Butter, Lemon, Smoke

3⁄4 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
3⁄4 oz Bénédictine
1 twst Lemon peel (as garnish)
Instructions

Stir all ingredients and strain into a coupe, garnish.

History

When someone asks for something smooth and smoky!

Picture of Butter, Lemon, Smoke
©2011 TJ Vytlacil, Blood & Sand
YieldsDrink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
TJ Vytlacil, Blood & Sand
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(25 ratings)
From other users
  • Subbed in 0.5 oz of single malt for the scotch.
  • Great with Kilkerran Scotch. — ★★★★★
  • Best with something at least a tad smoky. Try with Islay.
  • Absinthe
  • Made it with Laphraoig 10 and Maison Rouge. It *is* smoky, lemony, and somehow buttery!
  • Original recipe calls for lemon twist as a garnish (thus the name).
Similar cocktails
Dan commented on 10/06/2011:

I get the smoke, obviously, but from whence the Butter and Lemon? Sounds interesting. Also sounds like the sort of thing I might prefer neat. If you like this, you might try the Bernet Frankenstein, a mixture of Islay Scotch, Punt e Mes, and Fernet Branca, served neat.

One question: is the garnish a lemon wedge, slice, or what. It's a bit hard to tell in the picture. It also looks like the coupe is rimmed with something, but it might just be the light hitting it oddly.


Used Sheep Dip Islay in place of Peat Monster. 5 star.


Rye Summer

Instructions

Stir with ice and strain into a cocktail glass.

Notes

One of the first drinks cteated for Taste by Niche

YieldsDrink
Year
2009
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Ted Kilgore Taste St.Louis MO
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(9 ratings)
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Cubed Old Fashioned

3⁄4 oz Cognac, Rémy Martin
3⁄4 oz Rum, Appleton V/X
3⁄4 oz Rye, Rittenhouse 100
1⁄2 oz Simple syrup (Old Fashioned Syrup)
1 twst Orange peel (as garnish)
1 Brandied cherry (as garnish)
Instructions

Stir all ingredients with ice. Strain into a chilled rocks glass filled with one giant ice chunk. Garnish with orange zest and brandied cherry resting on the top of the glass.

Notes

Old Fashioned Syrup: 200 mL Bourbon or rye, 100 mL Angostura bitters, 550 mL Turbinado sugar, 5 cloves
7 allspice, 3 star anise, stir ingredients in a pot over low heat until all sugar is incorporated, let cool, strain and funnel into a sanitized bottle, add 1 oz of bourbon/rye to help preserve your syrup

YieldsDrink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Altered recipe
Creator
Jamie Boudreau, Canon, Seattle, WA
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(20 ratings)
From other users
  • Very tasty. Used KC 110 proof, Appleton's 12 yr, and Copper & Kings Phoenix barrel with maple syrup and a dash of Allspice Dram and chocolate bitters
  • Old fashioned syrup, ake Make syrup! Make cocktail!
  • Delicious. Made with Few rye, Havana Club Anejo 7 rum, Claude Chatelier XO Cognac, and Tippleman's burnt molasses sugar syrup. Great surprising smooth combo of alcohols. Bit sweet - I'd reduce Tippleman's a tipple.
  • Must try
  • Quite like this as an Old Fashioned riff. I approximated the syrup with a scant 1/2 oz. of turbinado syrup and a small dash of pimento dram. Like the other commenters said, this is on the sweet side. — ★★★★
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Dan commented on 10/02/2011:

Curated to fix typo in cocktail name, clarify the syrup, and format the syrup to fit Kindred Cocktails. Thanks for posting.


fantastic twist on a classic! subbed out the Appletons for Zaya 12 year, and used a Tesseron XO because that's all I had. Going to my favorite store to get some Remy becuase this one is going into rotation.


This is brilliant - so much flavour (Hennessey, Appleton 12, Rittenhouse).  Maybe a little sweet with the half of simple, but now I'm going to make the Old Fashioned syrup and try the drink in its full glory.


jaba commented on 2/07/2015:

Made this with Smith & Cross, WT 101 Rye, and Salignac Cognac. Used 1/4 oz regular double simple syrup. Still a mighty fine drink.


Made my second one with 1/4 oz. of old fashioned syrup and it was still very good.


Greenpoint

Instructions

Stir, strain, cocktail glass.

YieldsDrink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Michael McIlroy, Milk & Honey, NY, NY
Curator rating
4 stars
Average rating
4 stars
(57 ratings)
From other users
  • Made with Dubonnet, try with Punt e Mes. — ★★★★
  • Good. It's definitely of Manhattan ilk, but the Chartreuse mellows it out w/a twist. Not a syrupy sweet.
  • Dolin
  • another nice Manhattan :)
  • Made with 0.75 sweet vermouth and chartreuse and 2 dashes angostura and 2 of orange bitters.. Amaizng
  • Tons of depth, got better as it warmed. Also, seeing all the comments, green and yellow chartreuse are not interchangeable in my opinion. They are extremely different. Green chartreuse makes this a different drink.
  • 2 rye 0.5 punt e mes 0.5 green chartreuse 2 dashes angostura Initially I only had green chartreuse. Tried it again with yellow, which makes for a lighter, more aromatic profile. I prefer the green using Rittenhouse.
  • Went with Green Chartreuse.
  • Intricate spices
Similar cocktails

So there's a few variations of this one floating around, which makes sense, as it's arguably the second most popular and widespread of the contemporary riffs on the Brooklyn Cocktail, after the Red Hook. The one in Sam Ross' Bartender's Choice app, the closest thing to an official Milk & Honey recipe book, is nearly identical to this one, except that it calls for regular sweet vermouth and two dashes of Ango rather than one. The one in Saveur, which the magazine seems to have gotten from McIlroy himself, calls for a full ounce of Punt e Mes and only a teaspoon of yellow Chartreuse, with a dash of Angostura and no orange bitters (http://www.saveur.com/article/Recipes/Greenpoint). These are all worthwhile variations, and it's hard to determine which one's the "correct" or original recipe. One thing that's sure, however, is that the drink's name should be spelled Greenpoint, after the Brooklyn neighborhood it's named for. :-)


Accidental double post, so let me just say that this is a great drink. :-)


Dan commented on 3/13/2014:

Merged a duplicate from user hoarsefly which had 2 oz Bourbon, 1oz Punt e Mes, 1tsp Pastis, and 1d Angostura. "I subbed Belle Meade Bourbon for the original Rye, and Herbsaint for the original yellow Chartreuse."


Dan commented on 3/13/2014:

I'm capturing this version for posterity before moderating the recipe to a more authentic version:

Previous version:
2oz Rye
1/2oz Punt e Mes
1/2oz Yellow Chartreuse
1d Angostura
1d Orange bitters
1tw lemon peel


I don't have Yellow Chartreuse so I made it with Green. Does that make it an Extra Greenpoint? Also subbed VYA sweet for the Punt e Mes which strangely unavailable in PA. Anyway, I'm enjoying the heck out of this.


Delicious! Tried substituting green Chartreuse on the recommendation of a guy in a bar, and liked it just as well, maybe better. You don't want a timid rye for this drink, especially when using green Chartreuse. 

I wonder how it'd be using a smoky scotch instead of the rye?


Maybe with green Chartreuse it's a Yellowpoint.

I'm a big fan of the original.  My favourite of the Brooklyns, I think.


I just confirmed with MM that the true recipe is 1/2 oz each yellow Chartreuse and Punt e Mes. 


Made with 2 oz Elijah Craig, 1/2 each Yellow Chartreuse and sweet vermouth, Cocchi's Dopo Teatro, and one dash each of orange and angostura. Didn't realize I was out of lemons, used a couple drops of Fee Broz lemon bitters and a tiny piece of blood orange peel. Very good


Curated to remove broken Chowhound link.


Lazy Bear

3⁄4 oz Rye
3⁄4 oz Honey syrup (1:1 honey & water)
3⁄4 oz Lime juice
Instructions

Shake and strain into an ice-filled rocks glass.

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Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Jacob Grier, Portland, OR
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Average rating
3.5 stars
(7 ratings)
From other users
  • 1+ oz rum 1 oz Rye 3/4 oz honey syrup 3/4 oz lime
  • added allspice dram; a little cinnamon-y. very good. — ★★★★
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This is really good, thanks for posting. I didn't have the bitters- used Peychaud's, and Wild Turkey rye.


bza commented on 12/14/2011:

Unexpectedly incredible - maybe my favorite thing to do with Smith and Cross ever. I lowered the honey syrup to 1/2 oz, which perfect worked for me.


Sounds really good - you might want to try the Dover to Calais, which keeps the lime and Smith & Cross, but has Green Chartreuse and orgeat. 

Thanks,

Zachary


Dan commented on 12/15/2011:

I need to revisit this. I used honey and needed the full 3/8 oz to make it sweet enough for the lime. My Ryan and Wood rye didn't stand up to the Smith & Cross; I think something like Wild Turkey would have worked better. I added another 3/4 oz of rye and it worked better. I also think my generic honey was a bit milquetoast.


bza commented on 12/17/2011:

Dan, not sure what proof the Ryan and Wood is (I've seen it on shelves but have yet to try any of their liquors), but I used Rittenhouse because I figured I'd need the extra proof specifically because S&C is so overpowering. I used a local honey for my syrup, and the resulting drink was pleasingly floral - you could taste the S&C, but it was merged with other things. If you used honey rather than syrup, you probably ended up with a lot of it still in the shaker...


bza commented on 12/17/2011:

I have that in my suggestions, but I'm currently having an Orgeat identity crisis right now where I'm not crazy about homemade but I can't find the perfect store bought. Still looking for the Kassatly Chtaura Meehan recommends in PDT. Do you use homemade?


BZA,

Yeah.... my understanding is that the two best widely available orgeats are the BG Reynolds and the Small Hands versions. I make my own (the recipe I use is the one in the article), but I tend to like orange flower and rosewater more than most people ;)

Thanks,

Zachary


bza commented on 12/19/2011:

I had the small hands - brought a bottle back with me from California. It's great, but not available here and somewhat overpowering. I usually cut the amount by a dash or two in drinks like the Japanese that are Orgeat heavy. In old recipes it always seems like Orgeat was weaker and Grenadine was stronger back then...


If you don't have the Whiskey Barrel Aged Bitters you can use a 50/50 mix of ango and allspice dram. I believe that's what they use at Metrovino when they don't have access to the good stuff.


I tend to like 50:50 Ango and Ramazzotti to substitute for Fee's Barrel Aged, if you have to.


Windfall

1 oz Calvados
1⁄2 oz Simple syrup
1⁄2 oz Lemon juice
Instructions

Shake over ice, serve straight up.

History

The Polish drink their Zubrowka with apple juice, I just made that into a classic sipping cocktail.

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Authenticity
Your original creation
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(4 ratings)
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Dan commented on 11/15/2011:

This is a nice cocktail. The tropical flavors of the Bison Grass Vodka (I used Zu) melds with the apple of the Calvados. I found it a touch sweet, so I might scale back the simple syrup next time. I added a couple of dashes of Boker's Bitters, which added bitterness and depth. I'm wondering if something like Zucca might have a place in a variation of this cocktail.


I bought some ZU brand Zubrowka on a whim, then was disappointed when most of the recipes using it called for some really exotic or time-consuming ingredients I didn't have.

This drink, though, is delightfully simple, and tastes great - the exotic flavour of the bison grass (or whatever substitute the FDA allows) really came through. I will make this again - it justified the purchase of this bottle.


For All Of Us

2 oz Scotch, Highland Park 12
1⁄2 oz Sweet vermouth
1 twst Lemon peel
Instructions

Stir the scotch, amaro, vermouth, and bitters over ice vigorously for at least 30 seconds. Strain into a cocktail glass and garnish with lemon oil.

History

The evolution of this cocktail started with the My Own cocktail in Esquire's handbook for hosts. I think there is much to do with gin, vermouth, bitters, and liquor. I had just made a batch of Jamie Boudeau's approximation of the old Amer Picon so I wondered what My Own would taste like with my Amer in place of Cherry Heering. The result was pretty decent, but I kept thinking scotch for some reason. The result was somewhat similar to the Dagny Taggart that they serve at Seven Grand in LA.

Picture of For All Of Us
2011 Kindred Cocktails
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Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Kambel
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(5 ratings)
From other users
  • Astringent. Mlik chocolate.
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Toto

3⁄4 oz Reposado Tequila, El Jimador Reposado (or Cazadores)
3⁄4 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
3⁄4 oz Cynar
Instructions

Stir with ice; strain; cocktail glass.

Notes

For me, the lemon twist wasn't enough citrus, but .75 oz lime juice made this quite good.

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Authentic recipe
Creator
Kelley Swenson, Ten01, Portland, OR
Source reference

Left Coast Libations p 72

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Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(11 ratings)
From other users
  • .75 oz lime added
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The Bitter End

Instructions

Build in Collins glass; add ice; stir. Float the .25 oz bitters on top of drink.

YieldsDrink
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Yanni Kehagiaras, Nopa, San Francisco, CA
Source reference

Left Coast Libations p. 44

Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(11 ratings)
From other users
  • Skip the .25 oz Angostura float
  • Would prefer more sweetness. I know it’s supposed to be bitter but I would prefer it with more balance
  • consider adding a bit more falernum
  • Not bad; a better rum than I used would probably improve it. To my taste, the 1/4 oz. of bitters float could've been dialed back a bit.
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Dan commented on 9/29/2011:

Curated to clarify rum as a light rum. While it is true that Flor de Caña light rum is aged 4 years and clear in color, I don't think most folks would describe it as other than as a light rum, rather than an añejo rum.



I added 1/2 ounce of Amaro Montenegro instead of the Angostura float, and I used Plantation 3 Star rum. This is satisfying and delicious. Thanks for the inspiration!


Autumn Manhattan

2 oz Rye
1⁄2 oz Calvados
1⁄4 oz Sweet vermouth
Instructions

Serve on the rocks with a cherry.

Notes

Not sweet enough. Try bourbon?
Try with just one cube of ice for a more wintry feel. Maybe even no ice? Out of a tea cup?

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3.5 stars
(19 ratings)
From other users
  • I don't like manhattans but I like this
  • A very very nice Manhattan.
  • I made with bourbon as suggested. Delicious.
  • Lots of potential. Needs tweaking. I changed to .5 bonded rye, 1.5oz bourbon. Also added barspoon of demerara syrup. Garnish with flamed orange. 2nd time made w/ 1.5 rye, 1 lairds bonded, .25 lillet rouge, .25 sw vermouth.
  • Variation 3/4 each Templeton Sweet v Galliano Calvados
  • I think this needs some tinkering. Up the calvados, less rye (or maybe don't use Rittenhouse)?
  • 1.5 bourbon, 3/4 Calvados, 1/2 sweet vermouth, 1/4 cherry, barspoon Demerara syrup
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I like this, actually I find it almost too sweet. For me I'd use a spicier rosso like Vya or a sherry-like one like Vermut Lacuenta and dial it up to a full ounce. Heering good here, though Combier Rouge would lend a fresher cherry note. Rye and calvados play well together!


I used cherry bounce made with cognac in lieu of cherry herring. Pleasant, tasty, plenty of fruit without being cloyingly sweet.