Newcomers Join the Classic Bars to Stir the
NOLA Cocktail Scene
By Pameladevi Govinda
Cocktailing in the Big Easy
Alot of the service industry left New
Orleans to work in
cities like New York,
Chicago and San
Francisco,” says Chris
McMillian, a founding
member of the Museum of the American
Cocktail, in regards to
the effects of Hurricane
Katrina. “After Katrina,
they came back, so
now we’ve got some
extremely talented
bartenders — people
who have worked at
places like Milk &
Honey and Pegu Club.
New Orleans is quickly
evolving into a dynamic
cocktail scene.” Here’s
a look at the new and
notable:
New Orleans native
Neal Bodenheimer
worked in New York
City under the tutelage
of mixologists such
as Eben Klemm and
Junior Merino, but
when Katrina hit, he
felt the need to return
home. After working at
some of New Orleans’
swanky bars, Bodenheimer opened Cure.
Some of the most
talented bartenders in
town, including Ricky
Gomez, Danny Valdez,
Maksim Pazuniak,
Kirk Estopinal and
Bodenheimer himself,
tend bar at Cure, where
they serve classic and
signature creations like
the summery Bootsy
Collins, which involves
El Jimador Blanco Tequila, fresh lime juice,
agave nectar, rhubarb
bitters and soda water.
Bar Tonique is another recent arrival in
the New Orleans nightlife scene. As the name
implies, homemade
tonics are the specialty
at this stylish spot on
the outer edges of the
French Quarter. Almost
everything is fashioned
in-house, including the
maraschino cherries,
and the cocktails are
made with attention
to detail by esteemed
bartenders such as
Matthew Palumbo.
Culinary cocktails
and local ingredients
are the thing at
Cochon, where Audrey
Rodriguez nicks ingredients from chef Donald Link’s kitchen to
make creations like the
seasonal Eat A Peach,
made with Old New
Orleans Cajun Spiced
Rum, Ruston peaches,
cayenne pepper and
fresh squeezed orange
juice. And at the fairly
new Patois uptown,
bartender Rebecca
Tarpy offers twists on
the classics and makes
her own apertif with
a concoction of fruits,
herbs and botanicals
steeped in vodka, sugar
and white wine.
Classic cocktails are
front and center at the
Sazerac Bar, situated
in the newly reopened
Roosevelt Hotel. With
roots that stretch back
to the late 1800s, the
hotel went through a
series of name changes
until it was forced to
close its doors during
Katrina in 2005. The
hotel reopens to the
public on July 1, just
in time for Tales of
the Cocktail, when
the expectations for
an exquisitely made
Sazerac and Ramos Gin
Fizz will be high.
After years behind
the bar at the Ritz-Carlton New Orleans,
McMillian is now at
the new Bar UnCommon in the Renaissance Pere Marquette
Hotel. The bar doesn’t
host much of a cocktail
menu because McMillian can make you any
classic potable of your
pleasing — and if you
aren’t sure what your
tipple is, he’ll be happy
to guide you in the
right direction. NCB
Pameladevi Govinda
writes about mixology,
bars, wine, travel and
the good life from New
York City and other points
around the globe.
Stocked shelves give the veteran bartenders plenty
to work with for Cure’s classic signature cocktails
[top], while comfortable couches and classic red,
black and white interiors greet guests at Bar Uncommon, inside the Renaissance Pere Marquette Hotel
[above and at right].