Mutiny!
Quarter and muddle strawberries in shaker/Shake all ingredients but beer/double strain/hi-ball glass/top with Blanche de Chambly
Also good with Lost Abbey Red Barn saison ale.
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Quarter and muddle strawberries in shaker/Shake all ingredients but beer/double strain/hi-ball glass/top with Blanche de Chambly
Also good with Lost Abbey Red Barn saison ale.
Combine the rye, amaro, madeira, and bitters in a mixing glass, fill with ice, and stir until cold. Strain into a chilled coupe, flame and drop in the twist, and serve.
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Stir well all in vessel containing espresso foam (make the shot(s) in something other than a demitasse) then shake on ice and strain in vessel of choice.
Luxardo cherry garnish optional, perhaps a coffee bean or two - for a real classy touch obtain raw coffee beans which are actually known as cherries. The Maraschino liqueur could be toned down or up. Any bitters can be used to accent and darken the cocktail particularly if limited foam rinse residue is available. Use care and caution, the oil is live and dissolves in the alcohol but resists the water percentages so stir well and strain well. Additionally as much actual espresso can be used with the foam as is desired.
A 'rinse' measure is gimmicky and sounds cool to the laity but in reality is little more than a showy way to measure a little liquid. However, this is not the case with espresso foam. Any decent espresso has a thick, oily foam left over, particularly if it is barely stirred after the pull. In this case then a 'rinse' isn't a measure as much as it is a separation method for an essential oil. Thus the 'rinse' is eminently useful and indeed critical rather than just a way to limit the amount of an ingredient. It is suggested to savor the morning (or afternoon!) espresso(s) but do so leaving the foam (yes, to the detriment of those shot(s)) for the evening when the then dried foam can be brought to life for cocktailing. Obviously a just-enjoyed shot or two of espresso foam could be used immediately - morning, noon, or night!
Shake all ingredients except Allspice and double strain in cocktail glass rinsed with Allspice Dram. I use 2 sprays with an atomic bottle.
Sunflower Orgeat: 4 cups roasted, unsalted sunflower seeds, 1 cup sugar. Combin the sugar and 2.5 cups sugar in a saucepan over med heat. Allow mixture to boil for 3 minutes then add sunflower seeds. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for 3-5 more minutes, then gradually increase temp to med-high. When the mix is just about to boil, remove from heat and cover pan. Let rest for at least 6 hours.
Strain mix with a fine mesh and cheese cloth.
Stir & Strain, Coupe, Grapefruit Peel
I use homemade orange bitters.
Sara-nice job; like the flavors. I ended up adding a bar spoon of rich simple syrup which helped soften the drink. I also tried it with 1 3/4 bourbon and 1 grapefruit which was nice. Also, only 1 dash of Whiskey Barrel for me; it's pretty potent stuff. Thanks for adding it.
Shake on ice, strain in vessel of choice.
Possibly garnish with a Luxardo if desired. But taste it first, particularly as it comes back up from the chill of the ice. Neither Ransom nor Benedictine are optional, they both are unique and complementary. The Scrappy's could be optional or other bitters substituted.
Serendipity in western Pennsylvania in January of 2013: an otherwise discriminating, savvy, fellow proletariat found distasteful a new bottle of Ransom AND I "agreed" with him and took it for free. Then a random bystander thought it was bourbon or rye. When I chanced the odd truth by saying gin, he immediately said: - Ransom and extolled its virtues. My cover was blown!
Add all ingredients to an iced highball or Collins glass. Give a quick stir and top with the soda.
I created this drink for the opening of the Great Lakes Coffee Bar in Detroit. This is a really refreshing drink on a hot summer day. Named for the Carthusian monks who have been producing Chartreuse since the mid 1700's.
Dry shake all ingredients except the Angostura. Add ice and shake again until cold. Double strain into a coupe glass. Add three drops of Angostura on top and swirl into the foam with a straw of bar spoon creating a spiral on top.
The Angostura doesn't really add to the flavor of the drink but it does add a pleasant aroma and the spiral adds eye appeal. This exemplifies my favorite style of drink. A perfect balance of sweet, sour, and bitter. Also I love the texture of egg white paired with the bitterness of the Cynar.
I created this drink at the Grand Trunk Pub in Detroit. I entered it in the Domaine de Canton cocktail competition but they apparently didn't find it as appealing as I do. This is what I want to drink at the end of a long week, hence the name.
Delicious! However, we skipped the dry shake and instead, used a measured half an ounce of egg white per drink. We then shook it vigorously WITH ice and all of the other ingredients (minus the Angostura which makes a beautiful appearance at the end). In his book, ‘Shake, Strain, Done’, J.M. Hirsch recommends this method in his recipes and now that we have followed his lead, the explosion featuring sticky hands and an annoying loss of drinkable liquid from our shaker has been a thing of the past.
Build the first four ingredients in an iced Collins glass. Top with the Angostura so it floats on top and slowly cascades toward the bottom.
This drink works with pretty much any ginger beer but the ginger spiciness of the Fever Tree really makes the drink come alive.
I created this drink while working at Michael Symon's Roast in Detroit, MI. I served it for a couple of days before I came up with the name. The rusty color of the drink made me think of the skeleton keys that opened the old locks in my grandparents house.