Posts tonen met het label Home. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Home. Alle posts tonen

dinsdag 12 mei 2020

Cocktails in a box by Belroy's

 
During this lockdown lots of webshop-projects are really thriving. We can now order gourmet meals from Michelin Star restaurants ‘in a box’, delivered to our doorstep. So why not order high quality, handcrafted cocktails the same way? I’m not talking about bottled cocktails that you can also buy in the supermarket or liqueur store. No, I’m talking about the real deal, hand crafted cocktails prepared by a bartender in your favourite cocktailbar, sealed in a plastic bag and sent directly to your home ‘in a box’, together with the garnish and instructions on how to serve the drink.

Cocktails in a box are not exactly new, but they became ‘the new normal’ for cocktail enthusiasts since the start of the coronacrisis. A few years ago I already wrote about the SIPSNSODA cocktailboxes, which were probably among the very first in Europe. Today lots of cocktailbars all around the country are selling their weekly offer through a webshop.
I even spotted some local restaurants in my neighbourhood (e.g. Barnaba)
, offering complete take-away or home delivered meals, including good quality cocktails for a great start. Fight the crisis by enjoying your perfect aperitif-moment at home.


Probably the first premium cocktailbar who jumpstarted this new trend in Belgium was Belroy’s
, the well-known Antwerp based company of Ben Belmans and Dieter Van Roy. Next to their cocktail catering activities they have two popular cocktailbars: Belroy’s Bijou (Graaf Van Egmontstraat 20) and Belroy’s MAS (Godefriduskaai 14). They already sold their own range of bottled spirits and cocktails (available at the better liqueur shops), but recently they also started a new webshop with a weekly range of crafted cocktails. Let’s try this. Is this really the same cocktail-experience you get in their bar?

You will miss the cosy atmosphere of the bar and the jokes made by Dieter while preparing your drink, but the drinks are definitely the real deal. Easy to serve and packed with of flavour. Dieter sent us a box with 4 drinks, which we could sample:

 
  • El Presidente : A rum-based cocktail with Belroy’s Rum, vermouth, dry Curacao and pomegranate. This cocktail is also available in their bottled range. 
  • Boulevardier : This Negroni variation is a very tasty mix of Michter’s whiskey, Italian vermouth and bitter. 
  • Ipanema Swizzle : A very fruity cocktail with Belroy’s Rum, passionfruit, white vermouth, pomegranate, ginger and lemon. 
  • Virgin Mojito : Some days are better without alcohol, this mocktail is a sweet lime mix with mint, served in a mix with Perrier.


We decided to use these drinks for a high quality aperitif moment, so we also made sure to get some matching snacks for each drink. We really enjoyed our aperotime. The drinks were extremely close to what we would get in the bar, so maximum points for quality.


Let’s hope most bars will keep this service also after the coronacrisis, it can come in handy when you’re entertaining friends at home and don’t want to spend too much time preparing drinks. Not everyone has the same bartending skills as Tom Cruise 😉


Personally, I think it’s a great service which will work perfectly for a lot of people, but I’d still enjoy the drinks a little bit more sitting at the bar in Antwerp, chatting with Ben or Dieter.


Disclaimer : All pictures and texts are copyrighted by Geert Conard and Esito Management & Communications unless stated otherwise in the article. While some items might have been gifted by the producer or distributor, these are in no way paid promotions or recommendations.

vrijdag 3 januari 2020

Mise-en-place : Making clear ice at home


As you may have noticed in my photos, during the last year I have started to make my own clear ice. There are a couple of very good reasons why you should try it :
  • Clear ice is much sexier on photo and it will absolutely impress your guests.
  • Clear ice doesn’t change the color of your cocktail. Even more, it will be almost invisible in your cocktail. 
  • Clear ice melts much slower, because there are no air bubbles inside. 
  • Clear ice won’t attract strange smells from other stuff in your freezer.
  • Clear ice won’t make your soda foam like crazy.
First, why isn’t all ice clear?
When water freezes from all directions towards the middle of the ice cube, all tiny air-bubbles and impurities are pushed to the middle where it gets locked in as a pretty much white substance. We are used to it and it won’t bother most people. It doesn’t even matter when you are using small cubes or pebbles. But when you serve a beautiful classic cocktail like an Old Fashioned or a Negroni, you really want a large cube of ice. Using a cube of clear ice will absolutely lift your cocktail to the next level.
 
You can buy clear ice in specialized wholesale stores, but is it hard to make your own clear ice at home ? Actually it isn’t, but it does take a little bit of practice.
 
Making your own clear ice by directional freezing
 
What do you need to make clear ice at home ?
  • A small insulated coolbox. Probably the smallest size you can find in your local camping store. Often blue with a white top. It has to be small enough to fit in your freezer. Most people have a very small maximum height in their freezer, so measure up before you go to the store. I bought my coolbox at AS Adventure. Probably the first time ever I went to a camping store voluntarily 😉
  • A breadknife
  • A rubber hammer. You can find them in the same camping store or in any DIY shop.
  • A large cutting board
The first thing you need to do is remove the lid of the coolbox. You won’t need it anymore. The next part is the hardest part. It will probably take a few badges before you’re 100% sure of the timing. Fill the box with tab water and put it in the freezer (without the lid!). Now let it freeze until it’s more or less 70% frozen. Yes, this is definitely the hardest part and it’s different with every freezer. The trick is to remove the ice before it’s completely frozen. This way the air and impurities won’t be frozen, but remain in the water which you can easily remove.
 
I asked my #drinkstagram-buddies and got totally different answers, with freezing times between 24 and 36 hours. Try freezing for 24 hours and have a look at the result. Adjust accordingly.
 
What happens ? Because you let the lid off and all other sides of the box are insulated, the freezing goes directional and starts at the (open) top, freezing downward to the bottom of the box. If you let it freeze too long, everything will be frozen to a solid block, freezing the impurities into an unclear part near the bottom.
 
Of course I also “forgot” my block a couple of times and let it freeze for several days. No worries, you’ll just have a harder time cutting off the “unclear piece” of the ice block. This will be more or less half of the block.
 
If you get it right, you take the box out of your freezer when it’s only frozen for ±70%. You put the box upside down on your cutting board and wait a few minutes until the big block of ice slides out of the box. Put the box to the side. The ice block is now upside down on your board.
 
You’ll notice that the bottom half is actually a large block of sexy clear ice. The top half still has a big air bubble in it, filled with water. With the knife you can easily cut off the top part, only keeping the solid bottom. This wasn’t my best batch ever, I have had blocks with a smaller air/water bubble. It’s normal that your remaining block is more or less half of the total block.
 
How do you cut such a big block of ice ? Make a first cut with your breadknife. When you can put the knife steady in the cut, give it a blow with the rubber hammer, it will splice the block. If you own a meat-axe, it will also get the job done and it can handle the blows from the hammer a bit better.
 
I always cut the block into cubes, pack them in freezer bags to keep them clean and store them in the freezer, inside my open coolbox. Whenever I want to make a cocktail, I get a cube from the box and cut it to the right shape to match the size of the glass.
 
 
For cutting the cube into the right size for the glass I use an old, but still sharp steak knife. Remember, I’m talking about HOME use. Bartenders use specialized tools like I already talked about in an earlier article. They use (expensive!) ice-saws in different sizes, ice tridents and several types of knives.

Impress your guests and try it out for yourself. It can be done pretty cheap and it’s really not that hard to do. You just need a bit of practice to get it right 😉

Disclaimer : All pictures and texts are copyrighted by Geert Conard and Esito Management & Communications unless stated otherwise in the article. While some items might have been gifted by the producer or distributor, these are in no way paid promotions or recommendations.

woensdag 4 oktober 2017

Grohe Blue Home - Cocktails met een scheutje water

Voor een cocktailbar is het uiteraard een enorme luxe wanneer gekoeld water met of zonder bruis gewoon uit een kraan komt. Geen overvloed aan flesjes en ook geen verdwenen bubbeltjes uit een aangebroken fles die een dag blijft staan.

Grohe ontwikkelde met de Grohe Blue Home een oplossing die je ook thuis kan installeren als keukenkraan. Deze kraan heeft uiteraard een “gewone” waterhendel voor kraantjeswater, maar ook een knop waarmee je kiest voor gefilterd en gekoeld water, naar keuze plat, bruisend of zacht bruisend. De magie gebeurt in een toestel ter grootte van een kleine desktop PC, die onder het aanrecht kan worden geïnstalleerd. Hierin zit naast de koelinstallatie uiteraard ook een filter en een CO2 flesje voor de bubbels.

Om deze nieuwe kraan te promoten vroeg Grohe aan Manuel Wouters of hij enkele lekkere cocktails kon ontwikkelen waar een scheutje water een echte meerwaarde in zou vormen. Voor wie de wenkbrauwen optrekt met de gedachte aan water in zijn cocktail, denk dan even aan de waanzinnig populaire Aperol Spritz, waar ook steeds een scheutje bruiswater in moet !

Op uitnodiging van Njam! TV en Grohe mochten we naar cocktailbar SIPS om de cocktails te proeven. Deze stelden absoluut niet teleur, de ‘La Poire’ cocktail met bourbon vond ik zelfs een echte topper.


COCKTAILKAART 
GROHE BLUE HOME