Posts Tagged ‘bloody mary’

Restaurants tout holiday hangover cures

Friday, December 30th, 2011

With New Year’s Day falling on a Sunday—already a popular brunch day—a number of restaurants across the nation are offering special “Hangover Cure” brunch menus and drinks.

The specials range from a lucky black-eyed-pea brunch concoction at FARMBloomington in Bloomington, Ind., and pepper martinis at MASA in Boston to cure-associated menudo, the traditional Mexican soup, at Frank’s Kitchen in Denver, Colo.

“It gives us something to market on the first day of year,” said Frank Berta, owner of Frank’s Kitchen in Denver. “As the weather turned colder here, we wanted to have a soup special. Menudo is traditionally considered a hangover cure in Northern Mexico and the Southwest.” Masa Bloody Martini

Berta said he is relying on a friend who has made menudo for more than 30 years to help with the New Year’s Day preparation of the soup and its main ingredient, tripe. Frank’s Kitchen is promoting the special through email, its website, a blog, Facebook and Twitter.

In Indiana, FARMBloomington is offering a variety of New Year’s-luck dishes on its menu, which is also being billed as a hangover cure because, as Ben Hutt, morning sous chef, said, “we have the best eggs in town and those are good for a hangover.”

Picking up on the Southern tradition of eating black-eyed peas on New Year’s Day, Hutt said FARMBloomington is offering, among other special brunch dishes, a Hoppin’ John Eggs Benedict, with braised black-eyed peas, green-chile hollandaise and ham on a buttermilk biscuit for $14.

Hutt said he personally wasn’t planning on a hangover of any sort. “It’d be a very long day if I did,” he said with a laugh.

At Ray’s & Stark Bar in Los Angeles, executive chef Kris Morningstar has created a “Hangover Menu” for New Year’s Day that the eatery said “is designed for those seeking to reenergize after a long night of holiday festivities.”

Among items Morningstar is touting on “The Hangover Helper” menu is a buttered brioche with griddled onions, Sottocenere cheese, prosciutto rossa, wild arugula and a sunny farm egg.

At MASA in Boston, executive chef and owner Phil Aviles is offering up the “Bloody Martini,” which is also known as the “Dirty Diablo.”  (pictured above)

“It may not be pretty, but neither is a nasty hangover,” spokesman Chris Haynes said.

The Bloody Mary mix alone has 22 ingredients, including chili peppers and in-house infused habanero tequila, and the martini is finished off with a pinch of chipotle.

“This is definitely not your average Sunday morning Bloody Mary,” Haynes said.

“Initially, we were going to pitch it as a Sunday brunch item,” he said, but decided to wait for the New Year’s Day Hangover Cure pitch.

“This year is special because New Year’s Day is on a Sunday,” he said. “It’s not a big push to get people to brunch. My idea was to market it toward the hangover.”

By Ron Ruggless, Re-posted from Nation’s Restaurant News

The Bloody Mary Story

Monday, October 10th, 2011

We’ll bet you a round that the question of how this morning tipple got its eerie name has crossed your mind at least once. Barman Fernand “Pete” Petiot is credited with inventing this cocktail in 1921 at Harry’s American Bar in Paris. Bloody Mary Cocktail

The drink was an exciting blend of two then-new products: vodka, which had recently arrived in France via refugees from Russia, and canned tomato juice, an unsurprisingly American invention fresh off the boats from the States after World War I.

According to one theory, the drink’s haunting name makes reference to Mary Queen of Scots via a lonely regular often found drinking alone at Petiot’s bar. Sipping in solitude for long, lonely hours as she awaited her beloved, she reminded barguests of an imprisoned Queen Mary, who was also known by the sobriquet Bloody Mary.

In 1936 the Astor family coaxed Petiot to move to New York to become head barman at the St Regis Hotel’s King Cole Bar, where his drink evolved further. Vodka was not yet available stateside and the St Regis’s swanky management wanted to lose the gruesome name. The new gin-based version was given the tamer-sounding name Red Snapper and earned a spot on hotel’s cocktail list. The cunning marketers at Smirnoff saw opportunity in the Bloody Mary while trying to penetrate the market with vodka in the 1950s.

They brought the original Bloody Mary back to its roots, making it a lynchpin of their legendary campaign to introduce vodka to the American marketplace. And it worked: Vodka holds forth on drink lists today, with modern brunchers asking for call-brand Bloody Mary’s by name.

But the original Bloody Mary recipe was quite simple. As such, the drink lends itself to delicious invention, and is a great template to play with until you’ve got your preferred recipe just right. As Imbibe! author David Wondrich says, “the small, idiomatic differences … are the mixographer’s delight!” Add celery salt, horseradish, and who knows what else.

By Pink Lady, Re-posted from lupecboston.com