Tiki Central / Tiki Drinks and Food
the ideal Mai Tai formula?
BK
Basement Kahuna
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Tue, Nov 4, 2003 12:49 AM
I dunno...sounds a little too math wiz for me. I just buy limes. |
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kick_the_reverb
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Tue, Nov 4, 2003 12:13 PM
haha...before I left Israel I was glad to find any limes... Later |
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UtopianDreem
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Wed, Nov 5, 2003 8:54 PM
I like to juice them and freeze as mini ice cubes. Next best thing to having fresh on hand. |
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Kono
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Thu, Nov 6, 2003 7:39 PM
Psssst...hey...c'mere. I wanna tell ya sumthin. OK...believe it or not...I actually like those sweet Mai Tais made with pineapple juice and grenadine! Yup. Now before you all start screaming "heretic!" and hurling stones at my melon, let me offer a concession. I don't understand why all of these exotic drinks have such a huge variation in recipes. Zombies, Mai Tais...there are dozens of different recipes and some are so different from the original as to be pretty much unrecognizable. I'd be more than willing to call my favorite Mai Tai by a different name. I think that's where the problem lies, not in the drink but in the name. I've tried several different Mai Tai recipes including the "original" one from Trader Vic's Bartenders Guide. I guess I'm just not crazy about lime juice all that much. My favorite's a personal variation of the recipe on my SUCK EM UP! HAWAII monster rocks glasses: Sophisticated? Maybe not. Goop? Perhaps. But I like it! I shall, henceforth call this drink "Mai Goop." :D |
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thejab
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Fri, Nov 7, 2003 1:48 PM
You hit the nail on the head. There's nothing wrong with liking a drink with pineapple and grenadine, just don't call it a Mai Tai. Because there are so many different cocktails and tropical drinks we have to call them something to keep track of them right? If a Mai Tai becomes just another rum, juice, and sweeteners drink, than it just becomes another Zombie or whatever. The importance of the "original" recipe is so we don't forget what the Mai Tai is supposed to taste like. |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Mon, Nov 10, 2003 10:58 AM
Alright, I mixed me up some Mai Tais this weekend, using fresh limes (Mexican?, from de local sooper market) and I found the taste kind of harsh, much more limey than the ones I have gotten at official commercial tiki establishments. Not to beat a dead fruit, but I take it there are times when the limes taste better? Next weekend I was gonna try going lighter on the lime juice, and maybe mail ordering some of the Trader Vic's Rock Candy syrup instead of the instant dissolving sugar, thinking this might take the edge off of the citric acid - ? stay'n on Mai Tai, J$ |
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Rattiki
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Mon, Nov 10, 2003 3:44 PM
Nothing wrong with that, if that is what you like, BUT! I had to debate the other night with a bartender about the correct way to make a Mai Tai. He INSISTED that there was pineapple juice in it, as he had been shown at the Redondo Beach (or some such So Cal local) Chart House :roll: where he trained as a bartender, and he KNEW I was wrong. Now when I was classically trained as chef, I was a young man full of piss, vinager and new ideas wanting to break the mold. I was told by the older (now I am their age) chef instructors to learn the classics first and THEN play with them. After 20+ years in professional cookery on more than 3 continents I can now truly understand what they meant. People (especialy in the USA) screw around with such things so much, sometimes before they ever know the right way to do it, that they completely forget what the receipt or concept originally was. Look at BBQ, a slow cooking technique developed by the Tiano, Arawak natives of Cuba where meat was slowly cooked 4 or 5 feet above a 'sacred fire pit' (that is what barbacoa means) made of WOOD coals (not gas thank you!). The meat cooked at aprox. the tempature of boiling water, which made the gamey meat tender and smokey, and didn't burn the wooden cooking frame (they had no metalurgy). BUT way too many people think BBQ is just a SAUCE! :( :roll: This is also "why all of these exotic drinks have such a huge variation in recipes", people were so quick to screw with them, they forgot what they ever were! BTW the Zombie was invented by Don the Beachcomber and it is : 1 oz. dark Jamacan rum Now this is an easily obtainable receipt which has been hacked to bits over the years. If you substitute papaya juice for orange juice (you can use fresh or frozen papya chunks if necessary) and forget the soda and 151 floater, it is a COMPLETELY different drink, it is almost a Planters Punch! A nice drink in itself, BUT NOT A ZOMBIE! :wink: [ Edited by: Rattiki on 2003-11-10 16:26 ] |
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thejab
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Mon, Nov 10, 2003 4:21 PM
Good analogy with food, Rattiki. It amazes me that some folks think we're picky snobs for expecting to get a real Mai Tai. But if those folks went in a restaurant and ordered a Ceasar salad and received iceberg lettuce with blue cheese dressing instead, they would have no problem sending it back for a real Ceasar salad. |
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Rattiki
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Mon, Nov 10, 2003 4:50 PM
I agree, funny thing about the Ceasar salad, it was put together supposedly by a guy in TJ with ingredents he had just lying around. Lemons, anchovies, parmasian cheese, olive oil, romain and crotons.....of course I have been all over Mexico and never seen Romain lettuce.....hmmm Anyway the same thing appearently occured to creat a local Keys classic tropo concoction, the Rum Runner. 1 1/2 ounces fresh lime juice (Key limes?) Blend with ice, pour into Tiki mug, and forget that damn lost salt shaker! |
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thejab
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Mon, Nov 10, 2003 5:10 PM
The original Ceasar salad didn't have anchovies! And they're still made without them at Ceasar's in Tijuana. I don't know when they were added (I'm guessing sometime in the 1950s) but I like my Ceasar with anchovy. The Rum Runner is a great drink made with the recipe you provided, but where they invented them (at the tiki bar at Holiday Isle in the Keys) they now make them in a slurpee machine. For shame! |
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Rattiki
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Mon, Nov 10, 2003 5:20 PM
I didn't know that, and I like the salt of the anchovies as well. Found this with a Google : "It is amazing how many people think the salad is named after "Julius Caesar" but really it was named after "Caesar Cardini" (note the spelling) who created the salad at his restaurant in Tijuana, Mexico and it was prepared and served right at the table. The original recipe for Caesar Salad did not contain anchovies." I love this : "Holiday Isle is home to the World-Famous Tiki Bar, where the infamous Rumrunner was originally created. The first establishment on the spot was built from driftwood in 1968 and was known as the Happy Hula Hut, with the first ten-foot section of the Tiki Bar being added in 1970" Such was the Florida Keys when I moved here as a teen back in the 70's, and much of the Keys are still like that, but the slurpy machine is just like Key West, reaking from the foul stench of success. :roll: :( [ Edited by: Rattiki on 2003-11-10 17:26 ] |
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TheMuggler
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Wed, Dec 17, 2003 9:20 AM
Okay -- I'm going to be making Mai Tais at the office xmas party and all my sources for St. James Martinique Rum are dry, so I'd like to get advice on what would be the best substitute. I'm using Appleton Estate for the Jamaican rum, TV brand for Orgeat and Rock Candy Syrup. Mt. Gay? Thanks for all opinions and advice! |
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pablus
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Wed, Dec 17, 2003 9:54 AM
According to Trader Vic, the Appletons is enough. But if your recipe calls for St. James - then the Lemon Hart, or another Demerara, is fairly close to that sharp flavor that the St. James has. The Cruzan (5 year) is also good as a mixer. Another possiblity is the Flor De Cana, it's got a fantastic flavor and would do nothing but add to the mix. It's a bit sweeter than the St. James but not too much. It's a very good rum. Hey, those rum tastings came in handy! ... what was the question? |
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cybertiki
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Wed, Dec 17, 2003 10:48 AM
TheMuggler wrote:
Seems to be a common problem here in Florida ... I mean who would figure that the state in nearest proximity to the Caribbean would run out of Martinique rum?!?!? I had a whine about it in my blog at cybertiki.com just yesterday, so it was funny to come across your post today. Fortunately, you can always get Martinique rum online (in most states, including Florida). The following link will take you to Randalls which is where I get a lot of the more 'exotic' spirits that one can't find here in Florida. Cheers! http://www.internetwines.com/spirits-rumtemplate-martinique.html Stay on the beach. The natives over there are cannibals. They eat liars with the same enthusiasm as they eat honest men. [ Edited by: cybertiki on 2003-12-17 10:49 ] |
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thejab
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Wed, Dec 17, 2003 11:55 AM
The original Mai Tai was all 17 year old Jamaican. In the 1950s that became hard to get so Vic added Martinique rum to give it a "nutty and snappy flavor". This is from http://www.tradervics.com:
The web site says Trader Vic's used to market a Martinique rum with their label on the bottle, and later they created their own blend of Jamaican, Martinique, and Virgin Islands rums, callling it Trader Vic's Mai Tai rum. Is this still available? I don't think so. I have only seen the Hana Bay label by Trader Vic's. Again, from http://www.tradervics.com:
I would think the best thing to add would be a rum with a nutty flavor. Compare some rums to any Martinique you may have left over and choose one that tastes similar. |
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TheMuggler
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Thu, Dec 18, 2003 2:35 PM
Thanks for all the suggestions and info! Heads up to Central Florida TC'ers: PLAZA LIQUORS on International Drive can get both St. James Amber and St. James Extra Old in one days' notice for ya! I picked up a bottle of each ($19.99 & $21.99 respectively) and they had an extra bottle of each there. They are very nice and will order anything they don't keep in stock for you, like Luxardo Maraschino Liquor. Give 'em a call - 407-352-7665. |
K
Kon-Hemsby
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 6:28 AM
I'm eventually getting the hang of making a decent Mai Tai, then I re-read this old thread and see ideas/comments regarding a float which is new to me. But a bloody good idea by the look of it. What is the recommended rum to be used as a float in a Mai Tai? Suggestions please. |
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thejab
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 12:41 PM
If it floats your boat (ouch) I think a bold aged rum is preferable. Perhaps you could float a bit of the same rum you mixed in the drink (like Appleton). At Trader Vic's they used to use Myers's, recently they used Whaler's (ecch), and lately they use their own brand. I think Coruba is preferable to those if you want a dark rum float. |
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TheMuggler
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 2:43 PM
I picked up a bottle of the St James Amber & the St. James XO, and initial taste tests suggest I prefer the XO in my Mai Tai. I'll have to conduct more extensive tests to confirm, however. :wink: |
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TheMuggler
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 2:49 PM
(edited to erase all traces of Mick-whining by Basement Kahuna) [ Edited by: Basement Kahuna on 2004-02-10 09:19 ] |
MTT
Mano Tiki Tia
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 11:18 PM
I really like Coruba Jamican Ru, for floaters. |
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Kon-Hemsby
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Tue, Feb 10, 2004 1:26 AM
Oh no.An error occurred. Site administrators have been notified of the error. |