Jay Kuehner’s Signature Drink: The Caracas
It’s more ritual than drink, says Sambar’s longtime bartender.
Sambar’s Jay Kuehner, in his native habitat.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Prepping the sugar.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Muddling, er, grinding.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Next up: coffee and a thinly sliced lime.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Slices get dredged in sugar and coffee.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Readying the rum.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:Eat the lime wheel.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:This photo should be self-explanatory.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
View Slideshow » Illustration:And finally, the Pampero Aniversario.
Photo: Lucas Anderson
Welcome to local barman/writer Andrew Bohrer’s occasional series, explaining the signature concoctions of esteemed local bartenders.
There is a King Cocktail, and there is a Cocktail Historian, and Seattle used to have a Cocktail Whisperer though he no longer calls himself that.
I require more organizational skills for the following moniker, but what I aim to be for you is a Cocktail Cartographer. Seattle is a fine city to get a great cocktail but where can you best get your whistle wetted, and by whom?
The most enjoyable drinks aren’t necessarily on the menu; ask a bartender and he or she likely has a signature concoction. I plan to map out where to find these hidden gems and cult cocktail classics. The result: a most useful compendium of where find our city’s finest drinks. First up, the Caracas…
The Drink: The Caracas
Made By: Jay Kuehner
One of Seattle’s greatest drinking experiences is walking into Sambar and having the extremely talented (and often unbuttoned) Jay Kuehner give you a shot. Jay has been the longtime bartender at the worth-the-hype drinking hole attached to Le Gourmand in Ballard. Though most of Jay’s cocktails are gentle like downy feathers and composed like sonnets, the Caracas stands out as its own ritual.
How do you order the Caracas? “We will decide if you are in need of it,” says Kuehner. It isn’t a cocktail that you order; it is a cocktail that happens when the time is right. The Caracas is a very simple drink, just a shot of rum with a little bit of a snack. The snack is a wafer-thin lime wheel, with one half dipped in super fine coffee and and the other in super fine sugar. This black-and-white citrus wheel is for you, the brave consumer, to eat whole.
At some point during chewing, you’ll be handed a shot of Pampero Aniversario Venezuelan rum. Just throw it back. The result is a bitter, sweet, tannic, dry, citric roller coaster of flavors that one single cocktail can’t match.
The Caracas
1 wafer-thin lime wheel for each shot
Finely ground coffee
Finely ground sugar
1.5 ounces Pampero Aniversario rum
Instructions: Dip one half of the wheel in finely ground coffee and the other half in finely ground sugar. Eat the lime wheel. Shoot the rum. Consult the slideshow if you need more guidance.
Tags: Sambar, Cocktail Cartography, Jay Kuehner, Andrew Bohrer



Jay first served me a Caracas about 4 years ago; and it still, to this day, remains unmatched in sheer flavor to mouth feel to unadulterated joy ratio. Jay is a one of a kind. Thank goodness he’s one of ours.
With all due respect to those of us who tend or have tended the bar, when it comes to inventiveness, knowledge and hospitality, Jay stands alone. Wherever you are in this town, if you are sipping a scratch cocktail of some sort, the inspiration for it in some way can be traced back to Jay. Kevin Bacon’s got nothing on this guy!