Episode 12 — “An Important Job”
Hmm.
How often does overserving happen in a bar charging twenty bucks (or more!)
for a single cocktail? I could understand
Kitakata dealing with barflies
at the North Wind. Having to cut off a patron for drinking too much at a
high-end counter bar should be a rare event. However, bartenders still receive
training to recognize the signs. For Bartender Glass of God’s last
episode, I enjoyed the twist that a man was staggering and stumbling from
depression instead of intoxication. No, that’s not better for the patron, but
one state of mind often accompanies the other. So that was a fun twist in an
alcohol environment, but it wasn’t the only one.
The whole premise of the Glass of God is that it soothes the soul. That
language evokes a comforting, peaceful experience with notes of nostalgia. But
what if the customer needs a punch in the gut? I loved how
Bartender Glass of God used that twist to provide Sasakura his chance
at redemption from serving a suicidal customer. Compassion is not always soft.
Sometimes, a soul in trouble needs a kick in the pants instead of a lap
pillow. I’m glad I saw Sasakura learned to mix his observation skills with an
extra dose of iron in his soul-stirring drinks. He perfected the Glass of God
just in time for a promotion!
Heh.
The potent cocktail containing vodka, lime juice, and ice has a
nonstandard recipe. I found concoctions using the Sledgehammer moniker
basing themselves on brandy, apple brandy, poured into a Collins glass
with Sunny Delight, and even one with orange liqueur. People looking for a
pounding hangover headache can be terrifyingly creative. But in
Bartender Glass of God, the drink Sasakura made for the lazy author
driven to suicidal ideation through impostor syndrome is fundamentally a
cold lime-favored shot of vodka. Quit your whining and go back to work!
Sasakura’s counsel about maintaining professionalism when you’ve lost your
usual enjoyable drive is a call for creating a disciplined system. But
what about artistic or artisanal work that feeds off creativity? What do
you do when the well runs dry? Or when you feel you shouldn’t be taking a
brush in hand, tapping at a keyboard, or mixing ingredients for a specific
customer? Artisans, by definition, are artists whom customers pay for
their art.
Bartender Glass of God shows us all the steps a bartender takes to
mix a simple cocktail. If the creative spark doesn’t happen at the first
step, it might happen at the second. Or the third. Or not at all!
Kuzuhara, a.k.a.
Mr. Perfect, never worried about the Glass of God’s problems. But if Sasakura
employed the Perfect System, even on his off days, he could still satisfy
a customer’s soul in need of soothing. That is what maintaining
professionalism means.
The portable mixed drink from Hamburg, Germany, named after Czar Nicholas
II’s favorite drink, usually calls for
coffee grounds
and granulated sugar atop the lemon wedge. But Sasakura’s version of the
outdoorsy cocktail
is an acceptable variant. This is how you make a
brandy sour
in your mouth!
Sasakura calls it a Sidecar in your mouth, but that’s only because of the
brandy. I see no orange liqueur anywhere! And what a disappointing way to
add a signature cocktail to Bartender Glass of God before the
season’s end. The International Bartenders Association’s
Sidecar recipe
calls for Triple Sec (a clear orange liqueur), differing from the
episode’s
recipe using a single curacao
(orange liqueur from the Caribbean Antilles island nation). I saw no
mojitos anywhere!
Men of alcohol culture need to be flexible, prepared, and adaptive to
their environment to mix the appropriate drink. Hip flasks have been an
expensive accessory to carry the party with you wherever you go. Have
there been others? Yes! Kurushima’s
flask cane
has been one the English favored for centuries. Hip flasks and specialized
canes are customary for gentlemen. But, if you’re an American college
graduate of a certain age, you might tell stories of bringing Ziploc bags
of vodka into home football games stuffed into your socks.
Hypothetically!
Sasakura’s impromptu bartending with Kurushima turned into his contract
negotiation. He only had one condition that Kurushima had to fulfill if he
were to take the job at Hotel Cardinal, and he demonstrated it with two
things a bartender can’t make. The first is a Nikolaschka. And the second
is another thing a customer creates in the bar. In my review of the
Bartender Glass of God episode that called a
bartender the secret ingredient, I wrote that a bar’s main ingredients are the customers. Sasakura knows
this, too.
Could Hotel Cardinal create a space for guests to meet their old selves? A
place where memories of good times mix with new experiences like a
delicious cocktail? Regulars make the bar and leave their marks there,
like
Norm Peterson
from
Cheers
and his reserved bar stool. Only one pair of cheeks could comfortably sit
there because Norm had shaped the cushion to his own. Sasakura asked
Kurushima to promise him a bar “where everybody knows your name.” Oh, and
one other request. To call the counter bar “Edenhall.”
Did you know Bartender Glass of God’s
Edenhall is a real place? Maki chose the name of his bar because of a legend about it.
Historically, the
Luck of Eden Hall
is a glass cup that a nobleman (probably a Crusader) brought back from
Syria or Egypt in the 1500s. It also has an entertaining fairy tale about
Fairies leaving it behind after a night of carousing. The Fairies flew off
after curious people surprised them, with one crying out as it
disappeared:
If this cup should break or fall
Farewell the Luck of Edenhall!
Final Thoughts.
Tasting liquor, wine, or beer involves
many steps for evaluating
the libation in question. The last (or second-to-last) is to notice what you
taste after you’ve swallowed the drink. For Bartender Glass of God,
what are its flavors in the aftertaste? The first sip of the season felt like
a reboot of the 2006 version but changed its focus to recurring characters and
its main cast. The 2024 anime became Ryuu Sasakura’s story of perfecting the
Glass of God recipe in himself. That’s not surprising if we consider how
episodic storytelling relies more on characters these days instead of a
compelling long-form saga.
As Bartender Glass of God’s season wore on, it became less about the
drinks and the parables they evoked. The ultimate cocktail was Sasakura
himself. And Kurushima’s aim for the Glass of God was to replace the son he
lost. Was Miwa’s father the first Glass of God, and her grandfather had been
searching for the next one? The story of how Kurushima’s son chose a
bottle of whisky
to convince him to move into Western-style resorts is a huge hint.
Still, the recurring characters in Bartender Glass of God fashioned an
enjoyable slice-of-life drama. I heartily enjoyed
Yukari as a comic relief character. She didn’t know CEO Kurushima was Miwa’s grandfather! The Ogura Boss, who
served
cheap chuhais
and potstickers, acted like Yoda in a swamp for the young service industry
members. Now that Hotel Cardinal has firmly installed Sasakura and Edenhall as
its signature counter bar, could a second season be far off? I could see a
version that turns its attention to hotel guests, with the bar regulars
garnishing the base story ingredients.
I have one last point — Bartender Glass of God succeeded at its two primary goals. First, Suntory displayed its liquor labels at a bar and advertised them to the max. Second, the anime convincingly argued its overarching theme: Cocktails taste better with companions. Find a friend and tip one back together. But if you’re alone, your bartender will always be there for you. Kanpai!
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