If you're looking for manga similar to Bartender, you might like these titles.
Yutaka Kanzaki, a wine critic whose reviews have enough clout to move the industry worldwide, has died—leaving behind a wine collection worth over two billion yen. Only the one who can name his favorite bottles, plus vintages, will inherit this dream of a cellar. It's a battle between Yutaka's biological son Shizuku and adopted child Issei to identify these "Twelve Apostles"—along with the very best wine in his collection, the so-called "Drops of God."
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Will booze make it all better?
Sure it will! Especially if the right drink for the right situation. In Bartender there is more of a therapy through the perfect mixed poison, and in Drops of God, it is more the way the perfect wine can enrich your life or others.
Bartender is more episodic with only a fleeting connected story at the end. Drops of God follows a man who was born to be a wine taster, yet shunned it for much of his life.
The wealth of alcoholic knowledge in both is off the charts, and the pace on both are subtle.
A series of rather comedic stories about an eponymous bar, its owner, two regular patrons, and the oddballs that stroll through its doors.
A female bartender and her special "my-pace" bar where she makes cocktails that leave unforgettable taste in her customers' hearts.
Shun Sakai, a young man who has wandered across the world, comes to work at a bar run by Ren Sajima.
As a food trading company employee, Jinguji Satoshi has been exposed to food from all over the world. He recently quit his job to follow his dream of cooking hamburgers. What kind of burgers will the world-wise Jinguji bring to Japan?
In an old-fashioned all-night food stall, the owner prepares various dishes to suit the tastes of different customers.