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Behind Bars

Five Questions for the Bartender: Ian Cargill

This barman makes good drinks well and well drinks good at both Tini Bigs and Vito’s.

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Hamming it up with Ian Cargill. Photo via Facebook

Back when Ian Cargill was punching the clock as a line cook and server at Lola, one of the bartenders asked him why he didn’t try his hand at bartending. “Err, I don’t know anything about drinks,” says Cargill. “It’s not about the drinks,” responded said bartender, “it’s about personality, presence.”

When you belly up to Cargill’s bar you get the feeling anything can happen. He’ll tell a joke or an anecdote about making new friends from randoms at Zig Zag. The guy next to you will fall into the conversation; and before you know it, the three of you are drinking gin and playing roulette at the Muckleshoot Casino after hours. Cargill is a charmer, and it’s no surprise he’s made a name for himself. Look for him at Tini Bigs on Sundays and Mondays, and at Vito’s on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, but please don’t ask him, in that shit-people-say-to-bartenders way, “what’s good?” “That’s the worst thing you can ask,” says Cargill, “it’s booze; it’s all good.”

While Cargill enjoys mixing up and down the menu and “making good drinks well” his talent doesn’t lean on a mad-scientist, 12-ingredient mentality. His talent, like most bartenders worth a dram, like his Vito’s accomplice George St. John, is that he treats the bar like his home and the bar-goers (the well-behaved ones anyway) like friends he’s invited over for a high time.

Here, five questions for Ian Cargill.

What is the most underrated spirit and why?

Nothing is underrated for use in cocktails these days. I find that people are very eager to try just about anything in a cocktail, and there is nothing wrong with that. But have you tried a different whiskey or vermouth in your Manhattan?

What’s your favorite Seattle bar and why?

Besides Vito’s? Seriously, I don’t know why more people aren’t there more often. I told myself I would never work at Vito’s so that I could always drink there. I still can, but it’s different after you work at a place. The Zig Zag will always be the Zig Zag and it’s a fantastic bar… also Quinn’s and Rob Roy make me happy. I also hear of a restaurant opening in Fremont later this year that will be pretty cool.

What cocktail trends do you see coming this spring?

I think there will be a scaling down and streamlining of how cocktails are made. The restaurant business fundamentals don’t change because your drinks are more complex and take more time. There is also a trend I’m seeing where we are going back to hospitality and not focused so much on just the mixology. Nobody needs to go out for a drink…they go out for something to happen. The person sitting next to you is almost always more interesting than that garnish floating in your drink.

I am also hoping to see more restaurants and bar owners spend more time on the design and layout of the bar. I’m getting really tired of working behind bars that were given no thought to the people who have to work behind them. A bad bar design costs a business money, and often times it’s simply a matter of where the equipment is placed.

What drink (or type of drink) do people order most at your bar and what do you wish people ordered more of?

Old Fashioneds have become quite popular, and anything with rye. Also, muffulettas and beer.

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

Do you want the puke story, the fight story, or the angry-86’d-drunk-who-called-me-a-racist-while-they-were-falling-down-drunk story?

A guy stumbles out of the bathroom and storms up to another man sitting at the bar and tells him that is his seat. The drunk yells at me asking where his drink went. I didn’t have any idea where his drink went because I never gave him one. Then he decides to try and fight the sober gentleman who is sitting at the bar. It ends with the bouncers dragging him out the back door like a limp fish.

These are adult beverages. If you don’t know your limits, you should drink at home. Oh, and if you say the words “the rest is for you,” make sure you have at least paid enough to cover the bill.

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Tags: Vito's, Ian Cargill, Tini Bigs, 5 Questions for the Bartender

Shift Change

Where’s Waldo Ian Cargill?

Spoiler alert: This talented barkeep is now at Vito’s and Tini Bigs.

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Ian Cargill, here lending a hand at Where Ya At Matt’s gospel brunch. Photo by Naomi Bishop via WYAM.

Tracking the whereabouts of Seattle’s peripatetic bartenders should have a blog and Twitter feed all its own. Or, as Hanna Raskin put it, “I feel like we’re rapidly approaching drafts and salary caps.” But a bartender who is prolific with the classics and has a talent for booze creativity is a beautiful thing, and plenty of drinkers out there choose their watering holes based on the person behind the bar rather than the name on the door.

Today’s update: Ian Cargill, former lead bartender at Tavern Law and most recently at the Trophy Room at Shorty’s has two new gigs. One, noted here, is Tini Bigs, where you’ll find the barman on Sunday and Monday nights and dispensing classic cocktails during new Mad Men episodes. Cargill’s second new gig is at Vito’s, starting this weekend.

Vito’s manager Justin Gerardy sent around a note last night saying that the First Hill icon “has been re-opened for almost exactly a year and a half this week and we’re celebrating by hiring one of our favorite bartenders.” Cargill will be in the well Tuesdays and Saturdays.

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Tags: Seattle Bartenders, Vito's, Shift Change, Ian Cargill, Shift Change, Tini Bigs

Sauced Indeed

Celebrate Mad Men’s Return with a Cocktail in Hand

Bako and Tini Bigs pay alcoholic homage to AMC’s boozy drama.

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This can—and should—be you on Sunday night. Photo: AMC

Mad Men returns Sunday, after a tortuous 525-day hiatus, inspiring a few local establishments to get in on the cocktail-fueled action (just not this one).

At Tini Bigs, the martini-glassed drinks are a shade larger than the 1960s-sized versions Roger Sterling is so fond of, hence it’s not advisable to be completely period correct and consume them by the half dozen. The Queen Anne cocktail lounge is throwing a Mad Men premier party Sunday night, and will air every new episode this season.

Dress up in retro attire and classic cocktails from AMC’s instructional guide can be yours for just $6. Episodes will air at 9 and 11pm, with sound, so plan to actually watch. Oh, and hey, it looks like Ian Cargill has joined the crew here.

Meanwhile, Bako has been counting down the final days until the season premiere with some favorite classic cocktails of the show’s main characters, from Roger Sterling’s Gibson martini to Don’s old fashioned and Joan Holloway’s Tom Collins. Owner Keeman Wong says the staff did a bit of research on the AMC site and some other fan sites to determine character favorites (Pete Campbell is a Manhattan guy; Peggy Olson likes a white Russian, and Betty Draper drowns the sorrows of her unfulfilled suburban life with vodka gimlets). Wong designed his Broadway restaurant with the 1960s in mind…1960s Hong Kong, but presumably cocktail culture is universal.

Just don’t drink so much that you aren’t able to follow creator Matthew Weiner’s subtly secretive plot developments. Or pull a Freddie Rumson.

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Tags: Bako, Tini Bigs

Booze News

Tini Bigs Juices Up Its Cocktails

The watering hole known for unapologetically oversized martinis takes juice-based drinks in an un-citrusy new direction.

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Savory juice meets booze at Tini Bigs. A carrot-lemon-apple juice is served with gin or tequila, the glass rimmed with dried carrot.

While Seattle bartenders’ affinity for freshly made juices can be traced back to (more or less) the 1990s, Tini Bigs is setting aside the usual fruity blends and launching a little cocktail program centered on more savory juices.

Each day, the lower Queen Anne cocktail lounge is crafting a new juice blend, offering two daily flavors. When I visited during the testing phase, bartender Shane Sahr had whipped up a carrot-apple-lemon juice, and a more herbal cucumber-lemon offering.

And what better way to consume such a nutrient-rich creation than with booze? Patrons can either name a base spirit, or take a bartender recommendation. That same carrot-lemon-apple combo tasted refreshing and balanced with gin, and darker and smokier with tequila.

The daily duo of juices will also become components of two different bartender’s choice creations. Sahr blended that carroty version with amaro, cynar, Aztec chocolate bitters, and Dolin Blanc vermouth. To garnish, a slice of slightly bruleed carrot. Too often juice-based drinks just taste like…juice. That was emphatically not the case with this particular concoction.

Tini Bigs owner Keith Robbins has been making juice at home for a decade, but says the idea of taking it in an alcohol-fueled direction stemmed from a conversation about creating cocktails from local ingredients, which is hard to do when you’re relying predominantly on citrus from Florida. The recent interest in juicing documentary Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead doesn’t hurt either. The juice-based cocktails will use local produce when possible, though Robbins allows that such goals are tough this time of year. “Unless you want to spend $40 on a juice drink.” These drinks, for the record, are $11.

But do the health benefits of the juice get negated by the booze? Says Robbins, “It’s probably better than having a gin and tonic.”

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Tags: Tini Bigs, Keith Robbins, Shane Sahr

Imbibing Agenda

Tini Bigs Turns 15

Celebrate by drinking your way through the years with a bunch of the bar’s alums.

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Tini Bigs: Occupying the corner of 1st and Denny for 15 years. Photo by Angie Norwood Browne.

When owner Keith Robbins opened Tini Bigs in 1996, Seattle was basically a beer town. And as was the national trend at the time, the bar served its cocktails in oversized 10-ounce martini glasses, a move that inspired the bar’s name and is still in effect today.

Robbins has weathered some tough moments since then, including the 1999 World Trade Organization protests, the ban on cigar bars, and the departure of the Seattle Supersonics, which robbed Tini Bigs of a major source of patrons. But through all this, the Uptown establishment also helped usher in a new cocktail-celebrated era in Seattle, and served as the proving ground for some of the city’s best-known bartenders.

On January 22, the bar will mark its 15th birthday by throwing one hell of a party. Tini Bigs is resurrecting 17 of its most popular drinks, each one representing a year between the bar’s opening in December 1996 and now, and each one going for $5. Robbins created this list by getting in touch with a bartender from each year and asking for a selection. The full list is below, and Robbins is in the process of confirming the evening’s guest bartender lineup. What is confirmed: all this madness begins at 6pm.

While the night will indeed be a fun one for us civilians, Robbins says he’s most excited to make the night a reunion of the bar’s many alumni, many of whom still make drinks throughout the city. He even set up an alumni Facebook page for the occasion.

Obviously the past 15 years have transformed Seattle into a town of cocktail devotees. “It’s good to have more people appreciate what you’re doing,” says Robbins. “In the past, it was just ‘give me a vodka cran.’”

When I stopped in to meet Robbins recently, he insisted we sample a few plates off the menu. I made some excuses about not being hungry and braced myself for some buffalo wings or somesuch. What I got instead: Some of the most impressive bar food I have experienced in this city, including pork belly and a cornmeal pancake, and a kale salad that rivals the epic one at Skillet Diner. Seriously…whoa. Robbins said he recently brought in a new chef, Paul Kreft, who previously cooked at Toulouse Petit, and Purple Wine Bar Blue Glass, Skillet and Local 360.

Here is the full list of libations on offer January 22, and the bartender alums who selected each one:

1996 Joe Jeannot – Smokey Bigs (Toulouse Petit)
1997 Jude Augustine – Jolly Rancher (Hawaii)
1998 Patrick Haight – John Wayne (Snoqualmie Casino)
1999 Kevin Stuart – Peach Tini (Cantinetta)
2000 Josh Cushman – Backyard (99-06) (Azul)
2001 Dennis Brand – Spanish Tini (Branzino)
2002 Ezana Petros – Dirty Girl Scout (Matador)
2003 Aaron Marshall – Pear-a-dox (Pesos)
2004 Bill Arvish – Playboy (Dahlia Lounge)
2005 Amon Mende – Aloe (Cantinetta)
2006 Kevin Parisi – Burning Man (Macleod’s)
2007 Mike McSorley – Spaghetti Western (India)
2008 Jamie Boudreau – Chet Baker (Canon)
2009 Brian Lee – West Village Manhattan (Canon)
2010 Jon Chistiansen – Immaculate Misconception (Monsoon Bellevue)
2011 Joe Zara – Wild Child (Tini Bigs)
2012 Shane Sahr – Na Zadrowie (Tini Bigs)

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Tags: Drinking Events, Tini Bigs, Keith Robbins

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