By Janet Steinberg
Tavern…lounge…pub…café…saloon. Call it what you may, a bar by any other name
is still a bar.
Sometimes, a low-key, down-home beer joint can be just what
the doctor ordered. Other times you
might crave the serene atmosphere of a ritzy cocktail lounge. In addition to an affable bartender and the
proper knowledge of the art of mixology, a touch of history can also contribute
to the factors that make a bar memorable.
Here are a few of the places where you can find some of the world’s most
memorable watering holes.
NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND is a beautifully preserved
walking-city with an architectural tapestry dating back to the 17th
century. You can stroll through history
on Newport’s dramatic 3.5 mile Cliff Walk where paved walkways and stone paths
wind along the island’s southeastern edge.
The Cliff Walk is bordered on one side by the massive mansions (aka
“summer cottages”) of America’s turn-of-the-century elite and on the other by
granite cliffs and pounding surf.
Paying homage to the past as it celebrates the present, this “Sailing
Capital of the World” is home to THE WHITE HORSE TAVERN, the oldest bar (1673)
in America. in its early pirate days, Newport was one of the rum capitals of
the United States. The Dark and Stormy (non-alcoholic ginger beer topped off
with Gosling's Dark Rum and a lime wedge) is the tavern’s signature drink.
SINGAPORE, the city/state/island colonized by Sir Stamford
Raffles in 1819, is a study in contrasts.
It is a tropical paradise brimming with towering skyscrapers and old
Chinese shophouses. It is the clamor of
commerce and the tranquility of vast parklands.
It is a "computer-age city where the age-old abacus is never far
from hand." Once shrouded in
mystery, Singapore's dynamic present has been magically melded with her fabled
past. Nineteenth-century, reverential temples coexist with modern skyscrapers. Rickshaws and Rolls Royces share cobbled
lanes and concrete ribbons. Although
the Singapore of the 21st century is no longer the romantic Singapore of
Rudyard Kipling and Somerset Maugham, an exotic Asia is still in evidence in
this high-tech, immaculate city lying just over one-degree north of the
Equator. Raffles, the famed French
Renaissance-style hotel (1887), to which thousands of visitors to "Lion
City" flock each day, is home to THE LONG BAR where the renowned pink
Singapore Sling was concocted in 1915 by bar captain Ngiam Tong Boon. The bar’s
earthy interior is reminiscent of a Malayan plantation in the 1920s. Sipping this fruity gin-based cocktail at its
birthplace is a travel rite of passage and a must for any reveler’s bucket
list.
HAVE A SINGAPORE SLING/FLING, AT RAFFLES |
FRANKFORT, KENTUCKY opens up the door to Kentucky history.
And Frankfort’s Serafini Restaurant & Bar opens up the door to the best
ever Fried Green Tomatoes, with Roasted Tomato Jam and a Balsamic reduction.
Serafini’s elegant proprietor Wayne Masterson is the restaurateur often
selected to orchestrate Kentucky State Dinners.
However, it was the affable manager/bartender Carlos Ceballos,
black-aproned behind the SERAFINI BAR, who poured me my first tastes of
Kentucky Moonshine with names like Buffalo Trace White Dog, Devil John No. 9,
Jim Beam Jacob’s Ghost and MBR Blackdog.
Frankly, I’ll just stick to plain old bourbon!
AFFABLE BARTENDER CARLOS MAKES A GREAT EVENING GREATER |
VENICE, ITALY is the legendary city where more tourists ask
directions to HARRY'S BAR than to the Piazza San Marco. Harry's Bar--the one
and only original Harry's Bar--is not your ordinary watering hole. It is a
fashionable haunt frequented by celebrities, royalty, locals, and tourists. It
is quite possibly the most famous bar in the world. Whether you're properly seated at a square
table covered in elegantly simple Frette linen, or hanging off a bar stool with
the rest of the beautiful people, (jean-clad or sable-swathed, it makes no
difference) chances are you'll be sipping the bar's liquid trademark...the
Bellini. This ethereal concoction was
created by Giuseppe Cipriani who founded Harry's Bar in Venice in 1931. The
Bellini is a magical blend of white peach juice, sugar and sparkling Italian Prosecca
wine (often mistakenly dubbed champagne).
At Harry’s Bar, unlike other bars, your Bellini will not come in a
champagne flute. It is served in an
8-ounce glass with the image of a bartender and cocktail shaker etched on
it. It is a pricey drink, but it is part
of the quintessential Venice experience.
HARRY’S BAR...HOME OF THE ORIGINAL BELLINI |
COPENHAGEN, DENMARK and the classic movie Hans Christian
Andersen are practically synonymous. And who can ever forget actor Danny Kaye
singing: “Wonderful, wonderful Copenhagen, friendly old girl of a town...’Neath
her tavern light, on this merry night, let us clink and drink one down…” Nor will I ever forget my first drink at the
ICEBAR in Copenhagen. Not only did I ‘clink and drink one down’, but I clinked
and drank one down very, very quickly.
Why quickly, you might ask?
Because the temperature in the bar in which I was imbibing was a crisp
23-degrees Farenheit. It was a pure,
100% authentic, Icebar! Before chilling
out in the Icebar, I donned a bright blue cape and mittens trimmed in snowy
white faux fur. After being garbed for
my Arctic adventure, I was escorted into an air lock and the door closed behind
me. Then, voila, the door into the
Icebar opened. Lo and behold, there it
was. An entire room crafted of ice from
the Torne River in Swedish Lapland… the walls, the bar, the tables, the booths,
and hundreds of glasses…all produced from clear, pure, Arctic river water.
ICE GLASSES ARE LINED UP ON A PURE 100% AUTHENTIC ICEBAR |
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE is a “Nash-ional” treasure. Nashville's heart beats to music. Folk music that crossed the Smokies with
early settlers…toe-tapping fiddle and banjo music…mournful hill ballads…tunes
that grew into down home "hillbilly" music that filled the barns and
the countryside. With the advent of The
Grand Ole Opry, that music grew into a gentle, more sophisticated
country-western sound. Known as
"The Nashville Sound", this music is loved throughout the world and
earned Nashville its name: Music City, USA.
Nashville’s BLUEBIRD CAFÉ is an intimate, 90-seat, full-bar, music venue
where you might chose a local craft beer (such as Jackalope, Wiseacre or Yazoo)
as songwriters and artists perform their music.
This unassuming, world-renowned Nashville classic, located in a small
strip mall outside of downtown Nashville, helped launch the careers of many
country stars—including Garth Brooks and Taylor Swift. Over 70,000 people visit
the venue annually.
MUSICIANS PLAY IN THE CENTER OF THE ICONIC BLUEBIRD CAFÉ |
Janet Steinberg, winner of 47-travel writing awards, resides in Cincinnati but calls the world her home.
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