Table of Contents
Intro
Employment Paths
Types of Drinking Establishments
The Tools of the Trade
Tips
I've seen at least a few ROK articles talk about being a bartender is a great way to "insert yourself into an environment populated by horny peak fertility window r-selected females" or some such. Unless you're a hot chick, there is a ZERO percent chance that you will be hired as a bartender with no experience at a bar that you can make money at unless you are well connected.
The objective is to get a job at a legit establishment.
There is money to be made there and lots to learn and fun to be had.
If you're interested in becoming a bartender, your first step would be to delve into different types of alcohols and learn about cocktails on your own time. Become interested in liquors, beers, wines, and how to make cocktails. Use yourself as a guinea pig. The good news is, even if you suck, and fuck up your first 10 drinks, you still win.
I had an advantage when I become interested in doing this kind of work. Namely I'd already been an alcoholic. Or rather was a budding one at the time I started..
Paths to Gainful Employment
You can only booze it up under the pretenses of "an interest in spirits" for so long, right?
Getting an actual job behind a bar isn't as easy as you might think. Most people will go around and apply at bars, and when they tell the manager they have no experience, that's the end of the interview. Unless we're talking about some type of bikini bar shit which obviously doesn't apply here.
Barbacking
If you can't get a job as a bartender right off the bat, you can try to get a job as a barback. Even these jobs can be hard to get if you have zero service industry experience altogether. But if you have no experience, it's an easier job to get.
Bar backs are basically the bartenders support. They clean glasses, tap kegs, haul ice, restock stuff, ect. Occassionally they make drinks. This is how they learn to eventually bartend. It also is a job where you will learn to get used to the high stress atmosphere of a bar / restaurant, because that is a learning curve in and of itself.
Catering
Event bartending is another option. The barrier to entry for catering bartending is much lower than bartending at an actual establishment.
Getting a job with a catering company is easy as hell. They're desperate for people to work these events. The hourly pay varies, in my experience 20 an hour for one company and 14 for another, so nothing too great really. But you get the experience 'bartending'. The tips are also hit or miss. Some ethnicities don't tip. When you're behind a bar at a real establishment, this evens out over the course of the shift most of the time. So you're not as effected when you deal with one or two indians or foreigners who don't tip. But when you're working an indian wedding on the other hand...
This means you're going to be frustrated with some of the gigs you get (andcertain ethnic groups) but will get the experience bartending which will help you along the way.
You'll learn to profile people real fast this way. I don't just mean racially. I mean you find out what kind of people you're dealing with once they get a few drinks in them. Some are assholes. Others aren't.
The problem with catering work is that it's a double edged sword. If all you have is event bartending experience on your resume it's very hard to convince a real bar to hire you, because frankly most event bartenders suck terribly. When you're working some wedding somewhere you have limited booze and mixers to work with so you aren't going to be making more complex drinks that you will have to make under other circumstances. So while you do want to get the experience from catering you don't want to be strictly an "event" bartender. Making the transition from event bartender to brick and mortar bartender takes persistence and lots of pavement pounding. You also have to consider working events you are not dealing with cash and a POS system, you're just cranking out drinks one customer at a time. This is to your advantage when working an event where people tip well, but doesn't entirely prepare you for working behind a busy bar with people 5 deep.
Bartending School- Y/N?
I'll summarize; don't go.
Here's the thing; there could easily be a good bartending school model, where you actually do learn the art of bartending and the business, but I haven't seen one yet. They just teach you a bunch of recipes, which doesn't do you much good as recipes vary depending on the establishment.
Types of Drinking Establishments
Once you've got enough skills, confidence, and know how to land a job at a place where you can make some decent money, you have to decide what kind of a set up suits your personality best.
There's restaurant bars, nightclubs, neighborhood bars, golf courses, country clubs, hotels, private clubs, banquet bars, ect. Each of these will have it's own idiosyncrasies and parts about the job you may like or dislike. They also attract different types of people, and more importantly, different kinds of clientele. You want to end up at a place where your personality goes over well for the clientele.
Here's a tip, try to get a position where you don't have to deal with food. I can't stress that enough. You'll deal with way less BS this way, though it may be necessary to have restaurant experience depending on your location.
The Tools of the Trade
Shakers
Shakers are used to...you guessed it, shake cocktails. There's basically two rules to remember here. If it has citrus or milk, you shake it.
There's basically two types:
Boston Shakers
![[Image: ICM1034-bostn-shaker.jpg?v=1453425543]](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0709/6215/products/ICM1034-bostn-shaker.jpg?v=1453425543)
Cobbler Shakers
![[Image: 3fcf9bc8d1ac7aeb7baa5b36c3284945.jpg]](https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/3f/cf/9b/3fcf9bc8d1ac7aeb7baa5b36c3284945.jpg)
Cobbler shakers are shit and should never be used in any professional setting. They tend to leak, the cap gets stuck on, and they can hold less fluid than a Boston shaker set.
The boston (aka glass on tin) setup is the most reliable. They are what most professionals use. However there's a lot of different perspectives on glass on tin vs tin on tin. Personally I use glass on tin.
I like to build my drinks inside glass in front of my customers so they can see exactly what's going into the glass.
When you're shaking up a couple of margaritas with your Boston shaker you look cool. When you're shaking them up in a Cobbler shaker and the cap gets stuck on you look like an amateur.
These things matter.
Mixing Glass
![[Image: 4882_main.jpg]](http://www.truefabrications.com/assets/images/products/4882_main.jpg)
This is used in conjunction with your Bar Spoon to stir drinks that aren't to be shaken. Most of the time, when a drink is composed of mostly spirits, you are going to stir it rather than shake it. For example, a Martini, a Negroni, or a Manhattan.
Bar Spoon
![[Image: ball-tip-bar-spoon-800.jpg]](http://www.barproducts.com/media/catalog/product/cache/2/image/640x640/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/b/a/ball-tip-bar-spoon-800.jpg)
This is an extended spoon with a corkscrew function built into it. The technique with the bar spoon is to stir the ice through the drink inside the mixing glass. The idea is to move the ice around using the spoon as to chill the drink with as little dilution as possible.
James Bond may drink his Martini "shaken not stirred" but nobody else does.
Other uses for the bar spoon include making layered shots / floating liquor, such as in the B52 shot:
![[Image: Cocktail_B52.jpg]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3a/Cocktail_B52.jpg)
The technique is to turn the spoon upside down and to slowly raise it up as you pour on your next layer on top of the spoon. In the case of the B52; Kahlua, Bailey's, and Grand Marinier.
Intro
Employment Paths
Types of Drinking Establishments
The Tools of the Trade
Tips
I've seen at least a few ROK articles talk about being a bartender is a great way to "insert yourself into an environment populated by horny peak fertility window r-selected females" or some such. Unless you're a hot chick, there is a ZERO percent chance that you will be hired as a bartender with no experience at a bar that you can make money at unless you are well connected.
The objective is to get a job at a legit establishment.
There is money to be made there and lots to learn and fun to be had.
If you're interested in becoming a bartender, your first step would be to delve into different types of alcohols and learn about cocktails on your own time. Become interested in liquors, beers, wines, and how to make cocktails. Use yourself as a guinea pig. The good news is, even if you suck, and fuck up your first 10 drinks, you still win.
I had an advantage when I become interested in doing this kind of work. Namely I'd already been an alcoholic. Or rather was a budding one at the time I started..
Paths to Gainful Employment
You can only booze it up under the pretenses of "an interest in spirits" for so long, right?
Getting an actual job behind a bar isn't as easy as you might think. Most people will go around and apply at bars, and when they tell the manager they have no experience, that's the end of the interview. Unless we're talking about some type of bikini bar shit which obviously doesn't apply here.
Barbacking
If you can't get a job as a bartender right off the bat, you can try to get a job as a barback. Even these jobs can be hard to get if you have zero service industry experience altogether. But if you have no experience, it's an easier job to get.
Bar backs are basically the bartenders support. They clean glasses, tap kegs, haul ice, restock stuff, ect. Occassionally they make drinks. This is how they learn to eventually bartend. It also is a job where you will learn to get used to the high stress atmosphere of a bar / restaurant, because that is a learning curve in and of itself.
Catering
Event bartending is another option. The barrier to entry for catering bartending is much lower than bartending at an actual establishment.
Getting a job with a catering company is easy as hell. They're desperate for people to work these events. The hourly pay varies, in my experience 20 an hour for one company and 14 for another, so nothing too great really. But you get the experience 'bartending'. The tips are also hit or miss. Some ethnicities don't tip. When you're behind a bar at a real establishment, this evens out over the course of the shift most of the time. So you're not as effected when you deal with one or two indians or foreigners who don't tip. But when you're working an indian wedding on the other hand...
This means you're going to be frustrated with some of the gigs you get (andcertain ethnic groups) but will get the experience bartending which will help you along the way.
You'll learn to profile people real fast this way. I don't just mean racially. I mean you find out what kind of people you're dealing with once they get a few drinks in them. Some are assholes. Others aren't.
The problem with catering work is that it's a double edged sword. If all you have is event bartending experience on your resume it's very hard to convince a real bar to hire you, because frankly most event bartenders suck terribly. When you're working some wedding somewhere you have limited booze and mixers to work with so you aren't going to be making more complex drinks that you will have to make under other circumstances. So while you do want to get the experience from catering you don't want to be strictly an "event" bartender. Making the transition from event bartender to brick and mortar bartender takes persistence and lots of pavement pounding. You also have to consider working events you are not dealing with cash and a POS system, you're just cranking out drinks one customer at a time. This is to your advantage when working an event where people tip well, but doesn't entirely prepare you for working behind a busy bar with people 5 deep.
Bartending School- Y/N?
I'll summarize; don't go.
Here's the thing; there could easily be a good bartending school model, where you actually do learn the art of bartending and the business, but I haven't seen one yet. They just teach you a bunch of recipes, which doesn't do you much good as recipes vary depending on the establishment.
Types of Drinking Establishments
Once you've got enough skills, confidence, and know how to land a job at a place where you can make some decent money, you have to decide what kind of a set up suits your personality best.
There's restaurant bars, nightclubs, neighborhood bars, golf courses, country clubs, hotels, private clubs, banquet bars, ect. Each of these will have it's own idiosyncrasies and parts about the job you may like or dislike. They also attract different types of people, and more importantly, different kinds of clientele. You want to end up at a place where your personality goes over well for the clientele.
Here's a tip, try to get a position where you don't have to deal with food. I can't stress that enough. You'll deal with way less BS this way, though it may be necessary to have restaurant experience depending on your location.
The Tools of the Trade
Shakers
Shakers are used to...you guessed it, shake cocktails. There's basically two rules to remember here. If it has citrus or milk, you shake it.
There's basically two types:
Boston Shakers
![[Image: ICM1034-bostn-shaker.jpg?v=1453425543]](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0709/6215/products/ICM1034-bostn-shaker.jpg?v=1453425543)
Cobbler Shakers
![[Image: 3fcf9bc8d1ac7aeb7baa5b36c3284945.jpg]](https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/3f/cf/9b/3fcf9bc8d1ac7aeb7baa5b36c3284945.jpg)
Cobbler shakers are shit and should never be used in any professional setting. They tend to leak, the cap gets stuck on, and they can hold less fluid than a Boston shaker set.
The boston (aka glass on tin) setup is the most reliable. They are what most professionals use. However there's a lot of different perspectives on glass on tin vs tin on tin. Personally I use glass on tin.
I like to build my drinks inside glass in front of my customers so they can see exactly what's going into the glass.
When you're shaking up a couple of margaritas with your Boston shaker you look cool. When you're shaking them up in a Cobbler shaker and the cap gets stuck on you look like an amateur.
These things matter.
Mixing Glass
![[Image: 4882_main.jpg]](http://www.truefabrications.com/assets/images/products/4882_main.jpg)
This is used in conjunction with your Bar Spoon to stir drinks that aren't to be shaken. Most of the time, when a drink is composed of mostly spirits, you are going to stir it rather than shake it. For example, a Martini, a Negroni, or a Manhattan.
Bar Spoon
![[Image: ball-tip-bar-spoon-800.jpg]](http://www.barproducts.com/media/catalog/product/cache/2/image/640x640/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/b/a/ball-tip-bar-spoon-800.jpg)
This is an extended spoon with a corkscrew function built into it. The technique with the bar spoon is to stir the ice through the drink inside the mixing glass. The idea is to move the ice around using the spoon as to chill the drink with as little dilution as possible.
James Bond may drink his Martini "shaken not stirred" but nobody else does.
Other uses for the bar spoon include making layered shots / floating liquor, such as in the B52 shot:
![[Image: Cocktail_B52.jpg]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3a/Cocktail_B52.jpg)
The technique is to turn the spoon upside down and to slowly raise it up as you pour on your next layer on top of the spoon. In the case of the B52; Kahlua, Bailey's, and Grand Marinier.
"Does PUA say that I just need to get to f-close base first here and some weird chemicals will be released in her brain to make her a better person?"
-Wonitis