Munsell Test
Stir and strain. Garnish with a strip of grapefruit zest (bartender's choice).
I used Letherbee Autumnal gin, but it's a bit rare, so Broker's is a good choice. If neither, you want very dry and more spicy than juniper-y.
Stir and strain. Garnish with a strip of grapefruit zest (bartender's choice).
I used Letherbee Autumnal gin, but it's a bit rare, so Broker's is a good choice. If neither, you want very dry and more spicy than juniper-y.
Shake, strain over a big rock, and float a halo of bitters.
The cloud of Ango teases complexity out of the rum and honey.
Now with a how-to from Chris Hassaan Francke: https://www.facebook.com/thegreenzonedc/posts/3079166822147427
Shake with ice, strain into an absinthe rinsed coupe. No garnish.
Don's Mix is 1 part cinnamon syrup to 2 parts grapefruit juice.
Death & Co cocktail book, p.183
Shake, strain into a coupe. No garnish.
Death & Co cocktail book, p.182
Add orange wedges to a shaker and muddle. Add everything else and shake over ice. Strain into a double rocks glass over fresh crushed ice, garnish with an orange crescent.
Death & Co cocktails book, p.182
Nice balance between orange and cinnamon - almost floral finish - very refreshing!
Shake with ice, strain into a coupe. Garnish with an orange twist.
Death & Co cocktail book, p.182
Used yellow chartreuse instead of Benedictine and it worked very well. Made a second using 1/4 oz of oj and using 1/4 oz of raspberry syrup and it was very floral and still extremely good.
Lastly, we used lavendar bitters with a spritz of orange blossom water. Very very good cocktail.
This would make for a fantastic brunch cocktail. Very good. Blanco Tequila also worked nicely. I tried with rhum agricole in place of tequila, and while not nearly as good as the original, it's a skeleton of a drink that I think might be worth experimentation.
Good, but could probably be improved. I have it at 3.5 at present. I like the bones of the drink, but the proportions might benefit from some slight tweaks. It is a bit sweet and the orgeat dominates while the Benedictine is mostly lost. I might cut back the orgeat and up the Benedictine. Then again, the Torani orgeat I am using might be holding it back, I need to try making my own.
Shake with ice, strain into a coupe. No garnish
Death & Co cocktail book, p.181
Rinse an Old Fashioned glass with the liqueur. Over ice, stir remaining ingredients except garnish. Strain over a large cube into the rinsed glass, twist orange peel over, and drop into drink.
Curated this due to a curation request: Cleaned up instructions to avoid copyright issues. Added a link to the Robert Simonson book where it's quoted.
Used several dashes of Fee Bros black walnut bitters in place of Nux Alpina. Quite good.
Combine all ingredients in mixing glass with ice. Strain into cocktail glass. Squeeze orange peel atop the drink and float peel on top.
Great sazerac variant, and I didn't even have an orange peel for the extra ooomph.
Shake the rum, syrup and limes with ice and pour into the largest and most sturdy wine glass you can find. Add prosecco.
To make ginger syrup, dissolve 2 teaspoons of sugar in a tablespoon of ginger juice from grated ginger.
Curated this: moved the ginger syrup instructions to the notes section - it breaks the line badly otherwise. As an aside, this seems like an unpalatable amount of lime here - even if you get an ounce of juice out of a lime, it's almost as much as the alcohol and sweetener combined.
You really do need two entire limes. It’s like a super-concentrated Dark and Stormy. Serve over ice - you do not want to finish this in a hurry.