K.B.M.
Stir, stain up, garnish
- Revolver riff
- With my tawdry coffee liqueur, too sweet, but to spec probably pretty good.
- An excellent coffee cocktail.
Stir, stain up, garnish
Shake with ice. Serve up. Garnish with a cherry.
I was a little surprised there was no grapefruit juice + crème de cacao cocktail listed. Ergo, this attempt.
Not bad - a little heavy on the chocolate, which might be great for some if you like that kind of thing
Mix over ice, stir, strain into chilled coupe, garnish w/ lemon peel.
Inspired by several Bicycle Thief recipes
Ave De Sica!
Stir, strain into either a coupe, up, or an old fashioned glass with a large cube/sphere. Garnish with a grapefruit peel, expressed.
I hesitated making this libation, as I lacked the black mission fig bitters, but because "Springtime in Manhattan" is a variation of one of my favorite cocktails (the traditional "Manhattan"), I pressed on. Given the grapefruit forward overtones of this libation, I used 6 drops of Bittercube's Jamaican #2 bitters and 6 drops of Dead Rabbit's Orinoco bitters as a substitute for the black mission fig bitters.
The black mission fig is a favorite fruit of mine, so I have a hunch how the fig bitters would taste in this drink. What I used, I'm sure, did not even approximate the fig bitters; however, the bitters substitutes proved to be suitable to the task, and I would recommend them if you, too, lack the black mission fig bitters. I easily rated "Springtime in Manhattan" at 4.5. How would you rate this libation? And do you have any suggestions to replace the fig bitters?
Curious if the Brooklyn Hemispherical fig bitters have a strong cinnamon component. Can't find them where I live, so I made it with a local source, AZ Bitter Labs Figgy Pudding. I found the cinnamon in their bitters overpowering for this drink.
Stir, stain up into chilled coupe, garnish lemon twist
Agree on dialing back the elderflower.
Did .75 elderflower and a slightly scant Chartreuse. Maybe .75 and .5 respectively would be better, even as much as I love Chartreuse
Stir, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large cube/sphere. Garnish with a lemon peel, expressed.
If you're missing Amargo-Vallet, substitute with a dash or two of Angostura bitters and a dash of demerara syrup
Named after Antonio Garcia Martinez's entertaining book about the inner machinations of Facebook, "The Chaos Monkeys." And monkeys like bananas (not sure about Scotch).
Stir, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large cube/sphere. Garnish with a grapefruit peel, expressed.
CH Amargo de Chile is probably not easy to obtain outside the Chicago area; a substitute would be another amari (Meletti, Cynar) plus some Ancho Reyes
Shameless riff on Tonia Guffey's trendsetting "2 Cups of Blood"
Stir, strain up into coupe, garnish cherries.
The "Rubescent Glow" is, in my opinion, a great drink. I used Baker's 7 year (107 proof) for the bourbon. The cocktail is well-balanced, and if sipped slowly, you'll enjoy multiple overtones from all of the ingredients, including both cherry notes. Don't hesitate to make this drink. It will surely end up on your list of favorite cocktails. Sip and enjoy! I rated this drink at 4.5.
little bit sweet - like black cherry ice cream!
I tried this with a 46% high west bourbon.
+1 with Mojo.
With the list of ingredients you cannot imagine that in fact it's sooooo good.
I was perplex, worrying a result on the sweet cherry side, no variation in taste.
But rhubarb bitters adds a lot of complexity with the other ingredients.
5*.
Try.
Dial back the Averna a bit.
Add ingredients to mixing glass with ice, stir and strain into glass, garnish with cherry and lemon twist.
This probably predated the availability of sloe gin in the US.
Vintage Spirits and Forgotten Cocktails, pg. 65
This was also cleaned up a bit in my effort to normalize the various Blackthorn cocktails running around the database. The poster of this drink adapted the VS&FC recipe as follows: 1.5 oz gin, .5 kirschwasser, .75 Dubonnet, .33 Sloe Gin, 2 dashes cherry bitters. This reverts to the canonical (revised) version of the drink. Thanks, Zachary
Shake, strain, rocks.
A Punch article mentions a Monte-rita, which subs Montenegro for the Cointreau.