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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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  • The Devil's Backbone — Rye, Averna, Islay Scotch, Gran Classico, Bitters, Orange bitters, Orange peel
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.
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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
(27 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.


The Fleet Street

1 1⁄2 oz Gin, Martin Miller's (Westbourne Strength Gin)
3⁄4 oz Lemon juice
1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Yellow Chartreuse
1⁄2 oz Simple syrup
1 twst Lemon peel (as garnish)
Instructions

Shake, double strain, straight up, coupe, garnish

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Jackie Patterson, Heaven’s Door, San Francisco, CA
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(24 ratings)
From other users
  • Surprisingly complex.
  • Subbed in green chartreuse. Reduced simple syrup to 0.25 oz.
  • used celery shrub
  • Have tried this with a variety of bitters in addition to the orange bitters, e.g. peach, Abbott's, celery.
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Dan commented on 11/12/2011:

Thanks for posting. Curated to conform to our style guidelines -- mostly putting the right info into the right place, making instructions concise, adding garnish to ingredients, etc. The long description had to be removed for copyright reasons. If you make the drink and would like the describe it, I suggest you put your feedback in Notes (where tasting notes belong).



nfo commented on 11/20/2011:

This is a winner! I used unmeasured agave since I didn't have simple on hand - hopefully I can replicate this, because it's tasty.


Curari Cocktail

2 oz Rye
3⁄4 oz Ruby Port
3⁄4 oz Amaro Cora
Instructions

Stir, strain, cocktail glass, cherry garnish

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Ted Haigh
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(1 rating)
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christina in tacoma commented on 11/16/2011:

I didn't have any port, so I subbed Bonal Gentiane-Quina for now. This made a nice drink, lots of dried fruit flavors, some sweetness but not too much. I'll try it again with port as soon as I have some. The Cora strikes me as somewhere between Becherovka (without the dominant allspice flavor) and Averna...



Zachary Pearson commented on 11/24/2011:

So thanks to the kindness of a stranger ;) I now have a bottle of Cora. This is definitely in the fall-and-winter set of cocktails. The ruby Port does get a bit lost up front, but contributes dried fruit tones to the midpalate. This shines on the finish, with lots of cream-coconut flavors and allspice that lingers. Maybe half Port and half Clear Creek cranberry liqueur next time? 

Thanks,

Zachary


The French Connection

1 1⁄2 oz Tequila, Herradura
1⁄2 oz Mezcal, Sombra
1⁄2 oz Applejack, Lairds
1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
Instructions

Stir with ice. Strain into chilled rock glass over large cube of ice.

Notes

Any smokey Mezcal will work. Herradura reposado.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Sandy De Almeida, Gladstone hotel, Toronto
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
Not yet rated
From other users
  • 1 1⁄2 oz Tequila, Herradura 1⁄2 oz Mezcal, Sombra 1⁄2 oz Applejack, Lairds 1⁄2 oz Green Chartreuse 2 dr Bitters, Tobacco (caution!)
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Zachary Pearson commented on 11/11/2011:

Just as fair warning -- tobacco is incredibly dangerous to use in an alcohol extraction, especially without being able to tell how much nicotine you're extracting, and the LD 50 for nicotine is very low. Giving tobacco infused alcohol to non-smokers can cause all sorts of problems, as people unaccustomed to nicotine can react very badly to the stuff.



Zachary Pearson commented on 12/07/2011:

Sandy, I've heard of that, but don't have access to it. I really want to try the Ted Breaux "Perique", which again.... heard of, don't know if it exists. 

The article about tobacco references that AoD article, which is a great summation of the what people know about tobacco infusions. 

Thanks,

Zachary


Nation Of Two

Instructions

Muddle peppercorns in bottom of mixing glass. Add rest with ice. Stir and double fine strain into chilled coupe. Or neat into chilled old fashioned glass. lemon zest.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Sandy De Almeida, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(16 ratings)
From other users
  • added more the bourbon (extra oz) plus heavy on the peppercorns.
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hays.kelly@gmail.com commented on 1/21/2016:

There is a lot going on, the pepper is nice as complexity. Used buffalo trace bourbon which is already a little peppery, so that add to it.


MoJo Hannah

1⁄2 oz Campari
1⁄2 oz Aperol
2⁄3 oz Amaro Nonino
1 rinse Scotch, Laphroaig
1 twst Grapefruit peel (zest, as garnish)
Instructions

Rinse chilled old fashioned glass with Laphroaig. Stir rest in a mixing glass. Strain neat into prepared glass. Grapefruit zest.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Sandy De Almeida, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(20 ratings)
From other users
  • Delicious. Boozy. Scotch aroma fades after a bit (which is good).
  • Follow this bartender!
  • Used the older Centinela and this rocked. Fruity agave really came through and the liqueurs complemented nicely.
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Dan commented on 11/12/2011:

Curated to tweak ingredient list to correspond to instructions and notes.


Cul de Sac

Instructions

Prepare like an old fashioned. Muddle the sugar cube with the Fernet in a chilled old fashioned glass. Press out the oils on the grapefruit zest with your muddler. Add the rum, tequila and Chase Elderflower liqueur. Add ice. Stir well.

Notes

This cocktail does not work as well with St Germain. If St Germain is all you can find, cut the Fernet down slightly.

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Sandy De Almeida, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(1 rating)
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Dan commented on 11/12/2011:

Curated to add Chase as a preferred brand. It does not appear to be imported into the US.


Sandy De Almeida commented on 12/07/2011:

Well, I'm from Canada. But like I said, give it a try with St. Germaine and cut the Fernet to taste. I first made it with St. Germaine. I liked it better with Chase and it's cheaper, that's all.