Want to book a room at the Renaissance? You can’t - they’re sold out. And because subtlety is not Beyoncé’s middle name, the glass has a 24-karat gold rim. I mean, when your hotel is literally called Renaissance you have to do some kind of tie-in, right? The bartenders at the 515 Bar obliged with a special cocktail called the Beyhive, which has whiskey, honey (duh), lime juice, and ginger beer. The 515 Bar at the Renaissance Seattle Hotel Here are a few of the places around town that are either doing special events or foods for the Renaissance show or have some connection to Beyoncé. You have to eat, and whether you’re in town for the occasion or you’re a local welcoming Bey for the first time since 2018, you might as well spend the next few days eating as Beyoncé would want you to eat. But try as you might, you can’t live on your love of Beyoncé alone. The Beyhive will be all over downtown and the surrounding area, celebrating their queen and likely boosting the Seattle economy. If you like that sour salty kick, use one of your limes to moisten the rim of a glass, and press gently onto a plate of Kosher salt.When Beyoncé brings her Renaissance tour to Lumen Field on Thursday, September 14, it’s going to be a big shimmering silver party. Table salt is too fine for rimming glasses, and will be much too salty. The use of Kosher (or some other large-grain) salt versus table salt is not. ( Note: Recipes above are based on the syrup, not the nectar.) That being said, it’s not strictly necessary. It’s also easier to work with than the straight nectar-less clingy, and requires less precision. If you’re making drinks at scale, turn it into a syrup by stirring two parts agave nectar with one part warm water until they’re integrated. In either case, anything is better than the plastic bottled, 0 percent juice, neon, high-fructose margarita mixes, which pair best with microwave TV dinners and a prefrontal lobotomy.Īgave Nectar: Agave nectar is the ideal sweetener, and is worth the small effort to get. Honestly lemon juice would be OK too, but the long, malic, zesty finish of limes is really the star here. If you can’t, pasteurized lime juice works in a pinch. Lime Juice: Get fresh limes, and a decent hand juicer ($15). I also love top-shelf, expressive blancos, but usually for sipping-too much character actually distracts from what’s great about Margaritas, which to me is their snappy refreshment. Cimarron, Lunazul, Olmeca Altos and Milagro are all great Margarita tequilas. Añejo even more so.Īs for brands: After more than a decade of professional bartending, I’ve come to prefer the budget side of the spectrum for margaritas. A high quality joven, like one from Casa Dragones, can also work. Reposado tequilas introduce a little oak aging, and will blunt the bright rawness of the agave with vanilla and cinnamon tones. For margaritas, I prefer a blanco (sometimes called “silver”), which is unaged-you get all the flavor from the agave and the earth. If it doesn’t say this (looking at you, Cuervo Gold) it’s fermented from 51 percent agave and 49 percent industrial sugar syrup, and is gross, and you should give away the bottle to someone you don’t like.īeyond that rule, we drift into personal taste territory. This means that it’s made exclusively from the Blue Weber agave plant, as it is supposed to be. Tequila: The most important, absolute deal-breaker is that your tequila needs to be 100 percent agave.
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