelica, Bailey's, Kahlua - Mudslides, Nutty Irishmen, etc.
Creme de Menthe, Peppermint Schnaps - Candy Cane Drinks
Hurricane Mix, Margarita Mix, Pina Colada Mix
Blender
Shaker (you can use two different size cups - smaller inside the larger)
Mint
Lime Squeezer
Martini Glasses
Re: The Essential Home Bar
I don't drink much of it, but I keep a bottle of Trianon. It's definitely quality stuff, but I buy it mostly because the American importer is a dude from my area.Fat Cat wrote:You gotta tequila you like?
A novice is someone who keeps asking himself if he is a novice. An intermediate is someone who is sick of training with weak people and an advanced person doesn't give a shit anymore. - Jim Wendler
Re: The Essential Home Bar
On Vermouth and gin- I've been experimenting and researching the classic Martini lately. Many people use the wrong vermouth- Martini and Rossi is all over the place, but the name is a total coincidence. It has an oregano base. For Martinis, if you are going for a classic profile, the appropriate Vermouths are French, and are more floral in scent. Dolin or Noilly Prat are what I use. Very Important: have some inert gas in a can to displace oxygen from the the Vermouth after you open it. It's a wine, and oxidizes and goes bad just like any bottle of wine. You can use the same bottle of Vermouth for weeks without it getting yucky this way. It's handy to have the gas any way so you can open multiple bottles of wine and have a glass of whatever anytime.
My usual evening drink is a stiff Martini these days so I've been taste testing a lot of them. There's a huge number now. My personal top pick is Tanqueray #10. It's their flagship gin. Boodles, Broker's, Bombay Sapphire, those are good too. But to me the Tanqueray # 10 is head and shoulders above.
The Martini gets ignored a lot these days, or made only half-heartedly because it's so old and simple, but it rewards quality ingredients. Depending on mood I make 3 recipes:
Original 1896: equal parts Vermouth and gin, dash of bitters.
1920's to 40's: 2 parts gin, 1 part Vermouth, dash of bitters (my fave)
1960's: as previous, but omit bitters.
I am not a fan of the later versions with almost no Vermouth. That's just pretending you're not drinking straight gin.
My usual evening drink is a stiff Martini these days so I've been taste testing a lot of them. There's a huge number now. My personal top pick is Tanqueray #10. It's their flagship gin. Boodles, Broker's, Bombay Sapphire, those are good too. But to me the Tanqueray # 10 is head and shoulders above.
The Martini gets ignored a lot these days, or made only half-heartedly because it's so old and simple, but it rewards quality ingredients. Depending on mood I make 3 recipes:
Original 1896: equal parts Vermouth and gin, dash of bitters.
1920's to 40's: 2 parts gin, 1 part Vermouth, dash of bitters (my fave)
1960's: as previous, but omit bitters.
I am not a fan of the later versions with almost no Vermouth. That's just pretending you're not drinking straight gin.
Last edited by Schlegel on Thu Dec 11, 2014 1:57 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"
Re: The Essential Home Bar
double post
Last edited by Schlegel on Thu Dec 11, 2014 1:56 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"
Re: The Essential Home Bar
Oh, and also make some home-made sour mix. If you've never had a whisky sour or amaretto sour with home-made sour you are in for a treat. Keeps a week and more in the fridge no problem.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"
Re: The Essential Home Bar
good shit lads keep it up

"That rifle on the wall of the labourer's cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy.
It is our job to see that it stays there." - George Orwell
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Re: The Essential Home Bar
Herradura AnjeoFat Cat wrote:You gotta tequila you like?
Also, a licqueor would be nice. A little Gran Marnier suits a lot of tastes. Maybe some Frangelico.
Re: The Essential Home Bar
And this may just be the crowd of ne'er-do-wells I hang with, but someone always wants Crown or a Canadian blend (Seagrams, VO, etc.).
A novice is someone who keeps asking himself if he is a novice. An intermediate is someone who is sick of training with weak people and an advanced person doesn't give a shit anymore. - Jim Wendler
Re: The Essential Home Bar
Got dat covered with the Rye. My mama is Canadian and they don't actually call it "Canadian Whiskey" there.stosh wrote:And this may just be the crowd of ne'er-do-wells I hang with, but someone always wants Crown or a Canadian blend (Seagrams, VO, etc.).

"That rifle on the wall of the labourer's cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy.
It is our job to see that it stays there." - George Orwell
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Re: The Essential Home Bar
I'm with Tonka on the 1 mixing and 1 sipping tequila. Sauza Hornitos or Espolon blanco for mixing. I like Chinaco and Casa Noble Anejo for sipping. I have heard good things about Clooney's Casamigos as well. Just get an anejo or a nice reposado and don't buy Patron. One caveat.. unless you have tequila fans around the anejo may not get touched and it is expensive. The sipping tequila would be low on my priority list for a Christmas party, YMMV.
I would also ditch the spiced rum unless you have a relative that drinks captain morgans. You could spring for a sipping rum (same caveat as the sipping tequila). I've just recently got into rum but I like the Ron Zacapa 23 yr and 10 Cane. For dark rum get Goslings and some ginger beer for Dark and Stormys (Barritts is good). D&S are easy as fuck to make, look cool and everybody loves them.
Get the small vermouth bottles cuz that shit spoils quick.
Bitter herbal liquers- Chartreuse, Campari, Fernet, Averna, Ramazotti etc. The baddest ass one I've ever had is Riga Black Balsams from Latvia.
Always good to have some non-herbal/bitter liquers as well: Amaretto, Kahlua, Grand Marnier, etc. Those would be low on my list but some of my family has been known to sit down and polish off a handle of amaretto over ice during the gift grab.
For mixing gin in something like a negroni, I like Beefeater, for martinis or highballs Hendricks is a good because it is a little more subtle on the juniper side and has more depth of flavor, vegetal/herbal-wise.
For tools- you should be fine with a jigger, a boston shaker and a strainer. I would specifically not have a muddler so I wouldn't be required to muddle anything.
What kind of bourbon and scotch are you considering?
I would also ditch the spiced rum unless you have a relative that drinks captain morgans. You could spring for a sipping rum (same caveat as the sipping tequila). I've just recently got into rum but I like the Ron Zacapa 23 yr and 10 Cane. For dark rum get Goslings and some ginger beer for Dark and Stormys (Barritts is good). D&S are easy as fuck to make, look cool and everybody loves them.
Get the small vermouth bottles cuz that shit spoils quick.
Bitter herbal liquers- Chartreuse, Campari, Fernet, Averna, Ramazotti etc. The baddest ass one I've ever had is Riga Black Balsams from Latvia.
Always good to have some non-herbal/bitter liquers as well: Amaretto, Kahlua, Grand Marnier, etc. Those would be low on my list but some of my family has been known to sit down and polish off a handle of amaretto over ice during the gift grab.
For mixing gin in something like a negroni, I like Beefeater, for martinis or highballs Hendricks is a good because it is a little more subtle on the juniper side and has more depth of flavor, vegetal/herbal-wise.
For tools- you should be fine with a jigger, a boston shaker and a strainer. I would specifically not have a muddler so I wouldn't be required to muddle anything.
What kind of bourbon and scotch are you considering?
Ed Zachary wrote:Best meat rub ever is Jergen's.
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Re: The Essential Home Bar
One more thing... can often help to make simple syrup ahead of time and store it in a squeeze bottle like this:


Ed Zachary wrote:Best meat rub ever is Jergen's.
Re: The Essential Home Bar
Champagne... Or whatever you call it in the U.S. Chicks love the 'bubbly'... Can't go wrong with it.
Get half a dozen bottles. Nothing too expensive but not so cheap that is tastes bitter/flat.
For instance this Lindauer Brut Cuvee NV would be classed 'mid-range' as far as taste goes (good for xmas party), but it only costs $16 down here, so it's a bargain:
And I second the tequila for margarita's and other girl friendly drinks.
Remember to have a selection snack foods or whatever so it can suit what you are drinking.
Get half a dozen bottles. Nothing too expensive but not so cheap that is tastes bitter/flat.
For instance this Lindauer Brut Cuvee NV would be classed 'mid-range' as far as taste goes (good for xmas party), but it only costs $16 down here, so it's a bargain:

And I second the tequila for margarita's and other girl friendly drinks.
Remember to have a selection snack foods or whatever so it can suit what you are drinking.
What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.
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Re: The Essential Home Bar
No bar is complete without Tullamore Dew irish Whiskey and Jack Daniels.
Hell, David Allen Coe even sang a song about Jack.
Hell, David Allen Coe even sang a song about Jack.

"Tell A.P. Hill he must come up."
Re: The Essential Home Bar
Don’t believe everything you think.
Re: The Essential Home Bar
I know that it's a matter of taste, but I can never get into Old No. 7. I would reach for the Booker's first every time. I do like Tullamore Dew but my favorite is Redbreast Irish Whiskey.Bob Wildes wrote:No bar is complete without Tullamore Dew irish Whiskey and Jack Daniels.
Hell, David Allen Coe even sang a song about Jack.

"That rifle on the wall of the labourer's cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy.
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Re: The Essential Home Bar
I like having 4-5 bottles of my go to sipping whiskeys and a big ole bottle for mixing, Beam and even the Evan Williams are not bad for mxes.
Have you tried Blanton's? It's perhaps my fav. Bourbon followed close by Four Roses.
Have you tried Blanton's? It's perhaps my fav. Bourbon followed close by Four Roses.
"He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that." JS Mill
Re: The Essential Home Bar
Sipping Tequila, Deleon (anejo is best but the diamante is just fine as well)
Blow their minds with home infused spicy vodka. Grab a bottle of Titos or some other Organic vodka. Buy a mix of Scotch bonnets and other fiery peppers. Fill a mason jar with the voda and peppers, leave in the fridge for at least 5 days, preferably a couple weeks. Shake the jar every couple days.
PS - either be careful getting rid of the seeds before putting it in the mason jar or sift it before pouring into another bottle to make sure no seeds make their way into the drink...no bueno.
Then grab a lychee liquor and do 4 oz vodka to 1 oz lychee and watch the bitches swoon...you're most welcome my feline friend. Your wife will think you are a god and her girlfriends will agree, after a couple of these :)
For the faint of heart, mix regular vodka with the spicy stuff until they can deal with the heat.
Blow their minds with home infused spicy vodka. Grab a bottle of Titos or some other Organic vodka. Buy a mix of Scotch bonnets and other fiery peppers. Fill a mason jar with the voda and peppers, leave in the fridge for at least 5 days, preferably a couple weeks. Shake the jar every couple days.
PS - either be careful getting rid of the seeds before putting it in the mason jar or sift it before pouring into another bottle to make sure no seeds make their way into the drink...no bueno.
Then grab a lychee liquor and do 4 oz vodka to 1 oz lychee and watch the bitches swoon...you're most welcome my feline friend. Your wife will think you are a god and her girlfriends will agree, after a couple of these :)
For the faint of heart, mix regular vodka with the spicy stuff until they can deal with the heat.
I don't think you realize the depths of Jezzy's sexual greed~ EZ
Big, strong men (preferably in kilts) are my lesbian kryptonite~Jez
the right kind of male can make Jezzy's reproductive instinct overcome her preference for black vagina~Gary
Big, strong men (preferably in kilts) are my lesbian kryptonite~Jez
the right kind of male can make Jezzy's reproductive instinct overcome her preference for black vagina~Gary
Re: The Essential Home Bar
Agree that Beam is totally adequate for mixed drinks and cocktails. I have not tried Blanton's.Blaidd Drwg wrote:I like having 4-5 bottles of my go to sipping whiskeys and a big ole bottle for mixing, Beam and even the Evan Williams are not bad for mxes.
Have you tried Blanton's? It's perhaps my fav. Bourbon followed close by Four Roses.

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Re: The Essential Home Bar
Blanton's is one of the best readily available bourbons. I've done tastings with it next to PVW Lot B, 15, and 20yr. Not as special as the VW but very very close. A bit pricey, I think a fifth is $55. For cheap but good mixing bourbon consider WL Weller. I spoke with an avid collector/distributor a few months ago and he thinks that Heaven Hill is going to be the next big distillery in light of Buff Trace running so low on quantity over the last few years. They make Bernheims and Larceny, with wheat, and Elijah Craig and Henry McKenna, with rye.Fat Cat wrote:Agree that Beam is totally adequate for mixed drinks and cocktails. I have not tried Blanton's.Blaidd Drwg wrote:I like having 4-5 bottles of my go to sipping whiskeys and a big ole bottle for mixing, Beam and even the Evan Williams are not bad for mxes.
Have you tried Blanton's? It's perhaps my fav. Bourbon followed close by Four Roses.
Agreed on Redbreast being the best Irish. I also like the Powers gold label for lower end. It's become my go to when someone suggests shots of Jameson.
Ed Zachary wrote:Best meat rub ever is Jergen's.
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Re: The Essential Home Bar
HOLYFUCKTHO!! PVW.
Was at a function in Boston this fall.....(several IGXrs in attendance no less). I had a chance to try Pappy Van Winkle 23 yr family reserve. It completely lived up to the hype... I fell into a deep despair at its price point and availability.
Was at a function in Boston this fall.....(several IGXrs in attendance no less). I had a chance to try Pappy Van Winkle 23 yr family reserve. It completely lived up to the hype... I fell into a deep despair at its price point and availability.
"He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that." JS Mill