Business World

Cocktails,

- — Zsarlene B. Chua

and management degree with a focus on bartending.

Ms. Kamata’s 20 years of bartending experience, starting at the Interconti­nental Tokyo and now The Peninsula Tokyo, gave her enough knowledge about the classics, so she is now into creating original cocktails incorporat­ing the tried-and-tested favorites.

During the preview, Ms. Kamata showed how to make three of her cocktails: Matcha Martini, Blood and Sand, and Hennessy Negroni.

The first was a homage to Ms. Kamata’s Japanese heritage combined with one of the best-known cocktails, the martini.

The Matcha Martini features Belvedere vodka and Monin Poir Syrup ( and regular simple syrup) with matcha powder (powdered green tea) which is prepared by mixing the powder with cold water, much like how they do it in the traditiona­l tea ceremonies in Japan though replacing the hot water with cold.

The resulting beverage is “fruity with a comfortabl­e bitterness,” as Ms. Kamata described. It’s quite easy to drink because it goes in smooth, almost like drinking an iced matcha drink — but laced with vodka. And watching her preparing is like performanc­e art because of the almost meditative mixing of the matcha and water.

The next beverage was Blood and Sand, a cocktail named for a 1922 movie about Spanish bullfighte­rs starring silent screen star Rudolph Valentino. The classic recipe calls for vermouth but Ms. Kamata switched things up and introduced an Earl- Grey-tea-and-clove-infused Vermouth Rosso alongside a 10-year-old Ardbeg whisky.

She infused the Earl Grey and clove into the vermouth by using an aeropress — those who don’t have the hardware can just steep the ground tea and clove for an hour.

The beverage is “peaty and smoky” with a bit of spice lingering at the back of one’s mouth due to the tea and clove.

Finally, she presented a Negroni, but instead of using the usual gin, she replaced it with Hennessy VSOP to make it an effective before- and/or after-dinner drink and used a smoker (they used maple wood chips) to lend a smoky flavor to the Negroni.

The three drinks presented in the mixology class — and three other cocktails Ms. Kamata created for the The Pen — are available throughout the month for P650 each.

Aside from Ms. Kamata’s drinks, the hotel is also serving its Cocktail of Hope — which uses Bailey’s, milk, mint liqueur and elderflowe­r syrup — for P900 (including a Tree of Hope ornament) and a Mocktail of Hope — which uses Welch Grape Juice, Coke, and sliced pineapple — for those who prefer a nonalcohol­ic beverage for P790 (including the ornament). Part of the proceeds from the sales of the two drinks will be given to the Make a Wish Foundation.

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