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A Spontaneous Libation for your Consideration

Cocoa Puff Smash

Posted by DrunkLab. Created by Sam Gabrielli, Russell House Tavern, Cambridge, MA..
2 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse (Cocoa Puff-infused)
1⁄2 oz Crème de Cacao, Tempus Fugit
3 wdg Lemon
8 lf Mint
Instructions

Muddle lemon wedges and mint leaves, add the rest of the ingredients and shake with ice, double strain over ice in a rocks glass, garnish with Cocoa Puffs and mint, serve with straws.

Notes

Cocoa Puff-infused Chartreuse: crush 4 oz Cocoa Puffs and shake vigorously in a bottle of Chartreuse, letting sit for at least an hour. Strain, bottle, refrigerate.

Curator rating
4 stars
Average rating
4 stars
(2 ratings)

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Recent Discussion

  • Re The Holy Grail, 2 days ago danoman89 commented:

    The montenegro absolutely disappears into this drink. Quite tasty, but a little too easy drinking

  • Re Smoke on the Beach (Jim Kearns), 2 days ago danoman89 commented:

    Really quite good

  • Re Industry Flip (Fred Yarm), 3 days ago danoman89 commented:

    Creamy, bitter, and funky. Absolutely lovely

  • Re The Bellman, 4 days ago Mixin In Ansley commented:

    Perfectly balances the sweet, the bitter and the spirit. Elevated.

  • Re Vancouver, 4 days ago Shawn C commented:

    This one changed over time. Difford's Guide points to a "Vancouver" recipe in "About Town Cocktail Book" published in 1925 by Mitchell Printing & Publishing of Vancouver, B.C. Same ingredients except using French vermouth rather than sweet vermouth; proportions differ with more Benedictine, probably for balance (50 gin/30 dry vermouth/20 benedictine/dash of orange bitters/ olive. The book was reviewed and apparently edited by Joe Fitchett, who contributed the "Fitchett" recipe using Italian vermouth in 50/30/20/dash proportions. So the 1934 Boothby recipe that has become the modern norm is likely an evolution of the Vancouver/Fitchett. Boothby's listing is 1/2 jigger: 1/4 jigger: spoonful: 2 dashes : pimento stuffed olive. I will probably curate to list as "altered" and to the Boothby pattern...might need to add a third dash of bitters to get the ratios equivalent.