The Rooftop bar opens at 4 pm
Tues-Sat
Reverse Happy Hour every Friday and Saturday night from 10 pm - midnight
-$2 off signature cocktails
-$5 select house beers
-10% off whiskey pours
SIGNATURE craft COCKTAILS
featuring Texas Spirits
Respect the past. Craft the future.
Oneida Smash
Bourbon smash made with Milam & Greene Bourbon, fresh orange and lime, seasonal fruit shrub
Founded in 1887 following the development of the Fort Worth and Denver City Railway, Oneida was officially renamed by majority consent shortly after its founding to Amarillo and named the county seat of potter county.
Madam Queen
House infused Cucumber Vodka, Seersucker Gin, fresh lemon juice, cucumber-basil syrup, sparkling wine
Named for the 1930 original coal burning railroad engine that is now on display just north of Amarillo Civic Center on Lincoln St. and SE 2nd.
Greenbelt
Still Austin Rye, Cherry Heering, Antica Formula Vermouth, Angostura Bitters
Greenbelt reservoir was created in 1966, eventually threatening to flood the original 1878 townsite of Clarendon, known to local cowboys as “Saint’s Roost”.
Masterson #1
Texacraft 100 proof Straight Bourbon Whiskey, fresh lemon juice, Silver Star Texas Honey Liqueur, Peychaud’s Bitters, honey syrup
Masterson #1 was the discovery well in the Panhandle-Hugoton Gas Field, the largest known gas field at the time, which is located just 10 miles north of Six Car Pub and Brewery. This discovery spurred the boom of Panhandle oil fields.
Saint’s roost
Still Austin “The Naturalist” Gin, house-made raspberry liqueur, St. Germain’s elderberry liqueur,lemon, splash of sparkling wine
JUG Club
Dripping Springs Vodka, Coconut cream, fresh lime juice
Named to honor the fun and frivolous library committee of 1903-“Just Us Girls” Club-the first women’s club in Amarillo. Their club library eventually became the first Amarillo public library.
Comanche Moon Margarita
Dos Rios Blanco Tequila, Ancho Reyes Verde Chile Liqueur, fresh lime juice, orange liqueur, habanero-agave syrup
Comanche raiding parties were known to utilize the light of the full moon, said to be “bright enough to light the warpath”. They ruled throughout the southern plains and into parts of Mexico until the late 1800s.
Sad Monkey
FLOR DE CAñA AGED RUM, HOUSEMADE BANANA LIQUER AND PISTACHIO ORGEAT, GARNISHED W/ TROPICAL FRUIT AND BANANA DUST
Our profound tribute to the Sad Monkey Railroad; the miniature rail with open, sightseeing cars which ran for 41 years on the floor of the Palo Duro Canyon. This piece of local sentimental history is now displayed just south of the historic square of Canyon, Texas.