Jean Genie
In a highball glass with cube ice, mix gin and a splash of St-Germaine elderflower liqueur. Top with ginger beer and swizzle well. Garnish with a lime wheel.
- Hendrick's Mule (JMW's) — Gin, Ginger beer, Lime juice, Cucumber
In a highball glass with cube ice, mix gin and a splash of St-Germaine elderflower liqueur. Top with ginger beer and swizzle well. Garnish with a lime wheel.
Lightly muddle the lime peel and ginger slices in a rocks glass with the cognac. Fill glass half-way with ice. Stir well for 5 seconds. Add lemonade and cucumber peel. Stir well for another 5 seconds.
Created by a team of 20 mixologists as the "summit drink" of the 2008 International Cognac Summit.
In a mixing glass, muddle the mint with a few ice cubes and the maraschino until the mint is broken to very small pieces. Add more ice and the gin and juice, shake until cold. Strain into sugar rimmed cocktail glass.
Book - The Art of the Bar: Cocktails Inspired by the Classics
Rinse cocktail glass with rosewater. Stir tequila and carpano and strain into glass. Garnish with flamed orange zest and add a few drops of campari to the surface.
Book - The Art of the Bar: Cocktails Inspired by the Classics
Tried it with an inexpensive anejo, and really enjoyed it. Second batch, added a few more drops of rose water to the shaker, and about 1 t of campari. Amazing color and better balance. Great warm weather cocktail.
Muddle mint. Add ingredients, shake and strain into a chilled cocktail glass.
Have made with 1 oz raspberry shrub in place of the raspberry syrup and lemon juice. Very good!
Shake and strain into a chilled cocktail glass
Shake all but Chinotto, strain, rocks, lowball, top with Chinotto, stir gently.
Created for Thursday Drink Night, Cold, July 21, 2011
Loved it. Used Ron zacapa
Shake, strain into a coupe, garnish with a wide lemon peel
I really like this! Very refreshing. I had to make a couple of substitutions based on what I had: Obsello Absinthe Verte for the Herbsaint, and Bombay Sapphire for the Broker's. I had Bitter Truth Celery Bitters, and used those (is that what you intended?). I would love to know if this gets me in the right neighborhood... I like Fernet and anise flavors in small doses, and for me, this is a really good application. Thank you.
Christina, Thank you for the kind comment and the new cocktails. My intent was to make a cocktail that smelled like celery without any celery in it, the way a Jasmine builds pink grapefruit flavors through lemon and Campari. It was completely accidental. I was playing around with St. Germain, and I love both Fernet and the sour family, and the St. Germain + Fernet was interestingly green. Herbsaint with the two of those brings it very very close to smelling like celery.
As for substitutions, Sapphire for Broker's should be fine. Herbsaint is probably more sweet than your absinthe. And while you can use BT Celery Bitters, I don't think they're necessary. I think the Herbsaint is the important thing for you to get.
Thanks,
Zachary
Thanks Zachary,
I added the Herbsaint and the Angostura orange bitters to my (ever-growing) list. I am glad you guys didn't feel spammed with my cocktail additions to your database:) I was really happy to find a place to 1) consolidate my bookmarks, and 2) share with the hope that I could make a like-minded soul happy. I'll report back after trying this again with the specified ingredients.
Christina,
Nah, it's great. Herbsaint is one of those things that will last forever, but is indispensable to a small handful of cocktails, the best well known of which, of course, is the Sazerac. I like the Original (100 proof, orange label) version of the stuff, if you can find it.
Thanks,
Zachary
Much more delicate than I expected and definitely has celery notes. I added a pinch of salt which brought it out a bit more.
Shake, strain, serve up.
I tried this with some trepidation, but this isn't bad- maybe what an appletini wants to be. I rarely reach for my applejack (laird's) or sloe gin (bitter truth) and am trying to find good ways to utilize them so I can make room for something else. The tart/apple/herbal combination is nice, though on the sweet side.
Yeah, a little too sweet/syrupy for me but great flavors. Have to figure out what our balance is ...
Shake ingredients through egg white dry, then with ice. Serve on the rocks in a Collins glass. Top with soda, garnish with bitters.
There are no units on the club soda or instructions on how to use it. I could find several references to the cocktail and ingredients on the web but not units or instructions. Given the Collins class, I assumed it was "top it off" which is what I did. It's a big cocktail to begin with so this eneded up being somwhere in the 1-1.5 oz range, I'd guess. I loved the drink but I'd also love love clarification as to the creators intent in this regard.
From personal experience, shaking club soda is a bad idea... I'm going to eyeball the amount as an ounce and update the instructions. Thanks, Zachary
Moderated slightly - we're assuming "top" means around 3 ounces in a single rocks glass.