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A Spontaneous Libation for your Consideration

From the Knowledge Vault

The Twelve Bottle Bar Book

I received an advance copy from the publisher of The Twelve Bottle Bar, a new book by the David Solmonson and Leslie Jacobs Solmonson, authors of the Twelve Bottle Bar blog. Let me first be up front about a few things. I had heard of the blog before the review copy of the book came my way, but I hadn’t looked at it in depth. Furthermore, this book is firmly geared toward the novice cocktail enthusiast, which I am definitely not.

One of the high points of this book is that is covers the bases of modern cocktail making thoroughly. Amidst sidebars about classic bar cons, witty apocrypha on the origins of Cognac, and classic mid-century vodka advertising slogans, there is a lot of high quality, reasonably well researched information about ice, barware and specific brands to buy in any given price range.

New cocktail enthusiasts are told in no uncertain terms what spirits they should buy, why they should buy the specific recommended brands, and roughly how much they’ll pay for them. This is incredibly useful information when starting out. It will help readers avoid spending money on spirits and mixers with few uses until they feel confident enough to explore the world of spirits more in depth.

I also admire the sections on non-alcoholic drinks, cider and beer cocktails, and etiquette for hosting parties and being a guest at one. I would have been thrilled with a more in depth treatment of the logistics and attitudes toward hosting a cocktail party, and it would give the novice more confidence to have friends over and put The Twelve Bottle Bar to good use.

Recent Additions

  • Island Manhattan — Bourbon, Dry vermouth, Orange Curaçao, Bitters, Maraschino cherry
  • Italian in NYC — Bourbon, Amaro Nonino, Orange bitters, Maraschino cherry
  • Blackout in NYC — Scotch, Sweet vermouth, Fernet Branca, Orange bitters
  • The Mysterious Affair — Cognac VSOP, Palo Cortado Sherry, Crème de Banane, White Crème de Cacao, Cassis, Crème de Menthe
  • Smokin' from Shootin' — Bourbon, Apple brandy, Cherry Liqueur, Scotch, Bitters, Brandied cherry

Recent Discussion

  • Re Leche del Diablo, 1 day 15 hours 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 15 hours 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, 2 days 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, 2 days 14 hours ago bkemp1984 commented:

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

  • Re Bobby Burns, 3 days 4 hours 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.