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The front-facing rail or well containing the most frequently poured spirits, positioned for maximum speed of access. Speed well and speed rack are functionally identical terms — both refer to the primary reach zone containing well spirits used for the majority of pours.
The speed well is where service speed is made or lost. Every spirit in the speed well should meet three criteria: it's used in a high volume of orders, it's stored in a position where the bartender's hand reaches it in a single motion, and its placement is consistent across all shifts so muscle memory works for every team member.
Organization conventions vary, but most high-volume bars follow a logic: vodka at the dominant hand (most common pour), then gin, rum, tequila, whiskey, with modifiers and mixers at the ends. Deviation from the documented standard for personal preference creates friction during handoffs and shared-station service.
A documented speed well setup serves double duty as a training tool. New bartenders who know where each spirit lives before they start their first service are faster from day one — and they're not in the habit of looking down during service.
methodus documents speed well setup as a certifiable service standard alongside recipe specs — tested and tracked in the same certification system.
Everything in its place — the prep and setup before service begins.
The well of most-used spirits within arm's reach of the bartender.
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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