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The horizontal rack or speed rail at hip level in front of the bartender, holding the most frequently used spirits for fastest access. Speed rack placement directly affects service speed and cost — the spirits in the well become the default pour for all well drink orders.
The speed rack is the bartender's primary interface during service. Every reach into the speed rack is a fraction of a second — multiplied by hundreds of pours per night, the difference between a well-organized and poorly-organized speed rack can amount to meaningful time savings per shift.
From a cost perspective, the spirits in the speed rack define your well program. Every 'gin and tonic' or 'vodka soda' ordered without a specific brand call is poured from the speed rack. These are typically your highest-volume, lowest-price pours — which means the margin profile of your well selection has an outsized impact on overall beverage cost percentage.
Speed rack organization should be a documented standard, not a personal preference. Different bartenders organizing the well differently creates muscle memory conflicts, slows handoffs between shifts, and causes pour errors when someone reaches for bourbon and grabs rum.
methodus documents speed rack setup as a certifiable service standard — part of the same training system as cocktail specs.
The display shelving behind the bar holding premium and call spirits.
Everything in its place — the prep and setup before service begins.
A cocktail made with the bar's default, lowest-cost spirits.
A documented expectation for how a drink or dish should be prepared and presented.
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