Times Colonist

Bar carts help lure guests out of the kitchen

- MARY CAROL GARRITY

Even though our lake cottage is snug, during the holidays, we still manage to fill it with lots of family and friends. One of the keys to fitting in so many folks is to find ways to encourage everyone to spread out through the house, not just wedge into the kitchen like merry-making sardines.

At Thanksgivi­ng this year, I made the mistake of putting the bar in the kitchen, which all but guaranteed that our guests would not stray far.

I learned my lesson. So for our Christmas and New Year’s gatherings, I decided to lure our guests out of the kitchen, into the living room and even down to the lower-level den by setting up a few small bars through the house. My new strategy is working so brilliantl­y, it will be my new party traffic-control plan for the new year.

We have a new bar in our living room. I had this wonderful old serving cart in the basement, so I decided to pull it upstairs for Christmas entertaini­ng. I nestled it into a corner by the bookcases, next to my reading chair, where it was out of the way, yet still easy to get to.

The bottles went on the shelf below and the top became a selfserve bar, outfitted with a few essentials, like glassware, mixers and ice.

In our den downstairs, I turned an end table into a mini bar. Our TV is in this room, and during holiday gatherings, there always seems to be a big game on. There’s not a lot of room on this table, so we had to keep it simple, with just a few favourite spirits on hand.

I think I will only set up this bar when we entertain, tailoring it specifical­ly to our guests’ drink preference­s.

We are turning my mom’s cottage next door into a guest cottage. I’m experiment­ing with the decor for this special spot.

For the holidays, I turned a console table into a small bar. I like the idea of our guests being able to relax at the cottage, perhaps fixing themselves a cocktail before coming over to join the party at our house, or enjoying a quiet nightcap before they turn in.

There are tons of blogs on the essentials of a well-stocked bar, so I will leave you to the experts on that one. Personally, I’m a huge fan of decorator Bunny Williams and her philosophy on entertaini­ng. Bunny says she likes to welcome guests with a well-stocked bar, set so they can serve themselves.

In a recent article I read in one of the big decorating magazines, the hostess shared her “Three Ps” for entertaini­ng success: Parmesan, potato chips and prosecco. Translated, that could be: have something to snack on, like a bowl of nuts, or cheese and crackers. It doesn’t have to be fancy; it just has to be good.

We try to keep an assortment of cheeses and fresh fruit on hand so we are ready when an instant party happens, which is pretty often in our social little lake community.

In my pantry, you will always find a jar of mixed nuts or some gourmet trail mix that I can pour into a pretty bowl in seconds, ready for guests to nibble.

Even if you don’t imbibe, having a bar cart set up with refreshmen­ts is a great idea. Stock it with flavoured waters, fresh fruit juices and soda.

It doesn’t matter what’s in the glass — it matters who is holding it.

Today and into the new year, celebrate those people.

 ?? MARY CAROL GARRITY, TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? The bottles went on the shelf below and the top became a selfserve bar, outfitted with a few essentials, like glassware, mixers and ice.
MARY CAROL GARRITY, TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE The bottles went on the shelf below and the top became a selfserve bar, outfitted with a few essentials, like glassware, mixers and ice.

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