Orlando Sentinel

Master the margarita with chef Rick Bayless

- By Judy Hevrdejs

To master mixing a perfect margarita, there might be no better coach than chef Rick Bayless.

The next best thing to a one-on-one class with the chef and TV celeb is his latest book, “Frontera: Margaritas, Guacamoles and Snacks” (W.W. Norton & Co., $24.95), written with his wife, Deann Groen Bayless.

The book opens with “A Master Class in Margaritas,” a lively conversati­on with the margarita master who offers insight into the nuances at play, from limes to tequila (save pricey aged tequila for sipping solo), from balance to texture.

Texture in a margarita? “When you shake a margarita the way I describe, not just back and forth three times then pour it out, but that full 15-second shake, you chip off little bits of ice and create a drink that’s got this wonderful sort of frothiness,” he says.

Starting with fresh lime juice is key. “The difference in flavor between fresh-squeezed lime juice you make yourself and anything that you can buy is huge.” And he favors agave or sugar syrups over granulated sugar: “You’re going to get a much better texture and much more even distributi­on of the sweet element.”

The book boasts recipes for seasonal margaritas (peach-basil, apple-habanero, etc.), mezcal margaritas, tequila-spiked classics, agua frescas, dessert cocktails and tequila choices. There’s also a “master class” in guacamole plus seasonal variations. To science-fixated “self-professed margarita geeks,” he coaches not to take “all the delicious fun out of it. ... I’m all about soul-satisfying deliciousn­ess.” To that, we say: Salud!

 ?? BILL HOGAN/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS PHOTO
LISA SCHUMACHER/FOOD STYLING ??
BILL HOGAN/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS PHOTO LISA SCHUMACHER/FOOD STYLING

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