Friday, October 21, 2022

#183: Howards Bar & Club

The Bar


Howards Bar & Club. 1130 W 6th St, Austin, TX 78703

Visited 10/21/2022 @ 6pm.

The Drink



Draft espresso martini. Vodka, St George NOLA coffee liqueur, Amaro Montenegro, Proud Mary Humbler blend cold brew coffee. $18.

At one point draft cocktails were fairly polarizing in the high-end cocktail scene, but I think they're now common enough to have reached that "they're fine if you do them right" stage of general resigned acceptance, meaning the use of high-quality ingredients, keeping draft lines clean, knowing what's okay to keep in the tank vs what really needs to be mixed in at the point of serving, etc. Of course, no one ever said that consistency was the spice of life, but consistency doesn't have to be monotony. Howards' draft espresso martini, one of their signature drinks, is not monotonous, and also isn't sickeningly sweet. Espresso martinis always lean way more to the espresso side than the martini side, but often tend to add a sweetener so that the coffee bitterness doesn't overwhelm the gin (or in this case vodka; yes yes I know), theoretically while being careful not to turn the drink into an alcoholic Starbucks milkshake. Despite its name, the coffee liqueur they use is from the Bay Area, and adds just enough sweetness and other chocolate/vanilla flavors to mix nicely with the coffee base, which is a Brazilian/El Salvadorian cold brew from Proud Mary, a new Australian coffee joint and roastery on South Lamar. There's also some additional orange citrus bitterness from the Amaro Montenegro, one of the many excellent Italian liqueurs I've discovered while doing this extended bar crawl. Poured from a nitro tap and served with some dark chocolate on top, overall it's a great-tasting cocktail.

Of course, $18 is on the high side of cocktail prices, at least at the bars I go to, which affects the recommendation even if this is perfectly normal in the aforementioned high-end cocktail scene. Devil May Care's espresso martini was $16, so maybe that's just the going rate for this drink, but you'd better be really certain that you want one. I'm too old these days to look at cocktails solely from the perspective of "how much would it cost to get drunk on these?", but I hope one day to make enough money to live the kind of life where drinks of this tier are in the regular rotation.

The Crew


Elijah, Aaron.


Notes


Tonight was an all-MML extravaganza, but please hold all comments about the hospitality juggernaut's effects on affordability issues in the Austin restaurant scene or if it's a leading indicator of unhappy trends in gentrification, etc for the moment. The first of 3 MML joints we visited tonight (and the 5th overall), Howard's is "part neighborhood tavern, part dance party", replacing the former Wiggy's liquor store original location. Now, my neighborhood doesn't have a tavern anywhere near this nice, but if you are fortunate enough that your neighborhood is Clarksville, then you're in luck. I say "nice", but you can see in the background of my picture that it has a distressed/peeling/rundown aesthetic that's intended to convey the impression of age, which is the kind of atmosphere that an aspiring local haunt needs to conjure, even if the rest of the joint is obviously brand new and all of your fellow patrons look like they just got off the clock at their high-roller jobs. Most of them were fairly dressed up to some extent, but the doorman took one look at my Shiner t-shirt and waved me on in, after reminiscing about how he went to high school with their frontman. It's nice that even in a city that's getting as expensive as quickly as Austin is, there's still room for a cool music connection with someone. 

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