Bourbon and Branch - San Francisco
by admin on Jan.27, 2009, under Mixology, Worlds Best Bars
San Fransisco is a mecca of bar culture. When you’re in town it doesn’t take long to realize that bars and bartenders seem to take things a little more seriously, putting pride into their cocktail experience. I had heard the term “Speakeasy” as a term to describe a bar or tavern but never really given it much thought. I was fortunate enough to visit Bourbon and Branch, which is about the closest thing to a modern speakeasy out there. Speak Easy was a slang term used to describe an establishment that illegally sold alcoholic beverages during the period known as Prohibition (1920–1933) when the sale, manufacture, and transportation of alcohol was illegal. The term comes from a patron’s manner of ordering alcohol without raising suspicion — a bartender would tell a patron to be quiet and “speak easy”. Although we’re not currently entrenched in Prohibition, the simple act of going into a busy establishment where you could have a conversation at a comfortable volume and get a great drink is, unfortunately, a rarity. After a couple of failed attempts, I finally got a reservation via email and they sent me the address and my password via email. When we arrived at the unmarked building with no number on the door, (we figured out we were at the right place by process of elimination) we knocked. The door opened a crack and we were asked for a password first, then a reservation name. Once inside we settled into the bar for our 90 minute time allowance and enjoyed everything that Bourbon and Branch had to offer.
Cell phone use is not allowed, allowing uninterrupted conversation, and I almost got the feeling that we had stepped back to a point in time when invasive technology wasn’t everywhere. The feeling of being in a comfortable place insulated from the outside world, where you could literally enjoy the social element of a public house the way things used to be.
Bourbon and Branch is a place I’d love to work, with a full sized test kitchen, where bartenders are encouraged to experiment and come up with new and unique ingredients and cocktail creations. I got to try a house sour with home made pineapple-black pepper bitters, and it made me realize the importance of having a creative space to work with where a bartender can play and come up with unusual ingredient collisions.
For a list of the Bourbon & Branch house policies, and to check out their site click here.
Every ingredient was measured and balanced with care, the way it should be done, no bottled or canned juices in site, lots of fresh cirtus, and a mix of classic and modern cocktail techniques rounded out the visual experience, no drink crossed the bar without first being tested by the bar chef/mixologist/bartender/bar keep… lets just leave it at beverage professional.
One of the most surprising delights of Bourbon & Branch was their commitment to stay Vodka free. Full flavoured cocktails littered the menu made with brandy, gin, whisk(e)y of every variety, tequila, and rum, but no vodka. In fact one of the rules of the house is “dont even think about asking for a Cosmo.”
Although B & B is not the only bar in San Francisco to make such a commitment, in a time where (unfortunately) vodka makes up between 1/4 and 1/3 of all spirits served, it’s refreshing to see
that people have the balls to buck the tasteless trend and truly get back to basics.
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