A Brief History of the Bloody Mary
By Logan R. Brouse
Logan R. Brouse, proprietor and mixologist of Logan’s Punch, has run bars and clubs in Shanghai for over six years. In between hangovers, he puts pen to paper in his column for That's to record his pontifications on the drink industry.
Like
many a classic, what has now become the world’s favorite brunch
draaaank originated in the 1920s. The story goes that bartender Fernand
Petiot, of Harry’s New York Bar in Paris, mixed a drink that was equal
parts vodka and tomato juice. A patron suggested he call it a Bloody
Mary after a gal he knew at the Bucket of Blood Club in Chicago.
Considering the latter was one of the city’s most notorious brothels, we
needn’t speculate too hard on the nature of their relationship.
Fast
forward to 1934, when Petiot brought the drink to his new digs at the
King Cole bar in the New York St. Regis Hotel, where the hotel managers
attempted to foist a more genteel moniker of ‘Red Snapper’ on the drink.
Needless to say, New Yorkers were having none of it, and the name
Bloody Mary stuck. They also complained about the drink’s bland flavor,
asking Petiot to give it some pizzazz, in the form of black pepper,
cayenne pepper, Worcestershire sauce, lemon and a generous splash of
Tabasco. The drink gained its enduring reputation as the all-healing
hangover tonic in sanitariums, where patients were prescribed fruit and
vegetable juice to fix what ailed them.
However, you have to
realize it took canned tomato juice, perfected by chef Louis Perrin in
1917, to get the Bloody Mary craze off to the races. Prior to the advent
of canned juice, fresh was the only alternative. It is one of the few
drinks that doesn’t benefit from fresh juice, since tomatoes separate
easily into sediment and water.
A modern day Bloody Mary
Now,
with that history out of the way – let talk turn to an anecdote about
my cousin Renée, with whom I will always associate with Bloody Mary’s.
He’s a construction worker in Oakland, CA. Last time I was visiting San
Francisco, he called me up and said he was coming over to hang out and
catch up.
After a hard day at the construction site, Renée
confessed that he wanted nothing more than to just dance. Now, this
isn’t something two straight guys often say to each other, but
nevertheless, Renée’s wish was my command, so we struck out to a spot
near Polk Street. Then Renée danced, like an angel, he danced like the
sun breaking out of black clouds on a rainy day, he danced like water
falling from the heavens, oh, he danced and he danced and he was
amazing. People recorded him, like an eagle he spread his dance wings
and flew across the dance floor, twirling partners, dipping poetic in
his motions. As he stopped, and the bar collectively drew its breath,
awaiting his next move, he walked up to the bartender on a midnight
Saturday shift and proudly ordered himself a Bloody Mary.
For more Logan's columns, click "Read more"(阅读原文)below.