Cattle Drive
Shake with ice and strain into a frozen coupe glass.
Enjoying the John Wayne classic, "Red River"
- Geechy Joe — Whiskey, Crème Yvette, Falernum, Bitters, Aperitivo
- Grab Bottle — Rye, Crème de Violette, Dark Crème de Cacao, Peach bitters, Pomegranate juice
- Parenthetics — Whiskey, Pear liqueur, Crème de Violette, Bitters, Pomegranate juice
- 32 Degrees — Whiskey, Herbal liqueur, Crème de Violette, Aztec Chocolate bitters, Pomegranate juice
- The Father — Apple brandy, Elderflower liqueur, Cinnamon bitters, Lavender syrup, Ginger-Honey Syrup
Surprisingly, despite not having any real base spirit, this Boulevardier inspired riff works. Admittedly, I don't find Malort horribly bitter, and I use it as a single note bitter and drying agent for overly rich cocktail recipes. Also my bottle is now 2+ years old so it could be losing some wormwood intensity even in a dark cabinet. The Abano provides a slightly earthy, herbal connection to the wormwood and red berry/grape of the vermouth. It is an extremely dark brown.
Note: I grabbed the wrong bottle of amaro out of the cabinet the first time, Amaro di Angostura. While it sort of worked, the flavor was thinner and did not connect things as well.