Bartender Moe Aljaff, founder of Two Schmucks in Barcelona, was at the height of his career when he hit rock bottom, Now, two years later, he’s bouncing back, opening in New York City.
Acclaimed bartender Moe Aljaff’s bar love story started as he was handing out flyers to a dive bar in Amsterdam. The industry had him in a joyous headlock and he climbed the ranks, eventually opening a “five-star dive bar” in the rough quarters of Raval, Barcelona in 2017.
Fast forward to The World’s 50 Best Bars awards bonanza in his then hometown five years later. His bar, Two Schmucks, had just been awarded number seven on the list. People were flocking to the after parties, queuing up to the bar and its two neighboring siblings that opened during the pandemic. Head bartender Juliette Larrouy was seen parading the lines with trays full of shots, making the wait worthwhile.
“We had decided to go out with an absolute bang,” Aljaff remembers.
No one necking those shots knew that two days down the line almost the whole staff would do a walk-out in support of the founder’s loss of business control to its venture capitalist investors. But it wasn’t only that, along with internal power battles work had become something else than it initially was.
“You wake up and your job title has changed from creative to logistics and it’s just not as fun anymore,” explains Aljaff during a lecture at Tjoget bar.
We’re in Stockholm, just one hour from the Swedish city of Västerås where Aljaff grew up, when he, for the first time, opens up on how life has been since leaving his lifetime project that day in October 2022.
“We had no idea what was next”.