Paris is Burning
Shake; strain; up; garnish.
The NoMad Cocktail Book, p. 95.
Shake; strain; up; garnish.
The NoMad Cocktail Book, p. 95.
Drop everything but the beer into a pint glass, stein, or the muzzle your club-butt fowling piece. Pour in the ale with vigor. One quick stir, then enjoy.
I used Bell’s porter and Trader Joe’s French Roast coffee concentrate. I get distinct cinnamon notes from this. Feel free to adjust the coffee upward as much as necessary. If you can handle it, the drink can, too.
“Rattle Skull” variation commemorating the September 1, 1774 Massachusetts militia muster that amounted to a practice-run for the first battles of the American Revolution the following April. Drink up, and keep your powder dry.
Shake, strain, up.
Combine in mixing tin, stir 30-40 rotations, strain onto big rock in DOF and garnish with a lemon twist.
Vermouth Infusion: combine 1/3 cup of earl grey Creme tea per 750 ml of Cocchi VDT, agitate and let infuse for 1 hour, then strain.
A Negroni riff that takes classic Turkish Delight flavors such as bergamot, rose water and cardamom and serves them in a perfumed ensemble.
Combine ingredients in shaker tin and shake with ice, strain into Collins glass rimmed with lava salt and garnish with a pineapple frond and a flaming crouton in a lime husk.
Jungle bird variation utilizing rhubarb forward amari.
Named after the documentary which features Mt Etna, where Amaro dell’Etna is from.
Very nice Tiki drink. The notes should probably describe what a "flaming crouton" in a lime husk is. A flaming crouton is a crouton that has been placed in a lime husk, etc., and the crouton soaked in lemon extract (I used a dropper to saturate a crouton). The extract has an extremely high alcohol content, with lemon oil dissolved in it. When the crouton is lit it will have a blue glow from the alcohol close around the bread cube, but with a long yellow flame extending upward. The yellow flame is from the burning lemon oil. As a bonus, sprinkle some cinnamon powder over the flame to provide sparks.
Using a mixing glass (Boston) or a 2 piece shaker, combine Black Mission Figs, Taylor Fine Tawney Port, Simple Syrup, and Fresh Lime Juice and muddle into a nice paste. Add 3 Fresh Mint Leaves, Bourbon, and St. Germain Elderflower Liquor. Add Ice and shake vigorously for about 8 – 10 seconds so the ingredients can infuse. Strain contents over ice in an Old Fashion Glass or Rocks Glass. Cut a Fig in half and make two nice slices about 1/4 inch thick from it and garnish cocktail. Grate some Walnut over drink and add a Mint Sprig
Personally had at Fig and Olive, NYC. Recipe: https://www.eatdrinkoc.com/fig-and-walnut-julep-recipe/
Shake with ice. Stain into cocktail glass.
Cafe Royal Cocktail Book 1937 page 134
Combine in mixing glass with ice, stir, and serve in cocktail glassware of choice. Express orange peel over drink and discard.
Stir ingredients with ice, strain into chilled Nick & Nora/cocktail glass or over a large cube in a rocks glass. Express a red grapefruit peel. Garnish with brandied cherry (and grapefruit peel if desired.)
Strikingly red, almost candy apple. I have used Buffalo Trace and Evan Williams for this, nothing fancy is required. The specific combination of Select and Maurin Quina distinguishes this cocktail.
This concoction is a riff on the Boulevardier, with the name being a nod to Select's Venetian origins, canals vs. boulevards. Select has some parallels to Campari, and I have found that Select has a synergy with wine based cherry aperitif Maurin Quina. The latter stands in for vermouth here, taking the Boulevardier form in a new direction. Maurin Quina has historically used a devil theme in advertising, acknowledged here as the Devil's Gondolier.
Update: I tried a wheated bourbon (Larceny) for this tonight, and this was even better than what I remember with Buffalo Trace or Evan Williams. It was an even smoother libation this way, so that is what I will recommend going forward. The vibrant candy apple red of this cocktail makes for a good Valentine's Day beverage.
Shake and strain into a rocks glass