Cocktail umbrella

Purpose

The true purpose of the cocktail umbrella is unknown. Some bartenders say that the cocktail umbrella is only decorative. Other bartenders have argued that the umbrella provides shade that slows the melting of ice when the drink is served outdoors. However, the temperature outside matters more than direct sunlight when it comes to the melting of ice.

The shade from the cocktail umbrella would do nothing to slow this down. Another hypothesis about the cocktail umbrella’s purpose is that its absence can lead to faster evaporation of alcohol due to direct sunlight when the drink is served outdoors. Chemists reject this idea and explain that the presence of a cocktail umbrella has no effect on this.

In the past, cocktail umbrellas have served as a gimmick to draw women into bars that were mostly frequented by men. However, this purpose has faded in current times. Currently, the cocktail umbrella has become an important part of the drinks it is found on. It has become a garnish that is essential to the identities of these drinks.

Cocktail garnishes started being used in the 19th century, with non-edible garnishes being introduced after prohibition. Two examples of these non-edible garnishes are cocktail umbrellas and swizzle sticks. Since their introduction, cocktail umbrellas use as a garnish has become a large part of their purpose.

As a garnish, they complete the drink's presentation and identify it as tropical. However, cocktail umbrellas differ from other drink garnishes. Unlike foods commonly used as garnishes, such as cherries, olives, or citrus, cocktail umbrellas do not add to the flavor of the drink and have a purely aesthetic purpose.

Alternative uses for cocktail umbrellas also exist. They can be used as toothpicks and may have been used as hat decorations in the past. It is also possible to use them as hair decorations and place cards to tell people where to sit at a hosted event.

  • kristina [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    i use them to poke men in the eye who come to talk to me while i try to get drunk

  • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
    ·
    2 years ago

    They were hoping to expand their customer base to the mouse demographic.

  • Catherine_Steward [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Cocktail umbrellas are actually a prank. They're just waiting for you to ask what it's for so they can all pretend to be in the know and laugh at you for having to ask.

  • D61 [any]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Increase incidents of eye related injury in tourists severe enough to need local medical attention.

  • MikeHockempalz [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Other bartenders have argued that the umbrella provides shade that slows the melting of ice when the drink is served outdoor

    anybody who's ever argued this is a huge dumbass

  • Mardoniush [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Simple, the spike of the umbrella breaks the surface tension of the drink, preventing separated layers from forming immiscible components.

    Meanwhile the umbrella prevents evaporation of the alcohol out into the atmosphere. The surface vapour then forms a high pressure inversion layer, forcing the less dense layers down where they mix, allowing convection to form a perfectly mixed cocktail.

  • Circra [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Origonally invented in the 1700's . The first ones were larger and made in drab grey and brown, not the colourful ones we are so familar with today.

    The idea was that drinks containing significant amounts of fruit or different alcohols and mixers were simply put frivalous and decadent. Christians began using them in their drinks to 'hide their shame from god.'

    As society became more secular, they changed of course and now just like Easter eggs and Christmas presents usurped their respective holidays, so too has the shamebrella evolved from its initial significance.