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COCKTAIL
PARTY PLANNER
There's
no better excuse for gathering with friends than to enjoy that
last bastion of sybaritic sophistication: the cocktail party. In
terms of American contributions to world culture, it's right up
there with jazz, blues and hamburgers. We'll help you plan a
festive party with advice on:
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Setting
the hours and whether you'll need a bartender
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Making your shopping
list, how much alcohol you need
and the essential tools
-
Eight
bartending tips
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The recipes:
Tropical
pleasures, trendy treats and classic
cocktails and non-alcoholic mocktails.
Six
key planning tips
A
successful cocktail party usually requires some careful planning.
We'll make it easy for you with these practical tips on party
hours, hiring a professional bartender
and what should go on that important pre-party shopping
list, including amounts and types of liquid
refreshment. We'll also help you stock up on 13
essential bartending tools and the appropriate glassware.
We've even got some great recipes for tropical
and trendy drinks, classic cocktails, and - for designated drivers
and teetotalers - tasty mocktails. Plus, eight
tips on how to pour them with panache.
1.
Define the hours
If your
party is longer than three hours it's not a cocktail party. Allow
an hour for your guests to arrive, an hour for chemistry to work
its magic, and an hour for your guests to leave. In fact, whether
you invite people informally or with printed invitations, specify
the start and end times of your party so there will be no
confusion. (If you don't give an end time, guests may assume
dinner is involved). As a rule of thumb, the prime cocktail hours
are between 5 p.m. and 8 p.m.
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2.
Who tends bar?
How long
is your guest list? If you're thinking of a small group of five to
six couples you should be able to pull off bar duty yourself. If
you're inviting more than 12 guests you'd probably have a better
time if you hire a bartender. (And if you take that route your
glassware problem is solved, too, as many bartenders come with
their own gear.) The acceptable intermediate solution is to make
everyone's first drink yourself and then allow guests to help
themselves.
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3.
How much booze will you use?
Most
adults can process one drink per hour and still pass a
Breathalyzer test after two or three hours. As a responsible host,
you don't want anyone to flunk that particular quiz. For a
three-hour party, plan on three drinks per person (with or without
alcohol). Knowing your guests' preferences in advance helps to
determine the types of alcohol to buy, but you can always simplify
things by offering one "featured" cocktail and then
stocking a few other basics. Err on the side of generosity.
Unopened bottles can usually be returned.
A 750-milliliter
bottle of spirits makes 18 drinks (at a jigger a piece). A bottle
of wine holds five glasses (your choice of white or red may depend
on your guests' preferences) Allow two nonalcoholic beverages (mocktails,
soft drinks, bottled water or juices) for each guest for mixers
and to cover the designated drivers and teetotalers.
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4.
The shopping list
Depending
on the array of drinks you're planning to serve, make sure you
have all or most of the following items on hand:
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Club soda or
sparkling water
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Tonic and
bitters
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Soft drinks
(cola, ginger ale, lemon-lime)
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Juices
(orange, grapefruit, cranberry, pineapple, tomato)
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Garnishes
(lemons, limes, oranges, olives)
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Cocktail
napkins
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Toothpicks
and straws
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Ice - allow
one pound of ice per person for a three-hour party. Cracked
ice or small cubes work best.
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Enough
appetizers to help keep your guests upright (and that they can
hold with one hand - a cocktail presumably keeping the other
occupied). Serve food that can be consumed neatly. Marinara
sauce looks like a gunshot wound on a cocktail dress. Whatever
you serve, be sure you enjoy it because half of it will
inevitably remain after the last guest leaves.
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5.
Essential equipment
Keep
those Flintstones jelly jars out of sight. Cocktail parties are
for grown-ups. Make sure you have all the right stemware.
Depending on the
array of adult beverages you're planning to serve, make sure you
have all or most of the following items on hand:
13
Essential bar tools
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Bottle opener
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Corkscrew
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Jigger -
preferably the double-ended variety with both 1 1/2 ounce and
3/4 ounce measures.
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Juice
squeezer
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Strainer
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Ice bucket
and tongs
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Bar spoon
with muddler on the end
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Blender
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Cocktail
shaker
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Cutting board
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Sharp knife
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Zester
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Towels
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6.
Hosting with flair
Here's
how to prepare the top trendy
and tropical treats and classic
cocktails and tasty mocktails. Cheers!
Here are eight
time-tested tips to help you pour with panache and serve with
style:
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Keep
your kit clean - Rinse your jigger after each
use. The flavors of different spirits are not necessarily
compatible. Keep plenty of fresh towels on hand to wipe your
utensils and glasses and clean up spills.
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Use
fresh fruit and juices when possible
- If you can, get fresh, ripened fruit for the blender or for
garnishes. Similarly, fresh squeezed juices beat concentrates
hands down.
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Handle
with care
- When pouring a cocktail, handle the glass by the stem.
You're less apt to warm it or leave fingerprints on the sides.
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Keep
your mixers cool
- Store all juice, tonic and soft drinks in the refrigerator
or ice chest. Warm mixers melt ice and dilute drinks.
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Use
an ice scoop
- Never use a glass to scoop ice from the bucket. Slivers of
glass can chip from the rim and land in the drink.
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Baby
let's twist
- When a cocktail calls for a twist of lemon, use a zester to
trim a thin strip of peel. Rub the strip around the rim of the
glass to coat it with oil. Then twist it to add a drop of oil
to the drink and drop the peel in.
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Keep
it iced -
Make sure you have enough of the frozen stuff (one pound per
person). Add fresh ice to your bucket regularly as you need
it, keeping the main supply as cold as possible.
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Rim
trim - To
salt or sugar the rim of a glass, fill a small bowl with
either, rub the rim of the glass with lemon or lime and twist
it into the bowl.
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