Posts Tagged ‘cocktails’

Bbars to the Break of Dawn Bbars be Rocking On and On

by Anya Driscoll on 9 November 2009

bbartwin

What’s in a name? If you’re in London, Bbar is ostritch steak, proximity to royalty and divine cocktails. New Yorkers associate Bbar with Californian fare, an amazing heated outdoor patio and divine cocktails.  If you’re in the Metrotwin office, Bbar is a great excuse to clumsily shoehorn in a Beastie Boys reference, wince at an overly long blog title and drink a divine cocktail.  Okay, drink some Ribena out of a mug, but one can pretend…

Just Prohibitive

by WeeBirdy on 13 March 2009

See this wee tea cup here? That’s no kids’ drink, folks. It is, in fact, a very potent cocktail from one of New York’s coolest “secret” bars. Located on the Lower East Side, The Back Room is actually a former ‘20s speakeasy with a sexy vibe and sumptuous furnishings.

Playing on the history of the location, the bar has a secret entrance (just look for the toy shop sign with a bouncer out the front) and serves drinks Prohibition-style: cue cocktails in teacups and beer wrapped in brown paper bags.

The novelty of it all, not to mention a great line-up of tunes (on our visit it ranged from The Cure to The Killers) made for a whole lot of fun and a great way to start a night out in New York.

The speakeasy trend has also caught on in London, with the recent opening of Barts on Sloan Avenue. It ticks all the right boxes with a hidden entrance, classic cocktails and tunes from the ’20s. Whether you’re deemed suitable for entry, however, remains to be seen.

The Back Room
102 Norfolk Street (near Delancey Street)
New York
Tel. 212 228 5098

Barts
Chelsea Cloisters, Sloane Avenue
London SW3 3DW
Tel. 020 7581 3355

A week of East London: Awright!

by WeeBirdy on 3 March 2009

Awright geeeza!

Wee Birdy here, and I’ll be guest blogging for the next two weeks whilst Candice is away on holiday. (And in case you’re wondering, I’m not a Cockney “geeza” at all – I just found a “Cockney translator”online and couldn’t help giving it a whirl.)

The reason I’ve come over all Pearly Queen? Tomorrow marks the beginning of East, a festival celebrating the best of East London, which runs until 10 March. Make sure you download your free festival program over at Visit London. It’s a rather brilliant guide to what’s happening over the next 10 days, and comes complete with informative maps and event listings.

I like the sound of some of the walks on offer, including “The Belles of Bow” (Sunday 8 March), which is led by a Blue Badge guide and follows in the footsteps of Sylvia Pankhurst and the suffragettes.

And then there are the shops, bars, restaurants, sights, sounds (and smells) of East London to explore. Over the next few days I’ll be having a peek at some of the best East London has to offer.

In the meantime, you might like to check out one of my favourite East End destinations, Lounge Lover. One look at the cocktails menu and you’ll soon know why! (And if your like your cocktails fruity and sweet, may I suggest the heavenly Strawberry Lolly for your drinking pleasure? That’s it below.)

Three Best London Bars, Cocktails and Restaurants via the Mr & Mrs Smith Blog

by Tim Malbon on 4 January 2009

The Mr & Mrs Smith blog is a great source of high quality recommendations of the best places to go in New York and London and should be on your list of sites to check out if you’re planning a visit to either city. It’s only the best from The Smiths, they don’t mess around. Check out their lists on Metrotwin of top city restaurants and boutique hotels in both cities.

Mr & Mrs Smith recently asked Soho bar operator Brenhan Magee the following questions:

Top three places in London to get a great cocktail?
Shochu Lounge under Roka, on Charlotte Street
Green & Red on Bethnal Green Road
LAB bar on Old Compton Street in Soho

Three best three bars in London for atmosphere?
Cocoon on Regent Street
The Long Bar at the Sanderson Hotel in Berners Street
Café Boheme on Old Compton Street

Top three bars in London for design?
The Blue Bar at The Berkeley Hotel
The new Eight Club in the City (still being built!)
The Coburg Bar at The Connaught

Top three London restaurants?
Scott’s of Mayfair, on Mount Street
La Petite Maison, also in Mayfair
Hakkasan in Hanway Street

A Network of Experts

by Tim Malbon on 5 November 2008

We started this project with a really clear idea of the problem we were trying to solve for the end user: help them navigate the massive volume of online content created every day about what you should do in New York and London and find the best stuff as quickly and painlessly as possible. If you don’t know precisely what you’re searching for this can be surprisingly difficult.

Take the following scenario: you’re off to New York and you’d like to find somewhere special for that ultimate cocktail experience. You’re only there for three nights – so you can’t really afford to screw up. NYC is a big city and there are *a lot* of cocktail bars. Some are better than others, and new bars open as quickly as others close. On top of that, the cocktail bar scene is fickle – the cocktail bar ‘du jour’ changes on a… well, daily basis. Straightforward web searches are not great at dealing with all this – they tend to reward sites that have been around a while with higher rankings than those that have just launched, and of course it’s possible (apparently) to game search engines. Not only that, but mixologists working at the bleeding edge of cocktail creation may be simply too busy shaking their stuff to spend time optimising, updating or even creating websites.

Try the search term “New York cocktails”. You’ll get at least 20 million results. The very top of the first page is useful, although you’ll find ‘the usual suspects’ rather than discovering hidden treasures. But even on the front page there are results that will seem frustratingly irrelevant to your search: articles from 2006, book reviews, cocktail recipes. There’s massive search clutter precisely because New York is a global cocktail pilgrimage shrine. They invent cocktails. And they give them cocktail-defining names like Manhattan Iced Tea and Metropolitan.

Search engines are extremely useful when you know kind of what you’re looking for or have lots of time to sift and refine your search terms, but they don’t know as much about cocktails right this second as – for example – NY Barfly, who is one of the bloggers contributing content to Metrotwin (see his profile here). NY Barfly is a domain expert in cocktails. He’s the kind of guy you’d ask if you knew him. He’s ‘the man’. He’s out every night testing drinks and bars so you don’t have to take chances, and he does it because he loves it – it’s not even his main job. It’s his life. When you’re reading NY Barfly you’re tapping a depth of knowledge and a category focus you’re not going to get anywhere else.

Thing is, there are people New York and London blogging like this about burgers, pizza, doughnuts, restaurants, free stuff, city walks, being a mum in the city, painting, geek stuff and just about every other highly specialised micro-vertical niche you’d care to experience while you’re there. They’re updating their sites every day – sometimes many times a day. When you consider how much most peoples’ trips to either city now use the Web – for booking, planning and organising the social side of things – it seems to make perfect sense to connect visitors with local, expert bloggers and niche online communities. We’re trying to help people find the best blogs and sites to support their trips as well as provide recommendations.

We’ve met all of the bloggers and site owners contributing content to Metrotwin in the flesh. Nearly everyone we’ve approached has been excited by the idea – after all, they face a similar challenge trying to reach new readers through the wall of noise, and British Airways carries a vast number of people looking specifically for authentic, qualified recommendations between both cities every year. At BA.com they’ve recently created an index page for all the Metrotwin partners in one place – you’ll find it here, and there’s a screenshot below.

The Metrotwin Partners page on BA.com

The Metrotwin Partners page on BA.com

We’ve also set up a page on Netvibes (screenshot below) where we’re aggregating feeds from as many partners as we can into a single page, as well as providing feeds from other useful online resources, all in one place. Hopefully, it will save you time if you’re using the blogosphere to piece together the perfect itinerary from the collective wisdom of a small crowd of experts in both cities. Use the Lists page on Metrotwin as a taster.

Image of the Metrotwin Netvibes page

Image of the Metrotwin Netvibes page