Wednesday, April 28, 2010

I really wanna be a bartender when i graduate for hs! where/how should i start?!? any advice?

and i already checked the age u need to be to be a bartender in my state and its 18 and im already 18 so yeaa....


where should i start?


bartending school or no? y?


any advice?! thanks for ur help! =)I really wanna be a bartender when i graduate for hs! where/how should i start?!? any advice?
DON';T go to bartending school, a total and complete waste of time and money, and all it really does is give you a worthless piece of paper that FALSELY proclaims that you're now a qualified bartender, which these graduates are anything but. And I am endlessly stunned by the haughtiness and holier-than-thou attitude displayed by your average bartending school graduate. HELLO!!! It's not like you've earned a college degree here! It's not like you're now intellectually on par with a rocket scientist. I can't count the number of times I've watched a ';graduate'; get behind the bar for the first time, and wind up getting totally smoked and snuffed by the patrons and onslaught of a moderate sized crowd, all while begging me for answers to ';how do you make this drink'; or ';how do you make that drink';?. Stop wasting my time dammit.





First, get a job as a barback and look, listen, and learn. Or, for a female, cocktail waitressing is another easy way to gain experience, especially if your bartender is willing to teach you a bit, plus, as a barback or cocktail waitress, instead of wasting your money on a completely worthless certificate whose value is only one grade up from toilet paper, you'll be earning a decent income as you learn. While on the job, absorb as much information as you can from the bartenders you are working for, and ask questions, as time allows. Get a few good bartending books, read and try to memorize the more commonly requested cocktails in your area, and also the classic types. Beware--for lots of drinks, 10 different bartending books will give you 10 different cocktail recipes (try looking up Mai Tai in a few and you'll see what I mean)--so don't freak out. Another weird thing, I was bartending in the FL Keys for 20 years, and I dealt with a lot of international tourists and tourists from all over the U.S., and (don't freak out here either) the same drink with the same name will be made completely differently where they (the tourist) is coming from. For instance, a european martini is far different than an american martini, so if I was asked for a martini by someone with a european accent, I'd have to stop and clarify it with them (60 to 100 years ago, the american and eurpoean martinis were exactly the same, not so anymore). A hick coming outta South Dakota will insist that his Tom Collins is red and has grenadine in it, and yes, that is in fact what you get when you order a Tom Collins in SD. I now call that one a Sven %26amp; Ole Collins (because a Tom Collins it surely isn't). And that's just the tip of that iceberg. Bartending is far and away more art than science, there are very few 'right' answers--some right answers, but not a lot. Get used to that.





Bartending school will try to teach you the science, little of the art. And bartending school graduates will of course tell you how great the experiance was for them, and how much better of a bartender they are versus the non-schooled bartender (that holier-than-thou thing I mentioned earlier, simply because they cannot intellectually digest the fact that they have flushed $500 to $1000 of their money down the toilet. And you'd better be a people person, someone that people want to talk too, and you HAVE to talk to them, whether you want to or not. And patience--you MUST have a well of patience 100 feet deep or more.





In summary, artending schools are a waste. Get yourself a job as a barback or cocktail waitress, buy a coupla good bartending books (yes, they same drink will have different ingredients in different books--don't freak out), learn the standard drinks, learn your regional favorites (they vary greatly), and do it yourself. It ain't rocket science. Here's a little secret: real bartenders snicker and laugh behind the backs of bartending school graduates. I mean puh-leeze, get a life. .





Also, don't just learn at work. DO YOUR HOMEWORK, which of course happens at HOME.I really wanna be a bartender when i graduate for hs! where/how should i start?!? any advice?
In the US most states i believe will let you bartend at the age of 18, but most places won't let you.Depending on your state you may need a liscence. Best to check with you states regulation dept. first, because the bartending classes are expensive. I live in FL. were you do not need to go to school. I have bartended for over ten years, and here at least they are looked as a joke. In reality, you wont be able to bartend right out of high school. Most employers want experience. A good idea for you would be to look for a job as a barback in a night club or popular bar. Barbacks basically get all the ice and bottles. It's a great way to pay your dues, plus you will get and learn the expience you need to bartend. They money should be alright. So in case you do have to go to school you already have a knowledge of what to do and a little money to pay for it.
Watch Cocktail - Tom Cruise.
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