Basil Lime Daiquiri
Simmer water & basil until reduced to 2 1/2 tbsp. Strain, stir in sugar & 1 tsp fresh lime juice. Shake syrup with rum and 1/2 oz more lime, strain, straight up, cocktail glass, garnish.
Simmer water & basil until reduced to 2 1/2 tbsp. Strain, stir in sugar & 1 tsp fresh lime juice. Shake syrup with rum and 1/2 oz more lime, strain, straight up, cocktail glass, garnish.
Build in lowball over ice, stir
Sub Fernet if Zirbenz is unavailable. Different flavor, but the same function.
Built to honor my dear friend George Sawdy, lover of Scotch, stomper of overgrown trails, sufferer of fool, fighter of inevitability. Simple to make, generous but not extravagant of ingredients, off-beat, and a bit sweet and a bit bitter.
this is a great utilization of zirbenz! what i really enjoy is a bit of a twist: replacing the bowmore with auchentoshan three-wood (a sweeter scotch), bumping up the zirbenz to 3/4, and eliminating the punt e mes.
But other than that, it's the same drink ;) I'll try your variation and remember my friend George.
Shake with crushed ice, pour unstrained.
Inspired by the Blackbeard's Ghost, Blackbeard's Galley ca. 1970's, as chronicled in Jeff Berry's Grog Log.
Originally made with commercial sour mix. Eventually saw the light and replaced with fresh lemon juice and simple syrup.
Shake all ingredients except club soda, strain into Collins glass over a few ice cubes, top with the chilled club soda.
Strega would be an acceptable substitute for the Yellow Chartreuse.
Blueberry shrub recipe found here: http://cocktailvirgin.blogspot.com/2009/08/blueberry-shrub.html
Based on our current inventory we used Marie Brizard Apry instead of the peach and it came out great.
Monin blackberry syrup, or Creme de Mure or Creme de Cassis work instead of the shrub.
To each 3 oz. of booze, add 1 dash (“blip”) of grenadine. Mix in the morning, let sit 6-8 hours. Pour over crushed ice in a highball glass – pineapple spear, straw, swizzle stick.
A carefully researched and time-tested variation on the Trader Vic's recipe, passed on for generations. This version was first made in 1981.
Stir, strain, straight up, cocktail glass
Meh... This looked great on paper but ended up feeling a bit rough. The component parts didn't play off each other as much as just seem to be bouncing around in my mouth trying to figure out what they were supposed to taste like. Yeah, that description may sound a bit weird, but it's not inaccurate. Maybe this would be better if shaken and served over crushed ice, like a straight-up tiki drink? As it is, it's a case of the thing just not coming together all that well.
Upped the Cynar to 1/2 oz.
Muddle 1/2 lemon with large handful basil, add simple and test for sweetness. Add ice and gin, shake, double strain, rocks-filled frozen old fashioned glass
Originally posted as 5cl gin. Updated to reflect video from Le Lion
The Gin Basil Smash was created by Jörg Meyer (Le Lion, Hamburg - Germany) in 2008.
Moderated to provide method and reflect gin quantity from oh gosh video.
Christian Dehm at http://barnotes.co/recipes/christian-s-basil-smash has a nice version that adds 1/2 oz. Aperol and 2oz tonic water.
Stir, strain, single large sphere or cube, old fashioned glass
Diffords suggests Johnnie Walker black 1:1 with St Germain, a very sweet drink. Oh Gosh suggests a highland single malt 3:1. The poster orignally suggested 5:2.
Named (perhaps by Difford's) in honor of whiskey lover Xavier Padovani
Moderated to provide instructions and some reference / attribution. Actual creator currently unknown. I'm not sure I understand the odd 5/8 measurement. ohgo.sh used 1-1/2 and 1/2 oz.
Dan,
The Difford's Guide says equal parts "Scotch" and St. Germain. The Ogho.sh article says use 3:1 Glenmorangie Signet (a Highland at $200 a bottle!). This is a little more than 2 1/2 :1, and is using Islay... does anyone have the Difford's Guide and can clarify the brand of Scotch?
Can we also move the 2 1/2:1 and 3:1 versions as variations in the notes?
Thanks,
Zach
-edit- I was wrong :)
I updated the history, clarified the name and changed the ratio to 3:1. This is specified in metric: 6cl:2cl. Kindred Cocktails rounds the 2/3oz that is 2cl to 5/8oz, a more manageable amount for most bartenders to measure.
This is a fantastic rainy day cocktail. I did the 3:1 ratio with the Bowmore 12 and it's very well balanced.
Shake all ingridients, strain into a tiki mug with fresh ice cubes and decorate with some mint sprigs. add a few drops of grenadine on the sprigs
Creation for the Tiki Lover Rum Challenge 2011
love it.
I edited the recipe to correspond to the one in the reference (Food & Wine). The reference's ingredient list neglects the second quantity of lime juice, which the instructions clearly require. I assume the intention is to make a quantity of syrup and store it in the refrigerator, using about 1oz (3 Tbsp) in each cocktail. I also rewrote the instructions to remove any question of copyright infringement.