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A Spontaneous Libation for your Consideration

South Side (Death & Co)

5 lf Mint
2 oz Gin, Beefeater
3⁄4 oz Lime juice
1⁄2 oz Cane syrup (2:1 sugar to water)
1 lf Mint (Garnish)
Instructions

In a cocktail shaker, muddle the mint. Add the other ingredients, shake with ice, and strain into a chilled coupe. Garnish with a mint leaf.

Notes

Death & Co's version uses lime juice and adds a dash of Angostura.

History

Https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Side_%28cocktail%29?wprov=sfla1

Curator rating
5 stars
Average rating
4.5 stars
(11 ratings)

From the Knowledge Vault

'Tis Pity She's a Corpse

A Short History of the Corpse Reviver

Nineteenth century drinking culture was, in many ways, quite alien to what is socially acceptable today. The local saloon was more like a coffee shop – where (mainly) men socialized and drank throughout the day. Many people started and ended their day with a drink, and took them to waken the appetite, digest meals, or “whenever steam and energy are needed”. Many drinks in the middle of the 19th century reflect the notion of the energy and verve a quick stiff drink would give the imbiber: “flash of lightning”, “pick me up”, “refresher”, “invigorator” and our primary subject, the “corpse-reviver”.

The first reference I can find of a drink called a Corpse Reviver is in Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper (London) on October 23rd, 1859 in which a theater reviewer describes Tom Taylor’s new play Garibaldi:

Suddenly, the reader will surprised to hear, every man jack of the company of troopers gets excessively drunk and incapable on a couple of enormous stone jugs of some American drink (possibly “corpse reviver” or “gone ‘coon”)…

One of the most interesting things about the search for the early Corpse Reviver is the lack of American sources that reference the drink. The earliest mentions are in London newspapers and magazines, and though they’re always very careful to call them “American drinks”, throughout the latter half of the 19th century, it is almost always European sources who give reference to the Corpse Reviver. Which makes a lot of sense, because no less than the celebrated Jerry Thomas introduced this drink to wild acclaim in London.

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Recent Discussion

  • Re Oh, My Word, 40 minutes 49 seconds ago Hubajube commented:

    Too sweet as is. I'll try again with less maraschino.

  • Re Thyme in a Bottle, 21 hours 54 minutes ago Shawn C commented:

    Curated to Internet Archive link of the now defunct original link.

  • Re The Pale Rider, 22 hours 1 minute ago Shawn C commented:

    Curated to fix the now generic link to a 2012 archive link of the original. Also updated year from 2013 to 2012 as a result.

  • Re Margarita, 2 days ago Craig E commented:

    FWIW Christine Wiseman’s recipe unanimously won the Punch blind tasting this year:

    • 2 oz Cascahuín blanco 
    • 1 oz lime juice 
    • 1/2 oz Cointreau 
    • 1/2 oz 1:1 agave syrup

      Half salt rim and lime garnish. 

  • Re The Moops, 2 days ago bza commented:

    Glad you like the drink! The menu reference is for me to remember, it's my home menu not an actual bar menu.