Cockatoo Island was an absolute riot of activity this weekend just passed. With the one-weekend-only booze-fest Cocktail Island, the street art festival
Outpost and the balmy weather for just hanging out at
The Island Bar, there was every reason to join the masses waiting for a ferry at Wharf 4, Circular Quay.
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Crowds enjoying Cocktail Island on Cockatoo Island, 20 November 2011 |
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Part of the Outpost Project on Cockatoo Island |
The Cocktail Island event was an uphill walk to the Upper Island part of Cockatoo Island, with masterclasses, tastings and exhibition stands housed in a couple of buildings in the Convict Precinct (apt, really).
Sufficiently warmed after the walk to the Upper Island, we headed straight to the exhibition hall where cocktails could be bought for anything from 3 to 10 Island Dollars (which equated to normal Aussie dollars) from a range of spirited stands and associated fun-loving bar hands.
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Cocktail with St Germain, sparkling wine and lemon zest |
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Cocktails with Hendricks Gin |
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The West Winds Gin - Australian gin! |
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666 Vodka served with young coconut juice in a young coconut |
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Tasting Theatre: History and Future of the Margarita |
Upstairs in the Tasting Theatre, we'd caught the start of the Patrón tequila session hosted by Gee David. With decent sized tastes of Patrón Silver and then margarita samples on offer, it was quite interesting to see the mixed views across the room. A few sniffs yielded woody and citrus flavours, as well as gasoline and "a party".
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Sample of Patrón Silver (it's a shot sized, 30ml cup) |
Sipping the Patrón Silver, we were instructed to hold it if the mouth a while to really suss out the flavours. Admittedly, I never did this in my youth though I guess I wasn't drinking Patrón either. There were flashes of familiarity but on the whole, it wasn't too negative an experience.
The shaken margarita was decidedly better, made with Patrón Citronge; the citrus flavoured tequila in place of Cointreau as per a traditional margarita.
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Patrón tequila in the Tasting Theatre |
It was an educational session where we learnt that the correct service of a margarita entails two questions: "On the rocks?" and "Salt rim?".
While these are standard for a Tommy's Margarita (more further down), apparently it's not for a traditional margarita which is most commonly served straight up with a half or full salt rim.
I also learnt that National Margarita Day occurs on 22 February every year - so chuck that one in next year's diary (note: buy 2012 diary).
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Picnic area on Cocktail Island |
Back outside, the wind had picked up but not so much as to disturb the happy pinickers making the most of the free Mount Franklin sparkling water and a place to sit. After the quick start to the day's drinking and with plenty more to go, food was on the mind somewhat with one stall offering burgers, pies and other fine drinking fare.
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Free popcorn at Cocktail Island |
I don't know who worked out that popcorn and cocktails are great friends, but they sure
are. The balancing act of sweet drinks and salty snacks works a dream, and we scoffed the bag full of buttery popcorn in moments, just ahead of a provocatively named tour led by Jason Crawley, Creative Director of Mixxit.
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Seven Drinks to Try Before You Die at Cocktail Island |
Seven tastes of classic cocktails is fair enough; all within 30 minutes through dark passages into themed bar areas was a different matter. The first cocktail took the tour group back to the Prohibition years with The Greyhound made of Russian vodka and golden grapefruit juice on ice.
A little too easy to drink, the bitterness of the juice makes this an ideal pre eating drink. With a salt rim, and sometimes gin instead of vodka, the drink becomes a Salty Dog.
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The Official Mixer's Manual - first published circa 1934 |
The Last Word cocktail is made with gin, maraschino liqueur, lime juice and green chartreuse, and it's from here that things got a little hazy. I recall thumbing through a rare cocktail book and then heading into the next tiki themed bar area and even Crawley mentioning that Australia's best tiki bar was in
Perth.
I remember a Mai Tai creamy in flavour (Cruzer rum, lime juice, orgeat, triple sec and vanillar) before being lumped a with a full serve of The Blinker, consisting of Jim Beam Rye Whisky, golden grapefruit juice and grenadine.
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Final themed bar of the Seven Drinks to Try Before You Die tour |
All through the tour, Crawley was an endless fountain of knowledge, with so much infomation spurting out that my not-so-sober self still managed to retain a few.
In this last themed room, we sampled a Mint Julep which for me was sweet enough to hide the Maker's Mark bourbon, and a Blood & Sand with Scotch cherry liqueur, sweet vermouth and orange juice.
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Jason Crawley, Creative Director at Mixxit |
I'm pretty sure it had something to do with all the mixing of drinks and moving about different rooms/venues/eras but I was pretty happy all the cocktails despite being triple parked at the end when (keeping count?) there was still one drink to collect.
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Cognac Punch - 1920s style |
All cocktails we currently drink are essentially a form of punch with something added or removed. Called the "founding father" of all mixed drinks, it makes sense as punch dates as far back at 1576.
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Cognac Punch (right) and Blood & Sand (left) cocktails |
Our final drink of the tour was the Cognac Punch, ladled out from a boat by a 1920s styled server. I'm sure everyone who left the tour had at least two cups in hand and may have had a little trouble walking a straight line (or was it just me?). The moment seriously called for food and a pie later, we were ready for more.
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ABSOLUT Flavour Akademi Master Class with Ben Davidson |
The Master Class room was filled for the Absolut session and with a couple of bottles of vodka on each table, it looked like it was going to be a corker session. Kind of needing to sit, we instead headed back upstairs to the Tasting Theatre and found comfy seating and the Chivas Regal tasting.
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Age Matters tasting session by Chivas Regal, Royal Salute and The Glenlivet |
Five samples of Scotch whisky including one clear (unaged?) one that tasted of burning. It was a learning curve for me, but tasting older whiskies as we went along the burning eventually subsided and there were actual flavours to appreciate.
The Chivas Regal 18- and 21-year-old whiskies were getting pretty fine indeed, and rather warming as a light sprinkle of rain started outside.
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"Slàinte mhòr" - a Gaelic toast to health |
Most fun was probably learning a new toast, in Scottish Gaelic at that, especially as most in the room probably weren't entirely sober. With glasses raised, we shouted "
Slàinte mhòr" (sounds like "
slohn ja vor") as host James Buntin's father did before a tipple.
The day was getting long but there was no missing the final session in the Piazza Tasting room; a pretty old sandstone building yet an entirely appropriate room for tequila tasting.
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Julio Bermejo - creator of Tommy's Margarita |
Here, we were educated by two of the industries finest tequila minds: Julio Bermejo of Tommy's Mexican Restaurant and the World's Best Tequila Bar in San Francisco and Phil Bayly of Cafe Pacifico in Surry Hills.
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Phil Bayly of Cafe Pacifico |
There was plenty of talk about agave plants and its honey-like nectar, and getting what you pay for when it comes to tequila.
Bermejo is the Ambassador of Tequila to the US for the Mexican Government and, wait for it, the creator of Tommy's Margarita. He started serving this version of the margarita - with 100% agave tequila, agave nectar and lime juice sans an orange liqueur - at his father's restaurant Tommy's in the 1980s. Just don't forget to serve it on the rocks with a thick salt rim.
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Julio Bermejo |
Through the talk we sampled cakes baked with tequila; both quite dense cakes and the flourless chocolate one completely memorable; fudgey yet with flavours of tequila - in a good way. That was in between tasting 100% agave blanco tequila and then shaking up a Tommy's Margarita with Bayly and Bermejo as assistants. Too much fun is an understatement - but then again, it is tequila.
I honestly don't think I've had this much tequila since my teens and I must admit, my behaviour has improved vastly since those days. I didn't try to crash the after party at Island Bar, but rather sensibly joined the other Cocktail Islanders straggling onto the last ferry off Cockatoo Island.
The trip back to Circular Quay was definitely vocal, but I think showed that everyone, water bottles in hand, had a great day of drinking and learning about the cocktails on the island. See more photos of the day at
my Facebook page.
Food, booze and shoes received media admission and Island Dollars for Cocktail Island courtesy of The Cru Media - thanks for keeping us well watered and educated.