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Tiki Central / Tiki Drinks and Food / The (Even further) Simplified Zombie

Post #734542 by rockydog101 on Wed, Jan 7, 2015 12:15 PM

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On 2015-01-07 11:43, Swanky wrote:

Well, let me refer you to the writings of Jeff Beachbum Berry in Sippin Safari on the topic of the Zombie. I believe he has a chapter or two on how that drink started the Tiki era and was a landmark that spread across the country. Long before the Mai Tai existed, the Zombie was the touchstone, the famous cocktail of Tiki. It was ripped off and bastardized even in the 1940s. Unlike Vic's Mai Tai, Don kept that recipe a closely guarded secret and only until a few years ago no one on earth knew how to make it except the Mai-Kai head bartender. From 1989 when the last DtB's closed until 2007 when The Bum published it, it was a ghost. And until maybe the last 5 years, the only place left on the planet to get served the real Zombie was the Mai-Kai. Not sure who serves one today, but probably someone does now that it is a published recipe.

It should be put on a pedestal. It is indeed a mythical drink that Jeff Berry spent over a decade trying to find. And were it not for Jeff digging to find it and publishing it, we'd be drinking Zombies that taste like old socks as we were in the dark ages of the early 2000s.

DtB was to mixology what Beethoven was to music or Picasso to art, a great master. Don was arguable the greatest mixologist of all time, though various researchers are bringing great names to us today who can contend for the title.

All that work and Jeff Berry serves the Aku Aku Zombie at his bar Latitude 29.. :)

And I think you're completely off base comparing DtB to Beethoven or Picasso. I just find that ridiculous.