Drinking the Devil’s Acre combines San Francisco cocktail history, recipes for classic drinks like French 75s and Margaritas, and modern riffs on those drinks from bartenders of the 2010s craft-cocktail renaissance. (Sadly, that era may also now have receded into history, considering how many bars have closed in the pandemic.) The author, Duggan McDonnell, founded the Union Square bar Cantina (2006-2016), which happens to be where I celebrated on Election Night 2008, three months after I moved to San Francisco and four months after I could legally drink.
McDonnell has clearly done his research into cocktail culture old and new. His main thesis is that San Francisco’s favorite cocktails are “bright, bitter, and boozy,” which does seem fitting for this city of fresh citrus and Fernet Branca.
With its luscious photographs and ornate Gilded Age-inspired design, this book would make a lovely housewarming gift. But that also means it feels too pretty to use—and possibly mess up with an accidental spill of Campari or cocktail syrup. It’s also sometimes unclear whether the book is for cocktail novices or cocktail experts: is the person who needs to look up a basic Negroni recipe the same person who wants to make their own artisanal cocktail bitters from 20+ ingredients? I also wish the drinks were arranged in a logical order in the text, though at least there’s an index where you can search for recipes by principal ingredient.
As I said, this book is also a valuable record of the 2010s cocktail scene, but at times McDonnell seems overly enamored with his own prose. (I mean, the first sentence begins “San Francisco, born from a womb of gold…”) Though I suppose that’s what the subtitle “a love letter from San Francisco and her cocktails” suggests: come for the booze, stay for the rhapsodic buzz.