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Shift Change

Roster Changes at Rob Roy

Andrew Bohrer’s day job means Philip Trickey is back behind the stick.

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Philip Trickey is back at Rob Roy on Friday nights.

Let’s count down to the weekend with personnel matters at one of Seattle’s most talent-packed bars, shall we? Well known writer-barman Andrew Bohrer, he of the cocktail cartography, booze blogging, and entertainingly ranty Twitter feed, is stepping away from the bar to become spirits director for Vinum Importing. Bohrer was the man who made Seattle (and the country at large) sit up and take notice of MistralKitchen’s bar program, but most recently he’s been tending at Rob Roy on Friday nights.

The timing worked out nicely, because Philip Trickey, an early hire by Rob Roy owner Anu Apte, was looking to pick up more shifts as he returned from paternity leave. Trickey spends the rest of his week at Purple Cafe and Wine Bar, but a night a week at a more classic spot, he says, helps him retain his edge. His first shift back at Rob Roy is February 17.

Bohrer hasn’t given up bartending entirely. When Vessel reopens in its new location in the next few months, he plans to work a monthly. He also has a book in the works.

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Tags: Rob Roy, Shift Change, Andrew Bohrer, Philip Trickey

Cocktail Cartography

Anna Wallace’s Signature Drink: The Pretty Ricky

It’s not currently on the menu at Walrus and the Carpenter, but feel free to ask for one anyway.

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Anna Wallace: Maker of a rickey so good it deserves to be named after a 90s hip-hop quartet. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Anna Wallace: Maker of a rickey so good it deserves to be named after a 90s hip-hop quartet. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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A Rickey is soda and lime with a spirit, in this case gin. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Instead of Rose’s lime juice, Wallace mixes up a less chemical-based lime cordial. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Top it off with soda, in this case Fever-Tree spring club soda. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Floral garnish optional, but highly classy. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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The finished product is simple, summery and damn pleasant to drink. Photo: Lucas Anderson

Welcome to local barman-writer Andrew Bohrer’s occasional series, charting the signature concoctions of esteemed local bartenders.

The Drink: The Pretty Ricky
Made By: Anna Wallace

A few years back, judgmental bartenders started putting jihads out on ingredients they didn’t like. Blue curacao, creme de menthe, and peach schnapps offended sensibilities with artificial color (but Campari was ok?) and disappeared. However wiser, more diplomatic, crafty bartenders like Anna Wallace of Walrus and the Carpenter decided to improve matters, starting with lime flavoring. “The lime cordial I make is so bright and lovely that it only seemed natural,” she says of devising her own non-artifical blast of concentrated lime. Think Rose’s lime juice, only without all of those scary chemicals, and whatever you use to dye beer green. Anna is building while others tear down.

Instead of lime flavoring #47 from a factory indiscernible from a pharmaceutical plant, Anna’s lime cordial uses lime juice and peel, from lime trees. It also swaps sugar for high fructose corn syrup. The perfect drink to showcase Anna’s lime cordial is her version of a gin rickey. Rickey is a simple tem meaning soda and lime with a spirit. But this drink was so much better than the average rickey that one of the restaurant’s oyster shuckers suggested that it be called the Pretty Ricky after the rap group from the 90s.

This cocktail is not currently on the menu at the Walrus and the Carpenter but bar staff is always happy to make one, says Anna. It pairs perfectly with oysters and its fresh flavor will transport your brain to a sunny day of drinking on the patio and forgetting our cold seaside winter weather.

Anna’s Lime Cordial Recipe
1 1/2 cups water
3/4 cups sugar
3/4 tsp citric acid
3/8 tsp tartaric acid
Juice of 4 limes, pulp strained
Rind of 2 limes

Combine and whisk sugar, citric and tartaric acids. Bring water to boil, add sugar mixture, juice, and rinds. Heat on high 1 1/2 minutes. Cover and cool at room temperature and refrigerate in sealed container overnight. Strain and continue to refrigerate for a total of 48 hours.

The Pretty Ricky

2 ounces Bombay dry gin
1 ounce homemade lime cordial-recipe (see above)
1/2 ounce lime juice
Soda water

Shake and strain gin, cordial, and lime juice over ice. Top with soda and a pretty edible flower. Witness this whole process in the slideshow above.

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Tags: Walrus and the Carpenter, Walrus and the Carpenter, Cocktail Cartography, Andrew Bohrer, Andrew Bohrer, Anna Wallace

New Beer Alert

Thursday Tap Excitement at Urban Family

Bend’s 10 Barrel Brewing says its beers have never been poured in Washington…until now.

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Two offerings from Bend’s 10 Barrel Brewing are about to get their own little tags on Urban Family’s wall of 25 taps.

Urban Family Public House prides itself on offering beers, mostly Belgian-style, that are tough to find elsewhere in Seattle. On Thursday night the Ballard Avenue newcomer plans to tap two new kegs, the contents of which have never before been poured in Washington State (well, officially at least).

Urban Family owner Tim Czarnetzki says he and partners David Powell and Sean Bowman visited Bend’s 10 Barrel Brewing over Thanksgiving and really enjoyed the beers, particularly the Oregon Brown Ale and Sinister Black Lager. Being in possession of a specific type of purchasing license, the bar was able to pick up a keg of each when Bowman made a return trip south of the state line recently.

Czarnetzki says 10 Barrel isn’t just good: it’s relatively inexpensive for non-fratty beer. A pint of either will run you about $4.50. Depending on the beer, kegs at Urban Family usually last about nine days to two weeks. If patrons like the beer as much as Urban Family’s owners do, there’s a chance more kegs could make that trip up I-5. Also, 10 Barrel’s plans to grow to a 50-barrel brewing system (no, the name won’t change) means Seattle could get better acquainted with the wares of this fine brewery in the future.

The pub opens its doors at 4pm weekdays. Czartnetski is still on the hunt for a brewer for the beer-making side of Urban Family, but watch for a food program to debut shortly.

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Tags: Beer, Urban Family Public House

Happy Hour

Dollar Oysters at Pike Street Fish Fry

A new seasonal happy hour offers bivalves big and small.

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This giant hotel pan of oysters: yours for $12 during happy hour.

Pike Street Fish Fry ushered in the month of February by joining the new dollar oyster club. The discounted oyster action happens from 5 to 8pm Sunday through Thursday, and beers are $4. There are fancier dollar oyster experiences to be had around town: experiences that involve mignonette, tiny oyster forks, and actual platters. But I’m a sucker for this Pike-Pine hideaway, both for the rippingly good fried seafood and the diner-meets-pirate-fort ambiance, punctuated by warm-up bass thumps from nearby Neumos.

Last week I stopped in for a dozen, along with an Odin’s Gift, the Beer Formerly Known as Ruby. I wasn’t sure how an establishment specializing in battering and frying would treat happy hour oysters, but you can opt for raw or grilled bivalves. Thank goodness there wasn’t a crowd at 5:30, because the two-person kitchen team had to seriously wrestle with those oysters. Arriving at work one day and being told that your job duties now include speed-shucking for beer-swilling masses is probably an occupational downer, though these two were awesome. One even took cell phone shots of her handiwork before bringing out the newly shucked dozen.

Oysters arrived in a hotel pan filled with ice, and we used standard-issue plastic forks to wrest the meat out of the shells. Apparently ours was the first dozen-oyster order since Pike Street initiated the happy hour. The takeaway: There’s no shame in rolling in for two or three of these guys if you so desire.

What you won’t find at more upscale oyster happy hours: a bigger oyster for your buck. The selection varies by week, but right now Pike Street lets you choose between dainty Olympias and behemoth Pacific oysters, nearly the size of my splayed fingers. Unsure if my companion would dig the Olys’ coppery flavor, I opted for 12 Pacifics: six raw; six grilled. This might be the first time in my life I preferred a grilled oyster to a raw one, perhaps due to the addition of the same crunchy purple cabbage slaw that accompanies the Fish Fry’s pulled pork sandwich and fish tacos.

Pike Street plans to continue the oyster happy hour for the remainder of the season, though plans could certainly change. While there aren’t any other discounts besides the $4 beers, the drafts are solid. Wines are just a few bucks more, and a far nicer selection than you’d expect to find at a punky fried fish shack. And if dollar oysters don’t entice, there’s always free fry Friday.

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Tags: Happy Hour, Oysters, Happy Hour of the Week, Seattle Happy Hours, Pike Street Fish Fry

Bar Culture

Ba Bar to Launch Karaoke Nights

This could get interesting.

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Banh installed the monitor over by the windows.

When bars and restaurants seek ways to drum up weekday business, they typically launch happy hour, or maybe some family-style meals. If you’re Eric Banh, you bust out the karaoke machine.

“We’ve been waiting for this since day one!” says an enthusiastic Banh of his plans for Ba Bar. Starting at the end of February, the 12th Avenue spot will host karaoke nights twice a week—Tuesday and Wednesday—from 9:30pm to 1:30ish.

The potential for embarrassment aside, there’s no cost to partake. No need to reserve in advance either, the format is like an open mic night. For those who require a dose of liquid courage (who doesn’t?), Banh says he’s working on drink specials for the occasion. He has amassed a song library 10,000-strong and installed the necessary equipment. Now all Banh has left to do is find someone to host.

Don’t be surprised if you see Bahn up there singing. The man apparently is a karaoke buff, especially when it comes to Elton John or Wham!—an admission that gets lots of laugh from friends, he says. Hey, David Boardman of The Seattle Times would approve.

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Tags: Ba Bar, Karaoke

Behind Bars

Five Questions for the Bartender: Greg West of Hunger

There comes a time in a man’s life when he must defend himself from pantsless drunkards with a soda gun.

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This San Diego transplant has a devoted pack of regulars at Hunger. Hit up the slideshow to see West make one of his drinks, the bonne chance. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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This San Diego transplant has a devoted pack of regulars at Hunger. Hit up the slideshow to see West make one of his drinks, the bonne chance. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Here’s West making a drink of his own creation. The Bonne Chance contains London Dry gin, Lillet Blanc, orange bitters, and a balsamic reduction. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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West says he came up with this drink while chatting with a customer one day about drinking vinegars. He got inspired and headed to the kitchen for some balsamic. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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The result is a riff on the Vesper. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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He made the balsamic reduction himself; West takes maximum advantage of Hunger’s small bar space, making many of his own ingredients. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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West says inspiration usually strikes during his conversations with patrons. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Dig the mustache tattoo. Photo: Lucas Anderson

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The finished product, served with a lemon twist. Photo: Lucas Anderson

Greg West moved to Seattle three years ago from San Diego with a desire to make good drinks. But he found it tough to penetrate the city’s network of destination cocktail spots. Instead, West worked his way up, starting “in bars where people fought and got drunk and got sick” and moving on to Oddfellows and, briefly, 5 Corner Market Bar. Now you’ll find him at Hunger, and West must be doing something right: A Seattle Weekly poll late last year proclaimed him of the readership’s favorite bartenders.

Later this year, West will get the bartending equivalent of a promotion from cubicle to corner office when Hunger moves down Fremont Avenue to a space nearly three times the size. But until then he continues to ply his trade at Hunger’s comfortable little bar, where he relishes riffing on drinks, making his own bitters and other components, and concocting drinks on the fly based on conversations with customers. And West promises not to judge you on your order: “I just hate that pissed off Seattle bartender demeanor.”

Here, five questions for Greg West.

What is the most underrated spirit?

I think obscure liqueurs are underrated. I just tried an evergreen liqueur the other day and it was both bizarre and amazing. We need to challenge the way we think about cocktails and explore different avenues to continue pushing limits and create fun and interesting cocktails.

What’s your favorite Seattle bar, besides Hunger?

I’m a nice bourbon, whiskey, and cheap beer kinda guy; you’ll find most bartenders to be the same. So with that in mind I’m a big fan of Sun Liquor and the Distillery. They have a great selection.

What’s the drink most people order from you right now?

You know…I recently put a scratch cocktail option on the menu. What that cocktail might be depends purely on the customer, which is the way it should be. We have seen tons of success with this. Also it keeps me on my toes and helps me to keep pushing the limits of what we think a cocktail is. I recently had someone drop off a bag of ghost chilies to the restaurant so I made a cherry/ghost chili bitters. It was great in everything. It was so good it didn’t last a month.

Favorite place to eat, and what you like about it

I really enjoy LloydMartin on Queen Anne. My good friend chef-owner Sam Crannell opened there a few months ago and his food is quite wonderful. He is pretty daring and makes just about everything from scratch. Plus, with the ever-changing menu, you can’t go wrong.

What’s the worst thing you’ve seen someone do in a bar?

Oh Lord. Back home in San Diego I worked at this dive bar called the Surf ’n Saddle. One night this “gentleman” was obviously intoxicated and really wanted to give me a hug for some reason. I respectfully declined. A few moments later he decided to take his pants off and climb over the bar. The only thing I could do protect myself was to grab the soda gun and threaten a hosing down of Coke. He stopped, looked around, realized the entire bar was looking at him. Most would have run at that point. Not this guy. He lifts his shirt up (he’s naked from the chest down) and starts doing “windmills” if you know what I mean. I had no choice but to spray this man down with said soda gun until his friends finally pulled him off the bar.

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Tags: Five Questions for the Bartender, Seattle Bartenders, Hunger, Greg West

Happy Hour

Anchovies and Olives Amps Up Its Power Hour

Stowell’s signature pasta dish joins forces with $1 oysters.

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One of the Hill’s best happy hours just got more bountiful. Photo by Geoffrey Smith.

In the past seven months, Ethan Stowell’s Capitol Hill seafood restaurant Anchovies and Olives has seen the arrival of a new chef, a remodel, and now an expanded happy hour menu. The so-called power hour that runs from 5 to 6pm daily, and again from 10 till 11 now has a few more food and drink items to accompany those $1 oysters.

Now on the menu: the bigoli. Stowell has said before that this thick spaghetti-resembling noodle tossed with anchovies, chili, garlic and toasted breadcrumbs would be his choice as a last meal. Granted, he meant the final meal of a lifetime, but the $10 portion now offered up during happy hour means it can be your last meal of the night.

Power hour also means $5 wine and prosecco, and $2 Peronis. And now the entire selection of bottled beers is half off. On Friday and Saturdays, all this happy hour action goes down in the bar area only.

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Tags: Happy Hour, Ethan Stowell, Seattle Happy Hours, Seattle Happy Hours, Anchovies and Olives, Zach Chambers

Imbibing Agenda

Upcoming Drinking Events: Party Punch at Rob Roy, Madonna-Inspired Cocktails

Plus: a skip trip with Prost!, Belgianfest.

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This weekend, make punch with Anu Apte.

SATURDAY, February 4

Learn to make two kinds of party punch with Rob Roy owner Anu Apte. The hour-long Swig Well session gets underway at 1 at her Belltown cocktail lounge; the $25 ticket includes snacks and samples of the juice. Sign up on the Swig Well site.

A reminder the beer bonanza that is Belgianfest happens today at Pier 66. Tickets are still available.

SUNDAY, February 5

Also courtesy Swig Well, also at Rob Roy: Ted Munat walks through the ABC’s of throwing a killer wingding. The author of Left Coast Libations will cover everything from picking a theme to prepping your bar to creating a menu. For those who go big, Munat will also touch on how to snag sponsorship and drum up buzz. The class costs $60 (three cocktails included) and lasts from 1:30 to 2:30, which gives you just enough time to make it to…

Bottleneck Lounge. Starting at 3, bartenders will be mixing “big gay cocktails” inspired by Madonna’s Super Bowl performance, says owner Erin Nestor. If you’re more into halftime than game time, this is your spot.

BEYOND

Feb 29 This sounds fun. German bar Prost! is shuttling snow bunnies to Crystal Mountain for a beer-fueled ski day on February 29. Tickets are $77 and include transportation, lift tickets, a t-shirt, all the brews you can guzzle on the bus, and two drink tokens to use at the bar. The bus leaves at 7am from the Phinney Ridge Prost! at 7311 Greenwood Ave North, also where you sign up. Only 40 spots, so act fast.

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Tags: Drinking Events

Shift Change

Hey, Cicchetti Has a New Bartender

Tango’s Kate Perry heads to Eastlake’s cocktail and snack spot.

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It won’t be difficult to spot Kate Perry behind the bar at Cicchetti: She’s the one who’s not a guy.

Cicchetti, boozy sibling to Serafina in Eastlake, has a new bartender in the (highly talented) lineup. The Italian cocktail and small plate destination sent along word that Kate Perry, currently tender of the bar at Tango, will be spending her Thursday and Friday nights behind the bar at Cicchetti. She’ll reportedly keep a few shifts over at Tango, the Latin-styled lair of beautiful people at the foot of Capitol Hill.

Cicchetti general manager Rachel Aiken also notes that Perry is a welcome female addition to the all-male bartending team. When you sidle in for a drink, don’t confuse her with the Kate Perry who is the partner at forthcoming Restaurant Bea in Madrona. And let’s not even make the all-too-obvious Katy Perry joke.

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Tags: Eastlake, Cicchetti, Shift Change, Kate Perry

Beer Fests

The 70-Odd Glorious Beers of Belgianfest

They’re big. They’re boozy. They taste like biscuits and banana. And now you can enjoy them in more spacious digs.

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Earlier this week the Washington Beer Commission released the beer list for this year’s Belgianfest beer event, happening February 4. If Belgian-style beer is your bag, and for some reason you weren’t already counting the days until next Saturday, this roster should banish your ambivalence.

The list currently boasts 32 breweries from around the state pouring more than 70 beers, from saisons to sours. Some participants, like Poulsbo’s Sound Brewery, produce Belgian-style beers all year ‘round (love both the name and the taste of their Dubbel Entendre). But for other breweries, this fest is a chance to get creative with specially concocted wits, saisons, or various big, boozy, biscuit-tasting beers. Other brewers put a Belgian spin on familiar styles like IPAs.

Washington Beer Blog’s Kendall Jones also notes that next weekend is also a rare chance for Seattleites to sample the wares of Engine House No. 9 brewery, which rarely dispatches its beer beyond its Tacoma brewpub.

It’s only the third year for this gathering of Washington brewers, each brandishing their own version(s) of Belgium’s mighty beers. The last two years sold out so rapidly that organizers moved this shindig from Magnuson Park to the larger Bell Harbor space on Pier 66. I still say waiting until the day of to buy tickets is a risky proposition (plus they cost $5 more at the door). Get ‘em online for $30 for either the afternoon or evening sessions.

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Tags: Beer, Beer Festivals, Belgianfest

Taps

Tasting Room Test: Hilliard’s Beer

It’s light, it’s lovely, and good beers are just $4.

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Ballard’s new brewery also pours beers three days a week.

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Ballard’s new brewery also pours beers three days a week.

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The chandeliers come courtesy of partner Adam Merkl, who worked at Design Within Reach before leaving to co-found Hilliard’s.

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Both cans and pours will run you $4.

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The rejiggered beer vending machine is just for fun. Sadly you cannot actually buy Hilliard’s beer for 55 cents.

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Merkl also conceived of the herringbone-esque pattern that graces the cans…

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…and the bathroom. OK, fine: the can.

When Hilliard’s Beer opened its tasting room in October, the Ballard brewery didn’t have a sign. Now a 55-gallon drum painted with the logo sits outside (it’s less likely to fall over than an A-frame sign). And the word “BEER” is painted on the facility’s outside wall, the former service garage for Nelson Chevrolet.

There, people. What more do you want—a hand-lettered invitation?

While it’s a few blocks removed from the glutton’s row of excellent new bars and eateries populating Ballard Avenue, Hilliard’s kind of feels like a discovery. The taproom is a rare place where straight-up production commingles with artfully unstuffy furnishings and some great beer. On weekends it’s not uncommon to see a food truck parked outside (right now Snout and Co. is there Saturdays from 4-9).

Right now you can drink the brewery’s two mainstsays: a saison and an amber ale, both available only in tallboy form. Four other beers are on draft, including a pilsner dubbed Hil’s Pils, a Cast Iron Stout, and the brewery’s Regimental Scottish Blonde. Apparently “regimental” is the term for “going commando in a kilt.” That newfound knowledge alone made my visit a success. Hilliard’s also does an ESB, though in this case the acronym denotes an Extra Special Belgian, fermented with the same yeast as the saison.

The interior is spare and surprisingly light for a brewery, thanks to banks of lofty windows and many a coating of white paint. In the tasting room, a pair of surprisingly sleek chandeliers, modern productions of an Italian design from mid-century, preside over some tables, chairs and rugs that appear to be dragged out of the nearest basement rec room. Other seating is basically a concrete slab. And yet the whole thing works work quite well together.

There’s no happy hour here, but each can or draft pint of beer costs a reasonable $4. Right now founders Adam Merkl and Ryan Hilliard (the namesake and the brewer) open the doors on Thursday and Friday from 3 to 10pm, and Saturday from noon to 10. The space draws in neighborhood folk and beer geeks, some of whom drift over from tiny nearby brewery NW Peaks. Another major bonus in familyriffic Ballard: This place is all ages. The guys do have plans to take things 21-and-over later at night, and bring in some local bands for live music.

Bars and breweries around the state are embracing microbrews in cans, but Hilliard’s is a rare establishment that deals entirely in cans and kegs. No bottles here. The machinery on site can fill 24 cans per minute, and as you sip your beer, you can eye the pallets of empty cans, stacked to the ceiling as they await. Hilliard and Merkl placed an original order of 150,000 specially printed cans when the brewery started production, and estimate they’ve filled nearly 30,000 cans.

If you can’t make it to the taproom, Hillard’s beers are increasingly appearing in beer-oriented bars around the city, including Montana, The Upstairs, Locol, Brave Horse Tavern, The Publican, and newcomer Bitterroot BBQ. Another big milestone happens February 1, when the amber and saison will start appearing in area Whole Foods—$8.99 for a four-pack of tallboys.

Hit up the slideshow for more shots of the tasting room, including a vending machine repurposed to dispense beer.

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Tags: Beer, Tasting Rooms, Seattle Beer, New Seattle Breweries, New Seattle Breweries, Hilliard's Beer

Cocktail Cartography

Jay Kuehner’s Signature Drink: The Caracas

It’s more ritual than drink, says Sambar’s longtime bartender.

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Sambar’s Jay Kuehner, in his native habitat.

Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Sambar’s Jay Kuehner, in his native habitat.

Photo: Lucas Anderson

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Prepping the sugar.

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Muddling, er, grinding.

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Next up: coffee and a thinly sliced lime.

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Slices get dredged in sugar and coffee.

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Readying the rum.

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Eat the lime wheel.

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This photo should be self-explanatory.

Photo: Lucas Anderson

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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.

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Tags: Sambar, Cocktail Cartography, Jay Kuehner, Andrew Bohrer

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