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A Spontaneous Libation for your Consideration

From the Knowledge Vault

Craft Cocktail Making: Theory and Structure of Sugar

Our first installment discussed acidity, one of the primary building blocks of modern cocktails. Acidity can come from many different sources: citrus fruit, milk, wine, and vinegar. All have significant acidity, which helps balance out sweetness in a drink. One of the challenges of working with acidity is that often times the quantity of acidity in a drink is right, but the flavor profile is wrong. A drink that is perfect with ½ ounce of lemon juice will be significantly different with ½ ounce of lime juice, even though their pH are similar. Lime juice has a strong, grassy aroma and flavor that lemon juice lacks.

Luckily, the range of flavors inherent to sugar are much smaller than those associated with acidity. Sugar is a much older addition to alcohol than acidity, as it helps mask the unpleasant flavors of distillation impurities and the burn of alcohol. Sugar was in the first “cock-tail”, along with a spirit, water, and bitters.

The delicate, snowy white crystals of refined sugar at the grocery store have very little to do with sugar in ancient times. In fact, sugar is a relatively modern invention, gaining popularity in the 5th century in India as crystallization technology allowed sugarcane juice to be transported cheaply and efficiently. From India, sugar refining spread to China and eventually into the Middle East, where the refining process was industrialized. From there, it spread into Europe, probably in the 8th century.

Christopher Columbus brought sugarcane to the Caribbean from the Canary Islands. Huge plantations were developed, significantly decreasing the price of sugar in Europe and opening it up to wider use. In the 18th century, price increases led the British to create sugar plantations in India, bringing sugar full-circle back to its origin.

Recent Additions

  • Expedition II — Aromatized wine, Swedish Punsch, Light rum, Yuzu juice, Salt Solution
  • Devil's Own Mistress — Overproof rum, Sweet vermouth, Bénédictine, Fernet Branca, Crème de Banane, Absinthe
  • Cornucopia (Claphamcocktails) — Corn Whiskey, RinQuinQuin a la Peche, Bianco Vermouth, Cachaça, Bitters, Lemon
  • Over the next ridge — Gin, Bianco Vermouth, Breckenridge Bitter, Brucato Amaro Chaparral, Lemon
  • Pamplemousse au Poivre — Mezcal, Pamplemousse Rose, Pepper liqueur, Grapefruit bitters, Lemon juice

Recent Discussion

  • Re Thyme in a Bottle, 19 hours ago Shawn C commented:

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

  • Re The Pale Rider, 19 hours 11 minutes 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.

  • Re Sitting With Stella, 3 days ago Shawn C commented:

    Curated to Cocchi Americano Rosa so that typo "Cocci americano rose" can be deleted.