Manhattan (Employees Only)

1 1⁄2 oz Rye
1 3⁄4 oz Sweet vermouth
1 twst Lemon peel (as garnish)
Instructions

Stir with ice, strain into cocktail glass, garnish.

YieldsDrink
Year
2013
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(18 ratings)
From other users
  • Very sweet. Perhaps try less SV.
  • Love the combo of the gran marnier! Really gives some depth. I reduce SW to the amount of rye I use. Have used Knob Creek 100proof and Rittenhouse 100p.
  • A touch too sweet. Made a second round as a “perfect” Manhattan and it was excellent. — ★★★★
  • 1/6/18: Made with Cocchi vermouth and PF dry curaçao. Might reduce curaçao slightly, but quite good.
  • Nice, well balanced, better for my taste than à classic Manhattan
  • Made with Punt e Mes and PF dry curacao. — ★★★★
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  • Red Morning Light — Rye, Damson gin liqueur, Aperol, Sweet vermouth, Maraschino Liqueur, Bitters
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Coquito

2 oz Añejo rum (brown butter-washed)
1 oz Sweetened condensed milk
1⁄2 oz Coconut Water
1 pn Salt
1 pn Nutmeg (hefty)
Instructions

Blend until smooth and refrigerate at least four hours or overnight. Garnish with fresh-grated nutmeg or cinnamon and coconut shavings. For butter-washed rum: http://www.foodandwine.com/recipes/january-2008-brown-buttered-rum

Notes

My take on the traditional Puerto Rican holiday treat Coquito, a kind of coconut egg nog. Recipes for Coquito are extremely varied, with many calling for cinnamon, allspice, evaporated milk, cream of coconut, and whole eggs (though some Puerto Ricans insist that the presence of an egg makes it a Ponche). This version, based loosely on Jeffrey Morgenthaler's egg nog, simplifies things by cutting back on the sugar and modifiers. Feel free to experiment with proportions and ingredients; Coquito recipes are only ever suggestions. Note: while this recipe serves one, due to the prep involved it's best batched.

History

Traditional Puerto Rican drink.

YieldsDrink
Year
2012
Authenticity
Altered recipe
Creator
Traditional, but this version's by Rafa García Febles, NYC.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
Not yet rated
Similar cocktails
No similar cocktails found.

Broken Flower

3⁄4 oz Cynar
1⁄2 oz Lime juice
1⁄2 oz Cinnamon syrup
1 twst Grapefruit peel (as garnish)
Instructions

Shake, strain, coupe, garnish

YieldsDrink
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Chris Lane, Lolinda, San Francisco
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(30 ratings)
From other users
  • Fabulous! Grapefruit & cinnamon are a great combo. Agree with other commenters on reducing cinnamon syrup to 1/4 oz, and finishing with a mezcal spritz.
  • Nice combo, but cinnamon dominates. I lowered cinnamon to 1/4 oz which was better. I also added 1/2 oz mezcal cuz I like it a bit smoky ;)
  • Agree with others about reducing the cinnamon syrup.
  • A bit too spiced.
  • Intense cinnamon. I might cut back a tad, add more grapefruit somehow. This goes into summer rotation...
  • Tequila- bitter, sour, cinnamon
  • Made with Becherovka in place of cinnamon syrup. Grapefruit predominates. Terrific zingy finish. ETA: great with cinnamon syrup too! — ★★★★★
Similar cocktails
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  • As Wine Stands Time — Rye, Cynar, Bonal Gentiane Quina, PInk grapefruit juice, Grapefruit peel
  • Caught in a Cabaret — Tequila, Cynar, Sloe gin, Apricot liqueur, Lime juice
  • Mixed Greens — Reposado Tequila, Herbal liqueur, Cynar, Bitters, Lemon juice

Wow, this changes every sip, it seems. Love it!


Shade Saver

15 Coriander seeds
1 1⁄2 oz Bourbon
3⁄4 oz Applejack, Lairds
3⁄4 oz Simple syrup
1 twst Lime peel
Instructions

Muddle seeds and bitters
Shake served up
Lime twist garnish

YieldsDrink
Authenticity
Unknown
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(2 ratings)
Similar cocktails
jrick commented on 5/03/2015:

I like the balance between the ingredients. I changed it from 3/4 oz of simple syrup to 1 Tbsp of sugar (a bit less) since bourbon and applejack are already pretty sweet. I also think that muddling the coriander, sugar, a dash of water, and bitters together did a better job of releasing the coriander taste, though it was more work.


Mixed Greens

1 1⁄2 oz Reposado Tequila
1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Yellow Chartreuse
1⁄2 oz Cynar
1⁄2 oz Lemon juice
Instructions

Shake and double strain
No garnish

YieldsDrink
Authenticity
Unknown
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(8 ratings)
From other users
  • Not nearly green enough. ;)
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French Toast Flip

1 oz Sweet sherry (Dry Sack 15, a sweetened Oloroso)
1⁄2 oz Apple brandy
1⁄2 oz Scotch
1⁄4 oz Allspice Dram
2 ds Bitters
Instructions

Dry shake, shake, strain, garnish with freshly grated cinnamon.

Notes

Lives up to its name.

YieldsDrink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Erick Castro, Rickhouse, San Francisco.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(1 rating)
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  • The Mysterious Affair — Cognac VSOP, Palo Cortado Sherry, Crème de Banane, White Crème de Cacao, Cassis, Crème de Menthe
  • Her Majesty — Amontillado Sherry, Rye, Rich demerara syrup 2:1, Orange
  • Importer — Añejo tequila, Amaro Montenegro, Pedro Ximénez Sherry, Amontillado Sherry, Bitters, Orange peel

As of April 2012, you can't sweeten Oloroso sherry and still call it Oloroso - these have to be labelled as "Cream" or some other branded name. I have a feeling that since the producer and bottling is called out in the recipe, this should be Oloroso Sherry, Lustau.

Thanks,

Zachary


I reached out to Erick via Twitter and he confirmed the use of a sweeter Sherry, saying that Dry Sack 15 (which is 78% Oloroso and 22% Pedro Ximinez) works well. Some people might find that quite sweet - If you have both Oloroso and PX sherry lying around, try it with straight Oloroso, then add PX to taste.


Thanks a lot. East India Solera might work well too. I think with Oloroso it's already plenty sweet.


Professional

1 1⁄2 oz Bourbon, Old Grand Dad 114
1 oz Campari
1 twst Grapefruit peel (as garnish)
Instructions

Stir, strain, rock, garnish.

Notes

The recipe does not specify which overproof Jamaican rum (Wray & Nephew White or Smith and Cross) but Smith and Cross works very well.

YieldsDrink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Benjamin Schwartz, Little Branch, NYC.
Source reference

Bartender's Choice cocktail app for iOS by Sam Ross.

Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(14 ratings)
From other users
  • Used grapefruit juice in place of grapefruit peel
  • Made with Smith & Cross. I thought it was a touch sweet. Robin thought otherwise. — ★★★★
  • Made with S&C. Intense, but balance works well, assuming an audience game for bitter and funky and high-proof.
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  • Grounds for Separation — Bourbon, Aperol, Averna, Sweet vermouth, Bitters
  • Luck Be a Lady — Rye, Bigallet China-China, Chocolate bitters, Islay Scotch, Rich demerara syrup 2:1

<br />Two users made comments about Smith & Cross overproofed rum being satisfactory, but no comment about the bourbon used in the making of The Professional. That's too bad because I believe the taste of this drink will, to a great extent, also be determined by the bourbon used. Some bourbons can be mild and mellow (e.g., Makers' Mark), while other bourbons may have a stronger, heavier taste (e.g., Bulleit Bourbon). Then, too, one needs to consider the proof of the bourbon. With these thoughts in mind, I put together The Professional consisting of Smith & Cross rum (114 proof), Elijah Craig bourbon (114 proof), and Campari (48 proof).

The combination of rum and bourbon I used for my first-ever taste of The Professional, I rated as 4.0. I suspect that using a lighter and mellower bourbon, such as Makers' Mark, will result in a cocktail that will be rated differently. So my cautionary note is: Pick carefully BOTH the bourbon and the rum you will be using in this cocktail. Your choices may well make or break your liking of what I think is a very good cocktail.


The creator of this drink piped up in a Reddit thread in /r/cocktails a few months ago and clarified the recipe. He called out Smith and Cross rum, OGD 114 (said Elijah Craig 114 and Weller 107 were also good) and said he served it over a large rock with a grapefruit twist.


Tango 'til They're Sore

1 oz Rye
1 twst Orange peel (as garnish)
Instructions

Stir, strain, rock, twist.

YieldsDrink
Year
2013
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Rafa García Febles, NYC.
Curator rating
4 stars
Average rating
4 stars
(24 ratings)
From other users
  • Very nice. Complex.
  • Bulleit
  • Fascinating mix of flavors. In the neighborhood of a 1794 but lighter and zippier. — ★★★★★
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Bevx commented on 3/08/2013:

Lovely and unique. Out of Punt e Mes and oranges, so I subbed 1/2 oz Cocchi di Torino & 1/4 oz Campari and skipped the garnish... So, yeah, a slightly different drink than intended, but still quite delicious. There's a minty-carraway thing going on that I'm really digging... Used the new Dickel Rye -- do you have a preference, DrunkLab?


I used Redemption Rye, which is the same juice (LDI) as the Dickel, and also found that cool mint/carraway accord you mention... going to try this with Rittenhouse 100 once I buy another bottle this weekend, the added proof should stand up nicely to the other ingredients. Glad you liked it! And I can't take too much credit for it being unique; I just took the recipe from the Fritz, subbed rye for the gin, and cut back slightly on the Maraschino. Still, I think I prefer it this way, and I'm glad it worked for you even with your (smart) substitutions.


Bevx commented on 3/08/2013:

While I haven't yet tried the Fritz or its predecessor, the Gerty, I guess by "unique," I meant the flavor profile. I would assume that the gin botanicals in the Fritz and the Pastis in the Gerty would be more present in those variations. The carraway flavor is neat to me because of its association to rye bread--my 2nd favorite use of that grain. ;P


Well in that case I agree--especially about the bread.


I'd like to try this with a half ounce of Bénédictine in place of the Maraschino, as a kind of nouveau Vieux Carré.... If anyone has any success with that variation, let me know! I need to acquire a bottle of Bénédictine first.


jaba commented on 2/20/2014:

Well this was just fantastic. I made i with bourbon instead of rye, because that's what my guest prefers, but I can see how the spice of the rye would elevate it further.



Quite nice anise notes to a Redhook variant. I might try 1/2 oz dry vermouth for sugar balance next time.


Made this tonight with Bulleit Rye, delicious. Just bought my first bottle of Luxardo yesterday (I know, I know) and this has me off to a great start.


jaba commented on 9/22/2015:

I tried this with Benedictine, instead of Maraschino, as suggested by Rafa. It's fantastic, if a touch sweet. Another great use of Benedictine (so far I know of only two: this and the Vieux Carre).

 


DuBois

1 1⁄2 oz Armagnac blanche, Delord
3⁄4 oz Floc de Gascogne, Laubade
3⁄4 oz Suze
1 twst Lemon peel (expressed and discarded)
Instructions

Stir, strain over one rock in an absinthe-rinsed glass.

Notes

Named for that other Blanche.

YieldsDrink
Year
2013
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Rafa García Febles, NYC.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
Not yet rated
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Woodside

2 oz Gin
3⁄4 oz Ginger syrup
2 oz Tonic water, Q
6 lf Thai Basil
4 lf Mint
Instructions

Muddle basil, shake, double strain, top with tonic, stir, top with bitters and a basil sprig, serve with straw.

Notes

Potable tribute to my diverse Queens neighborhood. Southside Fizz by way of the Rangoon Fizz by way of Thai basil. If Thai basil cannot be found, regular sweet basil can be substituted; the Peychaud's shoud donate the licorice notes of true Thai basil.

Woodside, Woodside, NY.
YieldsDrink
Year
2013
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Rafa García Febles, Woodside, NYC.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(1 rating)
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