Three Dots and a Dash | |
---|---|
Restaurant information | |
Established | 2013 |
Owner(s) | Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises |
Street address | 435 N Clark St, Chicago, Illinois |
Coordinates | 41°53′25″N87°37′50″W / 41.89028°N 87.63061°W |
Website | www |
Three Dots and a Dash is a craft cocktail tiki bar in the River North neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois.
Three Dots and a Dash was one of the first tiki bars with a consideration to mixology, along with Smuggler's Cove in San Francisco which opened in 2009. The bar was a success almost immediately; it sold 6,000 drinks per week in its first year. [1]
The bar was named for the cocktail Three Dots and a Dash, a lost tiki drink discovered by Jeff Berry. [1] The cocktail name is Morse code for "V", meaning "Victory", referencing World War II. [2] [3]
The bar has a discreet alleyway entrance, off of Hubbard Street in the River North district of Chicago. The entrance is sometimes given away by a red-roped line of people waiting to enter. [4] Inside the building, a set of stairs leads to the bar space. The staircase is heavily decorated, with a blue wall of skulls paired with drum music. The bar itself is island-themed, and evokes elements of the 1940s. Its main room includes 15 booths, 7 tables, and a bar with 18 stools. Its capacity is 240 people. The bar also includes a service bar. [2] The interior decor is tiki-style, including a fake thatched roof, colorful lighting, and ceramic tiki mugs. [5] Owner Paul McGee has his likeness on swizzle sticks in the bar, as well as in a cartoon image on the back of the menu. [2]
Three Dots attracts tiki aficionados, tourists at downtown hotels, and workers in the Loop district of Chicago. [6] It is owned by Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, which operates other foodservice businesses in the metropolitan area. [7]
The bar also includes a smaller bar within the space. The 22-seat space, the Bamboo Room, formerly was used as a private event space, and is located to the right of the main bar. The Bamboo Room, opened in 2019, allows for a more interactive service style, where its two bartenders serve their drinks, and pour some tableside. The menu has sections for daiquiris, stirred drinks, and classics, and also includes several large-format drinks. Guests at the space receive an amuse-bouche-style drink, a pineapple daiquiri served over Japanese-style shaved ice. The room also includes a wide variety of rums, including vintage and expensive brands; rums from St. Lucia, Martinique, Cuba, Jamaica, and France. Some of these drinks are served in mugs from famous defunct tiki bars from around the country. The Bamboo Room is also planned to host guest bartenders, offer classes, and host special room events by distilleries. [6]
The menu has a variety of cocktails served in custom tiki mugs and glasses. Some of their custom mugs are sold in the bar. A section of the menu includes drinks meant to share, including a $385 cocktail, "Treasure Chest No. 1", which includes rums, juices, and Dom Pérignon Champagne, served in a treasure chest. [2]
The bar serves its eponymous drink, with slight adjustments from its original recipe. The bar's owner adjusted the original orange juice with dry curacao and increased the amount of lime juice. [8]
The food menu is made up of small bites, inspired by Polynesian foods. [2]
Three Dots and a Dash opened in 2013. One of its founding owners, Paul McGee, is a noted bartender known across the U.S. [6] McGee left the bar after a year and a half. [9]
In December 2014, McGee left as beverage director; [10] Diane Corcoran took over the position. In April 2015, the bar introduced a new menu, where she replaced several drinks, made adjustments, and added a new sharable drink. Its chef Doug Psaltis also revised the menu, adding new items. [11]
In 2016, the bar introduced a new cocktail menu by Julian Cox. The bartender, reportedly equally acclaimed to McGee, was brought in to adjust the menu, where he modernized tiki classics. [9]
The bar has won several awards and titles, including being named 13th best bar in the world, in The World's 50 Best Bars publication in 2014. [12] Eater lists the bar among its 28 "essential bars in Chicago". [7]
The bar does not address the controversy involved with tiki culture, and still is known as a "tiki bar". Eater wrote that in contrast, Lost Lake, another tiki bar in Chicago co-founded by Paul McGee, rebranded as a tropical bar after facing criticism. Lost Lake closed in 2022 from loss of business during the COVID-19 pandemic. [7] [13]
Tiki culture is an American-originated art, music, and entertainment movement inspired by Polynesian, Melanesian, and Micronesian cultures, and by Oceanian art. Influential cultures to Tiki culture include Australasia, Melanesia, Micronesia, Polynesia, the Caribbean Islands, and Hawaii. The name comes from Tiki, the Māori name for the first human, often represented in the form of hei-tiki, a pendant and important taonga. The hei-tiki was often appropriated by Europeans as a commercialised good luck charm, hence the name of Tiki culture. Despite spanning over 10,000 miles and including many different unrelated cultures, religions, and languages, Tiki aesthetic is considered by some to be amalgamated into one "fantasia of trans-Pacific cultures" and "colonial nostalgia". Because of this, and the simplistic view of the Pacific taken by the aesthetic, Tiki culture has often proved controversial.
The Mai Tai is a cocktail made of rum, Curaçao liqueur, orgeat syrup, and lime juice. It is one of the characteristic cocktails in Tiki culture.
The Zombie is a Tiki cocktail made of fruit juices, liqueurs, and various rums. It first appeared in late 1934, invented by Donn Beach at his Hollywood Don the Beachcomber restaurant. It was popularized on the East coast soon afterwards at the 1939 New York World's Fair.
The daiquiri is a cocktail whose main ingredients are rum, citrus juice, and sugar or other sweetener.
Trader Vic's is a restaurant and tiki bar chain headquartered in Emeryville, California, United States. Victor Jules Bergeron, Jr. founded a chain of Polynesian-themed restaurants that bore his nickname, "Trader Vic". He was one of two people who claimed to have invented the Mai Tai. The other was his amicable competitor for many years, Donn Beach of the "Don the Beachcomber" restaurants.
A tiki mug is a large ceramic cocktail drinking vessel that originated in tiki bars and tropical-themed restaurants. The term "tiki mug" is a blanket term for the sculptural drinkware even though they vary in size and most do not contain handles. They typically depict Polynesian, mock-Polynesian, tropical, nautical, or retro themes, and as the term is used generically do not always emulate a tiki. When used to serve drinks they are frequently garnished with fruit or decorative drink umbrellas and swizzle sticks.
The Hurricane cocktail is a sweet alcoholic drink made with rum, lemon juice, and either passion fruit syrup or fassionola. It is one of many popular drinks served in New Orleans. It is traditionally served in the tall, curvy hurricane glass.
A tiki bar is a themed drinking establishment that serves elaborate cocktails, especially rum-based mixed drinks such as the Mai Tai and Zombie cocktails. Tiki bars are aesthetically defined by their tiki culture décor which is based upon a romanticized conception of tropical cultures, most commonly Polynesian. Some bars also incorporate general nautical themes or retro elements from the early atomic age.
A Scorpion Bowl is a communally shared alcoholic tiki drink served in a large ceramic bowl traditionally decorated with wahine or hula-girl island scenes and meant to be drunk through long straws. Bowl shapes and decorations can vary considerably. Starting off as a single-serve drink known as the Scorpion cocktail, its immense popularity as a bowl drink in tiki culture is attributed to Trader Vic.
Harry K. Yee was an American bartender from Honolulu, Hawaii, who was credited with having helped to spread tiki culture during the mid-twentieth century, both in Hawaii and in the continental United States. He invented the Blue Hawaii cocktail, and is attributed with being the first bartender to use paper parasols and vanda orchids in tiki drinks.
Flaming volcano is a large tropical group cocktail typically made with rum, brandy, pineapple juice, orange juice, and orgeat syrup. Many variations exist, and the cocktail in the 21st century is more about the presentation than an adherence to a set list of ingredients. It is usually a multi-user drink, served to a group in a special vessel known as a volcano bowl, which is a decorative ceramic bowl designed with a rising central hub feature resembling a volcanic cone. The cone includes a "crater" reservoir which can be partially filled with rum or another flammable liquor. The crater liquor is carefully ignited when serving, creating a mild volcanic ambiance with its central blue flame.
Floridita or El Floridita is a historic fish restaurant and cocktail bar in the older part of Havana, Cuba. It lies at the end of Calle Obispo, across Monserrate Street from the National Museum of Fine Arts of Havana. The establishment is famous for its daiquiris and for having been one of the favourite hangouts of Ernest Hemingway in Havana. The bar now boasts a life size bronze statue of Ernest Hemingway positioned in his favourite spot at the end of the bar. On a small plaque hanging in El Floridita, hangs Hemingway's signed quote: "My mojito in the Bodeguita del Medio and my daiquiri in the Floridita".
Trader Sam's Enchanted Tiki Bar is a tiki bar located at the Disneyland Hotel in the Disneyland Resort of Anaheim, California, that opened in May 2011. Named one of the top five tiki bars in Los Angeles by LA Weekly, Trader Sam's is one of many tiki bars gaining popularity throughout the United States, and even the world, in what some call tiki's "third wave". It is not to be confused with the San Francisco, California tiki bar Trad'r Sam founded in 1937.
The doctor cocktail is a pre-prohibition era cocktail that traces in drink guides to as far back as 1917, when it appeared in Hugo R. Ensslin's Recipes for Mixed Drinks. As originally described the cocktail called simply for Swedish Punsch mixed with lime juice.
The suffering bastard is the name for two different mixed drinks, one being more of a standard cocktail associated with World War II and the other being more of an exotic drink associated with Tiki bars. As is the case with many cocktails, there are multiple recipe variations and historical origins have been argued and changed over time. Two of the earliest recipe versions have very different ingredients. One from bartender Joe Scialom (1942) calls for brandy and gin, while another from Tiki pioneer Victor J. Bergeron primarily uses rum along with "secret ingredients" and is known for being garnished with a cucumber.
The cobra's fang is a vintage tiki cocktail invented by Donn Beach that calls for a mixture of rums along with fassionola and falernum syrups, the juice of orange and limes, and a dash each of bitters and grenadine. The recipe from the book Hawai'i: Tropical Rum Drinks & Cuisine By Don the Beachcomber calls for it being garnished with fresh mint and a lime wheel, although a length of spiral cut lime peel made to look like a snake is used for aesthetics in some cobra named cocktails.
The Fog Cutter is a vintage tiki cocktail frequently attributed to being invented by Victor Bergeron that calls for a mixture of several liquors, the juice of lemon and oranges, orgeat syrup, and cream sherry. It is high in alcoholic content and has been called the "Long Island Iced Tea of exotic drinks." It has historically been served in special Fog Cutter ceramic mugs.
Jeff "Beachbum" Berry is an American restaurant owner, author, and historian of tiki culture, particularly the drinks associated with the tiki theme. In addition to researching and reconstructing lost recipes, he has invented and published his own cocktail recipes.
The craft cocktail movement is a social movement spurred by the cocktail renaissance, a period of time in the late 20th and early 21st century characterized by a revival and re-prioritization of traditional recipes and methods in the bar industry, especially in the United States. The renaissance was followed by innovation and new techniques, and the movement has spread globally, now forming part of global cuisine.