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Susan Cohen - Londons Best Cocktail Bars: The Most Popular Hotspots

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Susan Cohen Londons Best Cocktail Bars: The Most Popular Hotspots
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London has some of the best cocktail bars in the world, from the luxurious and trendy to the quirky and classy. Londons Best Cocktail Spots is the hippest, most up-to-date guide to Londons diverse and stylish cocktail scene. It offers lively descriptive reviews of 48 top venues across the city, from smart hotels and rooftop bars to craft cocktail hotspots, over-the-top concept bars and celebrity-spotting destinations. Each revealing entry includes a concise description, contact and reservation details, nearby tube stops, whether food is served, opening hours and lavish color photos. Locations are pinpointed on easy-to-read maps. This indispensable nightlife guide even includes recipes for the best signature cocktails in town, plus an introduction to the art of cocktail making and the history of cocktails.

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Contents
Guide
The Most Popular Hotspots - photo 1

The Most Popular Hotspots SUSAN COHEN - photo 2

The Most Popular Hotspots SUSAN COHEN Published 2019IMM - photo 3

The Most Popular Hotspots SUSAN COHEN Published 2019IMM Lifestyle Books - photo 4

The Most Popular Hotspots

SUSAN COHEN Published 2019IMM Lifestyle Books - photo 5

SUSAN COHEN

Published 2019IMM Lifestyle Books httpfoxchapelpublishingcouk IMM - photo 6

Published 2019IMM Lifestyle Books

http://foxchapelpublishing.co.uk

IMM Lifestyle Books are distributed in the UK by Grantham Book Service, Trent Road, Grantham, Lincolnshire, NG31 7XQ.

In North America, IMM Lifestyle Books are distributed by Fox Chapel Publishing, 903 Square Street, Mount Joy, PA 17552, www.FoxChapelPublishing.com.

2019 by Susan Cohen and IMM Lifestyle Books

Produced under license.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Fox Chapel Publishing.

Print ISBN 978-1-5048-0105-8
eISBN: 978-1-6076-5661-6

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Cohen, Susan, 1946- author.

Title: Londons best cocktail bars / Susan Cohen.

Description: Mount Joy : IMM Lifestyle Books, 2019. | Includes index. | Identifiers: LCCN 2018059514 (print) | LCCN 2018060834 (ebook) | ISBN 9781607656616 (ebook) | ISBN 9781504801058 (hardback)

Subjects: LCSH: Bars (Drinking establishments)EnglandLondonGuidebooks.

Classification: LCC TX950.59.G7 (ebook) | LCC TX950.59.G7 .C64 2019 (print) | DDC 647.95421dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018059514

We are always looking for talented authors. To submit an idea, please send a brief inquiry to acquisitions@foxchapelpublishing.com.

This book has been published with the intent to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter within. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the author and publisher expressly disclaim any responsibility for any errors, omissions, or adverse effects arising from the use or application of the information contained herein.

Introduction

E xactly where and how the cocktail started is somewhat of a mystery; there are plenty of myths and legends around. Some say the name came from the practice of docking a horses tail to show it was not a purebred. So, if you drank a cocktail, you were thought to be trying to elevate your social standing. Or maybe it comes from cock tailings, where the cock was the tap of a barrel and the tails were the dregs collected inside it. Regardless of whether either of these stories is true, there is a popular belief that the American cocktail is more than 200 years old, and that the martini, which author E. B. White called the elixir of quietude, has most definitely been around for more than 150 years. In fact, some of the best-known cocktailsthe martini, the daiquiri, and the Manhattanappeared between the 1860s and 1920, the year that Prohibition was introduced in America. For the next thirteen years, bootlegged alcohol and illegal drinking went underground into speakeasies, and as a result, bartenders became more inventive.

Shaken, not stirred. James Bond

Happiness isfinding two olives in your martini when youre hungry Johnny - photo 7

Happiness isfinding two olives in your martini when youre hungry Johnny - photo 8

Happiness isfinding two olives in your martini when youre hungry Johnny - photo 9

Happiness is...finding two olives in your martini when youre hungry. Johnny Carson

Meanwhile, as transatlantic travel became more popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, cocktails reached our shores here in the UK. In response, many American bars opened up in London, with inspired bartenders serving these mixed or American style drinks. Amongst the great names was The Savoy, who employed the first famous, and first female, bartender in 1903. Ada Coley Coleman, whose signature cocktail was the Hanky Panky, took London by storm, and was followed by the inspirational Harry Craddock. He left America during Prohibition and in 1930 compiled The Savoy Cocktail Book, famously proclaiming cocktails to be the finest appetisers known. His classic creations include the Corpse Reviver No. 2, one of the family of cocktails which are claimed to cure a hangover, and the Sherry Flip, made up simply of an egg yolk and sherry. Yet another classic cocktail bible, The Official Mixers Manual, written by Patrick Gavin Duffy in 1934, included recipes for the improbable sounding Monkey Gland and Bosom Caresser.

When it comes to the cocktail party, British author Alec Waugh claimed responsibility for inventing this social gathering in 1925. He explained how he was looking for something to do between 5.30pm and 7.30pm, and so he invited some friends to join him for drinks at his London home. But the English were devoted to tea, and he was disappointed when only one person turned up. Undeterred, he tried again in the autumn of 1925, and this time was economical with the truth, asking thirty people to tea at 5.00pm. They eagerly expected a cup of Earl Grey, but their hopes faded when, much to their amazement, Waugh produced his surprise in the form of a beaker of Daiquiris. So, it seems, the cocktail party was born, and when Waugh returned from his next book tour, he found a nation where cocktails had replaced tea after 5.00pm.

I never go jogging it makes me spill my martini George Burns Today - photo 10

I never go jogging, it makes me spill my martini. George Burns

Today, mixologists create exciting cocktails using the finest, and often unusual, natural ingredients sourced from near and far, and produce mixes which make the most of seasonal plants, herbs, and spices. Trends in cocktails are associated with different eras and can transport you to a different decade, from the 19th century through the Prohibition era and the Second World War to the Swinging Sixties. Hollywood films are loaded with cocktailsfrom the 1930s The Thin Man: Murder over Cocktails, through Marilyn Monroes Manhattan in Some Like It Hot, to Barbra Streisands 1968 green crme de menthe frappe in Funny Girl, to the Dudes White Russian in the 1998 film The Big Lebowski.

The bars in this guide are a selection of the best that London has to offer, from legendary sophisticated venues, to American bars, to themed spots and tiny speakeasies. There are places for a pre-theatre drink, places to unwind after a hard day at work, and places where you can spend time relaxing in quiet or not-so-quiet surroundings, depending on your mood. Some of the locations offer cocktail masterclasses so you can hone your skills and become a master of mixology. Others specialise in gin, vodka, or whisky-based cocktails, whilst champagne cocktails have many a follower, too. The bartenders in these establishments are devoted to their craft, and though they are always innovative, creating drinks to tickle the fancy, they still mix those eternal classicsfor there are some cocktails that cannot and will not ever go out of fashion. The martini is a perfect example: the ingredients are simple, but it is hard to beat. From James Bonds widely recognized instruction that it be shaken not stirred, to Ernest Hemingways declaration in

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