Gear up for the long weekend with guest shifts and launches across town. Start the weekend off in Jordan as Terrible Baby hosts the convivial Employees Only Singapore. Over in Central, C108 has updated its menu of signatures inspired by cocktail history, while Quinary will begin celebrating the bergamot-scented tea that has long inspired bartenders.Thursday, May 21Employees Only Singapore x Terrible BabyDilly, Don’t Dally, from Employees Only Singapore’s takeover of Terrible Baby in Hong Kong. Photo: HandoutThe Singaporean chapter of seminal industry favourite Employees Only arrives at Terrible Baby for one night only this Thursday. Employees Only Singapore was ranked No 89 on Asia’s 50 Best Bars last year, thanks to its potent combination of easy sips and high-energy hospitality. Cocktails on the night will include Dilly, Don’t Dally, a combination of gin, falernum, home-made camomile cordial, botanicals, basil and lemon juice, all milk-washed for texture. The Nightshade supplements tequila blanco with blueberry shrub, peach bitters and Perrier for a light, long sip.Where: Terrible Baby, 4/F, Eaton HK, 380 Nathan Road, JordanWhen: 7pm til sold outSaturday, May 23C108 updates the Creator’s Point of ViewMi-Roni from C108’s updated Creator’s Point of View menu. Photo: HandoutC108 takes its coffee-by-day, cocktails-by-night mission to the next level, having updated its Creator’s Point of View menu of signatures earlier this week. When the original menu launched last June, it was designed around updating classics based on the stories that inspired them. To wit, new menu entries include the visually striking Cuba Cola, derived from the Cuba Libre: a “liquid monument to post-war Havana” combining Cuban rum and American cola. The Cuba Cola uses Havana rum and rounds out the flavour with green soda, cola syrup, bitter melon and citrus.For the more spirit-forward inclined, the Mi-Roni combines gin, miso-infused vermouth, sencha tea and Campari, with the menu notes observing that “while the drink is a masterpiece of Italian culture, its modern global popularity often bridges diverse cultures through artful variations”.Where: 15 Old Bailey Street, CentralWhen: 6pm-2amSunday, May 24