1794
Stir, strain, rocks glass, no ice
Lord Hobo (Cambridge, MA) uses Mole bitters, a flamed orange swatch garnish and Vya sweet vermouth)
A modernized and refined Boulevardier. The bitters are a c. 2007 addition (as per the cited link).
- Good, but just a standard variant of a Boulevardier
- Found it just a little bit too heavy on the Campari the first time; made it again with 20 ml Campari to 25 ml sweet vermouth and it was perfect.
- Very good. I used knob creek 100proof. Also subbed in Appleton 12 year. Both nice, but prefer the rye over the rum.
- Try with Santa Teresa 1796 rum, per Avery Glasser
- Really like this one with overproof bourbon and Scrappys Chocolate Bitters
- Lovely Manhattan / Left Hand variation.
- A rye-oriented twist on Boulevardier. Doug Ford claim for a more alcoholic recipe: 2oz Rye, 1.oz Vermouth, 1.oz Campari
- Made with Rittenhouse rye (2 oz) and Dolin sweet vermouth. Very drinkable.
- Good but i still prefer a boulevardier
- Really good; use a light touch on the mole bitters.
- Pen Pal — Rye, Dry vermouth, Aperol, Orange peel
- Old Pal — Rye, Dry vermouth, Campari
- Boulevard des Rêves — Bourbon, Sweet vermouth, Campari, Rum
- The Killing Floor — Rye, Bigallet China-China, Sweet vermouth, Bonal Gentiane Quina, Orange peel
- Boulevardier — Bourbon, Campari, Sweet vermouth, Maraschino cherry
Absolutely great. Really shows of the Mole bitters (be careful to go easy as they are very strong). I still don't see the point of flaming orange peels, though, besides looking cool.
Try straining over one big-ass cube, and then sprinkling a pinch of Maldon on its surface. A la the Little Giuseppe.
A malty alternative to my favorite Negroni.
This is a goddamn glorious drink.
The mole bitters addition came from John Gertsen while at No 9, before Lord Hobo existed.
I was also pretty sure Venegas made this drink while at Bourbon and Branch, but I'll trust the link on that one.
Highly recommend the 1796 with Santa Teresa rum mentioned in the comments at the link.
The drink was created in 2004 before there were mole bitters on the market by 3 years or so. My blog post has the first evidence of the addition of them (posts earlier in the year list them without the bitters). I can't be certain where, but Avery Glasser suggests that the addition was made in Boston.
Curated this - thanks Fred. It's good to see you here more often. Zachary