Pétanque
Stir, strain, float absinthe, garnish.
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Stir, strain, float absinthe, garnish.
Shake all ingredients with ice for 15 seconds, strain into coupe. Garnish with lime twist or lime wheel.
Stir ingredients with ice and strain into a cocktail coupe. No garnish.
Stir; strain; big rock.
Tools: mixing glass, barspoon, strainer
Glass: rocks
From Phoenix bartender.
Odd flavor profile... strangely miny... Not bad, but I'm guessing this would taste very different depending on the specific spirits. I used Espolon anejo whiskey barrel aged tequila, Clement select barrel rhum, punt e mes, and Rothman & Winter apricot. I'm sure that a "real" vermouth would make it less bitter and more enjoyable. Also the tequila I used is kinda specific.
Stir, strain into old fashioned glass with a large cube or sphere. Garnish with a grapefruit swath.
Dry shake, shake, coupe, garnish.
Shake over ice and strain into a chilled coupe
Herbal and floral, and overall very French tasting. The Bigallet Thyme liqueur is not as sweet as you'd expect, so the honey syrup helps sweeten and balance out the strong thyme flavor.
I tried this first with even parts gin, elderflower, thyme, lemon and it was way too thyme-y, like an over-seasoned beef stew. A thyme bomb, if you will. Cutting the liqueur with honey syrup helped but I'm still tweaking the proportions.
Stir, stain, coupe, garnish.
Fill a mixing glass with ice. Add rye, Averna, Scotch, Gran Classico, and bitters. Stir for 30 seconds, or until well chilled. Strain into a coupe.
Brilliant and surprisingly well-balanced combination of intense flavors: essentially a Black Manhattan mated to my favorite Islay scotch with the bracing bitterness/almost syrupy sweetness of Gran Classico. Next time I will serve it in a double old-fashioned/rocks glass over a large clear cube. The addition of the Lagavulin has me thinking "Black Watch Manhattan," but the present name will do.
Stir, strain, coupe glass, garnish with a lemon peel
Slightly weird, although my sherry is rather old, and I'm using a poor excuse for homemade amaretto. Very nice though, lingering evolution. Sweet almond underlain by the bitter sherry. It almost tastes like chocolate.