Cornell’s Center for Hospitality Research just released the third version of their Wine Cellar Management Tool application. The software is available for free and does not store any of its users’ data online. The tool allows wine owners to keep track of the drinkability windows of different wines in their collection. This lets owners make revenue-generating decisions about which wines to promote for quicker sales and which can afford to be stored longer.

Read the full article here: Updated Wine Cellar Management Tool Available From Cornell

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It’s no secret that coffee and tea are trendy now, and restaurant operators at all price points have been working to take advantage of these beverages’ cultural cachet. On the higher-end side of things, restaurants like Eleven Madison Park have been asking their sommeliers to create tea pairings for their dishes that mimc traditional wine pairings. Tea is especially suited to this application because, like wine, it contains tannins and is grown in many different locations with their own terroirs. High-tannin black tea roughly corresponds to red wine, lighter green tea is reminiscent of white, and oolong can be thought of like high-quality rosé.

Introducing pairing menus for beverages that don’t usually get this sort of treatment is a sound strategy for operators to increase check averages and encourage customers to try out things they wouldn’t order or are unfamiliar with. Servers should be trained to know the pairings and be able to talk about them in their own words. This gives customers the sense that unique beverage pairings are authentically adding value to their meals, and will often lead them to spend more.

Read the full article here: Brewing Coffee and Tea Pairings

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Sometimes it’s hard to know what questions you can reasonably ask your friendly bartender without making them wish you never walked up to the bar. Thrillist surveyed a bunch of real bartenders to come up with a list of questions they wish people wouldn’t ask. The worst offenders? Many of the questions on the list somehow involve the customer asking for a strong drink without paying extra. Another no-no is complaining that your glass isn’t always filled to the top.

Read the full article here: The Dumbest Questions You Can Ask Your Bartender

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