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Front bar
The customers area where customers order their drinks and where orders are served.
Back bar
Functions:
Under bar
Work surfaces of underbar equipment are a standard 30 inches high, with a depth of 16 inches to the backsplash at the rear. Units from the same manufacturer fit side by side and give the appearance of being continuous.
Each piece of equipment is either on legs 6 or more inches high, for access to plumbing and ease of cleaning, or else flush with the floor. The legs have bullet feet (feet tampered like bullets) for ease of cleaning. The feet are adjustable to accommodate uneven flooring.
Ice chest, ice bin Containers for bottles bottle wells and speed rails Handgun for dispensing soft drink mixes Mixer (shake mixer), and blender Frozen drink dispenser (machine) Glasses overhead on the backbar, on drain boards, almost anywhere there is room Glass froster
The centerpiece of any pouring station is the ice chest (ice bin), with or without bottle wells, having a speed rail attached to the front. This piece of equipment is variously known as a cocktail station, cocktail unit, beverage center or colloquially, jockey box.
A three- or four-compartment sink Drain boards Special glass-washing brushes Hand sink with towel rack Waste dump
Glass Brushes
Waste receptacle
Keg
Beer tap
Keg
E. Storage Equipment
Dry
storage (unrefrigerated) cabinets with locks Under counter and backbar refrigerators
Stainless steel is the metal of choice for small equipment and utensils. Most of the small bar equipment is used for mixing and pouring. A second group of utensils is used in preparing condiments to garnish drinks. A third group is involved in serving.
Jiggers Speed Pourers Mixing glass Hand shaker Bar strainer Barspoon Ice pick Ice tong
Cocktail shakers: (left: Boston shaker, right: Standard shaker) Mixing glasses
Ice scoop Ice tongs Muddler Fruit squeezer Funnel Glass rimmer Measuring cups and measuring spoons
Muddler
Fruit squeezer
Funnel
Condiment tray Cutting board Bar knife Relish fork Zester, router, or stripper Nutmeg grater
Bar knife
Canelle knife with zester Bar spoon with relish fork Nutmeg grater
Bottle and can openers Corkscrews Round serving trays Folios for guest checks Bar caddy Coaster Stirrer/swizzle stick Wine bucket
Bottle and can opener (left: wall mount, center: Bar blade, right: can opener)
Wine bucket
Glasswares
The glassware you use in serving drinks plays several roles. It is part of your overall concept: its style, quality, and sparkle express the personality of your bar. As functional equipment it has a part in measuring the drinks you serve, and it conveys them to your customers.
It is a message carrier: glass size and style tell your guests that you know what you are doing you have served each drink ordered in an appropriate glass. It can be a merchandising tool; subtle or flamboyant variations of custom in glassware excite interest and stimulate sales oversize cocktails in wine glasses or beer mugs coffee drinks in brandy snifters, special glassware for your own specialty drinks.
Three Characteristics:
Stem
Base or Foot
Major Types:
Tumbler
Footware
Stemwares
Mugs
A tumbler is a flat-bottomed glass that is basically a bowl without stem or foot. Its sides may be straight, flared, or curved. Various sizes and shapes of tumbler are known by the names of the drinks they are commonly used for: old-fashioned, rock glass, highball, collins, cooler, zombie, pilsner. Glass jiggers and shot glasses are mini-tumblers.
Footed ware refers to s style of glass in which the bowl sits directly on a base or foot. Bowl and base may have a variety of shapes. Traditional footed glasses include the brandy snifter and certain styles of beer glass. Today footed ware is also popular for on-the-rocks drinks and highballs. In fact, any type of drink can be served in a footed glass of the right size.
Stemware includes any glass having all three features bowl, foot, and stem.
A fourth type of glass is the mug. You can think of it as a tumbler with a handle or as a tall glass cup. It is usually used for serving beer.
In selecting glasses, size is a better guide than the name of the glass, since a glass with a specific name will come in many sizes.
Buy glass sizes that you will never have to fill to the brim; they will surely spill.
A glass for dinner wine should be only half full, so the drinker can swirl the wine around and appreciate the bouquet.
A brandy snifter of brandy is served so the customer can savor the aroma.
In making your glass selection, remember that glassware is about the most fragile equipment you will be using. Consider weight and durability. Consider heat-treated glass if you use a mechanical dishwasher. Consider design and buy glasses that do not need special handling: flared rims for example, break easily. Then consider the breakage factor in figuring the numbers you need.
Care of Glassware:
Handle glasswares with care Do not wash glasses mixed with plates or spoons Never used it in scooping ice Throw chipped or broken glass Do not pour hot liquid with cold glasses Never stack glasses Do not handle glass in all together Always handle glass by the stem
Look for Quality. It makes very good business sense to invest in high quality equipment for your bar.
Survival
Quality equipment will last longer and will withstand better the wear and tear of a high-speed operation. Heavy-gauge surfaces will resist dent, scratches, and warp. Heavy-duty blenders will better survive the demands of mixing frozen drinks. Quality glasses will break less easily than thin brittle ones.
Function
High-quality products are less likely to break down.
Breakdowns of any kind hamper service and give a poor impression of your operation.
If your pourer sticks, youve got to stop and change it. If your corkscrew bends, you may crumble the cork and loose your cool as you present the wine and the customer may refuse it. If your ice maker quits, you are in real trouble. Repairs or replacements can be frustrating, time-consuming and costly. Quality products, moreover, usually come with guarantees.
Appearance
Quality products are usually more pleasing to the eye, and are likely to maintain their good looks longer. Cheap glassware becomes scratched and losses its gleam. Cheap blender containers get dingy-looking. So do work surfaces. Since much of your equipment is seen by your customers, it is important to have it project an image of quality, cleanliness, and care.
Ease of Care
High-quality equipment is likely to be better designed as well as better made. This means smooth corners, no dirt-catching crevices, and dent-free surfaces that clean easily. It all makes for better sanitation and better appearance.
For equipment quality, look at weights or gauges of metals (the lower the gauge, the thicker the metal); at energy requirements, horsepower of generators, insulation of ice bins and refrigerated storage, manufacturers warranties and services.
Consider the design features of each item in relation to its function and sizes and shapes and capacities in relation to needs.
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