![]() |
Craft ice?
I'm flipping the channels this afternoon and a local wine show comes on. They have a segment with a bartender making a mixed drink and she made the drink and got a large craft ice cube and stuck it in a rocks glass, She pours the drink over the ice cube.
So, is craft ice any colder, lasts longer or tastes better than regular ice? |
Round shape will tale longer to melt.
|
I had a guy tell me it made a significant difference using distilled water for your ice. I told him he needed to get his tap water checked
|
We went to a nice, trendy restaurant buy a chef that's been on lots of TV shows and is very well known in Houston. Our kids we with us. Our son in law ordered a bourbon on the rocks. They asked if he wanted it with a big ice cube. We figured sure, why not. I'd seen the big round ice cubes, but this one ended up being a big cube (literally, a cube, like a rubiks cube just small enough to fit in the glass) It was an extra $1 for the ice cube. I mentioned it many months later at a bar and the bartender told me that they bought them from an ice company who made them, and the bar cost was probably $.75. I guess it makes sense, it's not like you use a regular ice machine or trays to make these special cubes.
|
Clear ice is made by freezing the water from one direction pushing out the air as it freezes. Large ice cubes significantly decrease surface area and as a result melt slower and don't dilute the drink.
Clear ice doesn't change the drink quality, large ice does. ones for show and ones for go.... |
Round ice has less surface area to melt per volume.
I wonder if clear ice will also melt (significantly) slower, as the lack of air bubbles also would mean less surface area (think golf ball) |
Quote:
https://www.whiskyadvocate.com/make-crystal-clear-ice-at-home/ |
I have a couple large cube silicone trays from Amazon, cheap and all I use for a rocks bourbon.
|
I really like the idea of using distilled water to make large round cubes...do you need a machine to do this, or are there cube trays that will accomplish this ? I don't need another electrified kitchen appliance taking up counter space.
|
Quote:
|
Craft Ice, for when you've determined that you're not paying enough for your frozen water.
|
I have one of these to make clear cubes:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07422QWCP/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 It’s more work taking the cubes out especially if they freeze longer than 18 hours. |
If you want clear ice cubes, simply boil the water before freezing.
|
Quote:
Water is wet. Regardless of shape. |
Quote:
|
Well yes.. ice make a difference ....
A few years ago a wonderful small plate/tasting/tapas craft cocktails place opened within walking distance of my house... an amazing little restaurant.. The S/O and I prefer to sit at the bar, rather than a table...we watch the barkeep...mix, muddle, shake, she makes her own extracts and bitters.. And she spends a lot of time shaping ice.. She explains that the different shapes.. have different surface areas, hence different rates of cooling and dilution.. She usually puts a crystal clear cube or sphere in an Old Fashioned... Cocktails If you ever happen to be in my town, run, don't walk to have a meal at this place |
Quote:
BURGER... brisket & short rib blend, brioche bun, white cheddar, fries |
Last trip to Charleston and at Husk, I splurged and spent a few extra bucks to have this ice sphere for my drink.
Their cocktail glasses are recycled wine bottles, so the kick holds the sphere above the beverage. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1611581253.JPG |
...anyone feel that we’ve taken the whole “craft” and “artisan” thing a little far?
If they hand carved a shape out of a cube, sure that’s a craft. Freezing water in a shape isn’t much of a craft... baking your own loaf of bread doesn’t make it artisanal. Get off my lawn. |
^^^This.
|
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:50 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website