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Thursday, November 17th, 2011
 The Gobbler. / Ben Twingley/btwingley@pnj.com
Now that November is here, the weather is turning cooler and all the stores are starting to string up twinkling lights, bringing on dancing Santa Clauses and Christmas trees — wait — what?
Is it just me, or has the world gone crazy? Have we completely forgotten that greatest of gluttonous holidays — Thanksgiving? How can we skip right over the giant turkey, the stuffing, the family, the football? Well, to all these festivity rushers who want to skip right to Christmas, let me offer one more reason to take time to be thankful for Thanksgiving.
Though beer might be the traditional beverage to accompany the start of the extended weekend that is Thanksgiving break for most of us, why not try something a little different this year?
In the past, I’ve offered up cocktail recipes with lemonade, juice, wine and Champagne, but this month, let me suggest one with beer. But far from the red eyes and Irish car bombs that may come to mind when one hears “beer cocktail,” this drink is not for chugging. It can be enjoyed sip by sip in between first downs and turkey legs. I hope this cocktail can help us slow down, enjoy the day and keep from rushing through the season too quickly.
The Gobbler 4 ounces wheat beer ½ ounce Grey Goose L’Orange vodka ½ ounce Licor 43 ½ ounce Frangelico ½ ounce Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey Splash fresh lemon juice Dash bitters Cinnamon sugar (to rim the glass)
In a cocktail shaker with ice, combine Grey Goose L’Orange, Licor 43, Frangelico, Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey, lemon juice and bitters. Pour into a chilled martini or wine glass rimmed with cinnamon sugar. Add beer slowly, and stir gently with a spoon or decorative stir. Garnish with an orange slice.
Great Southern Restaurant Group, 600 S. Barracks St., 470-0003 or www.goodgrits.com.
Tags: Beer, Cocktails, Fish House, Florida, Holidays, humor, Melissa Temsook-Boeker, Pensacola News Journal, Recipes Posted in Cocktails, Fun, Holiday, Pensacola, Recipes, The Fish House, party planning | 2 Comments »
Monday, October 31st, 2011
Written by William Morse 
In 1830, 15-year-old Don Facundo Bacardi Massó left Spain to join his brothers in Cuba. Upon his arrival, rum was the most popular spirit even though it was crude and unsophisticated. Here he saw an opportunity and dedicated several years to refining the spirit. Ultimately, in 1862, he established the Bacardi Co.
One of Cuba’s oldest drinks was the Draque, which was named after its inventor, the English corsair Richard Drake, and is the predecessor of the widely popular mojito. Much like today’s mojito, the Draque, or Drak, was made with mint leaves, lime and a rough sugar-cane spirit called aquardiente (meaning fiery water). During the mid-1800s and around the same time that the Bacardi Co. became established, the Draque recipe was changed to use rum in place of aquardiente, thus becoming the mojito.
Another classic cocktail originating in Cuba — and allegedly with Bacardi Rum — was the daiquiri. The account goes that in the summer of 1898, an engineer named Jennings Stockton Cox, who was leading a mining expedition in the town of Daiquirí, Cuba, began experimenting with Bacardi Rum and concocted a mixture of rum, fresh-squeezed lime juice, sugar and shaved ice. He aptly named it the daiquiri.
Another historical drink developed around this time, and purportedly with Bacardi Rum, was the Cuba Libre (meaning “free Cuba”). Well, maybe the drink’s name has more historical relevance than the drink itself. It is simply Bacardi Rum, cola and lime.
Over the years, Bacardi has developed many different-flavored rums, such as cherry, peach and raspberry, as well as many others. Their newest debut is Bacardi OakHeart — a smooth, silky spiced rum.
Bacardi OakHeart Punch
1 1/4 ounces Bacardi OakHeart Spiced Rum
1 ounce Southern Comfort
Fill glass with equal parts:
Orange juice
Cranberry juice
Splash of grenadine
Build ingredients in a tall glass over ice.
The Fish House, 600 S. Barracks St. 470-0003, or visitwww.goodgrits.com.
Tags: Bacardi Oakheart, Cocktails, Fish House, Pensacola Posted in Cocktails, Recipes, party planning | No Comments »
Wednesday, October 12th, 2011
Halloween candy inspires sweet cocktail
 Trick-or-Treat Martini - photo by Katie King
Written by Melissa Temsook-Boeker special to The Pensacola News Journal
Now that October is finally here, many people start thinking about the usual fall festivities — like football, leaves changing color, and cooler weather. But personally, I think of Halloween! At my house, the month of October is spent deciding the theme of this year’s haunted house, making the subsequent gory decorations and transforming the yard into a creepy scene of blood, guts and pretty much anything that will terrify the neighbors.
Also, one of the best parts of the holiday is seeing all the creative costumes, and, of course, throwing the perfect Halloween party so that all your friends have a place to show them off. So while everyone else is thinking of the perfect costume to wow their friends, I decided (more…)
Tags: Atlas Oyster House, Cocktails, Happy Hour, Melissa Temsook-Boeker, party planning, Pensacola News Journal, Recipes, Things to do, Vodka Posted in Atlas Oyster House, Cocktails, Entertainment, Halloween | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 11th, 2011
Good Grits Girls bake for a good cause. 
Tuesday, October 25, 5:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m., Twelve Good Grits Girls, employees of the Great Southern Restaurant Group (The Fish House, Atlas Oyster House and Jackson’s Steakhouse), will join together on the Fish House Deck to submit over 1000 cupcakes to the public for judging. The winner will be crowned the Great Southern Cupcake Queen. Judges are our own Great Southern pastry chefs Trina Confusione (Fish House) and Miko Franklin (Jackson’s Steakhouse), and Partners/Owners Mrs. Collier (Cate) Merrill and Pensacola Celebrity Chef Jim Shirley.
People’s Choice: The public will pay 5 dollars for a chance to taste all of the cupcakes. Cupcake tasters will receive two voting tickets. After tasting cupcakes at each station, the guests will leave their tickets with their favorite baker. The baker who has the most cards will win people’s choice. Prizes for the winner will be donated by the restaurant.
100% of the tasting fees will be donated to the American Cancer Society.
Judges will announce their choice along with the crowd’s favorite at 6:30 p.m.
Door Prizes: Provided for attending guests by area boutiques and salons such as Style Downtown and Escape Wellness Spa.
Drink Specials: Pomegranate and ginger martinis and pink sparkling wine.
Entertainment: Provided by Lucas Crutchfield.
We are all very competitive when it comes to our baking skills. We frequently bring in a new baking recipe for each other to try. We thought that making it a fun event and tying it to such a cause as breast cancer, particularly during Breast Cancer Awareness Month, would be an ideal way to have fun doing what we love for a cause we believe in. We hope that people will come and enjoy the evening with us. “It’s just a few days before the breast cancer walk on Saturday, so in a way it’s our own little pep rally,” says Lindsey Voorhees, a Fish House manager.
Tags: America, Atlas Oyster House, Chef Jim Shirley, Cocktails, contest, cupcakes, Fish House, Good Grits for a Good Cause, Happy Hour, Jackson's Steak House, Shelley Yates, Things to do, Trina Confusione Posted in Atlas Oyster House, Celebrity Chefs, Charity, Chef Jim Shirley, Cocktails, Employees, Family, Fun, Jackson's Steak House, Pensacola, The Fish House, fund raising | 1 Comment »
Thursday, August 25th, 2011
 The Greenhorn, by Melissa Temsook-Boeker - Photo by Tony Giberson/tgiberson@pnj.com
By Melissa Temsook-Boeker special to The Pensacola News Journal
The service industry is, by nature, ever-changing — from trends to menus to locations and so on. So, it follows that those of us in the service industry grow and change with it. As a bartender, sometimes you hit your stride, find a place where you feel comfortable, and get so used to the bar where you work that you could probably mix drinks blind-folded if you had to; you might even stay there for years before, inevitably, it’s time for a change.
This past month, it was that time for my change. I left a job after two years and started training at Atlas Oyster Bar. No matter how much experience you have, it’s always humbling to be the new girl again, having to ask where everything is, learning a new menu, getting lost a couple of times — and, inevitably, as soon as someone is standing behind you, forgetting how to work the computer. But I really do believe that change is good, and I like to think of this newest change as a fresh start. So, this month I am combining fresh ingredients to create a green drink for my days as the greenhorn.
Greenhorn
1 ounce Stoli Strasberi (or Blueberi) Vodka
½ ounce cucumber vodka
½ ounce ginger liqueur
4-5 ounces herbal lemonade (recipe follows)
Combine all ingredients and pour over ice. Garnish with a sprig of mint.
Herbal Lemonade (2 quarts)
6 ounces basil 6 ounces mint 2 ounces sage 2 quarts lemonade of your choice
Wash herbs and leave whole. Combine with lemonade in a large sauce pot and bring just to a boil. Remove from heat and chill overnight. The longer it steeps, the better it will be. Once the mixture gets good and green, strain and serve.
Atlas Oyster House, 600 S. Barracks St., Pensacola. 437-1961, or visit atlas.goodgrits.com.
Tags: Atlas Oyster House, Cocktails, Florida, Happy Hour, local restaurants, Melissa Temsook-Boeker, Pensacola, Recipes, Southern Cooking, Vodka Posted in Atlas Oyster House, Cocktails, Recipes | 1 Comment »
Thursday, July 7th, 2011
 The Basilico - Photo by Blackie
Written by William Morse – Special to the News Journal
It’s finally summertime! And ever since I was a child, I associated summertime with my personal favorite activity, the roadside lemonade stand. Of course, I also associated this time of year with weekend trips to the lake for skiing, wakeboarding and such — on two of the best lakes near where I grew up in Alabama, Lake Jordan and Lake Martin (as I didn’t have the luxury of growing up in Pensacola).
It seems that the heat of summer draws us all to certain things. Water activities (like going to the beach, tanning, skiing, surfing, etc.) helps satisfy our physical draw to this time of year, but then there’s also the need to satisfy one’s own hunger and thirst that seems to thrive during the “dog days of summer.” (more…)
Tags: America, Cocktails, Fish House, Happy Hour, Vodka Posted in Cocktails, Recipes | No Comments »
Friday, June 24th, 2011
Special to The Pensacola News Journal
 The Hummer / John Blackie/jblackie@pnj.com
Take a glass of Champagne, any Champagne, add 2 ounces of orange juice and garnish with a slice of orange and you have a mimosa. Add 1 1/2 ounces of crème de cassis to a glass of wine and you have a kir. Add the same crème de cassis to a glass of Champagne and you have a kir royale. Pour 1 1/2 ounces of Chambord (a French liqueur) into a glass of Champagne, garnish with raspberries, and you have a great kir royale.
What?
You’ve been there, done that — in the ’80s.
In that case, I’ve got a new twist. An American liqueur called Hum — made from rum infused with hibiscus, fresh ginger, green cardamom and kaffir lime — added to a crackling cold glass of sparkling Rosé is called a hummer, and is the summer kir for the new age. Pop a cork and give it a try.
The Fish House, 600 S. Barracks St. 470-0003, or visit www.goodgrits.com.
Visit Jim in seaside at our sister restaurant The Great Southern Cafe, www.thegreatsoutherncafe.com
Tags: America, Atlas Oyster House, Chef Jim Shirley, Cocktails, Fish House, Happy Hour, local restaurants, Recipes, Seaside Florida, Shelley Yates, The Great Southern Cafe, Things to do Posted in Chef Jim Shirley, Cocktails, Fun, Pensacola, Recipes, The Deck Bar, Uncategorized, wine | 1 Comment »
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