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A Spontaneous Libation for your Consideration

Sotolon Flip

1 1⁄2 oz Maple Canadian whisky, SAP56
1 oz Cognac
1 oz Valdespino Jerez Quina
1 Cinnamon stick (as garnish)
Instructions

Whip shake with 3 ice cubes, fine strain into a chilled coupe. Rasp a little cinnamon from a stick on top.

Notes

Sotolon(e) is a lactone aromachemical found in all sorts of interesting places - maple syrup, sherry, charred wood barrels, candy cap mushroom and fenugreek (methi) seeds.

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From the Knowledge Vault

In Search of the Singapore Sling

Let’s get some known facts out of the way first, shall we? The Singapore Sling was probably invented some time between 1913 and 1915 by Ngiam Tong Boon, who worked at the Long Bar at the Raffles Hotel in Singapore. It certainly had gin. And ice. It may have had “cherry brandy” (by which we mean a cherry liqueur ... or perhaps not) and Benedictine. It may have also had lime juice, lemon juice, pineapple juice, grenadine, sloe gin, crème de cassis, orange bitters and/or the all-mysterious “bitters”.

Furthermore, let’s set some things straight. First, this drink, whatever it is, isn’t a sling. A sling is a lightly sweetened and chilled spirit, lengthened with water of some sort. This drink, with its citrus, bitters and liqueurs is much more like an early English Tiki drink than a proper sling.

In fact, so little is known about this drink’s ingredients that David Embury, writing in “The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks” (1948) claims that he’d never seen two recipes with the same ingredients. I would extend this, and say that we should differentiate between the Modern Raffles Hotel Singapore Sling, the Original version of the same drink, and the more generic “Singapore Sling”, which may or may not have a lot in common with the version served at the Raffles.

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Recent Discussion

  • Re Myer Creek Cocktail, 1 day ago Biff Malibu commented:

    Halved the recipe, worked like a champ. Excellent on a hot day!

  • Re Expedition II, 2 days ago bza commented:

    That yuzu super juice has changed my life, I'm addicted.

  • Re Wounded Swede, 2 days ago Shawn C commented:

    I was expecting a really bitter kick with this much Malort, but the drink proved to have well-balanced bitterness with a very long wormwood finish. The gentle malt, subtle cherry, and broader grape/gentian of the Bonal create a fine flavor body to contrast with the ensuing finish. It is a solid 4+ on flavor alone, but doing that with this much Malort earns style points, so I am giving it a 5.

  • Curated to change rinse from Teapot Bitters to Dandelion and Burdock Bitters per the recipe notes.

  • Re Paper Flower, 2 days ago Shawn C commented:

    Curated to Dandelion & Burdock Bitters per the original ingredient note. Dr Adam Elmegirab's Aphrodite Bitters had been selected as a work around in the ingredient list from what I could see. Also had to change the Lillet to Lillet Blanc since the editor red flagged it as ambiguous. If either of these selections are incorrect, let me know so it can be fixed.