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A double-sided measuring tool used to dispense precise volumes of liquid when making cocktails. Standard jigger configurations are 1oz/2oz and 0.75oz/1.5oz. Jigger use is the single most effective intervention for controlling pour cost variance.
The jigger debate in bar culture is old and persistent. Free-pour advocates argue jiggers slow service and look amateurish. Measured-pour advocates argue precision is professionalism. The financial data is unambiguous: jigger bars have 15-20% lower pour cost variance than free-pour bars.
The training dimension matters too. When you add a new bartender, a jigger-culture bar can get them to correct pour volumes within one shift. A free-pour bar requires weeks of count-training before a new hire is trusted to hit target volumes consistently — if they ever do.
For high-volume operations, the jigger vs speed debate has a practical resolution: use jiggers for cocktails (where the cost and balance impact justifies the extra two seconds), free-pour for highballs (where 1.5oz of vodka in a tall glass is forgiving at volume). The key is a documented standard per drink category, not a blanket policy applied without operational context.
methodus specs include pour method — jigger or free pour — as a trainable field. Certification quizzes cover the pour standard for each drink category your venue uses.
The difference between pouring by feel and pouring by jigger.
The percentage of revenue spent on drink ingredients.
Ensuring every team member makes every recipe the same way.
The difference between intended and actual pour amounts without a measuring tool.
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