Warren is the cofounder and CEO of drinkklaus.com, the finest terpene forward, craft cannabis cocktail in the world. He's written Apothecary Cocktails-Restorative Drinks from Yesterday and Today, Bitters and Shrub Syrup Cocktails: Restorative Vintage Cocktails, Mocktails, and Elixirs , Whiskey Cocktails : Rediscovered Classics and Contemporary Craft Drinks Using the World's Most Popular Spirit, Cannabis Cocktails, Mocktails, and Tonics: The Art of Spirited Drinks and Buzz-Worthy Libations, and the Craft Cocktail Compendium (2017)
Warren Bobrow has been a pot scrubber, dishwasher, the owner of the first company to make fresh pasta in South Carolina , a television engineer in New York City, and he even worked at the famed club named Danceteria. He became a trained chef from the dish sink up; this unfortunately led to a mostly unsuccessful twenty year career in private banking.
Currently a cannabis, wine and travel aficionado, Warren is a former international rum judge and craft spirits national brand ambassador.
He works full time in the cannabis business as an alchemist/journalist/CEO. Instagram: warrenbobrow
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Bobrow
Join us for a free live-stream with Warren Bobrow as he demonstrates a few cocktails from his new book: Cannabis Cocktails, Mocktails, & Tonics: The Art of Spirited Drinks and Buzz-Worthy Libations
Bobrow will explain how the cannabis-driven apothecary of the past has suddenly become very relevant with Cannabis legalization on the periphery.
Demonstration Includes:
• A basic decarbing using the microwave
• How to infuse decarbed Cannabis into Bourbon Whiskey using heat in a double boiler
• A Moscow Mule with Q-Ginger Beer and explain why you shouldn’t have more than one cocktail per hour and what to do if you have too much
• A Gin and Tonic with Barr Hill Gin and Tonic from Q-Drinks finished with bitters made with Cannabis Tincture for scent and color
The original apothecarians and many country medicine/folk healers used cannabis tinctures as part of their healing regiment. From the inactive forms of THCA and CBDA used for medicinal purposes to fully decarbed versions, strains in both the Indica (night time) and Sativa (day time) have become more mainstream. Individual strains of Cannabis may actually alleviate many ills that force people to their doctors in the first place. It’s “high” time for this essential healing ingredient to be embraced once again.
As we have seen the explosion of hand-crafted bitters behind the bar and the use of syrups, infusions, tinctures and tonics- along with craft sodas and even Colonial techniques like punches and cobblers, the use of Cannabis extracts in Craft Cocktails has become an important trend that is only just beginning.
Warren Bobrow is a mixologist, chef, and writer known as the Cocktail Whisperer. Bobrow has published three books on mixology and written articles for Saveur magazine, Voda magazine, Whole Foods-Dark Rye, Distiller, Beverage Media, DrinkupNY and other periodicals. He has written for SoFAB Magazine at the Southern Food and Beverage Museum and has written restaurant reviews for New Jersey Monthly. He has also contributed to the Sage Encyclopedia of Food Issues and the Oxford Encyclopedia edition named Savoring Gotham: A Food Lover’s Companion to New York City
Previous books include:
Apothecary Cocktails: Restorative Drinks from Yesterday and Today
Whiskey Cocktails: Rediscovered Classics and Contemporary Craft Drinks
Bitters and Shrub Syrup Cocktails: Restorative Vintage Cocktails, Mocktails & Elixirs
Warren Bobrow is a firm believer in the homeopathic values of cannabis, especially when paired with the curative powers of a good cocktail. This recipe, which gives delicate floral flavors an herbaceous kick, comes from Bobrow’s “Cannabis Cocktails, Mocktails, & Tonics,” coming out June 2016 through Quarto Publishing.
Fill a Collins glass with ice and top with a little water. Set aside for a few minutes to chill, then discard the ice water.
Fill a Boston shaker three-quarters full with ice. Add the gin and the rose simple syrup, then shake hard for 12 seconds. Pour into a coupe glass and add the seltzer water. Dot with the grapefruit bitters, spray the top of the drink with the absinthe, and garnish with a grapefruit zest twist.
Wheelock Design and LUXE Interiors + Design Celebrated the grand opening of Wheelock Design Studio while guest enjoyed hors d’oeuvres and cocktails with by expert mixologist and author Warren Bobrow. The doors to the beautifully designed studio opened at 5:30 pm for an evening of fun in Old Greenwich. Local designers and media professionals gathered to help them celebrate, while guest toured Wheelock Design’s new lifestyle showroom.
Wheelock Design, displays are modern in their construction, innovative in appeal, compelling, inspiring and distinctive for every lifestyle.
Chuck Wheelock is a twenty-seven year kitchen industry veteran with experience in design, project management, sales and marketing direction for WoodMode, Poggenpohl, Smallbone, Christopher Peacock, Johnny Grey Studios and Wheelock Maidique. Chuck attended Dartmouth College, and holds a BA in Environmental Design from the University of Colorado. He has architectural design experience in the US and Middle East including corporate, educational and residential projects.
Get ready to try my Cocktail Whisperer’s twisted take on the French 75, that classic combination of gin, champagne, lemon juice, and simple syrup. This version is actually a hybrid of the French 75 and the traditional champagne cocktail, which calls for a bitters-moistened sugar cube, brandy, and a heady top of champagne. Fuse the two together, add a healthy whack of tart, fruity Squire’s Shrub, and you’ve got a cocktail that’ll make your knees tremble. In the same way that alchemists of old strove to turn base metals into gold, champagne can turn a plain old Tuesday into a full-on, hat-waving celebration. Be sure to keep a bottle on hand so you can whip these up the next time you find yourself hosting an impromptu shindig. Make a few batches of the Squire’s, if you dare—just keep that bottle of Fernet Branca on hand for the morning after.
1 1⁄2 ounces (45 ml) champagne or dry sparkling wine
l long lemon zest twist
INSTRUCTIONS
Add the sugar cube to a champagne flute, and moisten with the lemon bitters. Then add the gin and the Squire’s Strawberry-Rhubarb Shrub, and top with champagne. Garnish with a long lemon zest twist. Note: To prepare this flute, combine very finely chopped lemon zest and sugar, wet the rim of the glass with lemon, and dip the glass into yellow-colored sugar. Voila!
– See more at: http://drinkwire.liquor.com/post/the-squires-shrub-cocktail#gs.NOg0Xtg
Kitchen designer Chuck Wheelock crafts uniquely personalized kitchens, and asked ME to craft uniquely personalized drinks for his booklet! Chuck Wheelock Cocktail Booklet!!
While the term “shrub” might call to mind a short, green plant in someone’s garden, it means something quite different in the mixology world.
A shrub is essentially an acidulated (read vinegar-based) beverage as old as history itself. In the days before refrigeration, it was pretty evident that without some means for food preservation, keeping items fresh was difficult at best. Food borne illnesses could be prevented or at least minimized by the use of an acid. In this case, the combination of vinegar and sugar when added to either fruit or vegetables contributed to a rudimentary food preservation system that has existed up to modern times. During the colonial era in particular, when daily labor was exhausting and folks needed something to cool off and reinvigorate themselves, shrubs were often drunk on their own. However, when a more festive mood took hold, shrubs were added to spirituous beverages, offering both a tart kick and a dose of healthy vinegar. Was the shrub the original health drink? Certainly it was used for good health, right up to the time when soda pop was invented, spelling the demise of the shrub. In recent years, however, a resurgence of old methods has taken the cocktail world by storm. In search of new and intriguing flavor profiles, bartenders have started making shrubs in house and, in doing so, creating a wealth of unique drinks. Shrubs are simply made with only three ingredients, a fruit (or a vegetable), sugar, and some type of vinegar. It does have to be aged after the mashing of fruit, sugar and vinegar, but that timing is really up to you. It can age quickly or over several weeks.
Below is a selection of shrub recipes and the drinks in which I’ve used them. You could easily customize your own beverage by adding a shrub to your favorite gin, vodka, and rum-based libations.
Colonial Sour Cherry Shrub
Photo Courtesy of Glenn Scott
Colonial Sour Cherry Shrub
Ingredients:
8 oz. Jar of Sour Cherry Preserves
1 cup Demerara Sugar
1 cup Apple Cider Vinegar
Preparation:Place the sour cherry preserves in a nonreactive bowl, and cover with the sugar. Let them steep together for at least overnight (or for a few days) at room temperature. Then strain the cherry mixture through a non-reactive sieve, crushing the tender fruits with a wooden spoon to extract as much flavor and sweet juice as possible. Combine with the vinegar; let the mixture sit for a few hours, and then strain into sterilized bottles.
The Benjamin Gunn Mystery Cocktail
The Benjamin Gunn Mystery Cocktail
Ingredients:
2 tbsp. Colonial Sour Cherry Shrub
2 oz. Dark Rum (a Molasses-Based Rum that’s Been Aged in Ex-Bourbon Oak is Ideal)
1/4 oz. Dark Amber Maple Syrup
Splash of Seltzer Water
Lemon Twist
Dash of Cherry Bitters
Preparation:Place an ice cube in a rocks glass, and add 2 tbsp. of the sour cherry shrub. Add the dark rum and the maple syrup, and then top with a splash of fizzy seltzer water. Garnish with a lemon twist, and dot with cherry bitters.
Ginger-Lime Shrub
Ginger-Lime Shrub
Ingredients:
4 Limes, Zested and Quartered
1 cup Demerara Sugar
6 tbsp. Freshly Grated Ginger Root
1–2 cups Apple Cider Vinegar (Depending on the Height of the Ingredients when Placed in a Bowl)
Preparation:In a non-reactive bowl, combine the lime peels, lime quarters, sugar, and ginger. Stir to combine and coat all the fruit with sugar. Cover and leave at room temperature at least overnight or for 1 to 2 days. (Slow, cool fermentation gives a shrub its trademark bite.) Now prepare your shrub for aging. Set a strainer over another non-reactive bowl and pour the lime and ginger into the strainer. Use a stout wooden spoon to extract as much juice as possible from the limes and the softened ginger. Let the mixture sit for a few more hours.
Stir again, and discard the fruit chunks. Stir in the vinegar, and then use a funnel to transfer the shrub syrup to a sterilized bottle. Seal and then shake well to combine. Store the bottles in the refrigerator or at cellar temperature for 3 to 4weeks before using. Shake each bottle once or twice daily to help the sugar dissolve. When it’s mostly dissolved, your shrub is ready to use. Makes 1 1/2 cups. Keep refrigerated, and use within about 6 months.
Ginger-Lime Shrub with Rhum Agricole and Salty Lemonade
Ingredients:
2 tbsp. Ginger-Lime Shrub
2 oz. 100-proof Rhum Agricole Blanc
3 oz. Freshly Made Lemonade, Sweetened with Raw Honey or Simple Syrup
1/2 oz. Seltzer Water
1 pinch Fleur De Sel
2–3 drops Lime Bitters
Preparation:Add the Ginger-Lime Shrub to an old fashioned glass. Then add an ice spear. Top with the Rhum Agricole Blanc, the lemonade, and a splash of seltzer water. Sprinkle a pinch of fleur de sel into the drink, and finish with a couple drops of lime bitters.
Squire’s Strawberry-Rhubarb Shrub
Squire’s Strawberry-Rhubarb Shrub
Ingredients:
2 cups Roasted Strawberries and Rhubarb, Equal Parts
1 cup Demerara Sugar
1 cup Light Balsamic Vinegar
Preparation:Add the roasted strawberries and rhubarb to a non-reactive bowl. Cover with the sugar, stir to combine, and cover it with plastic wrap. Leave at cool room temperature for 24 hours. Stir frequently during this time to combine as the berries and rhubarb give off their liquid.
Place a non-reactive strainer above a second non-reactive bowl, pour the fruit-sugar mixture into the strainer, and use a wooden spoon to mash the mixture in order to release as much liquid as possible. (Reserve the mashed fruit to use in cooking or baking, if you like.) Add the balsamic vinegar to the liquid, stir, and let the mixture sit for a few hours. Funnel into sterilized bottles or jars, and age for 3–4 weeks in the refrigerator. This shrub will last nearly indefinitely, but if it begins to quiver, dance, or speak in foreign languages, throw it out.
Squire’s Shrub Cocktail
Squire’s Shrub Cocktail
1 Brown Sugar Cube
Several Dashes of Lemon Bitters
1/2 oz. Botanical Gin
2 oz. Squire’s Strawberry-Rhubarb Shrub
1 1/2 oz. Champagne, or Dry Sparkling Wine
1 Long Lemon Twist
Preparation:Add the sugar cube to a Champagne flute (see below), and moisten with the lemon bitters. Then add the gin and the Squire’s Strawberry-Rhubarb Shrub, and top with Champagne. Garnish with a long lemon twist.
Note: To prepare this flute, combine very finely chopped lemon zest and sugar, wet the rim of the glass with lemon, and dip the glass into yellow-colored sugar.
Klaus and I were interviewed for my upcoming fourth book, Cannabis Cocktails! It will be aired Friday at 10 pm on WWOR-TV 9, Friday at 12 am FOX 25 Philly and Friday at 1 am FOX 5 NYC!!
http://www.my9nj.com/chasing-news
Cannabis CocktailsChasing NJ Staff, Warren Bobrow & Klaus the Soused Gnome
Asheville is best known as Beer City USA, but there’s also a vibrant mixed drink scene, too. So this spring, the city will host a week-long celebration of mixology and fine craft spirits. Asheville Cocktail Week May 1-8 features an assorted of mixed drink events, including a Bloody Mary contest, a Cinco de May tequila tasting, a Kentucky Derby party and a spirits dinner. The week is a spin-off from The Asheville Wine and Food Festival.
Tickets are on sale Feb. 15, Kris Kraft, event director, said. Mixed drinks had been a component of the Asheville Wine and Food Festival, but with that element growing, it needed its own event, Kraft said. “We thought it would be best to remove it (from the Wine and Food Festival) altogether and highlight it in way all its own.” Venues include the historic S&W Cafeteria space, Malaprop’s Bookstore, the Smoky Park Supper Club and Ol’ Shakey’s bar. “We will have events in restaurants, event centers, bars, inside and outside,” she said.
Author Warren Bobrow, “The Cocktail Whisperer,” will do a reading and signing at Malaprop’s, the downtown bookstore.
Book signing with Warren Bobrow, May 5, Malaprop’s. Bobrow has written three books: Apothecary Cocktails: Restorative Drinks from Yesterday and Today (2013), Whiskey Cocktails: Rediscovered Classics and Contemporary Craft Drinks (2014) and Bitters and Shrub Syrup Cocktails: Restorative Vintage Cocktails, Mocktails & Elixirs (2015). https://cocktailwhisperer.com
Spirits dinner with Warren Bobrow with Beam Suntory, May 5 at the Historic S&W Cafeteria. Bobrow joins the dinner to share his lifetime of secrets and stories. The meal is prepared by Asheville chefs.
More details and information will be posted Feb. 15 at ashevillewineandfood.com/asheville-cocktail-week.