At some point in your career as a home bartender, you’re going to want to start making mint juleps. Or Moscow mules. Or scorpion bowls. Or frozen margaritas. And you won’t have a blender. What to do about the crushed ice? You can use that funky stuff that comes out of refrigerator doors and never tastes right. You can wander from store to store to find an ancient bag of crushed ice, now frozen solid. Or you can make your own. As you begin expanding your home bar toolkit, it’s time to consider the Lewis Bag.
What’s a Lewis Bag? Essentially, it’s a sturdy canvas bag with a flap, fold, or tie that you can fill with ice cubes and beat till you get tinier ice fragments. We know you’ve tried to do this before with block ice (or in a plastic sandwich bag), pounding it with a regular hammer, or maybe the heel of your boot. What happens? The ice crushes, sure, but it also perforates the bag and makes a soggy mess. Maybe you’ve even tried wrapping ice in a cotton kitchen towel. That works a little better if you can keep the towel closed. Still, it quickly gets soaked. Soon, everything’s wet.
The Lewis Bag solves all these issues and more. The sturdy canvas won’t tear or leak. The flap keeps ice chips from shooting out like a miniature Emma Frost battling the Inhumans (or .. .the X-Men … we got so confused). It also wicks away all that unwanted moisture created by transferring energy from your arm to the ice (science!) so your ice isn’t “wet” when it goes into the drink. Seriously. You only want so much water dilution in the glory that is bourbon, sugar, and mint.
The whole thing couldn’t be simpler: Scoop a dozen or more ice cubes into the bag. Fold the flap over and pound the hell out of it five or six (or eight) times. A soft, wide mallet (think rubber mallet, meat tenderizer, or wooden specialized mallet
There are a number of Lewis Bags available for purchase on Amazon, like this option
Pro tip: No matter how pristine the ice source, eventually cloth picks up a funk from that frozen water. Jeffrey Morgenthaler, Portland bar owner extraordinaire and author of The Bar Book
Oh … and why is it called a “Lewis” bag? No clue. We reached out to all the booze historians
Feature image courtesy of Viski.