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Wyndham the 4th manager Tom Wood says the bar is like going up to a friend's apartment.Photo: Jonathan Wong

Ask the Foodie: Tom Wood

Australian-born mixologist Tom Wood arrived in Hong Kong in January this year to oversee the bar at Wyndham the 4th, which has just opened in Central. Diageo Reserve named him a world class bartender of the year, Hong Kong's first, before the venue even opened.

Elle Kwan

Australian-born mixologist Tom Wood arrived in Hong Kong in January this year to oversee the bar at Wyndham the 4th, which has just opened in Central. Diageo Reserve named him a world class bartender of the year, Hong Kong's first, before the venue even opened.

It was created to sound like an earl's name, and obviously it's a play on the address as well [it's four floors up]. The overall concept was to make it feel like the owner, Sir Wyndham's, gallery and apartment. It can be so crazy down on Wyndham Street, so this is like going up to your friend's apartment. It's an escape.

There were a few delays in opening, but I thought I might as well enter the competition. So I did and kind of, well, won.

One of my bigger inspirations would be that luxury element. One of the ways I've been getting inspiration is by going to City'super or Great Food Hall and walking around, looking for high-end ingredients.

Truffles. I took truffle butter and used a process called fat washing. I got some almonds, toasted them in a pan, then covered them in truffle butter and honey to make a mixture, then poured a bottle of Fino sherry over it and sat it for 24 hours.

It comes out as a sherry with a beautiful nuttiness and richness because of the truffles and honey. I made a martini-style drink with it.

 

 

I called it the Dutch Book. A Dutch book is a set of odds that guarantees a win, a bit of a gambling term, but it's a traders' term too, so I figured that, in a city like Hong Kong it would be a great name for a drink.

No, not molecular. For a long time I had a focus on classic drinks. If you go too experimental at the start, you lose that foundation. I like to keep things fairly simple, but always with a surprise element.

I'd always liked cocktails. My parents didn't encourage drinking, but I used to like going into my mum's liquor cabinet and seeing what I could make. They always had cocktail books so I would go through them and think: "I can make that."

My intention was to work in a big hotel. I started working in bars in Sydney and got to enjoy the lifestyle. As soon as I finished university, I did the "Aussie thing" and went to London. There, I worked under someone really professional - Simon King. And I've never looked back.

It's starting to take off. People are starting to ask for more unusual items ... Globally, New York and London will always lead the way. Classics are really starting to come in. Right now, the Old Fashioned is huge. All the bartenders in Hong Kong are going for that classic style.

I have one called the Pickwick Flip, from Charles Dickens' . An original drink in the book was called a Dog's Nose, consisting of sugar, a pint of stout and gin, served warm. My Pickwick is a modern-day interpretation - a flip. I've turned the Guinness into a syrup, added an egg and presented it like a little pot of stout.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Noble appointment for a barkeep of distinction
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