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Can the Amtrak Bar Car still make a Bloody Mary ?

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Can the Amtrak Bar Car still make a Bloody Mary ?
Posted by divebardave on Monday, December 23, 2019 2:52 PM

Would they have the proper mixes? Or howabout a Tom Collins? I am going to need some X-mass cheer coming out of Toledo OH.

 

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Posted by divebardave on Monday, December 23, 2019 2:53 PM

Used to have these for Breakfast in the late 1980s on Amtraks Lakeshore Lmt.

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Posted by MMLDelete on Monday, December 23, 2019 2:56 PM

Absolutely, if they haven't run out of &quot.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Monday, December 23, 2019 4:13 PM

Lithonia Operator

Absolutely, if they haven't run out of &quot.

 

Yes

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Monday, December 23, 2019 5:21 PM

The cafe on the lower level of the Sightseer Lounge of the Southwest Chief did back on Sept. 28 and Sept. 30, 2019.  Can't say about after that.

- PDN. 

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Posted by greyhounds on Monday, December 23, 2019 5:47 PM

I've stumped several non Amtrak bartenders asking for a vodka martini.

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Posted by Enzoamps on Monday, December 23, 2019 10:36 PM

The wife and I used to like to hit the dining car at 6:30AM when it opened, have breakfast, ask the dining attendant for a couple cups of ice and return to our seats.  In our carry-on grip we pack a pint of vodka and a couple cans of V-8 juice.  We make our own bloody mary drinks.   it just feels so decadent having them at 8AM.  Now that the dining car is restricted to sleepres, and I cannot afford sleepers anymore...sigh.

On an earlier trip I went to the club car and they were out of tomato juice, so I got orange juice instead.  Either way they had minis of vodka to go with.  Oddly, when I asked the cafe attendant for tomato juice and was told he was out of it, I said I would then make a screwdriver.  He had never heard of a screwdriver.  After that, we just brought our own.

By the way, I prefer V-8 to straight tomato, and at that we prefer the "spicy hot" V-8.  (For non-usa readers, V-8 is a brand of tomato juice with other vegetable juices added)

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Posted by CMStPnP on Monday, December 23, 2019 10:59 PM

Paul_D_North_Jr
The cafe on the lower level of the Sightseer Lounge of the Southwest Chief did back on Sept. 28 and Sept. 30, 2019.  Can't say about after that.

Did he actually mix the drink or did he hand you the mini-bottles of liquor?   I was under the impression there were no longer any bartenders on Amtrak trains.    It would be great if the snack bar attendent knew how to mix drinks.   

I still remember back when the bartender was stationed on the second level in the Sight-Seer lounge........which btw, Amtrak has started to bastardize.    The Texas Eagle Sight-Seer lounge was half tables on the upper level (horrible).    Can't imagine that clients want that when half the dining car rides empty configured that way already.    Though they might be prepping for the day of boxed lunches for coach passengers in the Sight-Seer Lounge.    The lower level is usually empty and there are tables down there already.   Can't figure out why they are doing this with the rebuilds.    Just seems stupid.

Was telling some of the new to Amtrak passengers on my trip that the original design of the Superliner Economy Bedroom (which most had), was Channel 1 was for turning on outside intercom announcements (this still works) Channel 0 was to turn the system off, channels 2 and above were intended for piped in music (wonder if the wiring is still in place for that).     The Sleeping Car compartments were supposed to come with some form of entertainment but Amtrak long ago dropped the ball with it. 

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Posted by Deggesty on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 7:50 AM

As to tables in the Sightseer Lounges, they are found on the California Zephyr, the Empire Builder, and Coast Starlight, and were on the Capitol Limited. It seems to me that that wasthe standard arrangement for these cars.

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Posted by PJS1 on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 10:04 AM

The Sightseer lounge car attendants are not bar keeps.  They are not expected to know how to mix drinks.

Amtrak used to play movies in the Sightseer Lounge car, but they gave it up because so many passengers today have a tablet or smart phone that enables them to watch what they want to see.  I suspect the same applies for music, which probably is the reason the company has not kept up the system to pipe it into each room.

A lot has changed since the Superliner equipment went into service.  At the time iPads and iPods were a thing of the future, I believe.

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 10:44 AM

I have to confess that I see little point to making a lounge-car attendant a 'mixologist' for a standard Bloody, where the supplies are all going to be canned or individually midget-bottled.  They are not going to have a bottle of Worcestershire at hand to add to canned tomato juice cocktail, nor are they likely to start running a 'split' of a miniature bottle to adjust the amount of alcohol going into a given drink. I in fact would much prefer having a can of the mixed stuff (ideally actual "Bloody Mary Mix") with the spices and Worcestershire mixed in) and an individual bottle of vodka to being given a mixed 'cup-size' drink, as I can transport them without messy spillage to where I want, and then mix refills, too -- and get out my own Worcestershire if I want it instead of carrying the bottle in my inside jacket pocket as if going to football games.

Some airlines (I don't remember which, or when) carried canned "Bloody Mary Mix" instead of just tomato juice and V8.  They would serve this to coach passengers on request just like any other canned drink they carried on the cart.  It certainly wouldn't involve much trouble for Amtrak to do the same.  By extension, there's now a much more developed market for canned cocktails and 'mocktails' of various kinds, which require little if any mixological skill to deploy for customers.  (Yes, there should be some way for ticket-holders to communicate their expected cocktail 'wants' in advance so the commissary knows how many to stock ... but that's a different discussion.)

The problem with individual entertainment in sleepers is that so damn much money and trouble needs to be made to provide it in the first place, and the general quality of the equipment so provided is so primitive.  In the 1940s it was luxury to have piped-in radio to the pillow speaker C&O provided you.  Nowadays even cheap stick MP3 players, or any smartphone or other device that can connect to streaming music services, provide an individual alternative far superior to anything that could be 'hardwired' to a room in a way that wouldn't annoy other passengers even if turned up to preferred loudness ... or the airlines approach of renting headsets.  It is hard to imagine any cost-effective, theft- and vandal-resistant method of providing 'video' entertainment in sleepers, even from nothing more than a canned source, that would be superior to passengers' use of devices.

At least we haven't gotten to the world of Chinese passenger railroading, where not only were there speakers in every car but there was constant, fairly loud, 'programming' on them all the time...

Of course this comes back, again, to the desirability of very-high-bandwidth dedicated wireless connectivity (whether Wi-Fi, 5G repeaters, or other technology like Bluetooth or Zigbee) to a large number of parallel users on a train.  This gets difficult fast when entertainment, even using comparatively restricted streaming protocols, is involved.  I do think that any money that would be spent on 'in-room video screens' more complex than televisions running off a common 'cable' source would be better spent in implementing better wireless bandwidth more of the time... 

Now, I'm all for having big-screen TV set up in the lounge car ... with something like a dedicated FM or Internet setup for the sound, so your own headsets would be the non-distracting sound system.  Lincensing even of first-run films would be convenient and relatively positive in such a controlled environment.  (As would ensuring that no one was pirating a copy... Wink)

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Posted by York1 on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 12:27 PM

There's still something romantic about a lounge car with a bar staffed by a bartender who would make drinks to order.

It's not quite the same to get a can of mix and a small bottle to mix yourself at your seat.

Remember the issues involved with trains (and planes) crossing certain sections of "dry" counties?  It seems silly today, but it was taken seriously back then.

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 1:11 PM

York1
There's still something romantic about a lounge car with a bar staffed by a bartender who would make drinks to order. 

It's not quite the same to get a can of mix and a small bottle to mix yourself at your seat. 

Remember the issues involved with trains (and planes) crossing certain sections of "dry" counties?  It seems silly today, but it was taken seriously back then.

Scrupulously adhered to by the B&O Dining Car Stewards with West Virginia being dry for a time.  Last call for alcohol approaching Harpers Ferry Westbound and Cumberland Eastbound.  All alcohol was dispensed in 'minitures' by the Steward in accordance with orders written by the customer on the waiters order sheet.

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Posted by Deggesty on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 1:28 PM

And, Pullman employees in lounge cars also followed strict instructions-even instructions for pouring beer into glasses.

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 1:52 PM

York1
There's still something romantic about a lounge car with a bar staffed by a bartender who would make drinks to order. It's not quite the same to get a can of mix and a small bottle to mix yourself at your seat.

This is without question -- as is getting a drink that cannot be provided in a can, or made using materials in 'portion-controlled packaging'.

What is in question, though, is assuming the funds are in the Amtrak budget to provide both the mixin's and the mixologist as amenities.  I think they are not, and I further suspect that the political will to provide a more detailed alcohol service, as with many other 'non-transportation-related' amenities, may be relatively lacking.

On the other hand, if enough of the riding public is willing to pay a premium for the amenity and the experience, and if there is even a small 'net profit' from the mixed drinks ... well, every little bit helps toward making Amtrak both net-profitable and attractive to more potential passengers.

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Posted by York1 on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 1:52 PM

In 1972, officials boarded the Amtrak train in Kansas City.  When it stopped in Newton, Kansas, another official boarded the train, and agents arrested the conductor, the lounge car attendant, and the dining car waiter.  They were charged with violating the alcohol laws in Kansas.  The agents also confiscated all the alcohol on board the train.

I think the Supreme Court ruled that states had the right to make their own laws concerning alcohol.

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Posted by York1 on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 2:11 PM

Overmod
What is in question, though, is assuming the funds are in the Amtrak budget to provide both the mixin's and the mixologist as amenities.  I think they are not, and I further suspect that the political will to provide a more detailed alcohol service, as with many other 'non-transportation-related' amenities, may be relatively lacking.

 

I agree completely.  My comment was made after watching some TCM movies with people riding trains in the 1940s.

Of course, the movies don't portray anything that does not look "romantic".

York1 John       

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Posted by Electroliner 1935 on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 3:00 PM

Was the Union Pacific the ony railroad with full bottles used in the bars? All the other trains I rode on used the single service bottles. 

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 3:27 PM

York1
I think the Supreme Court ruled that states had the right to make their own laws concerning alcohol.

There was never any particular question about states having the right to make, and to enforce, their own laws -- whether under cover of a 'religious' based excuse or not.  There was also no question that the laws applied to ground transportation within the particular states.

The question was whether 'interstate commerce' was affected by the states' enforcing their liquor law on interstate trains passing through 'dry' areas.  And the idea of locking up sales of alcohol during passage through 'dry' or otherwise restricted areas was, as Balt's father noted, well and truly established from Repeal onward.

I think the reason the Supreme Court decision that overturned train-length legislation did not apply to beverage alcohol is the same reason it did not apply to full-crew laws: it does not affect safety, and there is no compelling restraint of interstate traffic involved in denying the sale of alcohol for some part of a train's run.  

Congress could have, as part of the official repeal of Prohibition, established a "right" to consume alcohol in interstate commerce.  (It would be interesting to see how subsequent elections for Congresscritters in dry areas would have gone.)  Only on such a basis, and only if subsequently confirmed as Constitutional by a majority of the Court, could restrictions on alcohol served in dry areas be 'overridden' by Federal power.

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 3:29 PM

Electroliner 1935
Was the Union Pacific the ony railroad with full bottles used in the bars? All the other trains I rode on used the single service bottles. 

Must be - having frequented the diners on B&O, IC, L&N, SAL, ACL and PRR - all liquor was dispensed in miniatures on those roads.

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 3:44 PM

Miniature bottles have a very long history, and judging from some other issues railroads likely had with pilfering, watering of contents, refilling with lesser quality, and pouring of short shots it would make enormous sense to provide demonstrably sealed individual bottles to be opened only in the presence of the passenger, and which could be easily counted before and after passengers were on the train.

Something else was that individual states that permitted alcohol could have their own tax stamps on miniature bottles, although I don't know if being served on a train counts as a bottle 'purchase' that would require that only a particular state's legal variety be served while the train was transiting that state.  I'm sure Balt's father would know all about this.  A legitimate state tax stamp would certainly be an additional layer of assurance that the contents were 'genuine'.

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Posted by Deggesty on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 3:48 PM

As I recall, the Pullman manual concerning the preparation of meals and serving drinks did not mention state stamps or such. I currently do not have access to my copy of the manual, so I am unable to verify this.

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Posted by NKP guy on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 4:35 PM

York1
In 1972, officials boarded the Amtrak train in Kansas City.  When it stopped in Newton, Kansas, another official boarded the train, and agents arrested the conductor, the lounge car attendant, and the dining car waiter.  They were charged with violating the alcohol laws in Kansas.  The agents also confiscated all the alcohol on board the train.

   "What's the matter with Kansas?"             William Allen White

   I'll bet that even in 1872 Kansas was behind the times and behind the rest of the nation.  

   

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Posted by divebardave on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 9:16 PM

Make Bloody Mary cocktails at home with this delicious recipe! This Bloody Mary mix is made from scratch with basic ingredients. It’s perfect for your next brunch. Recipe yields 4 cocktails.

Scale 1x2x3x

Ingredients

  • 32 ounces (4 cups) tomato juice
  • 8 ounces (1 cup) vodka
  • 1 medium-to-large cucumber, peeled and seeded
  • ⅓ cup distilled vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon celery seed (not celery salt!)
  • 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce*
  • ½ teaspoon hot sauce (I used Tapatío), more to taste
  • 1 teaspoon (about 50 twists) freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 medium cloves garlic, pressed or minced
  • ¼ teaspoon salt, optional
  • Lemon or lime wedges
  • Kosher salt, for the rims of your glasses, optional (add chili powder if you’d like)
  • Lots of ice, for serving
  • Garnishes (choose any): Celery stalks, skinny carrots with leafy tops, mini bell peppers, cherry tomatoes, dill pickle spears, pickled okra, and/or green cocktail olives

Instructions

  1. In a blender, combine the tomato juice, vodka, cucumber, vinegar, celery seed, Worcestershire sauce and hot sauce. Securely fasten the lid and blend on high speed until completely smooth.
  2. Taste, and add more hot sauce for more heat (it’s going to taste quite intense now, since the mix hasn’t cooled over ice yet). Add the black pepper and garlic. Securely fasten the lid and blend for just a few seconds (or longer, for a completely smooth texture). Taste, and stir in ¼ teaspoon salt for more overall flavor if you’d like (tomato juice brands vary by salt content, so this is really up to you). Set aside.
  3. If you’d like to rim your glasses with salt, run a lemon or lime wedge around the outside rim. Pour kosher salt onto a small plate (mix in chili powder if you’d like), and roll the wet edge of the glass across the salt at a 45-degree angle. Repeat with the remaining glasses.
  4. Fill the glasses with ice, and pour the Bloody Mary mix on top. Stir with a spoon, and garnish with a lemon or lime wedge and garnishes of your choice. Serve immediately.

Notes

Recommended vodka: I prefer Tito’s. Whichever you use, be sure it’s of good quality.

*Make it vegetarian/vegan/fish-free: Most Worcestershire sauces contain anchovies, so be sure to use vegan Worcestershire sauce. I like Whole Foods 365 or Annie’s brands.

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Posted by divebardave on Tuesday, December 24, 2019 9:43 PM

That being said the Amtrak Bloody Mary was a more simple affair one airline bottle of Vodka,V-8,Tobasco or Crystal Hotsauce, Pepper (V-8 has enough salt to raise BP to 200 over 110) Shake and add Cellary if avalible from dining car and serve in a plastic cup. Most of the Red Eye passengers who got on the train at 400 am after waiting hours on the floor and uncomfortible chairs for the Late Show Limited were just happy to have a anidote on a cold blizzard morning.

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Posted by York1 on Wednesday, December 25, 2019 8:47 AM

divebardave
(V-8 has enough salt to raise BP to 200 over 110)

That's why it tastes so good.  The older I get, more and more things that taste great are not good for me.

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, December 25, 2019 12:36 PM

The canonical Worcestershire for the 8:15am get-your-heart-started Bloody is Lea & Perrins, but the 365 version is indeed perfectly good.  I advise inclusion of some beef stock or consommé, and a little white pepper in place of some of the hot sauce.  If you are adventurous try Outerbridge's in place of Crystal, but be advised that stuff is psychologically addictive.  Nobody with taste uses Tabasco unless they enjoy the experience of tiny adder fangs sinking into the tip of their tongue over and over; a triumph of marketing over good sense matched only by Starbucks convincing whole generations that cremation is superior to roasting.

Of course you can also try the drink made with Everclear instead of vodka.  That needs a bit of a name change in the opposite direction of how you get a Virgin Mary by leaving the vodka out.  My suggested alternative is Hail Mary! as it covers all the necessary ground remarkably quickly, as it were.

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, December 25, 2019 12:46 PM

Overmod
Nobody with taste uses Tabasco unless they enjoy the experience of tiny adder fangs sinking into the tip of their tongue over and over;

When the military was creating MRE's (Meals Ready to Eat), they researched what the troops wanted for a condiment in some of the meals, thinking that ketchup would probably be suitable.  

Turns out they wanted Tobasco (or at least some sort of hot sauce).  Turns out that Tobasco doesn't fare well in the packets usually used for ketchup and the like - the only solution was glass bottles.

The bottles look just like their big brothers, but cute...

 

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Posted by Deggesty on Wednesday, December 25, 2019 1:12 PM

I think of the stuff marketed under the name "Louisiana Hot Sauce"--compared with Tabasco it is NOT hot sauce.

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Posted by York1 on Wednesday, December 25, 2019 1:18 PM

About the only time I have a Bloody Mary is when we have company.

Even though I'm sure the recipes are all good, I really don't want to be doing a lot of measuring and mixing while I'm talking to family or friends.

I have found that ZingZang is a good Bloody Mary mix.  Pour it in a glass, put in some vodka, and you have a very good Bloody Mary.

York1 John       

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