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A Spontaneous Libation for your Consideration

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 Leche del Diablo, 1 day ago MikeLewis commented:

    I used Ancho Reyes Verde, Fee Brothers Aztec Chocolate Bitters and unsweetened oat milk. Turned out just fine, really good actually!

  • Re Fistuk's house, 1 day ago jkm78 commented:

    I’m afraid I had only one of these exact ingredients (the apricot liqueur) but the peach and pistachio liqueurs I did made it work nonetheless

  • Re Bobby Burns, 1 day ago bza commented:

    That ratio makes sense when using Carpano. However, I prefer a heavier pour of Benedictine with a lighter vermouth. 2 blended scotch, .75 dolin or cocchi, and .5 Benedictine with a lemon twist makes one of the best classics in the Manhattan variation repertoire imo. There's also a tradition of serving a shortbread cookie on the side.

  • Re Albiconi, 1 day 22 hours ago bkemp1984 commented:

    Second review that ingredients didn't merge well, but still liked it.

  • Re Bobby Burns, 2 days ago Shawn C commented:

    This one could probably use an update since it isn't so much an "unknown" vs altered over its history from the very early Irish whiskey to Scotch with different ratios, etc. in Savoy. KC's given recipe is fairly close to modern examples, so an "altered" designation would work. Embury's 1948 version with Drambuie (vs. Benedictine) would merit its own entry as it is a fundamentally different drink.

    I have used 2 oz Scotch (16 yr Lagavulin), Carpano Antica (1 oz), and 1/4 oz Benedictine with a lemon peel for a modern version for both, with taste and adjustment for historical amounts (Benedictine.) Some use 2 oz generic Scotch, 3/4 oz sweet vermouth and 1/4 Benedictine.