The kitchen at The Sheaf gets the attention, as kitchens do. But it is the bar that does the quiet work of the evening — the place a round is retold, a wager is settled, and the right drink finds the right tired hand. We have given it as much thought as the menu.
Every bar worth visiting has one drink it is known for. Ours is the Prairie Fire — smoke, a little sweetness, and a slow heat that suits a porch at dusk. It is the cocktail we pour at the Calcutta, the one that ends up in the photographs, and the flavor we liked enough to put into a candle so you could take the evening home. Order one after the eighteenth. It tastes like the day you just had.
A short list, done perfectly, beats a long one done well.
We do not keep a hundred bottles. We keep the right ones, and we know what to do with them. A proper old fashioned, a cold local pour for the back-nine cooler, a bourbon list chosen by people who actually drink bourbon, and a sommelier who would rather talk you into the perfect glass than the expensive one. The bar, like the rooms, is built to be good on the hundredth night, not just the first.