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Holy atomizer, barman!

Mixologists spray cocktails with aromatics for taste and looks


By SONYA  MOORE



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(Oct. 26, 2009) As the American cocktail scene matures, bartenders are finding all sorts of gadgets to use as they make drinks, and some of them actually serve a purpose.

Consider the atomizer.

“Atomizers can be pretty fabulous when used properly, I think,” says cocktail writer Gary Regan. “They can be used to coat the interior of a glass with a liqueur, for instance, and bartenders don’t waste as much product as when they rinse the glass, then discard excess.”

The theory behind spritzing a little bit of something over a cocktail isn’t new. A lemon twist is just that.

And by the 1960s, when the Martini completed its gradual transformation from a 50-50 mixture of gin and vermouth to a drink that was almost all gin, it wasn’t uncommon to use atomizers to spray tiny amounts of vermouth over the cocktails.

Atomizers are readily available in many forms and price points. Some bartenders also use olive oil sprayers. Others step into cosmetics or household good stores.

Alex Day, a beverage consultant and bartender for Death and Company, a cocktail bar in New York, uses atomizers sold by Muji, a Japanese household goods and design company, to create a lingering effect on cocktails with a variety of house-made tinctures and bitters.

The Atlantic Ruin 2, a drink he created for New York restaurant Allen & Delancey, is made with aged rum, Batavia Arrack, demerara sugar, Angostura bitters, an orange twist, and a house-made cocoa bean tincture sprayed over the top.

“By spreading it on top of the finished drink, it sits and lingers,” Day says. “Roasted cocoa bean is just an aromatic; it’s a mushroomy, interesting smell.”

At first, Day added dashes of the tincture to cocktails, but then he decided spraying it over the top, rather than mixing it in, would have more of the effect he was looking for.

“The chocolate bitter note floats on the edge of your nose,” Day says.

Regan was taught a trick by a German bartender in London: “If you fill an atomizer with, say, lemon oil, you can coat the exterior of a glass so that the customer gets the oils on his or her fingers, and the scent will stay with them throughout the whole drink,” he says.

When Don Lee was the beverage director at New York cocktail lounge PDT, he created stencil patterns to use with atomizers, applying the restaurant’s logo to white foam-topped drinks.

Don Lee, head bartender at Momofuku in New York, says ingredients sprayed with an atomizer have the strongest effect when it comes to aroma. But they also affect a drink’s appearance and taste.

Earlier this year, Lee got attention in the cocktail world for playing up the visual aspect by creating stencil patterns to use with atomizers.

When Lee was beverage director of the New York speakeasy-style cocktail lounge PDT, he had his plastic stencils made by a local company, NYC Resistor, and sprayed PDT’s logo in Angostura bitters over the egg white foam on top of his Rust Belt cocktail.

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