Entrepreneur

Meet the Business Owners Spearheading Alcohol's Avant-Garde

A growing number of bars are leveraging advanced science, emerging technologies and DIY ingenuity to expand the possibilities of cocktail craft and redefine how drinks are engineered and experienced.
Source: Gabriele Stabile

Where others see an empty glass, Dave Arnold sees a blank canvas. Each cocktail Arnold creates at his trendsetting New York City bar, Booker and Dax, is a work of liquid artistry: His Manhattans, martinis and margaritas are shaken and stirred to painterly perfection, revealing new complexities and nuances with each sip.

But a Booker and Dax drink isn’t simply a masterpiece of mixology. It’s also the product of mad-scientist experimentation. Consider the absinthe-based French Colombian, which contrasts conventional ingredients like simple syrup, lemon juice and grated cinnamon with a most unconventional flourish: a 1,000-degree red-hot poker used to caramelize the sugar. Other weapons in Arnold’s arsenal include a centrifuge for separating liquids from solids, a rotary evaporator for low-temperature distillation and a steady supply of liquid nitrogen for precision stemware chilling.

Power drills, centrifuges and blast freezers are tools of the trade for bartender Todd Maul of Café ArtScience.
Image Credit: Wayne Chinnock

“Our cocktail techniques are not

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur2 min read
Make A Million Dollars In A Weekend?
Noah Kagan was the 30th employee at Facebook, the fourth employee at mint.com, and has started many successful businesses of his own. Now, his company AppSumo does nearly $100 million in annual revenue. Along the journey, he says he’s discovered some
Entrepreneur2 min read
Which Fridge Would You Eat From?
Will people buy cheap food to help save the planet? The answer is yes—and no. This was the idea behind Flashfood, an app-based marketplace that aims to divert food away from landfills, and to families in need. It collects food nearing its best-by dat
Entrepreneur3 min read
The Million-dollar Meeting
Want to meet the people who can accelerate your growth? You might need to make $1 million in revenue first. “I think there’s something magical about a million dollars in terms of just showing progress and scalability of the business,” says Laura Held

Related