1 post tagged “list”
Herein, a list, reproduced in it's entirety (because it deserves it) from Esquire via Reddit.
My top 10, what are yours?
- When all else fails, have a Martini.
- If it doesn't have vermouth, it's not a Martini. If what you really want is iced gin (or vodka) straight up, order it that way.
- Hungarian proverb: If three men tell you that you are drunk, lie down.
- If a bartender makes you flail your arms or beg for service, well, obviously, leave.
- If you don't smoke and you're in a bar, don't complain about other people who happen to be smoking, because, virtuous friend, you are in a bar.
- Sitting at the bar works only for two people. Three or more requires a table.
- If you're the first in the group to arrive and you start a tab on your card, you deserve exactly what's coming to you.
- Once you've fallen off a stool, there is little you can say to the bartender that will change his mind about asking you to leave.
- The one foolproof hangover cure: Don't get drunk.
- There is no such thing as a chocolate martini.
The Entire List
- There is no such thing as a chocolate martini.
- There is no shame in club soda and cranberry juice.
- Visiting the pub will be cheaper in the long run if you tip the bartender regularly and more generously than is necessary.
- Never order a frozen drink in a place that serves pickled eggs.
- Actually, never order a frozen drink.
- It's also not a bad idea to eschew the pickled pigs' feet, although their presence is fairly strong evidence that you've accidentally stumbled upon a real tavern.
- For the sake of the children, leave the pistol at home.
- Grappa is to lighter fluid as ouzo is to lighter fluid.
- Garnish matters.
- Despite a high ratio of female clientele, an insouciant way with fried mozzarella, and their prevalence in resort towns, establishments where a waitress pours shots into your mouth from a bottle she holsters in a bandolier are fraught with peril.
- When throwing a party, break the seals on all liquor bottles, lest guests should hesitate to open them and come to doubt your hospitality.
- Better yet: Hire a bartender.
- At the holiday office party, consume one drink less than your boss.
- Adopt a favorite cocktail on a seasonal basis.
- That sangria means "bloodletting" is more a cautionary note than a simple fact.
- Drinks that give you bad breath: beer, anything sweet, anything with milk.
- Drinks that give you good breath: gin and tonic, gimlet, vodka and cranberry, anything with citrus.
- Instead of ordering a shot of After Shock to cap off the evening, one could just walk calmly into the street, lie down, and wait.
- Hungarian proverb: If three men tell you that you are drunk, lie down.
- Every man should know how to make at least one drink from a foreign country, preferably one taught to him by a local female with whom he has had a complicated, unresolved, and quite possibly dangerous dalliance.
- Citrus cocktails benefit greatly from rubbing lemon peel around the rim of the glass.
- Jack Daniel's. Rocks.
- Fresh orange juice. Fresh lemon juice. Fresh lime juice.
- On those chrome, hourglass-shaped bar measuring cups, the big side is the jigger. The little side is the pony. Never use the pony.
- If you must: single-malt Scotch in a brandy snifter with a splash of water.
- Avoid bars that use plastic cups, bars whose bathrooms consist solely of a trough-style urinal, bars with chicken wire protecting the band, bars where Patrick Swayze is the bouncer.
- There is rarely any genuine need to shout "Skal!" "Na zdorovye!" "Slainte!" "Bottoms up!" or "Down the hatch!"
- No one but the bouncer cares how tough you are, and he already knows you're not that tough.
- Drinking is not a competitive sport.
- Never drink in a place that calls itself an eatery.
- There is no upside to karaoke.
- There is an ever-so-slight upside to a wet-T-shirt contest, as long as you're not in it.
- It is not necessary to request premium liquor for a mixed drink in which you cannot taste it, such as a gimlet or sour.
- On the other hand, ascertain exactly how nonpremium the "well" liquor is before you opt against the good stuff.
- Sitting at the bar works only for two people. Three or more requires a table.
- Never utter the words I and love and you if you've had more than three drinks.
- If you're a lightweight, make that one drink.
- If a bartender makes you flail your arms or beg for service, well, obviously, leave.
- Don't call the bartender Barkeep, Chief, Buddy, or Ace, unless his actual name, in fact, is Barkeep, Chief, Buddy, or Ace.
- Even if you have ascertained your bartender's name, behaving overly familiar with him will be seen as a pathetic gambit for free drinks or, worse, proof that you have nobody to go to for affection other than a random service-industry professional who does not, in fact, know you and just wants your money.
- The one foolproof hangover cure: Don't get drunk.
- Once you've fallen off a stool, there is little you can say to the bartender that will change his mind about asking you to leave.
- There is nothing cheeky and clever you can say to a female bartender that she hasn't already heard from some other schmuck before you.
- Don't eat the worm.
- If you don't smoke and you're in a bar, don't complain about other people who happen to be smoking, because, virtuous friend, you are in a bar.
- Instead of trying to remember whether it's "beer before liquor" or the other way around, just be an adult and stick to one or the other.
- Acceptable drinks for men: beer, wine, whiskey, cocktails that are neither sweet nor made with dairy or fruit other than lime or lemon or orange.
- Acceptable drinks for women: whatever they want, except a certain few.
- A certain few: the grasshopper, the Long Island iced tea, the pink lady, and any variety of spritzer.
- Also unacceptable: drinks whose names mimic critical medical conditions or copulative acts and their secretions.
- And while we're on the subject, drinks that are named after supposedly cute body parts, like navels, which are actually disgusting repositories for sebaceous grime: No.
- All of that said, never question a woman's drink choice.
- If you're the first in the group to arrive and you start a tab on your card, you deserve exactly what's coming to you.
- Unless you are lounging on the Promenade Deck, do not drink from a fruit.
- Almost never have more than three cocktails.
- Never order a cocktail with more than four ingredients.
- If it doesn't have vermouth, it's not a Martini. If what you really want is iced gin (or vodka) straight up, order it that way.
- Grain alcohol and purple Kool-Aid do not a punch make.
- Pick up your drinks before moving the table.
- Despite its name, a cocktail should contain no chicken parts.
- Single-malt Scotch and soda: there oughtta be a law.
- A lime yields about an ounce of juice, a lemon a little more.
- Two singles are better than one double.
- Ice. Lots and lots of ice.
- Shun novelty. Suspect innovation.
- If you strain your citrus juice, everything will be easier to clean.
- Measure, measure, measure.
- Betty Crocker Moment: 2 tablespoons = 1 ounce; 3 teaspoons = 1 tablespoon.
- When all else fails, have a Martini.
- The perfect Martini: There is no such thing as the perfect Martini. Make it the way it tastes best to you.
- Provided that you remember that there is no such thing as a chocolate Martini.
