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Food and Drinks
Lifestyle100 Top Tables

Drink in Focus: Off Wave at Dead Poets

The shochu-based cocktail, part of the bar’s Liquid Gallery menu, is inspired by Hokusai’s art and blends Japanese flavours

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Off Wave, from Dead Poets’ latest menu Liquid Gallery, is inspired by a Hokusai print. Photo: Handout
Josiah Ng

So what do a barbershop-by-day, cocktail-bar-by-night concept and Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock print art have in common? For its signatures menu, Dead Poets has gone from focusing on musicians to literature, to now spotlighting 12 artists and their famous works as inspirations for modern, casual cocktails.

One of these drinks is the Off Wave, inspired by Katsushika Hokusai’s Great Wave off Kanagawa, which uses meticulous detail in wood carving and printing to depict a massive tidal wave dwarfing Japanese boats and even Mount Fuji in its background. According to Dead Poets co-founder Nikita Matveev, the drink translates that sense of controlled chaos into a bright, modern Japanese-influenced sour.
The interior at Dead Poets. Photo: Handout
The interior at Dead Poets. Photo: Handout

Just as Great Wave is but one of many entries in Hokusai’s seminal collection, the Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, the Off Wave is one of many flavour profiles the Dead Poets team sought to crystallise in its new menu. “We started from moods and structures we like to drink,” Matveev says about the new menu as a whole, titled Liquid Gallery, “and matched them to painters. In the case of the Off Wave, Hokusai’s print directly guided both the layered build of the drink and the visual of the garnish.”

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The drink emphasises all-Japanese flavours, beginning with Iichiko Saiten shochu as the base and combined with white peach cordial, strong-brew genmaicha and white miso syrup, and finished off with yuzu. Matveev finds the shochu “expressive and mixable”, containing peach, melon and umami notes brought out by the white peach and the tea-miso syrup – ingredients that keep its character “instead of disappearing behind fruit and acid”.
The Great Wave off Kanagawa is a woodblock print by Japanese ukiyo-e artist Katsushika Hokusai. Photo: Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Great Wave off Kanagawa is a woodblock print by Japanese ukiyo-e artist Katsushika Hokusai. Photo: Minneapolis Institute of Art

Just as ukiyo-e requires meticulous carving and layered printwork, each Off Wave component appears to require equally precise prep work. Matveev says the syrup starts with brewing “strong” genmaicha then integrating it into a syrup, before white miso is added for its umami, toastiness and a light saline touch. The white peach cordial is clarified in-house for full control over sweetness and acidity. “We chose white peach,” Matveev says, “specifically for its delicate, aromatic character that supports the shochu and tea rather than overpowering them.”

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The result is a cold, refreshing, peach-forward sour with a surprisingly deep body, helped in no small part by the garnish – a showstopping stencil in the shape of the Great Wave. “The stencil is done with an ube-based powder,” Matveev says, “which gives a vivid purple colour, gentle earthiness and a subtle vanilla-nut quality.”

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