American Cocktail Co. is strongest when the how-to pages are paired with context. The journal captures the people, ideas, and practical habits behind better home bartending, so the site feels editorial rather than purely transactional.
Featured reads
Start here if you want a sense of the site's voice and the kind of stories worth following.
In The Spirit
The main journal stream for interviews, mixology notes, and home-bar perspective pieces.
Tanaya Ghosh Interview
A strong example of the site's better editorial direction: creator profile, drink inspiration, and practical takeaways.
Mixologist Profiles
Use the broader profiles page when you want a faster survey of the bartenders connected to the brand and recipes.
What this journal is trying to do
Human context
Good drinks usually come from specific people, habits, and hospitality choices. The journal should keep that visible.
Practical takeaways
Even interview-led pieces should leave the reader with something usable at home: a technique, ratio, or better ingredient instinct.
Editorial restraint
The goal is not filler content. A short useful story is better than a long page with no real idea inside it.
How a journal piece earns its place
There needs to be a person or point of view worth hearing
Profiles work when the subject has a clear approach to flavor, hospitality, or creativity that sharpens the rest of the site.
The story should connect back to a drink or technique
That link is what keeps the journal from feeling detached from the recipe and home-bar sections.
The page still needs useful structure
Strong subheads, a featured recipe, and a clear next click matter just as much here as on a guide page.
Read the Tanaya Ghosh interview first, then move to the mixologists page if you want a broader view of the people shaping the drinks and techniques elsewhere on the site.