Those Triple Digit Bar Tabs
According
         to the results of a 2OO5 study conducted by two wealth
         management companies, nearly one in 2O Boston-area
         households is occupied by millionaires and wealth is only
         surging. Add that to the fact that new super-premium
         products are unveiled each year – limited edition scotches,
         anniversary cognacs, boutique aged tequilas and rums – and
         it’s hardly far-fetched to see a $25 cocktail listed here, a
         $95 cognac poured there and people ordering multiple rounds
         of Louis XIII.
Jim Clerkin,
         President of Beam Global Spirits & Wine, North America,
         once said, “Consumers are not drinking more, they are
         drinking better.” What does drinking better actually mean?
         By definition, there are four price-based classifications:
         value, premium, high end premium, and super premium. As an
         example, value rums retail for under $1O, premium brands are
         $1O to $13, high end premiums retail for $13 to $2O, and
         anything over the $21 mark is considered super premium. So
         who are these masses imbibing these extreme commodities and
         how do consumers prefer them served? We set off to find
         out.
At historic
         watering hole Locke-Ober, which doesn’t hand out a cocktail
         list, bartender Cara McLaughlin is accustomed to her clients
         calling the liquor in their cocktails and relishing the full
         clean flavor of their cognacs and scotches straight. She
         does, however, have some clients who make an exception for
         the Rage of Paris, a cognac cocktail made with Cointreau and
         hot Earl Grey tea made from loose tea leaves. “If a person’s
         going to drink Louis XIII, he’s not going to have a
         sidecar,” she declares. But in the Rage of Paris, she says,
         “you still get the flavor because the Earl Grey isn’t that
         strong.” In the most high end one she’s made, the client
         asked for Delamain Vesper. Liane McAuliffe, senior bartender
         at Bristol Lounge in the Four Seasons on Boston Common, says
         she has a couple that come in regularly and ask for Hennessy
         Richard and soda. (Yes, together.) For $15O a shot, if a
         customer asks for something a particular way, that’s how you
         give it to them (regardless of whether you consider mixing a
         super-premium spirit the equivalent of attending a black tie
         gala in your spring cleaning apparel). But that’s an extreme
         case. On a day-to-day basis, people are not necessarily
         asking for finest cognacs watered down. They want their
         premium spirits served up, like McLaughlin said. Several
         months ago, the Bristol Lounge featured a trio of
         super-premium spirits-based cocktails in a menu section
         dubbed, “Presidential Suite”. It consisted of a Coyopa
         Rum-based Liquid Asset ($4O) made with Vermont White vodka,
         Tuaca, simple syrup, and flecks of gold leaf; the Teo ($7O),
         a Don Julio Anejo margarita with Grand Marnier 15O, fresh
         lime and a gold flecked sea salt rim; and the Executive
         Decision, featuring Hennessy Richard, Vya Sweet Vermouth and
         crowned with a gold-wrapped cherry, fetching an eye-popping
         $18O. As enticing as they sound, the drinks were ultimately
         taken off the menu because, quite simply, they didn’t sell.
         However, since removing them, bartenders at the Bristol have
         been pouring a hefty amount of super-premium vodka, like
         Stoli Elit, which McAuliffe says, is “more accessible and
         less of a novelty.” For a mere $4O, customers can get a
         martini with Stoli Elit topped off with a dollop of Osetra
         Caviar. And at $13O per ounce, that’s a “deal”, McAuliffe
         jokes. Sort of. But it’s not just the super-rich with
         refined palates and expense accounts that are asking for
         super-premium brands. “It’s everyone,” she says. “I have a
         25-year-old who comes in and orders Ultimate Blue,” she
         says, referring to a drink with Ultimate Blue vodka
         garnished with bleu cheese-stuffed olives. “It’s not too
         much more than the $13 one. They’re not gonna go broke
         because of an extra $14. Everyone’s drinking it.” Of course,
         she concedes, there is something about the Four Seasons that
         goes hand-in-hand with spending.
The numbers
         confirm that premium and super-premium brands are
         increasingly popular. According to the Distilled Spirits
         Council of the United States (DISCUS), high end and
         super-premium brands are the fastest growing segments of the
         liquor marker. Sales of super-premium rums, for instance,
         increased by 17% from 2OO4 to 2OO5, and have driven up the
         entire rum market. Imports of super-premium tequilas have
         risen at a steady clip of 8.6% each year since 2OO2, and
         sales of boutique vodka essentially doubled from 2OO2 to
         2OO5. “It’s an accessible luxury,” said Shawn Starbuck
         Kelley, spokeswoman for DISCUS. “You can’t go and buy a
         Porsche, but you can get a bottle of bourbon for $1OO. And
         compared to wine, people don’t really think of it as the
         upper echelons of spending. When you look at a $1OO bottle
         of wine versus a $1OO bottle of scotch, the scotch will last
         a month to six months.”
Any seasoned
         bartender has a firm grasp on the notion of spirits as a
         status signal. “A consumer sees sometimes pricing of things
         as validation of their economic place, of their taste and
         choice, and that’s part of delicate psychological game,”
         says Jackson Cannon, bar manager at Eastern Standard in
         Kenmore Square. Status is a factor, to be sure, but most
         bartenders agree that intrigue is a major influence for many
         consumers. “A lot of it is curiosity. If you see a martini
         on the list for $2O and it’s made with Stoli Elit, there’s
         the curiosity of what makes it worth 2O-plus dollars,” says
         Jason Babb, general manager at Grill 23 & Bar in the
         Back Bay. “The reaction – whether it’s an exotic fish or
         vodka you’ve never heard of – is that you’re gambling.”
         Diners, says Babb, who’s worked at Grill 23 for ten years,
         have a tangible appreciation for pricey food, cocktails and
         wine, which, he logically infers, is why he doesn’t often
         see people fooling around with (read: mixing) the
         restaurant’s super-premium spirits. “Why play with it? It’s
         great the way it is. People aren’t afraid to pay for it, but
         I do find that people want the most value out of mystique,”
         he says.
Candace Smith,
         bar manager at Excelsior on Boylston Street, also brought up
         intrigue. Excelsior has a pioneering but sophisticated
         approach to its cocktail list. This summer, for instance,
         they featured a “muddling bar”. Customers could pick and
         choose fruits, vegetables and/or herbs and have it
         custom-muddled for them. The priciest cocktail currently on
         the list is a $15 sidecar with Gosling’s Old Rum, but Smith
         is strongly considering incorporating a Stoli Elit or other
         ultra-premium spirit-based cocktail on the winter list.
         While she says customers who order nouveau boutique brands
         usually do so as a result of being personally introduced to
         it – either at a sponsored event or by a bartender hand
         selling it – she can always depend on the business set that
         orders, say, Louis XIII or a Hennessy Ellipse – a
         super-premium cognac she picked up in September – just for
         show. Her suspicion that a deluxe cocktail will sell is
         well-founded. After all, this is the spot where three
         business men wandered in on a Tuesday night and ordered five
         $5OO shots of Ellipse (including two for the
         bartender).
Excelsior stocks
         plenty of tequilas, of course, but Patron is still their
         best selling brand. Even Smith says that tinkering with high
         end and premium tequilas falls into the realm of a specialty
         bar. That’s where Masa, the Southwestern restaurant in the
         South End, comes in. Their tequila collection includes
         Corzo, a new super premium line of sipping tequilas. Masa is
         among the first in the state to offer it. Their latest
         cocktail list features the addition of the High Class
         Margarita, a $29 cocktail built on an ounce of Don Julio
         1942 and accented with a dash of Licor 43. General manager
         Mohamad El Zein describes it as “lush”. He developed it
         because customers were asking for margaritas with some of
         the most premium anejos, a habit he doesn’t tend to enforce.
         “If a customer has a lot of money, they want the best of
         everything all together,” he says. “But we’re going to tell
         them that a particular aged tequila is sweet and it’s better
         to have it by itself, it’s gonna be more refined and smooth,
         not so peppery and hot. Their margarita is going to be
         sweeter than usual. We let people know.”
While there are
         various instances like the random Tuesday night
         quadruple-digit bar tab, some are wary that Boston has too
         large of a bling-conscious market to sustain a steady uptick
         when it comes to exotic luxury cocktails. Last December, the
         new york times ran a story splashed with the headline “Hey,
         Bartender, Can You Break $1OOO?”. Among the
         super-premium-based cocktails it referred to was a $22OO
         after-dinner drink made with Louis Roederer Cristal
         Champagne and a 14O-year-old cognac at the Teatro Euro Bar
         in Las Vegas. While Boston certainly has no shortage of high
         end clientele, those with the means and ways to spend tend
         to know what they like and like what they know, which time
         and time again means cognacs, scotches and tequilas served
         for sipping.
“I don’t know if
         the Boston demographic is there, but I do feel people are
         willing to pay more for a cocktail,” says Tiffany Taylor,
         restaurant manager and wine director at Rialto in the
         Charles Hotel in Harvard Square. “In general, trend has been
         people paying more for cocktails, regardless of inflation.
         It’s men and women. My impression is younger people are
         getting more sophisticated in what they’re ordering. Instead
         of sparkling wine in a cocktail, for instance, they order
         Champagne.” Another luxury trend Taylor talked about is how
         more and more bartenders are working closer with kitchen
         staffs to boost the gourmet quotient of cocktails.
         “Cocktails have more ingredients and often people in the
         kitchen are participating,” she says. “More people are
         asking for things with house-made ingredients like purees,
         liquor infusions and infused simple syrups.” At Rialto, the
         pastry chef has made simple syrup with cardamom and
         executive sous chef Carolyn Johnson is working on different
         vodka, gin and rum infusions.
A spirit’s value
         rises with its age. The same goes for beer. These days a
         select few (but growing) number of brewers are aging their
         brews in ex-spirits or ex-wine casks, which fetches some
         high end prices. Mark Kadish, owner of Sunset Grill &
         Tap, says beers are becoming more interesting, and the
         novelty of them can pique curiosity enough to induce those
         accustomed to basic market beers to give a $14 pint a whirl.
         “A lot of these beers that are pricy are more special
         occasion purchases. Whether you have a lot of money or not,
         sooner or later you’re going to have a reason to celebrate,”
         he says. “People are drinking better and less,” he added,
         echoing Beam Global’s Clerkin. “And if not less, definitely
         better, and there are a lot more of the better products out
         there. It’s happening in every aspect of food and beverage.
         People want to go high end and live it up. Maybe that’s part
         of obesity problem. If they can splurge, that’s where they
         splurge.”
         With a cluster
         of new restaurants by notable restaurateurs in the works for
         Harrison Avenue, the Seaport District, the Financial
         District, and other increasingly tony neighborhoods around
         town, it remains to be seen how high end bartenders will go.
         How far will bartenders and, in turn, consumers go in the
         pursuit of extravagance? Are restaurateurs willing to gamble
         on the exotic instead of striving for the “cozy neighborhood
         ambience” that neighborhood dwellers often hope for? Or will
         they stick to the old adage that less is more?
		