Monday, March 7, 2011

Day 58: Turn Your Head and Coffee Twice

Boston Caribbean Cocktail
Not sure what is "Boston" or
"Caribbean" about this
In the process of each day’s post we usually do some research in an attempt to find interesting tidbits about the current drink.  At some point we will actually find one.  Until then we will continue to share whatever dreck we dig up.  On the hunt for our latest drink the Boston Caribbean we discovered the Cocktail Jen blog.  In addition to having a cool name, Cocktail Jen is “an amateur mixologist working her way through Mr. Boston, one drink at a time.”

That makes today the most tragic day in The Bottle is a Wonderland history. And no, it is not because we had to drink Coors Light, although that didn’t help.  It is because we are even more derivative than we thought.  We never pretended that the concept behind TBIAW was original. In fact, we said in our very first post that we blatantly stole the idea from Julie & Julia.  But to find another blog with the exact same premise was a real stomach punch. This must be how Marconi felt when he discovered that Tesla had already invented radio. I have no idea how Tesla feels about Mr. Big, though.

Damn you Cocktail Jen!
How did this happen?  We actually looked for a blog with this premise before we began but didn’t find one.  I guess we didn’t look hard enough because one certainly exists. Cocktail Jen’s approach is a little different than ours at least. She planned on doing each section alphabetically starting with rum.  She also posted relatively sporadically, at one point going more than six months between posts.   That might have been due to the great rum shortage of 2007.  The best I can tell is that she didn’t even make it through the rum section much less the entire guide.  She probably had a life that prevented her from finishing.  Luckily for me I have no such distractions.

Since Cocktail Jen (the blog, not the person) appears to be dead, the best way to honor it is to forge ahead in our own effort and review the Boston Caribbean.  It is coffee, crème de cocoa (dark), and dark rum.   Like Cocktail Jen, we both enjoyed the Boston Caribbean.  Mrs. Bottle thought it had a strong rum flavor, but I mostly tasted coffee.  There was ample sweetness because I normally don’t like coffee without a fair amount of sugar and this was definitely drinkable.  I’m guessing that the whipped cream had a lot to do with it but Cocktail Jen thinks it was the crème de cocoa.  Also like Cocktail Jen, our cinnamon stick sank to the bottom of the glass before I could get a picture.

Unlike Cocktail Jen, we will have another post for you tomorrow.



Overall Rating for the Boston Caribbean



Taste: 4
Presentation: 5
Ease of Preparation: 2
Drinks Until Blackout: 10 –  9% alcohol

Ingredients

1 oz Dark Rum
1 oz Crème de Cocoa (Dark)
Hot Coffee

The One In Which We Drink Beer

Welcome to our second ever The Bottle is a Wonderland Taste TestTM. This test is radically different than our previous one, though.   In fact it is almost a complete departure from the spirit of TBIAW because we are testing light beer instead of liquor.  “Spirit”, get it?  I crack myself up.   Anyway, we felt that we hadn’t mixed things up in a while and that this would be a fun way to do it.

We didn’t think that reviewing beer instead of liquor was enough of a change, though, so we added additional twists.  For the first time, we did a review away from the comforts of the Bottle Wonderland Estate.  Instead we tested in a remote mountain location so removed from civilization that there was no Internet connection.  In addition to making me very twitchy and discombobulated, the lack of Internet also meant that Saturday’s post did not go up as planned even though it had already been composed.  This was a disappointment to me and a dozen of our fans.
Where is the Starbucks and the free Wi-Fi?

But wait, there’s more.  We also had two additional reviewers, which doubles our previous record for guest judges.   With the four of us trapped in the mountains with no Internet connection, it was a miracle we could focus on the task at hand, but somehow we managed.  We did get a new appreciation for what those Uruguayan rugby players went through when they were trapped in the Andes and had to eat each other to stay alive, though.  They probably didn’t even have DirecTV like we did, giving them the edge in isolation.

We shall call our guest judges Mr. and Mrs. M.  We have known them for years and hang out with them quite a bit. One night out I had ordered a Smuttynose Imperial Stout and Mr. M ordered a Miller Lite.  We began talking about the beers and the idea came up to test light beer.  Mr. and Mrs. M both drink Miller Lite when they have light beer.  Mrs. Bottle and I tend to drink Bud Light.  They think Bud Light is terrible and we feel the same way about Miller Lite. 

After we had our vodka test we began to wonder if there was really any difference in these popular beers.  We decided to throw in two more top selling light beers and make it a real match.  Between the four of us, we would determine which crap beer would reign supreme.
Four Beers Enter, One Beer Leaves

Let’s meet the contenders:

Bud Light – Bud Light is the best selling beer in America and it weighs in at 110 calories per 12 oz. bottle.   The beer snobs aficionados over at Beer Advocate rate it a D-.  According to their web site it is one of the first light beers in the world, it has all-natural ingredients, and it is one of the freshest beers in the world.  Three things I don’t really care about. Oh yeah, they also say it has a crisp, clean, smooth taste.  It also happens to be the beer that President Obama had at the beer summit a couple of years ago, so it is either All-American or All-Kenyan, depending on if you are Mike Huckabee. In other news, Glenn Beck recently proved that Bud Light is both socialist and fascist.

Coors Light – According to them, Coors Light is The World’s Most Refreshing BeerTM. According to Beer Advocate, it is the world’s most grade D beer.  It has 102 calories beer bottle.   There are a few notable things about the Coors Light web site.  The first is that in addition to the pointless age “verification” that all beer sites have, they ask you for your state. So in addition to knowing you were born on 1/1/1901, they will know you live in Alabama.  At least that’s what they know about anyone who picks the easiest choices on their menus.  The second is that once you are in the web site proper, “Beer” is the fourth item on their menu.   What are they trying to hide? It is behind NASCAR, but ahead of Español. I don’t know if that is a statement on immigration reform.

Michelob Light – “Michelob Light is a full-flavored, rich-tasting light lager with surprisingly low calories and carbohydrate content”.  That must be why it scored a D+ from Beer Advocate. It has 123 calories, by far the most of any of our competitors.   In theory that should give it an edge in flavor.  I think it must. Their web page also says it has hints of spice and citrus, light body, a subtle citrus finish, a round malt character, crispness, spicy malts, tangy hops, and caramel flavors.   That is more flavors than the buffet at Golden Corral.

Miller Lite – Miller Lite’s 96 calories are the fewest calories of any of our contenders.  It also scores highest in creative writing for the spelling of “lite”.  I always hated that “gh” in light so I’m glad someone finally got it rite.  According to their web site, Miller Lite has a three-step brewing process which consists of creating flavor, developing balance, and locking-in taste. It must be good because it makes Miller Lite taste “insanely great”.  I know that is accurate because the D+ from Beer Advocate ties it with Michelob Light for the best score heading into our challenge.

We are finally to the test!  Similar to last time, the testers did not know which beer he or she was sampling.  The four beers were poured into identical cups and lettered A-D.  Each tester then sampled the beers and ranked them from favorite to least favorite.  Once the rankings were complete the beers were revealed.

Ready for testing!
As you can see from the picture, there was not much difference in appearance from beer to beer.  They were all a pale yellow.  Before tasting I tried to determine if there was any noticeable difference in smell but they all pretty much smelled the same.  How did they taste?  Here are the results:



Mrs. M Mr. M Mrs. Bottle Mr. Bottle Average
Bud Light 1 1 2 1 1.25
Michelob Light 2 4 1 3 2.5
Coors Light 3 2 3 4 3
Miller Lite 4 3 4 2 3.25

The winner was Bud Light, and it won convincingly. Three out of the four of us had it ranked number one, and the fourth had it ranked second.  The most interesting aspect was that both Mr. and Mrs. M had Bud Light ranked #1 when both of them thought they hated it prior to the test.    They both had their go-to beer Miller Lite ranked near the bottom which just added insult to injury.

Mrs. Bottle had predicted before the taste test that she would have Michelob Light ranked number one since it had the most calories and she was right.  She felt that Michelob had an unfair advantage and that Michelob Ultra would have been a better comparison.  Perhaps we will test that once we finish all the other beer we don’t want that is sitting in the Bottle Wonderland Fridge.

The truth is that there was not a ton of difference between any of the four. The comment heard most often during testing was “they all taste the same”.  I suppose this shouldn’t really have been a shock.  From my perspective the Bud Light and Miller Lite were so close I had trouble picking a favorite.  I thought Bud Light had the least flavor of any of them, making it the least offensive and therefore the winner.

The Michelob Light definitely had more flavor than any of the others, but to me the flavor was a bit skunky so that made it rate lower.  It says it is ideally served in a pint glass, so maybe that was the problem. I found the Coors Light the worst of the four and I made the helpful note of “Yuck” on my score sheet.  Maybe if I had been drinking it straight from the bottle I would have liked it better.  After all, the label turns blue when it is cold. This is helpful if you have no sense of touch.  Not as helpful as having no sense of taste would be, though.

We all know that none of these are great beers, but they serve a purpose. I find a nice cold Bud Light refreshing on a warm day or if I want something cool without a clashing flavor when enjoying a hot bowl of chili.  We learned that Mr. and Mrs. M like Bud Light the best as well, even though they didn’t know it.  At the conclusion of the test Mrs. Bottle asked them if they were going to switch to Bud Light and they said “no”.  The good news for them is that it hardly matters.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Day 57: Casting the First Stone

Gin and Sin Cocktail
What color is the Gin and Sin, anyway?
The Gin and Sin is a combination of gin, lemon juice, orange juice, and grenadine.  The drink was pretty unremarkable except for the amount of sourness.  The orange juice and grenadine did not provide enough sweetness to properly balance the lemon juice, leaving you with puckered lips and a sad heart.  The Hula-Hula Cocktail has similar ingredients to the Gin and Sin with a far superior taste.

This drink got me thinking about sin, which is something I don’t normally do.  There’s not much reason to since there are no confessions in Pastafarianism.  With sin being so far out of mind, I had to do a little research to bone up.  It turns out there is a widely acknowledged standard of seven deadly sins, just like in that movie, Se7en.  In case you didn’t just click that link (and I recommend you always click our links), the sins are Doc, Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy, Bashful, Sneezy, and Dopey.  Ha! Those are the seven dwarfs.  Just making sure you aren’t skimming.

The seven sins are actually gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, pride, lust, and envy.  I don’t think I’m normally that gluttonous, but I did eat a bag of Hot ‘n  Spicy Chex Mix this week in only three servings even though the bag claims there are eight servings.  I did feel bad afterwards, though, and I don’t mean an upset stomach.   I like money as much as the next guy, but anyone who has seen my money management skills would see that greed isn’t my highest priority.  Sloth? That depends on how you define it.  We have published at least an entry a day on TBIAW for two months, so that shows some kind of drive I think.  Of course I have barely moved off the couch in that same time so that might be a wash.

Sloth and Glutton
The older I get the less wrath I display.  It may not be apparent to the casual observer, but I am practically a Zen master compared to how I was in my 20s.   I don’t know if I’ve matured or if it just takes too much effort to be wrathful these days. I guess that might be another point for sloth.  I will admit that Jimmy Carter is not the only man who has had lust in his heart. That takes a lot of energy, too, though.  I don’t think I have too much envy. If anything I think people envy me and my bon vivant lifestyle.

That brings us to pride, the final sin. According to Wikipedia, pride is the most serious sin.  Uh-oh.  Of all the ones to be the most serious, it had to be pride, my greatest attribute.  Some may be shocked to hear that I have been accused of being a bit too prideful.  Earlier in my career, my manager told me I had a reputation as a prima donna.  Apparently this means I was viewed as vain, egotistical, obnoxious and undisciplined.  This was pretty insulting because I can be reasonably disciplined.

Those sins might be considered the big ones, but I'm not sure any of them compare to the ruining of a nice gin like the Gin and Sin did.

Overall Rating for Gin and Sin




Taste: 2
Presentation: 2
Ease of Preparation: 4
Drinks Until Blackout: 7 – 18%

Ingredients

1 oz Gin
1 oz Lemon Juice
1 tbsp Orange Juice
1 dash Grenadine

Friday, March 4, 2011

Day 56: Where No Ale Has Gone Before

Galactic Ale Cocktail
As blue as an Andorian's blood
Mrs. Bottle here covering today’s drink, the Galactic Ale. I believe many folks might also refer to it as Romulan Ale. To avoid further possible confusion, I’m not referring to a pale lager produced in San Salvador that surprisingly did not receive high marks from the Beer Advocate. No, it is the ale illegally consumed by members of the Starship Enterprise, as well as other inhabitants of the Star Trek universe. My guess is that if the pages of Mr. Boston contained a drink called Romulan Ale, copyright issues would ensue. Hence we have the royalty-free Galactic Ale.

Let me say that I begged Mr. Bottle to allow me to report on this beverage. And by beg I mean that I asked if I could write it up and he said “of course”. I do love me some good Star Trek TV shows and movies. I believe this is a learned behavior. You see, my parents were avid watchers of the original Star Trek series. They even reportedly left their wedding reception early to watch a new episode airing that evening (that’s what I’ve been told and I choose to believe that’s how they spent their wedding night). We also watched countless re-airings of the show while sitting at our TV trays every evening for dinner.

I thought I knew these shows inside and out until Mr. Bottle recently received the Blu-ray box set for Christmas. Holy wow, the first season was really slow, choppy, and I’ve found them to be the perfect cure for sleeplessness. That said, nothing beats William Shatner’s dramatic rendition of Captain Kirk. I … must … re … examine … his … performance … in …T.J. … Hooker!

Thinking about Kirk, I imagine his reaction after drinking the Galactic Ale, a shooter combining vodka, blue Curaçao, lime juice, and black raspberry liqueur. I’m sure he would say “This is very blue, tasty and lightly fruity with a slight raspberry flavor. Not a big alcohol taste, so that’s a plus. Now Spock, go mind-meld the bad guy, Dr. McCoy, check my vitals, and Yeoman Janice or Green Lady, kiss me now!!”

Khaaan you bring me another one?

To sum it all up, I’m pretty sure you’ll live long and prosper after consuming large quantities of this delicious blue libation.

Overall Rating for Galactic Ale

Taste: 4
Presentation: 5 – Bluuuuuue!
Ease of Preparation: 4
Drinks Until Blackout: 5 –  24% alcohol


Ingredients

.75 oz Vodka
.75 oz Blue Curaçao
.5 oz Lime Juice
.25 oz Black Raspberry Liqueur

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Day 55: Seek and Ye Might Find

Apple Brandy Cocktail
Candy Apple Brandy Cocktail Red
Today we have the cleverly named Apple Brandy Cocktail, a mixture of apple brandy, lemon juice, and grenadine.  Even coming in at over 30% alcohol, this drink wasn't bad.  It had a slight sour apple flavor that wasn't over-powering mixed with moderate alcohol notes. Plus it made my tummy warm when I had a sip. The drink's name is a positive, too.  Don't get me wrong,  I like whimsical drink names like Hula-Hula Cocktail as much as the next guy, but there is something to be said for a drink that just tells you what it is.  If someone brings me an Apple Brandy Cocktail I have a pretty good idea of what I’m getting.  If somebody brings me a drink called the El Presidente Cocktail #1 I don’t know in advance that I’m getting a drink that should be called You Will Be Sorry If You Order This.

In that vein, we here at TBIAW would like to reiterate that the purpose of our blog is to review a drink a day from the Mr. Boston Platinum Edition bar guide.  There seems to be some confusion about that based on some of the terms that have lead people here from various search engines. Some of the terms make sense.  I can see why “Tequila Drink” or “Maple Syrup” would land a Googler at TBIAW.   Even the person who searched for “Snickers Drink” would find something that is at least in the same subject area if not an exact match.  I am positive that the person who searched for “The Bottle is a Wonderland” ended up in the right place.  I am also confident he or she should probably bookmark this site.

Some of the people who come here may end up a little let down, though.  The people searching for “health master blender”, “where is the menu bar located”, or “cocktail dress” will not find what they were looking for here.  Protip: The menu bar is located at the top of the window. 

Was that so hard?
There were two searches that ended up here that left me a bit puzzled, though: “Porno animal and woman” and “girls getting it on with barn animals”.  My first reaction when I saw these phrases was “gross”.  My second reaction was “say wha?” How did those searches bring sickos to TBIAW?  I can only come up with two possible answers:  The first is that some search engines think “cocktail” is two words.  The second is that the long discussion of cows and romance in this entry are confusing them.  Maybe it is the photo of the girl and the cow with the naughty but hilarious caption?  Maybe those Ask Jeeves computers aren't as smart as we thought. I bet Watson would have known not to send those queries here.

I hope the animal lover at least stayed and read an entry or two.  That would probably raise his spirits if not his other bits.

Overall Rating for the Apple Brandy Cocktail





Taste: 3
Presentation: 4
Ease of Preparation: 4
Drinks Until Blackout: 3 –  32% alcohol

Ingredients

1.5 oz Apple Brandy
1 tsp Lemon Juice
1 tsp Grenadine


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Day 54: Bourbonic Plague

California Lemonade cocktail
Unfortunately the garnish
didn't completely block the
mouth of the glass
Our cocktail today is called California Lemonade and it has lemon juice, lime juice, grenadine, club soda, and simple syrup Unfortunately for us it also features whiskey, our least favorite spirit other than that freaky kid in The Ring.  Apparently people in California have no idea what lemonade tastes like because this drink tasted nothing like it.  In case anyone reading this lives in California, here is what lemonade should taste like: Sugar and lemons.  Here is what the so-called California Lemonade tasted like: Sour and ass.

That may be a bit of hyperbole, but this drink was pretty bad.  The ratio of sour stuff to sweet stuff was way off.  We have had enough drinks now to know that if you have a lot of sour juice, you need a lot of simple syrup or some other sweet element to balance it. A 1:1 ratio is probably best, slightly less if you don’t have a sweet tooth.  The California Lemonade had 3 ounces of lemon and lime juice with only 1 tablespoon of simple syrup and ¼ teaspoon of grenadine.  That is about a 5.5:1 ratio of sour to sweet, which is too much for any right-thinking person.  The sour was so powerful that it almost completely masked the whiskey, which was its one redeeming quality

Speaking of whiskey, I am starting to wonder why I want to learn to like it in the first place.  The good stuff is really expensive and we don’t need that at the Bottle Wonderland Estate.  Simply maintaining our Renaissance garden consumes a large portion of our budget.  I suppose I am supposed to like whiskey because someone decided it was manly and it shows some sort of toughness to drink something that tastes bad. Paregoric tastes bad, too, and contains more alcohol than whiskey. Why didn’t that become popular?  Probably because paregoric prevents diarrhea, and we all know that not wanting diarrhea is for wusses.

Requires a lot of Roundup
The thing about the California Lemonade is that it contains whiskey but still isn’t manly.  Even I know that walking around with a drink that has a lemon, orange, and a cherry as garnishes does not exude machismo.  It is also served with straws.  Not one straw, multiple straws.  The jury is out on whether it is manly to drink out a straw or not, but I am confident you won’t see a bunch of coal miners sipping straws from the same drink.  I guess the multiple straws are good when you say “hey this is terrible, you should try it!” and you don’t want to spread cooties.  Cooties are not manly.

Overall Rating for California Lemonade




Taste: 2 - So very close to a 1
Presentation: 4
Ease of Preparation: 1
Drinks Until Blackout: 9 – 10% Alcohol

Ingredients

2 oz Whiskey
2 oz Lemon Juice
1 oz Lime Juice
1 tbsp Simple Syrup
.25 oz Grenadine
Club soda

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Day 53: Woman Bites Dog (food)

Electric Jam Cocktail
Electric Blue
For today’s drink we have the Electric Jam, a mixture of vodka, blue Curaçao, simple syrup, lemon juice and Sprite lemon-lime soda.  Being a relatively low-alcohol drink that has soda in it, I was confident we would like it and that confidence was rewarded.  The lemon juice keeps it from being overly sweet and, as usual, the carbonation from the soda gives it a pleasant bite.  The Electric Jam is not only easy on the palate; it is easy on the eyes as well.  There's something about an artificially blue drink that just works. Made a boring looking drink?  Just add blue Curaçao.We’ve already covered the fact that blue Curaçao isn’t made from oranges but tastes like oranges.  This is enough of a segue for me to do some patented TBIAW navel gazing.  Hopefully I won’t find much lint.

I keep telling myself that we are doing this blog for our own entertainment.  For Mrs. Bottle I think it is actually true.  For me, I would love to have more readers. It would give me some kind of validation, however pathetic that may be.  If you are reading this right now I don’t want you to think that you aren’t enough, though. I think you are very special.  Really, it’s not you, it’s me. 

I know that other blogs don’t blow up because they are funnier, more original, or more relevant than TBIAW.  That would be ridiculous.  I think the real issue is that we need a gimmick and I think I may have stumbled on something while I was listening to Howard Stern on the radio.  He had on an animal rights activist who has been trying to get an animal protection law passed in Ohio.

Yum!
To attract attention to her cause, she has been eating dog food every day and posting the videos on YouTube.  It's not exactly Gandhi's hunger strike, but it must be working, right?  She was on Howard Stern after all.  The King of All Media won’t have just anyone on his show.  Unless, of course, you are a porn star, stripper, or regular woman willing to get naked and/or ride the sybian.  He will also have you on if you have a speech impediment, are transgender, have a high voice, are a little person, or if you are mentally disabled.  I guess it really isn’t as hard to get on his show as I thought.

Regardless, her first dog food video has over 17,000 views.  That is a lot more than the total views of TBIAW since we started it.  If only we had thought to review dog food every day instead of drinking  we could have way more of the attention I crave.   Sample review:  "It sucked.  Again"  I then noticed that her video for day 14 only has 254 views so maybe eating dog food alone isn’t enough to hold an audience.  She must have noticed, too, because the next day she got naked and it got bumped up to 1,724 views.  Of course she wasn’t really naked so the following day the views dropped to under 200.  She got “naked” again a couple of days later, but the genius denizens of the YouTube community could not be fooled a second time and only 375 of them fell for it and she hasn’t gotten above 500 since then.

What did we learn from all this?
 
1. Eating dog food every day will get you a more attention than drinking a different drink each day but…
2. It will not get you that much more attention unless…
3. You get naked, but…
4. You shouldn’t say you are naked but not show anything

So I think our best bet is to skip the dog food, keep up the drinking, but start doing it fully nude. That might be a little awkward for our family members and co-workers who read this, but you can’t make an omelet without some huevos, so get ready!


Sneak Preview

 
Overall Rating for Electric Jam




Taste: 4 - So very close to a 5
Presentation: 5
Ease of Preparation: 3
Drinks Until Blackout: 8 – 13% Alcohol

Ingredients
1.25 oz Vodka
.5 oz Blue Curaçao
1 oz Simple Syrup
1 oz Lemon Juice
1 oz Lemon-lime soda

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