The Mai Tai
It is thought that the Mai Tai was created in 1944 by a bartender known as Trader Vic, or Victor Jules Bergeron, in Oakland, San Francisco. Having been in the bar/restaurant business since 1934, he had become known for his eclectic blend of foods cooked in a wood-fired oven, as well as his ability to create irresistible rum-based cocktails. When guests visited from Hawaii, they were lucky enough to be treated to one of Vic’s new cocktail creations. Upon tasting, they exclaimed, “mai-tai roa ae”, which means “out of this world.” Trader Vic loved the phrase, and so the name was born. The drink became popular throughout California, but when Trader Vic opened his bar in Seattle in 1948, word about the drink spread. It had already been informally introduced to Hawaii by his first Mai Tai customers, and when it was included in a bar service for American President Lines, it became an international hit. A similar drink was created in 1933 by Ernest Raymond Beaumont-Gantt, called the Q.B. Cooler. Beaumont-Gantt claimed that Trader Vic had stolen the idea for the Mai Tai from him, as well as many other elements of his bar, Don The Beachcomber’s. While Vic admitted to copying many elements of Don’s, he has always refuted the claims that he stole the idea for the Mai Tai, to the point where he took it to court. He won his case and it is now generally accepted that he created the cocktail.
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