We stopped into the Sunken Harbor Club while out walking the City. As poorly dressed and unkempt as we were, Garret, Andy and Dan were extremely welcoming and entertained our questions. I tried the Mai Tai because of this video and the Mojito, the drink presentation was over the top and the taste was something to appreciate. As corny as it sounds to me it tasted fresh the subtleties were clear. I highly recommend a visit if you are someone that appreciates the culinary aspects of drink making, or just enjoy a very hip place to be... my 2 cents.
Just made a Whiskey Sour with 30 ml of Acid-Adjusted Pineapple Juice (100 ml/5,2 Gram Citric Acid), 22,5 ml simple syrup and 60 ml slightly smokey Scotch (Compassbox Glasgow Blend) and it is the most amazing thing ever. Pineapple and smoke go together so well.
One of your best episodes ever, guys. Garret was an amazing guest. Super insightful, well spoken, and obviously, has a great resume/pedigree. I learned so much from this one and I can't wait to try making this cocktail!
As a chemist, watching Garret just dump the acids directly onto the weighing platform rather than using a weigh boat or paper was hurting my soul. For anyone thinking about playing with acidifying juices, pouring onto the platform is a great way to get gunk into the weigh mechanism and mess up your scale. It's super simple to make a weigh boat out of paper (RUclips can help), you can use regular printer paper or card stock if you want, and you'll greatly extend the useful life of your scale.
Holy smokes. I love this episode. I’ve made it to a point in my cocktail making journey where I can finally appreciate an episode like this. Cheers Leandro
What works so well in this episode is that you first make a drink that seems right---and is not entirely wrong, but then make a much better drink and deconstruct every step as to why each new ingredient is better than the previous recipe. In doing so, you provide a much better education than a simple list of ingredients. If you are going to make future videos using original recipes based on classics, I would recommend continuing to use this format.
He was speaking liquid intelligence language all the time and then he pops the salt and talks about training with Dave Arnold and all dots connected. Great video and great guest!! Ps: An old fashioned that saline works for is the snowbird. 1.5 Oz rye, .5 calvados, .5 st germain(or other elderflower liquer), half teaspoon simple and two dashes celery bitters. Edit: forgot the garnish and the source: grapefruit peel, death and co the cocktail codex, Excellent book
I purchased the book liquid Intelligence myself a little while ago. Very complicated stuff, however anyone can benefit off of the plethora of information. He does good work, Much respect-
Yeah you should have more guests. This was incredibly engaging. I love hearing other pros techniques and hacks for in-industry work. One of my favorites so far, not just because we are talking about pineapple and Mai Tai's
Best. Episode. Ever! For the longest time I have been adding lime juice into my Pina Coladas and I couldn't figure out why I like it better and now it all makes sense!
Honestly not sure which is more revolutionary for me: The acid-adjusted sweet juice, or the saline. I've recently started making margaritas with salt in the drink rather than on the rim, and I'm a fan, but I hadn't thought of adding salt to other cocktails. Definitely going to start experimenting with that now!
Man-O-Man, what an episode. I really like the format and presentation. Taking mixology to the next level. Great tips with using saline and coating the glass with lime oils. Thank you, keep up the great work guys!
Stopping back by to report that I made these mai tais at a July 4th party and THEY WERE THE BOMB!!! Compared it side and side to both the Royal Hawaiian mai tai and Martin Cate's Smuggler's Cove mai tai (using all the specified bottles for each) and Garrett's version won handily. Thanks again for sharing!
Man, listening to you guys talking about tips and techniques worths million dollars of taking a cocktail class. That’s what we need. This is the most interesting video from educated barfly ever
As I sat here reading Brad Parson's Amaro book, I finished reading a quote about salt helping tame bitter edges in cocktails as Garret started his own salt rambling. Great work from you two!
Wow, you're in the big time..! This was a great video, validating so many of the subtle nuances you've been preaching for a couple-three years. Yeah, you are really coming into your own. It's bee a lot of fun to watch you and Marius grow this channel, and applaud your progress. I will never (I tried) be a cocktail person, but you've certainly made me a fan of the genre. Keep it up, I'm there with you..!
This acid adjustment is out of this world. Talk about leveling up! I just made a Painkiller with the acid adjusted pineapple and WOOOOOW this is outstanding! The pineapple is stronk upfront and gives you a beautiful pop on the back of your pallet, really amazing. I can’t wait to make more!
I was dubious at the start of the vid. That original Hawaiian “mai tai” was a horror story. Was totally won over by Garret’s make over. Everything detail makes sense. Can’t wait to give it a try. Thanks guys!
Great episode! I think you should have more guests, great watching you have someone to nerd out with. Now I will go start acid adjusting something ASAP.
I love the super “nerdy” scientific break down of information that this video had. That’s why I watch bartending content on RUclips. Teach me something that I would have a hard time discovering on my own. Excellent video!
Watched this video, ordered a scale and malic acid (had citric acid already), then waited. Today I got to make my favorite Mai Tai subbing in acid adjusted pineapple for the lime juice, it is delicious. Thanks for this idea.
Leandro this was a phenomenal episode mate! I learnt SO much from this! Definitely buying some acids and drug scale to re improve the ever created wheel 👌🏼
Best mai tai ever. The educated barfly has made alot of them so it must be good. Very interesting video. Really loved it as my favourite drink is The mai tai. So big thank you.
I'm a fan of the original Mai Tai, my wife prefers the Don Ho suck'em up version. I'm going to have to try this and see which she prefers. Great video! Thanks!
This was great but now I have questions lol 1- does acid correcting the juice change its viability timeframe? So if I am needing to make the juice daily do I gain or lose any time by acid correcting it as far as freshness? 2-the mix of Orange liqueurs, is it best to think of that like the same reason we normally blend Fee and Reagan orange bitters? 3-since I can't get any of these rums what flavor profiles are we really aiming for with these to replicate, either though the rums themselves or also adjusting the mixers?
'The Shrek factor' 😂 Great guest appearance from Garret Richard, here's hoping he can make it back again in future! I'll definitely have to try out this reconstruction, and acid adjusted juices in general. A question I've been wondering: would you recommend not pre-chilling glasses for cocktails served over crushed ice like this, or for short drinks served on the rocks such as Old Fashioneds?
Any recommendations for citrus adjustments for different types of fruits and vegetables? I would love to experiment with citrus adjusted tomato juice or fresh cucumber juice but have been having trouble sourcing proper info on the acid levels of most produce, great vid, cheers!
Fantastic video! Thank you so much! Also love that Garrett keeps calling it a drug scale. It is what I would call a coffee scale -- one that can measure in 0.1 gram increments.
I love a royal huwian mai tai BUT I watched the most famous mai tai video and never realised it had the Jamaican rum in it so I was just doing white and demurara rum, I was also just swaping the lemon juice out for more lime and so I think it's really good and more balanced with them specs, if u can't do this I'd shelf the Jamaican rum and use more lime. I'm no bar tender and that's just my humble opinion. Great video tho!
Learned so much in this episode. Not sure if I can get Malic Acid but I hope so that I can also make the lime juice extraction that you also make. I plan to do a spent lime even if it's a gin&tonic. Wonder if acid adjustment would work with Passion fruit or Mango? Going to give it a go. Also the saline solution! Yes! I love salt in a drink. Salt makes so many things taste better.
This is fantastic. I finally got all the ingredients and gave it a try. While delicious and unique, I have to cut it with plain pineapple juice because it's just too tart otherwise.
This was a really great episode. Lots of useful content. Awesome that you could have Garrett as a guest. I've had the privelege of enjoying drinks made by Garrett over at Existing Conditions (RIP). Sunken Harbor Club is already on my list of bars to hit up next. Can't wait to try the drinks there.
Heyo hot tip for measuring mg to few g solids best practice is to measure out solids onto a piece of aluminum foil or wax paper on top of the scale that is tared. Can crease down the middle to pour easy after and prevents you spilling getting the powder off the scale. Any haters about math being off due to total post add not being 100g can chill out. Close enough yo.
Had the Mai Tai at the Royal Hawaiian and yes, it was definitely too sugary. It was Hawaiian Punch with a little kick to it(it was very light on the liquor).
17:00 finally someone who explains the caipirinha the right way. You need the ungated poor to maintain the chilling going through the big cubes, while the dilution happens beucase of the small shards. This technique helps you in so many tropical cocktails!
This is a great episode, I’m a big fan of Dave Arnold & Don Lee’s work. One thing I’ve always struggled with acid balancing pineapple is the Bromelain enzyme present in pineapples can give the perception of acidity, and that can fade with time on older pineapples or disappear completely if cooked off. I’ll be trying out this recipe for sure!
I’ve never tried acid balancing but it makes sense. Based on what you said, I have always thought pineapple was highly acidic and I never thought it was that low.
9:19 One trick that may work well here, if you don’t have a pill scale, is to pre-mix 32g citric acid and 20g malic acid together dry, rather than in a full liter of juice. Shake to combine really well and now you have ten 5g doses that are ready to add to 100ml of fresh juice. Mixed and stored dry, you won’t have to worry about using up, like, a whole liter of juice before it oxidizes.
This was really cool and quite inspiring. It prompted me to go out and get some citric and malic acid so I can start playing around. I really want to try a whisky sour, but with peach and apricot. Feels like a winner. Is there anywhere online I could find fruit acid content in percentages, the way that you and Garret discuss them in the video? I've managed to find them expressed as typical PH levels, but I'm not really sure where to start with that if I want to be more controlled than just throwing acid crystals around.
hi i have a question but first: Very good video if you want to up your game in cocktails. It has especially opened my eyes about the explanation of acids and how you can increase a fruit syrup with malic and or citric acid. I sometimes did something with this for clarifications, but not beyond that. My question is also about this piece where you say that pineapple contains, for example, 0.8 citric acid per 100 ml. my question is where can i find this info how much citric or malic acid does a fruit juice contain? are there any tables for this as I can't find them. thanks in advance for your help, greetings ronald from the netherlands.
Now I’m thinking about other acid adjusted juices. First on my list is Apple Cider. There’s a lot of local orchards where I live, and you can get that rough juice, and it’s great. From some googling, it looks around 0.5% malic, so upping it to lime strength or so would make some really interesting drinks. Something vaguely tiki, but sure to include allspice dram? Or bourbon and a half-ounce of cinnamon whisky liqueur? No doubt there could be something interesting along the lines of a margarita pairing the funkier form of apple juice with tequila.
Are the Chairman’s Reserve (in the video) and Denizen Merchant’s Reserve (show notes) interchangeable rums? I know you’ve used Denizen previously in your Mai Tai. Great content, BTW!😊
Can Plantation Xaymaca rum substitue the Coruba rum? Or is Captain Morgan Dark Rum a better alternative? I have very limited access to rum here in Norway :(
I am a little bit confused by the ingredients in the description of the "Garret Richard's Mai Tai". It says "1 ounce lime juice (reserve 1 spent lime wedge)" and the Grand Manier and Créole Shrubb do not match with what you did in the video, is that on purpos?
Man - the saline, the acid adjustment, the spend lime wedge! Wicked tips and tricks. This episode was gold.
This is currently my favorite Educated Barfly episode of all time, this was so fun to learn about!
Ditto.
Same, this was drink nerd heaven
Agreed
Agreed
Totally agree! Love the in depth explanation. This should be a series!
We stopped into the Sunken Harbor Club while out walking the City. As poorly dressed and unkempt as we were, Garret, Andy and Dan were extremely welcoming and entertained our questions. I tried the Mai Tai because of this video and the Mojito, the drink presentation was over the top and the taste was something to appreciate. As corny as it sounds to me it tasted fresh the subtleties were clear. I highly recommend a visit if you are someone that appreciates the culinary aspects of drink making, or just enjoy a very hip place to be... my 2 cents.
Just made a Whiskey Sour with 30 ml of Acid-Adjusted Pineapple Juice (100 ml/5,2 Gram Citric Acid), 22,5 ml simple syrup and 60 ml slightly smokey Scotch (Compassbox Glasgow Blend) and it is the most amazing thing ever. Pineapple and smoke go together so well.
One of your best episodes ever, guys. Garret was an amazing guest. Super insightful, well spoken, and obviously, has a great resume/pedigree. I learned so much from this one and I can't wait to try making this cocktail!
As a chemist, watching Garret just dump the acids directly onto the weighing platform rather than using a weigh boat or paper was hurting my soul. For anyone thinking about playing with acidifying juices, pouring onto the platform is a great way to get gunk into the weigh mechanism and mess up your scale. It's super simple to make a weigh boat out of paper (RUclips can help), you can use regular printer paper or card stock if you want, and you'll greatly extend the useful life of your scale.
DIXIE CUP or ANY container for Christ sake..
I love the scientific approach and discussion! There's a reason for every little aspect, and it's great to hear experts pick it apart.
Holy smokes. I love this episode. I’ve made it to a point in my cocktail making journey where I can finally appreciate an episode like this. Cheers Leandro
Guest stars showing off their craft on your channel is amazing. Please continue down this path, what a fantastic episode!
Will do!
What works so well in this episode is that you first make a drink that seems right---and is not entirely wrong, but then make a much better drink and deconstruct every step as to why each new ingredient is better than the previous recipe. In doing so, you provide a much better education than a simple list of ingredients. If you are going to make future videos using original recipes based on classics, I would recommend continuing to use this format.
He was speaking liquid intelligence language all the time and then he pops the salt and talks about training with Dave Arnold and all dots connected.
Great video and great guest!!
Ps: An old fashioned that saline works for is the snowbird. 1.5 Oz rye, .5 calvados, .5 st germain(or other elderflower liquer), half teaspoon simple and two dashes celery bitters.
Edit: forgot the garnish and the source: grapefruit peel, death and co the cocktail codex, Excellent book
Thanks! Giving that a go also.
I purchased the book liquid Intelligence myself a little while ago. Very complicated stuff, however anyone can benefit off of the plethora of information. He does good work, Much respect-
Μακαρι να φτασουμε σε σημειο να εχουμε τετοια γνωση και εμεις...
that sounds amazing!
Celery bitters! Now that´s a new one for me, cool.
I love the idea of bringing on guests to teach new techniques and signature cocktails!
Yeah you should have more guests. This was incredibly engaging.
I love hearing other pros techniques and hacks for in-industry work.
One of my favorites so far, not just because we are talking about pineapple and Mai Tai's
Best. Episode. Ever! For the longest time I have been adding lime juice into my Pina Coladas and I couldn't figure out why I like it better and now it all makes sense!
Honestly not sure which is more revolutionary for me: The acid-adjusted sweet juice, or the saline. I've recently started making margaritas with salt in the drink rather than on the rim, and I'm a fan, but I hadn't thought of adding salt to other cocktails. Definitely going to start experimenting with that now!
I've seen a few bartenders add saline solution in many drinks as a secret ingredient and it's like magic!
@@dimitarapostolov9788 What happens to the drunks when you add saline? 😂
@@russb24 Good one, you got me 🤣
Actually now that I think about it, the drunks would retain a little more water in their system and might not get quite as hung over.
I add a little more than a shot of olive juice in a margarita. It gives it a bit of taste like grapefruit.
Man-O-Man, what an episode. I really like the format and presentation. Taking mixology to the next level. Great tips with using saline and coating the glass with lime oils. Thank you, keep up the great work guys!
Been a bartender for a year and never learned as much as in these 27m - love this guy, hope to see more of him..
Stopping back by to report that I made these mai tais at a July 4th party and THEY WERE THE BOMB!!! Compared it side and side to both the Royal Hawaiian mai tai and Martin Cate's Smuggler's Cove mai tai (using all the specified bottles for each) and Garrett's version won handily. Thanks again for sharing!
Man, listening to you guys talking about tips and techniques worths million dollars of taking a cocktail class. That’s what we need. This is the most interesting video from educated barfly ever
Love this episode. Mai tai is absolutely my favorite cocktail right now. Can’t wait to try it with the acid adjusted pineapple juice instead of lime.
Wow. This is very interesting. I need to try the pineapple juice acid adjusted.
This was an amazing episode.
As I sat here reading Brad Parson's Amaro book, I finished reading a quote about salt helping tame bitter edges in cocktails as Garret started his own salt rambling. Great work from you two!
Love love love it! I love the sciency episodes and bringing on more super intelligent industry people. Very enlightening
Definitely my favorite episode of yours so far! Very educational and interesting. Can't wait to try.
Wow, you're in the big time..! This was a great video, validating so many of the subtle nuances you've been preaching for a couple-three years. Yeah, you are really coming into your own. It's bee a lot of fun to watch you and Marius grow this channel, and applaud your progress. I will never (I tried) be a cocktail person, but you've certainly made me a fan of the genre. Keep it up, I'm there with you..!
We need more of this flavor theory nerd content!!! This was a great MasterClass and we need more!
This acid adjustment is out of this world. Talk about leveling up! I just made a Painkiller with the acid adjusted pineapple and WOOOOOW this is outstanding! The pineapple is stronk upfront and gives you a beautiful pop on the back of your pallet, really amazing. I can’t wait to make more!
palate
One if the better cocktail videos I have watched on RUclips in a while. Digging the guest appearance.
Wow - So much to learn from this. Didn't see it when it came out, but will be trying this Mai Tai recipe real soon.
I’m actually allergic to pineapple, but I couldn’t turn this episode off! The science behind everything was so awesome!
Great video. Was just ay Sunken Harbor club last weekend so its a real treat seeing Garret on here!
It was a real treat having him here too!
I was dubious at the start of the vid. That original Hawaiian “mai tai” was a horror story. Was totally won over by Garret’s make over. Everything detail makes sense. Can’t wait to give it a try. Thanks guys!
Just fabulous science! Love the concepts. Hate disappointing cocktails. Can’t wait to try all of it.
The science was of flavour is so important and a great discussion point. Thanks for have such a great guest.
That lime wedge in the glass is a gamechanger. Thanks!
This is one the most informative video I've seen. We need more of that. Cheers!
Great episode! I think you should have more guests, great watching you have someone to nerd out with. Now I will go start acid adjusting something ASAP.
The Royal Hawaiian mai tai just needs the orange juice deleted and then add a floater of Koloa dark rum.
I love the super “nerdy” scientific break down of information that this video had. That’s why I watch bartending content on RUclips. Teach me something that I would have a hard time discovering on my own. Excellent video!
One of the best! Love Garrett! Amazing information -- more please!😁
Such a great video! Would love more videos in this format with guests and these great tips! Cannot wait to try acid adjusting all kinds of juices!
Just re-watched this one. So much to think about here. I am going to go get Richard's book now.
All your episodes are great but this one is *chefs kiss* perfect.
Watched this video, ordered a scale and malic acid (had citric acid already), then waited. Today I got to make my favorite Mai Tai subbing in acid adjusted pineapple for the lime juice, it is delicious. Thanks for this idea.
Leandro this was a phenomenal episode mate! I learnt SO much from this! Definitely buying some acids and drug scale to re improve the ever created wheel 👌🏼
Best mai tai ever. The educated barfly has made alot of them so it must be good. Very interesting video. Really loved it as my favourite drink is The mai tai. So big thank you.
absolutely fantastic. very interesting. I'm trying to get citric acid in a small batch than 1kg. and also a set of the small scales. you are a genius.
Really loved that one guys! Cheers
I'm a fan of the original Mai Tai, my wife prefers the Don Ho suck'em up version. I'm going to have to try this and see which she prefers. Great video! Thanks!
Amazing, amazing episode!!! Love you, Leandro and thank you for introducing us to Garrett. Have him back. Very enlightening!
He’s great! Will def do more of these with Garrett and others cheers!
Love this! Science in food is so huge and incredibly helpful when trying to construct your own recipes.
“They do say that alchemy was born in the kitchen, after all.”
~Edward Elric, FMA
I've been watching here and there for a while. This episode earned my subscription.
So many things to steal there for our home bars… thank you both !!!’
I know this video is about Mai Tai’s but the Alma coffee in the ad is awesome stuff. Skip Trade and go right to Alma’s site to order. Wonderful stuff
Incredible. I cannot wait to make this!! Absolutely loved this breakdown of the Mai Tai.
I’ve been wanting to play with citric and malic acid for a while, but I’ve been afraid. This had curved that fear. Thanks so much!!
Woah, was that an 80’s Polly-O String Cheese commercial reference at 4:31 ???
Magnifique! C’est se bon!
Wow! This man is knowledgeable af! Great video and insight
This was great but now I have questions lol
1- does acid correcting the juice change its viability timeframe? So if I am needing to make the juice daily do I gain or lose any time by acid correcting it as far as freshness?
2-the mix of Orange liqueurs, is it best to think of that like the same reason we normally blend Fee and Reagan orange bitters?
3-since I can't get any of these rums what flavor profiles are we really aiming for with these to replicate, either though the rums themselves or also adjusting the mixers?
'The Shrek factor' 😂 Great guest appearance from Garret Richard, here's hoping he can make it back again in future! I'll definitely have to try out this reconstruction, and acid adjusted juices in general.
A question I've been wondering: would you recommend not pre-chilling glasses for cocktails served over crushed ice like this, or for short drinks served on the rocks such as Old Fashioneds?
I prechill all my glassware when feasible but definitely a must for pebble ice cocktails
Any recommendations for citrus adjustments for different types of fruits and vegetables?
I would love to experiment with citrus adjusted tomato juice or fresh cucumber juice but have been having trouble sourcing proper info on the acid levels of most produce, great vid, cheers!
Fantastic video! Thank you so much! Also love that Garrett keeps calling it a drug scale. It is what I would call a coffee scale -- one that can measure in 0.1 gram increments.
Cops find that in your car, and they’ll call it drug paraphernalia
Really stoked about this, what an amazing guest. Garret is a legend.
We added malic and citric to our pineapple and some other juices and things at one of my last jobs, its cool to get why 🤘
This was great. Lots of learning, especially the acidity and lime wedge oils
I love a royal huwian mai tai BUT I watched the most famous mai tai video and never realised it had the Jamaican rum in it so I was just doing white and demurara rum, I was also just swaping the lemon juice out for more lime and so I think it's really good and more balanced with them specs, if u can't do this I'd shelf the Jamaican rum and use more lime. I'm no bar tender and that's just my humble opinion. Great video tho!
Absolutely loved this episode. Garret was an excellent guest!!!
Wow…just shows how dedicated and detailed professional bartenders really are
Please do more of these. I learnt so much.
Learned so much in this episode. Not sure if I can get Malic Acid but I hope so that I can also make the lime juice extraction that you also make. I plan to do a spent lime even if it's a gin&tonic. Wonder if acid adjustment would work with Passion fruit or Mango? Going to give it a go. Also the saline solution! Yes! I love salt in a drink. Salt makes so many things taste better.
This is fantastic. I finally got all the ingredients and gave it a try. While delicious and unique, I have to cut it with plain pineapple juice because it's just too tart otherwise.
This video was so cool. Nice work, Educated Barfly!
This was a really great episode. Lots of useful content. Awesome that you could have Garrett as a guest. I've had the privelege of enjoying drinks made by Garrett over at Existing Conditions (RIP). Sunken Harbor Club is already on my list of bars to hit up next. Can't wait to try the drinks there.
Tried this and its really way better, than most Mai Tais Ive ever made.
Heyo hot tip for measuring mg to few g solids best practice is to measure out solids onto a piece of aluminum foil or wax paper on top of the scale that is tared. Can crease down the middle to pour easy after and prevents you spilling getting the powder off the scale.
Any haters about math being off due to total post add not being 100g can chill out. Close enough yo.
Had the Mai Tai at the Royal Hawaiian and yes, it was definitely too sugary. It was Hawaiian Punch with a little kick to it(it was very light on the liquor).
17:00 finally someone who explains the caipirinha the right way. You need the ungated poor to maintain the chilling going through the big cubes, while the dilution happens beucase of the small shards. This technique helps you in so many tropical cocktails!
Hnmmm... I was messing around with Acid Adjusting Watermelon Juice for a margarita about a month ago. Maybe I need to revisit it.
Super informative video! Cant wait to make that acid adjusted pineapple
Wonderful video - have loved Garret ever since he was at Slowly Shirley!
Such a good episode! Great chemistry and discussion!
This is a great episode, I’m a big fan of Dave Arnold & Don Lee’s work. One thing I’ve always struggled with acid balancing pineapple is the Bromelain enzyme present in pineapples can give the perception of acidity, and that can fade with time on older pineapples or disappear completely if cooked off.
I’ll be trying out this recipe for sure!
I’ve never tried acid balancing but it makes sense. Based on what you said, I have always thought pineapple was highly acidic and I never thought it was that low.
Great vid. A regards to you and Maris. Cheers again and to your guest.
I thoroughly enjoyed this episode, learned a lot, this was almost a masterclass👍
Tried this recipe, and it’s really good! I love pineapple juice so it really takes a good drink and makes it great for me
Also. LOVED this episode, you two make an awesome education team
The Alton Brown of Mai Tais. I realy liked this and learned something. very surprising, i bet that drink is wow
Love this level of technical mixology! More of this please! What brand of malic acid was used?
9:19 One trick that may work well here, if you don’t have a pill scale, is to pre-mix 32g citric acid and 20g malic acid together dry, rather than in a full liter of juice. Shake to combine really well and now you have ten 5g doses that are ready to add to 100ml of fresh juice. Mixed and stored dry, you won’t have to worry about using up, like, a whole liter of juice before it oxidizes.
This was really cool and quite inspiring. It prompted me to go out and get some citric and malic acid so I can start playing around. I really want to try a whisky sour, but with peach and apricot. Feels like a winner.
Is there anywhere online I could find fruit acid content in percentages, the way that you and Garret discuss them in the video? I've managed to find them expressed as typical PH levels, but I'm not really sure where to start with that if I want to be more controlled than just throwing acid crystals around.
You can buy a digital PH meter for around $10 on Amazon. Just picked one up and hoping it does the job ok
hi i have a question but first: Very good video if you want to up your game in cocktails. It has especially opened my eyes about the explanation of acids and how you can increase a fruit syrup with malic and or citric acid. I sometimes did something with this for clarifications, but not beyond that. My question is also about this piece where you say that pineapple contains, for example, 0.8 citric acid per 100 ml. my question is where can i find this info how much citric or malic acid does a fruit juice contain? are there any tables for this as I can't find them. thanks in advance for your help, greetings ronald from the netherlands.
Awesome episode! Gave me tons to think about and play with! Thank you!
Loved, loved, LOVED this episode! Great video.
Now I’m thinking about other acid adjusted juices. First on my list is Apple Cider. There’s a lot of local orchards where I live, and you can get that rough juice, and it’s great. From some googling, it looks around 0.5% malic, so upping it to lime strength or so would make some really interesting drinks. Something vaguely tiki, but sure to include allspice dram? Or bourbon and a half-ounce of cinnamon whisky liqueur? No doubt there could be something interesting along the lines of a margarita pairing the funkier form of apple juice with tequila.
You lost me with your 'maths' there! 🤣
Are the Chairman’s Reserve (in the video) and Denizen Merchant’s Reserve (show notes) interchangeable rums? I know you’ve used Denizen previously in your Mai Tai. Great content, BTW!😊
This is my new favorite video on your channel
Can Plantation Xaymaca rum substitue the Coruba rum? Or is Captain Morgan Dark Rum a better alternative? I have very limited access to rum here in Norway :(
I am a little bit confused by the ingredients in the description of the "Garret Richard's Mai Tai". It says "1 ounce lime juice (reserve 1 spent lime wedge)" and the Grand Manier and Créole Shrubb do not match with what you did in the video, is that on purpos?
Lol, the Shrek Factor. I'll be using that phrase at parties.