Golden Handcuffs
Stir; strain onto a big rock; garnish.
- Agree that Peychaud's improves this... I'd actually bump it to a 4.5 with peychauds
I thought this was improved with the addition of some Peychaud's bitters.
Stir; strain onto a big rock; garnish.
I thought this was improved with the addition of some Peychaud's bitters.
Rinse a wine glass with absinthe, then build other ingredients. Express and discard orange peel. This is a room-temperature cocktail.
Shake all with ice, pour (no strain) into a tall glass, garnish with a maraschino cherry – yeah, go for the American classic bright red ones – and lime twist.
Shagbark hickory syrup is pretty darn easy to make and here's a recipe. https://www.thespruceeats.com/shagbark-hickory-syrup-made-from-bark-402…
It has smoky almond/cherry/woody vibes so maybe you could swap it for maple/orgeat/cherry liqueur mix with perhaps a few drops of heavily peated scotch for the smoky notes.
Dry shake, wet shake, strain into chilled coupe. Garnish with 8 drops of Bittercube Boliver Bitters (or similar), swirled with a pick.
Stir, strain into old fashioned glass with a large cube or sphere. Garnish with an expressed blood orange swath.
For the blood orange cordial / syrup, peel and juice blood oranges (reserve the peels). Add an equal amount of cane sugar to the juice and peels, and sous vide at 145 degrees for 2 hours. Strain and bottle (I usually add a tsp of high proof vodka for preservation).
Shake and fine strain into a coupe.
Muddle caraway seeds in base of shaker, add remaining ingredients and shake with ice for 10 seconds. Serve in chilled goblet. Garnish with fresh grated nutmeg.
Dry shake all but seltzer, then add ice and shake. Strain into down glass and top with seltzer
Stir, strain over a big cube, garnishes.
Shake all ingredients (except nutmeg garnish), strain into a punch glass with a large chunk of ice. Garnish with grated nutmeg.
"The Dead Rabbit Grocery & Grog Drinks Manual," Sean Muldoon, Jack McGarry & Ben Schaffer, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015
The version listed at PUNCH (https://punchdrink.com/recipes/the-dead-rabbits-lions-tail/) is quite a bit different. 1.5 oz rye (Bulleit), 1 oz lime, .75 oz ea pimento dram, creme de cacao, creme de poire, orange juice and 3 dashes The Dead Rabbit Orinoco bitters.
This is a pretty...... dramatic departure from the original. Thanks, Zachary
I've seen recipes with rather minor changes rename it. This is not recognizable as a Lion's Tail akin to calling a Zombie a Daiquiri.
If it weren't from Jack McGarry, I probably wouldn't have published it as it's a problematic name. But it's not like I can ask him to change the name for us... Thanks, Zachary
In fairness, they did make significant changes with quite a few other classics in the book, but this is definitely one of the most far afield (which is the primary reason I posted it). That and the Lion's Tail is one of my favorite winter sours--aside from the use of allspice dram, it's one of the few drinks I regularly make that pairs whiskey with lime (not really making a lot of Bourbon Rickeys in recent memory, or ever really). Which, given that the second recipe included lime, makes me wonder if the use of lemon might have been a misprint in the book.
I personally prefer the original to either of these, they just seem needlessly overworked without any substantial improvement (and I'm not a big fan of orange juice in cocktails). I suppose if you like the whiskey or allspice flavors more muted, either of these might be more to someone's liking as they are significantly lengthened compared to the original (and continue The Dead Rabbits tradition of obscenely large drinks).