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“Art in the Age rides Philly food trucks”

Posted by:Intern on March 13th, 2013

What’s better than a bunch of Philly food trucks to feast upon? A bunch of Philly food trucks to feast upon… for a good cause.

The potential newest addition to the Fishtown neighborhood, the Philadelphia Sculpture Gym, will be hosting the Philly Food Truck Fundraiser, where for $50, you can have all the deliciousness the food trucks at the event have to offer, as well as beverages and live music. The goal of the fundraiser is to raise money to open and maintain the Sculpture Gym available to local Philly artists and sculptors.

Featured Food Trucks:
>>> Zsa’s Gourmet Ice Cream Truck

>>> Lil Dan’s Food Truck

>>> Farm Truck Philly

>>> Just Jackie’s

In addition, dessert will be provided by You Cut the Cheese Truffle Co., and there will be featured cocktails from Art in the Age, beer from two local home-brewers, Tim Patton from Saint Benjamin Brewing Co. and Jeff Watson from My Dear Watson Brewing Co., and tea-infused gin from Proper Cuppa by Josh Heake.

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Foodie, 3.13.13

“Anthology loves Art in the Age”

Posted by:Intern on March 7th, 2013

We took in the plentitude of historical, cultural, dining, and shopping options that Philly has to offer.

In terms of shopping, Old City was our preferred neighborhood with Vagabond standout spot for apparel, handbags, jewelry and shoes. We would also like to transport the following to our hometown:fashion boutique Sugarcube; Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, a purbeyor of Clothing, accessories, small home goods, and it’s own line of spirits; and the Clay Studio, which boasts a wide range of ceramic art. Next to The Clay Studio is Elfreth’s Alley, referred to as our nation’s oldest residential alley, and we couldn’t resist looking up the listing. If we only had half-a-million dollars lying around!

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“Racked showcases Art in the Age gallery”

Posted by:Intern on February 28th, 2013

Art in the Age will debut its latest art exhibition on Friday evening.

During the month of March, Beth Beverly of Diamond Tooth Taxidermy will create a still life farm within the Art in the Age gallery. “Life on the Farm” will showcase a wide variety of pieces that began life on the same local farm and have been reincarnated with a fresh perspective. The opening reception takes place from 6pm to 8pm, and will offer free samples of AITA cocktails.

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Racked, 2.28.13

“Pittsburgh loves Spodee and AITA”

Posted by:Intern on February 28th, 2013

The name itself invites confusion, and I suspect that the ambiguity is at least somewhat intentional. Is Tender about the quality of the foodstuffs? The men and women who tend the bar and mix drinks? Actually, it’s C, none of the above. Tender Bar + Kitchen, the soon-to-open lounge and restaurant in Lawrenceville, was named after the former bank building that the bar will call home. (Or rather, it was named after the legal tender that changed hands at the old Arsenal Bank, still standing where Butler and 43rd streets intersect.)

So that explains how the name was divined. But to the larger question — is this a restaurant with a nice cocktail menu, or a cocktail bar with some nice things to eat? — the answer is that Tender will be, first and foremost, a cocktail bar, one of just a few spots in Pittsburgh that honestly can make that claim.

Owner Jeff Catalina (who also owns Verde Mexican Kitchen and Cantina in Garfield) has recruited some of Pittsburgh’s best-known bartenders to mix drinks on either a full- or part-time basis: rum and tiki-cocktail expert Craig Mrusek, cocktail evangelist and educator Marie Perriello, Verde beverage director and PLCB watchdog Nathan Lutchansky, Verde’s and OTB’s Sarah Clarke, Silk Elephant sommelier Sean Rosenkrans, and Fredrick Arnold, the lone import of the group — he recently moved to Pittsburgh from Kansas City, having worked at the city’s now-closed R Bar. (The head kitchen chef is Neal Heidekat, formerly the sous chef at Verde.)

While Tender’s food menu hopes to draw inspiration from regional American cuisines and their iconic dishes and recipes, it wasn’t practical to take the same, regional approach with the cocktail menu. “We flirted with that,” Mr. Mrusek said, “for about 10 minutes — should we structure the cocktail list in sort of the same way?” But that would have been limiting, he said. Outside of New Orleans, the Bay Area, New York City and a few other spots, “how many times can you mine those same areas for iconic drinks?”

So there will be no specific cocktail menu theme, or even a broad governing philosophy, other than to stock the bar with as much American product as possible, spirits as well as wines. Expect the unexpected.

“We’ll be [featuring] craft-distilled spirits from across the country,” Mr. Lutchansky said in an email. “Germain-Robin brandy from California, Pollyodd chocolate-cello from Philly, Rock Town bourbon from Arkansas, North Shore aquavit from Chicago, Prichard’s rum from Tennessee, OYO honey vanilla vodka from Ohio.”

Tender also plans to stock some obscure foreign spirits — a Greek spirit called Metaxa, and a Scottish gin called Caorunn, to name just two. Part of the fun in planning the cocktail menu was thumbing through the PLCB’s 770-page catalog; bartenders were free to order whatever they wanted.

“We sat there for three hours [saying], ‘OK, who wants what?’” Mr. Mrusek said. “It was basically a Christmas wish list.”

And that level of freedom plays to the staff’s strengths, Ms. Perriello said, as each bartender has different backgrounds and specialties, and brings those specialties to the menu. Mr. Catalina called it the “Avengers model” of building a bartending staff.

“All of our styles are different,” Ms. Perriello said. “That’s another thing that we’re doing that no one else has done in Pittsburgh,” allowing all the bartenders to have an equal say in — and stake in — the cocktail menu.

Most new places, in developing a cocktail menu, focus on a theme (whiskies or tequilas or pre-Prohibition drinks, to name a few), or have a bar manager, head bartender, or a cocktail consultant guide the program. Not so at Tender, which is shooting for a March 15 soft opening, if city inspections go well.

“We each were very hands-on with this opening,” she said, with each bartender submitting three to five recipes for consideration for the opening day menu. Over a period of two months, weekly meetings — they called them “cocktail jams” — helped to tweak the recipes. They mixed the cocktails, passed them around — and then the drinks either made the final cut, or they didn’t.

After “those first sessions, we knew we had a good thing going,” Mr. Catalina said.

Eventually, the feature list was chiseled down to about 15 original drinks, to be lumped into three categories that play on the banking theme: Bulls and Bears (stronger cocktails), Recovery Measures (lighter cocktails), and Luxury cocktails (which will be sweeter). There also will be a “banker’s list” of about 30 classics — Negroni, Corpse Reviver, the Last Word, and so on.

While Mr. Catalina expects Tender will be best known for its cocktails — hopefully, on the same level as some of the bars that inspired him, such as Anvil Bar & Refuge in Houston and the Velvet Tango Room in Cleveland — the sales mix will be about 50-50, between food and drinks. (His other restaurant, Verde, does a 60-40 split, weighted toward food.)

They’ll have to move a lot of food, he said, because with quality cocktails, “the margins are much lower.” A typical bar might set its cocktail cost-to-price ratio at 11 or 12 percent — in other words, a cocktail selling for $4 costs about 50 cents to make. But that’s generally not possible with craft cocktails. “Sorry, we don’t serve Jack and Coke here,” he joked.

Tender’s classic, old-money theme will carry off the menu pages and into the bar itself. “We’re really going for that ‘Great Gastby’ feel,” Mr. Catalina said. Servers will be wearing black dresses and strings of pearls; patrons will sit in tufted chairs; the bar top is made of marble from the bank’s walls.

“You’re going to walk into that space and you’ll say, ‘This is cool. I want to be here,’ ” he said. “At least, that’s the goal. [But] we have to earn it.”

Wigle Whiskey, the Strip District-based rye and wheat whiskey (and gin) distiller, is releasing its second batch of aged rye this Saturday, March 2. No reservations, no dibs, no online pre-orders — it’s first come, first served.

Just show up at the 2401 Smallman St. distillery before the 9 a.m. opening and try to snag a good spot in line. Only a few hundred bottles are available, so if this release resembles the first one, the aged rye will sell out by noon, if not earlier.

The marketers behind the Philadelphia-based “Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” spirits line — it now includes the historically and botanically inspired Root, Sage, Rhubarb Tea and Snap — have come up with (or revived, I suppose) a wine-based Depression-era hooch called Spodee. The fortified, chocolaty concoction somewhat resembles a port, and probably would fall in the dessert wine category but for its packaging, which is intentionally down-market, meant to resemble milk bottles.

Best anyone can tell, the original “recipe” involved pouring whatever port or wine you had on hand into a bucket, then spiking the wine mixture with fruit and cheap whiskey.

Visit spodeewine.com for more information. And just for the heck of it, Google “Drinkin’ Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee” by Stick McGhee. It is, by some accounts, the first rock-and-roll song ever, and was the first big hit for the legendary Atlantic Records label.

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Pittsburgh Post Gazette, 2.28.13

“The Amateur Cocktailer raves about Sage”

Posted by:Intern on February 28th, 2013

I was already a huge fan of Art in the Age before this whole experience. Snap and Root are an absolute fixture in this Savannah household, and I’ve raved about AITA’s wares before.

I honestly didn’t think that it was possible that I’d like Sage better than my beloved Snap or Root…I’m such a fan of both that I figured Sage would be fantastic, but it might not quite live up.

Well it lived up, and then some. I think it’s the best thing that AITA has produced. They classify it as a “garden gin” which apparently means “gin on steroids.” Tasty, tasty steroids. I mean, just listen to this incredible list of ingredients:

Neutral Spirit, Elderberry, Pine, Black Tea, Rose, Dry Orange Peel, Cubeb, Angelica, Sage, Lavender, Spearmint, Dandelion, Thyme, Sumac, Rosemary, Licorice Root and Fennel

It’s fantastic for sipping – complex, intense, with an amazing fennel finish, all without being too in your face. I’m incredibly impressed.

And lordy, does it do well in a cocktail. I imagine there will be many Sage cocktails in this blog’s future, but for now, I think I really hit a home run with this first one.
Saged to Perfection.

Sour Sage Gimlet

*3 parts Sage
*1 part St. Germain
*2 parts fresh-squeezed lemon juice
*1 part Simple & Spicy (click on the link for the easy recipe)

Shake that all up with a few cubes of ice and you’ll be in Sage heaven. I was almost going to call this “Saged to Perfection” but ultimately, I didn’t think that a terrible play on words did this drink – and Sage – the justice it deserves.

Now, I know some of you purists out there are going to make the note that a gimlet technically is made with lime juice. But I found that lemon juice works better here, and I’m sticking to my guns.

Anyway, try it. It’s really terrific. And dammit, go out and buy some Art in the Age spirits! I cannot recommend them highly enough. Special thanks to Allison from Quaker City Mercantile – the company behind AITA. She really went out of her way to be accommodating and all around awesome when I asked for a Sage sample. I loved AITA before, and now I basically won’t be shutting up about how fantastic the company is for a long long time. So please support them!

The Amateur Cocktailer, 2.28.13

 

“Amateur Cocktailer warms up with SNAP”

Posted by:Intern on February 22nd, 2013

It’s actually a little chilly and fairly overcast today here in the Hostess City – a rarity these days to be sure – so I’m going where the weather takes me.

This particular cocktail – I call it “Long Winter” – is guaranteed to warm your soul a little in these fading days of winter. It’s packed with not one but two ginger-flavored delicacies and topped off with some plum bitters, all of which are meant to leave you with a toasty feeling inside. And yes, I’m aware that I’m obsessed with ginger beer. It’s okay guys. It’s delicious, so don’t worry about me. Here how to make this toasty treat.

Long Winter

*2 parts Snap (you guys really need to check this stuff out – completely delicious)
*1 part Pimm’s No. 1
*1 part apple juice (whatever you do, use the fancy stuff)
*2 parts ginger beer
*Dash of plum bitters (don’t go overboard!)

Shake all of that tasty, toasty stuff up together – except for the ginger beer of course – and then top it off with the ginger beer. I really dig this one.

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Amateur Cocktailer. 2.22.13