Happy New Year!

by Jen on January 1, 2011

We served this drink at Will's birthday brunch last May, and it quickly topped my list of favorites.

We started the evening off with a French 75, which may be one of my favorite drinks of 2010.

Start with a teaspoon of sugar in a champagne or Collins glass.

Douse the sugar with a half ounce of lemon juice, add an ounce and a half of gin, and top it off with champagne.

Give it a quick stir and BOOM! delicious.

Please note: this is not a drink for the faint at heart, as the gin and champagne combine to produce a very strong drink.

We accompanied the French 75 with a rousing game of Cheez-it Scrabble in three different languages.

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Any Cocktail That Can Be Made, Will

by Will on December 29, 2010

ReadyMade blog suggests that we make this cocktail:

Hoitoi

* 2 oz. dry gin
* 3/4 oz. grapefruit juice
* 1/4 oz. Campari
* 2 oz. champange
* Angostura bitters

Gin and grapefruit juice? And Campari? In the winter? And bitters to boot? And champagne?!

We may just have to try this, before 2010 has expired.

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Homemade Gift: Brandied Cherries

by Jen on December 23, 2010

I’m a big fan of the homemade gifts. Last year I gave my boyfriend’s mom a crocheted fish-shaped pot holder (she acted like she loved it!) and the other three members of Will’s family personalized crocheted beer cozies. That raised a lot of eyebrows, and I imagine they haven’t gotten much use this past year, but my heart was in the right place. Even they would admit that!

This year Will and I have been inspired by our new found love of all thing cocktails, my new interest in canning, and our desire to keep presents as inexpensive as possible. This year, our family is receiving one of our first batch of brandied cherries.

Our love affair with Maraschino cherries started last year when we learned that the red swollen sugary cherries that we grew up with in our Shirley Temples are not the traditional Maraschino cherries. No, Maraschino cherries are cherries that are soaked in Maraschino liquor, an Italian aperitif flavored with the ground seeds of cherries from Marasca. The ones we have been served are soaked in tons of preservatives, high fructose corn syrup and red dye. During the high tide of the Temperance movement, anti-alcohol enthusiasts campaigned to have the original, liquor-soaked cherries banned. They won, and ever since the original cherries have been lost to American culture. We managed to find a bottle at a high-end grocery store near our house, and fell in love.

But at a price tag of $16 a bottle, we instantly recognized the need to find a more affordable solution. Why not make them ourselves?

We followed this recipe from the Gourmet Foodie Blog. Or, rather, we tried to. Embarking on this journey in December meant that we didn’t have access to affordable fresh cherries, and had to use dried ones. It also meant that even though the cherries would be presented on Christmas, they wouldn’t be ready for consumption until March. But they’ll be better for all that time spent steeping in yummy brandy and Maraschino.

Our first try yielded disappointing results.

Our first time we canned with our friends Anthony and Nicole. Without the proper equipment and any previous experience, we unfortunately sealed the jars (accomplished by boiling the jars for 12 minutes, a process that allows the lid to create a food-safe seal with the jar) on their side. In three out of four, the brandy escaped during the sealing process, and we were left with nothing but cherries and sugar in a sealed jar. But at least we got the seals correctly created. Apparently, that can be a challenge when canning.

A couple weeks later we tried again. This time we knew not to let the jars fall on their sides during the boiling process.

The resulting jars of brandied cherries looked good, but had a layer of sugar that did not mix with the brandy. Next time, we will use simple syrup (sugar dissolved in water).

Happy with these results (and out of cherries and jars!) I finished the gift off with a scrap of my torn skinny jeans and our Lushes in Love label.

I estimate that each jar cost us a mere $3 in materials, despite our using a dash of the expensive Maraschino liquor and a high end brandy. We surmised that all you need is a dash of Maraschino liquor to make the entire batch have its delicious taste. We have noticed that any drink we make with Maraschino liquor tastes just like Maraschino liquor.

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The Conspicuous Consumption Cocktail

by Will on December 21, 2010

1 1/2 oz. cognac

1/2 oz. Maraschino liqueur

1/2 oz. yellow Chartreuse

1 dash pre-ban Absinthe

1 dash Amer Picon

Stir on ice, serve straight up with shredded $100 bill on the rim. Top off with a quick pour of French champagne.

This is a drink to have in public, so people will know that you have enough money to throw it away on dumb crap like shredded $100 bills, and to ruin good cognac by mixing it with other ingredients. Even if you don’t actually have that kind of money, people will think that you do. And if they think you have money to throw around, they’ll want to get their share, so they will suck up to you a bit. And isn’t that what you want?

Note: Substitute Armagnac to make a De La Souche.

Postscript: This post may be a joke. It would behoove you not to try making a Conspicuous Consumption cocktail. If you have $100 bills to shred, I’d encourage you to send them to me. I’ll shred them for you.

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What We Want for Christmas

by Jen on December 20, 2010

Will and I joked today about what we would ask for Christmas if we could be really, blatantly honest with our family and friends.

  • 1.75 liters  Tanquerey
  • an exciting mystery gin for gin tastings
  • 1 large bottle Angostora bitters (once in awhile you do run out!)
  • Cointreau
  • Green Chartreuse
  • Maraschino
  • Drambuie

We can't have the bar feeling neglected after all!

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The Pink Gin

by Will on December 1, 2010

In England, this is a traditional Christmas drink. I tried it the first time about a year ago at a bar, but it wasn’t until I made it for myself that it won me over. It’s a pretty serious drink, for those already well versed in gin and Angostura.

1 1/2 oz. gin (I’d recommend Hendrick’s gin or something else with spicy, as opposed to floral, overtones)

Several dashes Angostura bitters

Stir on ice, serve straight up in a cocktail glass.

This drink has its origins in the coastal cities of England and its colonies, two centuries ago. Seamen, in pubs while on shore, would take the drink as a general curative. Gin was supposed to be a remedy for numerous illnesses, from the plague to gout. Angostura bitters, meanwhile, were and are an effective means of combating stomach sickness.

Sante!

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Hard Cider

by Will on November 11, 2010

Holiday cheer!

1 1/2 0z. white rum

3 oz. or so warm apple cider

Stir together, serve in a mug with a cinnamon stick or vanilla bean as a garnish.

This cocktail provides comfort in cold weather. Salut!

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The Rusty Nail

by Will on November 1, 2010

It has been a long week, nay, a long month. So the impetus for this post is more than welcome.

The Rusty Nail:

1 1/2 0z Scotch (feel free to eyeball it)

1/2 oz Drambuie (again, no need to dirty the measuring cup)

Serve on ice in a tumbler or old-fashioned glass

And it’s that simple!

This is a drink well suited to cold weather. It was invented by some big-shot bartender in the 40s or 50s and popularized by Hugh Hefner, which to my mind is not a very interesting story. More interesting is that the copy on the Drambuie bottle is a bunch of flim-flam. The Drambuie people would have you believe that the recipe was bestowed upon their family by Charles II when they gave him refuge from the New Model Army at the conclusion of the English Civil War. The story is full of holes: there is no evidence linking the recipe to Charles II, and title to the Drambuie company has changed hands a bunch of times — the current owners just happen to have the same family name as the original owners (the Scots make do with just a few). But in Scotland as in the West, when the facts contradict the legend, print the legend.

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The Aviation

by Will on October 21, 2010

This is a cocktail that practiced and worldly connoisseurs will often name as their favorite. I’ve served it to a number of guests and they almost always are wildly enthusiastic about it.

1 1/2 oz. gin

1/4 oz. Maraschino liqueur

1/8 oz. creme de violette

1/2 oz. fresh lemon juice

Shake or stir, serve straight up with a cherry garnish

Now, two of those ingredients are rare and somewhat pricey. Most people don’t just have them sitting around. But I can assure you that if you buy a bottle of each, they will last you a very long time. Both liqueurs have such forceful flavors that they can only be used in tiny amounts. Also, the gin needs to be a fairly smooth, flowery gin like Beefeater, not a spicy gin like Hendrick’s.

The cocktail’s origins are obscure. It seems to have had the misfortune of being invented right before Prohibition, and thus it did not really establish itself the way that martinis and Manhattans had been able to. I have evidence that the aviation is now making a comeback, though, as the bartenders at the fancy places nearby are familiar with the recipe. I hope the trend continues.

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The Salty Dog

by Will on October 17, 2010

1 1/2 oz. or thereabouts gin

1 1/2 oz. or thereabouts grapefruit juice (fresh or not)

Serve on ice in a tumbler or old-fashioned glass with a salted rim

The salty rim makes the drink. This is a refreshing drink good for a hot day. It is miles better than its vodka-based cousin, the Greyhound. I know nothing whatsoever of its provenance, so I must be uncharacteristically short-winded in recommending it.

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