Bar at home: A beginner’s guide to a basic home bar set-up

Bar at home: A beginner's guide to a basic home bar set-up

While not everyone craves a home bar, it’s a luxury that many grown-ups would enjoy. Even if you’re not a frequent drinker or interested in dabbling in creating cocktails, having a bar at home may be something that comes into its own when you have a few friends round for a dinner party or celebration.

Thus, if you intend to have a bar at home, you should know how to set up a bar that contains all of the necessary equipment and is visually appealing and encourages you to experiment with new ideas.

With that in mind, this article will give you some of the basic home bar set-ups from drinkware and bar tools like mixers, shakers, and strainers. All these things can help you set up your bar at home and become your own bartender. So, read on!

Basic home bar set-up

If you want to have a home bar, regardless of whether or not you’re a bar enthusiast, you need to have the right tools. Getting the best hospitality supplier that will offer high-quality items for your bar will surely get you an awesome-looking bar. So here’s a list of some essential bar tools for your home bar set-up.

Shakers

A cocktail shaker is one of the indispensable and most basic bar tools. It allows you to thoroughly blend cocktails, which is necessary for creating a deliciously cooled, mixed beverage. A cocktail shaker is available in two distinct forms: Cobblers and Boston-style. The latter is a metal container that tightly fits over a shaker glass to prevent it from spilling while shaking.

The majority of the experienced bartenders prefer to use Boston-style shakers as they are more convenient and can be easily cleaned for reuse. However, for home bar use, you may choose to opt for the cobbler. This is a one-piece shaker consisting of a cap, metal tin, and a built-in filter. This is also an excellent choice if you’re just getting started with cocktail mixing.

Jiggers

A bar tool that you see bartenders use in measuring and pouring liquor shots to create cocktails, which can be shaped like an hourglass or in a narrow and sleek style, is called a jigger. It comes in various sizes, but a standard jigger typically measures 1½ ounces.

Having this valuable item for your home bar set-up is crucial as it will help you determine the proper measurements when following a cocktail recipe or crafting your drink and will enable you to serve a high-quality drink to yourself or your guests.

Strainers

One essential bar tool that you need to be equipped with is a cocktail strainer. This is a piece of bar equipment that filters out solid particles such as ice, fruit bits, or pulp from the drink that has been shaken or mixed. There are three types of strainers that you should consider before buying: the Julep Strainer, Hawthorne Strainer and Fine Strainer.

Mixing glass and bar spoons

A mixing glass is a necessary home bar set-up specially designed for combining the cocktail’s ingredients. Although you can use alternative drinkware like a pint glass, having a dedicated mixing glass in the bar counter of your home can add elegance and functionality.

On the other hand, bar spoons aren’t your typical type of spoon, as they’re specifically designed for stirring cocktails. Instead, they’re often long-handled, manufactured from stainless steel and made so that they don’t interfere with the drink’s taste.

Home bar drinkware

The bar is stocked with different glasses, and each glass is designated for a specific drink. The right glass for your cocktail can be found in various sizes to suit your preference: short, tall, fancy or casual.

●      Coupe glasses

Besides its classy style and look, this drinkware is all-round. You can have your Margarita or Martini in this glass instead of buying special ones for such specific drinks. Also, they’re far more effective at avoiding spills.

●      Shot glasses

Shoot your spirits away! Although this type of drinkware can be alternatively used as a jigger measure, this glass is typically used to serve powerful spirits and cocktails in single, neat servings.

You wouldn’t want to waste an expensive bottle of whiskey by pouring a large volume of it into a normal glass would you? Aside from proper measurements, shot glasses provide you an invaluable way to save on your more pricey drinks and spirits.

●      Rocks glasses

Want to sip on your whiskey? The old-fashioned glass is also referred to as a rocks glass. This drinkware is typically used for small mixed drinks served on the rocks.

Takeaway

Are you planning on installing a bar counter in your home? Having these basic home bar set-ups will give you a solid ground for entertaining your guests or enjoying a beverage on your own. Having the right tools such as a jigger, stirrers, mixers and glassware, allows you to mix your drinks easily for fun and enjoyable get-togethers at home.

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Auction alert: Antiques, Collectables & General Sale including Jewellery

Vintage Danish brass light pendant

This week, we’re featuring Eastbourne Auction who are located in the south coast town of the same name. Their Antiques, Collectables & General Sale including Jewellery will consist of a whopping 1,961 lots. It will take place across 3 days, Wednesday 12th – Friday 14th January 2022 from 10am.

Many people will be taking part in Dry January next month – however, we’ve singled out a couple of corking items (see below) that would look fabulous on your retro drinks trolley. In addition, there will be three vintage Whitefriars art glass vases kicking off the sale on the Wednesday. They’re all in the popular tangerine colourway.

Live online bidding is now available for all of our auctions via www.eastbourneauction.com or www.easyliveAuction.com  enabling you to take part in the bidding from anywhere in the world, live as it happens. To bid online you need to register at www.eastbourneauction.com or www.easyliveAuction.com.

A buyer’s premium of 30% (inc. VAT and minimum of £2.40 per lot) is payable on all sold lots, this is available to bidders who settle their invoices promptly. If you will be bidding via the easyliveauction site, there is a flat fee of £3.00 or 3% of the final hammer price (the type of fee is to be decided by the bidder on registration for the sale).

We can arrange packing and / or shipping on your behalf for smaller non fragile items. We will email you a quote detailing the shipping method, and will ship when you have approved and paid for this service. Eastbourne Auctions do not accept any responsibility for losses or damages from the time a parcel or items are passed to a courier / shipper.

Geoffrey Baxter for Whitefriars tangerine glass vases

Lots 1, 2 & 3: Geoffrey Baxter for Whitefriars tangerine glass vases
Geoffrey Baxter for Whitefriars, drunken bricklayer glass vase in tangerine, 21.5cm high
Geoffrey Baxter for Whitefriars, cello glass vase in tangerine, 18.5cm high
Geoffrey Baxter for Whitefriars, volcano glass vase in tangerine, 18cm high
Estimates: £40 – £100

Herbert Terry two step Anglepoise lamp

Lot 188: Herbert Terry two step Anglepoise lamp
Estimate: £40 – £80

Art Deco design silver plated cocktail shaker

Lot 221: Art Deco design silver plated cocktail shaker
In the form of an aeroplane bomb, 24cm high
Estimate: £100 – £200

Vintage Danish brass light pendant

Lot 334: Vintage Danish brass light pendant
38cm in diameter
Estimate: £30 – £50

Modernist bronze sculpture of a nude female

Lot 420: Modernist bronze sculpture of a nude female
25cm in length
Estimate: £80 – £150

Four Japanese Kokeshi dolls

Lot 450: Four Japanese Kokeshi dolls
The largest 36cm high
Estimate: £80 – £150

Pair of Art Deco design cut glass scent bottles with stoppers

Lot 520: Pair of Art Deco design cut glass scent bottles with stoppers
14cm high
Estimate: £80 – £150

Novelty silver plated bar companion set

Lot 1228: Novelty silver plated bar companion set
Including corkscrew and bottle opener, 28cm high
Estimate: £80 – £150

Frank Lloyd Wright Aus Stellung Exhibition poster

Lot 1531: Frank Lloyd Wright Aus Stellung Exhibition poster
Printed by Markgraf – Druck, framed and glazed, 83cm x 60.5cm excluding the frame
Estimate: £50 – £100

Price Points: Moscow Mule mugs

Moscow Mule mugs

Moscow Mule – it sounds so Cold War Soviet Union. In fact, the cocktail was invented in the early 1940s by two American drinks distributors.

On 28 July 1948, it was reported in the New York Herald Tribune:

“The mule was born in Manhattan but ‘stalled’ on the West Coast for the duration. The birthplace of ‘Little Moscow’ was in New York’s Chatham Hotel. That was back in 1941 when the first carload of Jack Morgan’s Cock ‘n’ Bull ginger beer was railing over the plains to give New Yorkers a happy surprise. Here was ginger beer in crockery bottles tasting exactly like that of old England.”

“Three friends were in the Chatham bar, one John A. Morgan, known as Jack, president of Cock ‘n’ Bull Products and owner of the Hollywood Cock ‘n’ Bull Restaurant; one was John G. Martin, president of G. F. Heublein Brothers, Inc. of Hartford, Conn., and the third was Rudolph Kunett, president of the Pierre Smirnoff, Heublein’s vodka division. As Jack Morgan tells it, ‘We three were quaffing a slug, nibbling an hors d’oeuvre and shoving toward inventive genius.’ Martin and Kunett had their minds on their vodka and wondered what would happen if a two-ounce shot joined with Morgan’s ginger beer and the squeeze of a lime. Ice was ordered, limes procured, mugs ushered in and the concoction put together. Cups were raised, the men counted five and down went the first taste. It was good. It lifted the spirit to adventure. Four or five later the mixture was christened the Moscow Mule… and for a number of obvious reasons. “

The exact reason why Moscow Mules are traditionally drunk out of copper mugs is a bit lost in time. However, the material certainly suits this cocktail – the metal keeps the drink colder for longer, necessitating less ice. And it apparently makes the acidic lime taste sharper.

I’d happily quaff Moscow Mules from any of three of the mug collections above. But I’d choose the hammered version over the other two. Firstly, I like my mugs with a handle – there are no freezing (or burning, if glugging Glühwein) fingers to contend with. Additionally, I know it goes against what I’ve just said, but the hammered body is so tactile…

  1. Copper Moscow Mule mugs (set of 4): $63, Food52
  2. Set of 6 pure hammered copper Moscow Mule mugs: £83.25, Amazon
  3. Tom Dixon Plum Moscow Mule glasses, set of 2: £55, John Lewis