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El Nacional

1 oz Mezcal
1 oz Campari
1⁄2 oz Ramazzotti
1⁄2 oz Dry vermouth
1 twst Lemon peel
Instructions

Stir, strain, garnish with Islay drops and twist.

Notes

Mole bitters work great. Laphroaig is original Islay, I used Ardbeg.

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Casey Robison, Barrio, Seattle
Source reference

Imbibe Jan/Feb 2011, p.37

Curator rating
4 stars
Average rating
4 stars
(29 ratings)
From other users
  • This is an excellent drink. I just got my first bottle of Ramazotti and was looking for a cocktail to try. I really like the layers of taste with a muted Campari bitter finish. I used Crude Coffee and Chocolate bitters. Yum!
  • Extremely well-balanced drink with nothing feeling out of place or overly assertive. — ★★★★
  • Found accidentally during unrelated search--sounds up my alley.
  • Plenty going on, chocolate, bitter, smoky. A winter cornucopia.
  • Nice use of Ramazotti to compliment the chocolate bitters. Does work best with Aztec Chocolate as the heat kicks it up a notch.
  • Scale back the chocolate bitters a bit.
  • For sophisticated palates (smoke- and bitter-tolerant), this is a lovely drink with a nice finish.
  • Smoky but not overwhelming. Complex, viscous texture. An excellent way to return from a Cozumel vacation.
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Maberlin commented on 5/10/2019:

Nice use of Ramazotti to compliment the chocolate. Works well with Fee Bros. Aztec Chocolate as the heat kicks it up a notch.


eSports Chaebol commented on 8/27/2019:

This is quite possibly my favorite modern cocktail creation. It has so many perfectly complementary flavors. It's like a great book or movie where every time I experience it, I can pick out something new that I enjoy.


casey_robison commented on 12/18/2019:

@eSports Chaebol 

I randomly ran across this comment tonight and am so touched! I made this drink up years ago, but it's still one of my favorites. I'm so glad you enjoyed the recipe! Try supplementing the ramazotti with Luxardo Amaro Abano, it changes the drink in crazy ways, for the better, I think. Cheers!


randallr commented on 12/21/2020:

I didn't think this drink could be improved upon. But I just subbed coffee-infused Campari for the uninflected amaro, and - well, I'd rate it 6 stars, now!


Orchard Sour

2 oz Brandy, Germain-Robin (or cognac)
1⁄2 oz Apricot liqueur (or peach or pear)
1⁄2 oz Cinnamon syrup
3⁄4 oz Lemon juice
Instructions

Shake, strain, cocktail glass

History

As adapted by Camper English. I can't find the original to compare.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Darren Crawford, Bourbon and Branch, SF
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(8 ratings)
From other users
  • Should try variations as suggested.
  • Scant syrup+apricot, 1oz lemon
Similar cocktails
christina in tacoma commented on 5/01/2012:

Another good model drink. I used Becherovka in place of cinnamon syrup. The apricot liqueur can be replaced by almost any fruity or herbal liqueur- tonight I tried Licor 43, thinking of Dan's Czechers in Paradise.


Kina Cocktail

1⁄2 oz Aromatized wine, Cocchi Americano
1⁄2 oz Sweet vermouth
1 oz Gin
Instructions

Shake (stir), strain, cocktail glass

History

From the Savoy Cocktail Book. Cocchi Americano in place of the original Kina Lillet

Yields Drink
Year
1930's
Authenticity
Unknown
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(13 ratings)
From other users
  • 2 oz gin, Dolin red, half Aria gin / half Ransom Old Tom, 2 ds Regan's orange bitters. Pretty good, but a bit sweet...added a pinch of lemon-herb flake salt to finish. Reminds us a bit of a Ford. — ★★★
  • 2 oz gin
  • Made with Gordon's and Martini. Nicely sweet than bitter. Good complexity for how little effort is required. I can see this working with double the gin per the comment, too.
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christina in tacoma commented on 11/16/2011:

Pretty good with both Carpano Antica and Punt e Mes; a couple dashes of Angostura orange bitters improved it for me. I think an orange or lime twist would also help.



English Basillica

1 1⁄2 oz Gin
1⁄2 oz Aromatized wine, Lillet Blanc
1⁄2 oz Simple syrup (*orange blossom syrup)
1 oz Egg white
6 lf Basil
Instructions

Muddle basil with juice and syrup. Add rest. Dry shake. Shake well with ice and strain into chilled coupe. Garnish with basil leaf.

Notes

*orange blossom simple: 2:1 (sugar:water), 6 drops orange blossom drops per cup of syrup.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Sandy De Almeida, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(19 ratings)
From other users
  • Made w/ Thai basil. Superb use of orange blossom water. Garnish by floating a small basil leaf on top of the foam.
  • Basil flavor not strong. Prefer "garden leaves" cocktail. To strong a lime flavor.
  • Reduced the lime to .75 oz. might cut back slightly on the basil next time (or use smaller leaves).
  • Tasty. Maybe a touch less lime next time. — ★★★★
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bvankammen commented on 6/04/2015:

I think this is one of the best drinks I've had in a while.  Remarkable because it perfectly balances the orange flower (for once).  Much better than the Ramos Gin Fizz.  I used pre-made simple syrup to which I added 2 drops and then 2 more in the shaking.  And the basil is also subtle yet apparent.  Also Moody June gin, for the record.  Wow is this good.


Ashby Swizzle

1 1⁄4 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
2⁄3 oz Mezcal, Jaral de Berrio
1⁄2 oz Falernum
2⁄3 oz Lime juice
6 lf Mint
Instructions

Gently bruise mint with juices and falernum. Add rest. Shake and strain into pilsner or Collins glass over crushed ice. Swizzle.
Garnish with mint sprig and pineapple leaf.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Sandy De Almeida, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(5 ratings)
From other users
  • Sneaky strong
Similar cocktails

Marjorita commented on 7/01/2016:

This has pretty much replaced the Last  Word as my go-to cocktail when I have mint in my garden.  I don't have tobacco bitters so I don't use them.

 


Prizefighter

1⁄4 oz Lemon juice
3⁄4 oz Simple syrup
1 pn Salt
2 wdg Lemon
6 lf Mint
Instructions

Muddle lemon wedges with mint, salt and simple. Shake. Strain. Rocks glass over crushed ice. Garnish with ample mint.

Notes

If no Carpano use Punt y mes or a full oz of Angostura.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Nick Jarrett, Dram and Flatiron Lounge, NYC
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(15 ratings)
From other users
  • Nice low ABV drink. I'm not a fan of Fernet Branca but this worked out swell.
  • Very unique and fairly complex. The fernet is very subdued in a great way.
  • Very good, bitter and fresh, well balanced — ★★★★
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Dan commented on 11/15/2011:

Has anyone actually made this? It looks like a heck of a lot of simple syrup, given the piddly amount of lemon and the other two sweet ingredients. Seems like it would be toothache sweet.


Sandy De Almeida commented on 12/07/2011:

Give it a try. I love Fernet Branca and this was one of my favorite drinks on my last visit to Dram.


Zachary Pearson commented on 12/07/2011:

Dan,

The muddled lemon ought to give the 1/4 oz lemon juice a bit of lift, I'd think.

Zachary


yarm commented on 7/16/2020:

2 wedges of lemon is often 1/3 of a lemon or around 1/2 oz juice (sometimes lemons are cut into 1/8th). 1/2 + 1/4 = 3/4 oz which will balance the simple syrup. Fernet is low sugar and does need sweetness to make it more palatable and that can come from the sweet vermouth. It is a rather balanced drink. Also, my Mint Julep recipe uses a 1/2 oz of simple syrup only balanced by Bourbon and dilution.


alphanumeric commented on 5/08/2022:

Thanks for the citrus math, yarm. It was enough to get me to try this. The ingredients play nice although dilution is your friend here. I might try again with 1/2oz simple for kicks.

I'm also surprised there's no elaboration on the note: "If no Carpano use Punt y mes or a full oz of Angostura." A full oz Ango?!


yarm commented on 5/09/2022:

Those notes are Sandy's not Nick's. If you don't have Carpano, just use the sweet vermouth that you have. Worked for me -- won't be as robustly flavored but it will be more in the ball park than those two suggestions.


Black Scottish Cyclops

Instructions

Stir w/ ice, strain, old-fashioned w/ rocks

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Rocky Yeh
Source reference

Bitters, by B.T. Parsons (2011)

Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(13 ratings)
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bza commented on 11/14/2011:

I never thought Ramazzotti would be able to stand up to an Islay single malt. Used Ardbeg, and it was delicious, would definitely make this again.


jellydonut commented on 11/15/2011:

'They've got more *** ***** **** *** **** than the likes o' me!' Love the name. ^_^


lyricsboy commented on 4/15/2013:

I used Johnny Walker Red (I had a big bottle!) and Bittercube Bolivar Bitters. This is definitely a drink that lives up to its name. After a few, I could only see out of one eye!


Sakas commented on 4/23/2013:

I too used johnnie red and through lack of the fees barrel aged I used 3dsh of Fees Old Fashioned and one of Bittermans Xocolatl Mole. It was all too much for the scotch, rolled right over it. I need to get some Laphroaig and do this for real.


Norm commented on 10/11/2014:

In addition to a straight-up peaty Islay (like Lagavulin, Laphroiag, or Ardbeg), I have found that Talisker 10 year works very well in this cocktail. Other, less powerful, whiskys would just be overpowered (in part because 4 dashes of Fee Whiskey Barrel bitters is very intense).


Shawn C commented on 2/26/2023:

This might seem a dumb question, but with 4 dashes called for, is this 4 dashes from a Fee Brothers bottle, or 4 normal dashes? The volumes are an order of magnitude different because the Fee Brothers glycerine base does not dispense well from their dasher tops. A dash from a Fee Brothers bottle is typically 1 to 2 drops (if anything comes out at all.) They tend to be larger drops so I could see some adjustment for that. I use 8 drops as a "generous dash" estimate for other bitters, and 6 for a lean dash, but with various Fee bitters I most often remove the dispenser cap and use a dropper. For this cocktail I used 16 drops shaken from the dispenser...sort of dead reckoning, splitting the difference between 4 real dashes and what a Fee bottle will yield in dash mode. This is a good cocktail with the proportions I used, but I am uncertain as to whether this volume is what was intended.


Winter Digestive

Instructions

Build over crushed ice, stir.

Notes

I'm going to sub out the Angostura for Christmas Bitters from Adam Elmegirab shortly.

Yields Drink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Zachary Pearson
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(1 rating)
From other users
  • Spicy, bracing, strong mint/menthol. Might try using Ango amaro instead of bitters and upping the dosage.
Similar cocktails
christina in tacoma commented on 11/14/2011:

What a great idea, thanks for posting this. I like this flavor combination quite a bit. I ended up going a little higher on the Punt e Mes.


Zachary Pearson commented on 11/15/2011:

Christina,

I was literally staring at a 9/10 empty bottle of Angostura, a 9/10 empty bottle of Fernet, and a half full bottle of Punt e Mes and thinking.... I've got to clean out the liquor cabinet! This is the result. I think there's just enough sweetness in the Vermouth to balance the Fernet, though if I had it lying around..... Antica would be really nice here, and play up the Christmas spicy thing.

Thanks,

Zachary


Ajvan commented on 12/22/2019:

Found this looking for Christmas / winter cocktails, and it's spicy and bracing with that strong fernet menthol taste. Used Carpano for the vermouth. Tempted to make it again with Angostura Amaro instead of bitters and up the dosage. 


Fire Cherry Cocktail

1⁄4 oz Campari
1⁄4 oz Port
1 Brandied cherry (as garnish)
Instructions

Combine, Stir, Strain into Coupe Glass, Garnish with brandied cherry

Notes

Very Complex; bourbon upfront, then a duel of port and Campari, finishes with cherry and subtle vanilla

History

Inspired by the Red Hook

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
egilmore
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(9 ratings)
From other users
  • Mostly tastes like bourbon, slightly sweet, slightly bitter, slightly herbal.
  • I used Rittenhouse and had to sub a touch of cherry liqueur plus Mole bitters for the cherry bark bitters. I liked the drink and the concept, although I thought the Maraschino was a bit dominant. Next time try less Maraschino — ★★★
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Dan commented on 11/13/2011:

Sounds interesting. It's a bit of a big drink by current standards. It could be easily scaled back with 2oz : 2 tsp : 1 tsp : 1 tsp, for the so inclined.


Dan commented on 3/04/2012:

Nice. Maybe less Maraschino and scale to a more manageable size? I split one, so it either makes one huge or two tiny drinks.


mikejaz2 commented on 11/17/2017:

Very nice. Used Rebel Yell bourbon (my go-to cheapie). Split it into two small drinks for me and the missus on a Friday night. Sweet, subtle flavors on a long finish.


American Praline

2 1⁄2 oz Rye, Bulleit
1⁄2 oz Bénédictine
1⁄4 oz Aperol
1⁄4 oz Orgeat
Instructions

Combine, stir, strain into rocks glass with large ice chunks

History

Unique

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
egilmore
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(26 ratings)
From other users
  • Subbed curry leaf syrup for orgeat. Nutty and sweet old fashioned.
  • I don’t find it too sweet. I think it’s pretty rye forward and the Black Walnut Bitters really balance it.
  • The accents still let the rye show through. — ★★★★
  • A bit sweet
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saltdodge commented on 10/01/2013:

very cool. I substituted a few drops of dry amontillado for the bitters


TheTaj commented on 1/07/2018:

Surprisingly, all those accent flavors still let the rye show through. Good balance though it may be a bit sweeter than some would prefer.


lesliec commented on 1/28/2018:

Pretty good. Next time (there will be one) I might try Campari in place of Aperol to take the sweetness down a smidgin.


sevyryelsdorn commented on 2/24/2020:

Since I'm not a big Aperol fan, I made this with Bigallet China-China in lieu of that. I also added 2 ds of El Guapo Chicory-Pecan bitters instead of the Black Walnut. I liked the resulting drink, but found it a bit too sweet for my taste. I added something approaching 1/4 oz of Eda Rhyne Rustic Black Walnut Nocino (which is fairly bitter) and this brought the sweetness into perfect balance for my taste.