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Rose Window

Instructions

In a shaker, muddle pineapple, orange peel and bitters. Add remaining ingredients and dry shake for 45 seconds. Add ice and shake for 30 seconds. Double strain into a coupe.

Yields Drink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Zachary Pearson
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(7 ratings)
From other users
  • Good cocktail, but you need to like floral flavors at least a little. — ★★★
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Zachary Pearson commented on 2/20/2011:

Lemon might need to be 3/4 oz - I'm fascinated by the way pineapple texturizes a drink... I also think you might be able to take this in a different direction subbing Peychauds for Regans' and a rinse of Pernod - think the whole faded violet/pastille accord.


Dan commented on 2/20/2011:

1 ounce of Violette. Not teaspoon, not dash, not drop... I'm scared.


Zachary Pearson commented on 2/20/2011:

Dan,

You might need a full ounce of lemon, but I think it'd be more of a violet sour. CdV isn't that sweet, or at least the sweetness is rather transparent. I'd like your opinion of this and the Piña Ahumado as well. 


Dan commented on 2/22/2011:

I tasted it warm with 1/4 oz Violette, prior to the egg and liked it. As written it is a bit flat. I think the egg white is homogenizing the flavors, which makes the 1 oz of Violette tolerable. Still, a sharper cocktail would be better, and I think acid fights an egg white's dampening effects. I might try skipping the egg white (although the texture is lovely) and scaling back the Violette, or really upping the lemon, or both. Note: I'm not a huge fan of Grandma's Perfume, so a little Violette goes a long way for me.


Zachary Pearson commented on 2/22/2011:

Dan,

Yeah, I think it needs 3/4 to an ounce of lemon. I also think the egg not only homogenizes the flavors, but interferes with your ability to taste sweet and sour flavors specifically. I do appreciate your trying the drink, especially considering your proclivities towards less sweet drinks.


Zachary Pearson commented on 2/23/2011:

This is now more harmonious. It loses a bit of the texture with the higher acid, the violet isn't as prominent, and it seems to push the gin forward. But it's a good drink in a fruit basket sort of way - lots of subtle aroma and flavor and it kind of has a raspberry accord from the cherry (Campari), pineapple, lemon and violet. Interesting.


christina in tacoma commented on 9/16/2011:

This drink has such a unique flavor, and is 5 stars for me. The fruit and floral notes are nicely balanced by the Campari and lemon; each delicious ingredient contributes to an even greater final product. The end result is nuanced, layered, and harmonious. I used Voyager gin.


Zachary Pearson commented on 9/16/2011:

Christina, Glad you like it - gin, Campari and pineapple seem to be perfect matches for each other (in the way that dark rum, Cynar and lime are), but I struggle with both of those combinations - see The Riviera. It's also a great example of detailed commentary being useful. 

Since you like this, you might also try the Broken Shoe Shiner, from Beta Cocktails. 

Thanks,

Zachary


christina in tacoma commented on 9/16/2011:

My to-try list keeps growing :) Thanks for the suggestions. I have always skipped over recipes that list pineapple juice, figuring they would be too sweet, but I sure did like the muddled pineapple, so I will keep an open mind.


Piña Ahumado

1 1⁄2 oz Cynar
1⁄2 oz Lemon juice
2 sli Pineapple (Rings, cut into quarters)
Instructions

Muddle pineapple rings and Peychaud's. Add remaining ingredients and shake well over ice. Double strain. Lemon twist garnish.

Notes

Cynar and Tequila are both smoky, and this highlights them. Nice texture, complex in the midpalate, savory and bitter back.

History

A piña is the name given to the core of the agave plant, from which tequila is made. Agave piñas resemble pineapple fronds.

Yields Drink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Zachary Pearson, Kindred Cocktails
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(4 ratings)
From other users
  • As written, needs more acid, and perhaps flip Cynar and Lemon — ★★★
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Dan commented on 2/22/2011:

Good cocktail, but a rather sweet. Would benefit from more bite from acid and alcohol. Suggest flipping Cynar and Tequila ratios, adding more lemon, and perhaps reducing Cointreau or eliminating it add upping the orange bitters (maybe Angostura orange). Promising.


Bijou (dry)

1 1⁄2 oz Gin
1⁄2 oz Sweet vermouth
1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
1 Maraschino cherry
Instructions

Stir, strain, straight up, cocktail glass, garnish.

Notes

See Bijou for historic 1:1:1 ratio

History

Bijou means "jewel" in French. Bijou combines the colors of three jewels: gin for diamond, vermouth for ruby, and chartreuse for emerald.

This variation is somewhat less sweet with reduced chartreuse and sweet vermouth.

Yields Drink
Year
1900
Authenticity
Altered recipe
Creator
Variation. The first reference to original is Harry Johnson's Bartender's Manual, 1900
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(26 ratings)
From other users
  • I usually think these classics are too sweet, but this version holds up and the chartreuse is tamed pretty well. — ★★★★★
  • Upped chartreuse and vermouth to 3/4.
  • Just a few dashes of maraschino
  • 2:1:1, one ice cube
  • 2:1:1, 2 dashes orange bitter, Sam Ross
  • 11/12/13
  • Made with Plymouth and Carpano Antica. It is indeed dry.
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  • Oxford Comma — Gin, Dry vermouth, Herbal liqueur, Maraschino Liqueur, Celery bitters, Lemon peel
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yarm commented on 9/20/2022:

The "history" for several drinks on Wikipedia were altered by a rapscallion of a bartender working at Drink who changed the Sidecar to Sam "Suck It" Treadway, the Sazerac to John D. Gertsen, and the Bijou to Ezra Star plus a few others. The damage leaked into such reputable sites as Tales of the Cocktail and someone even dressed up as John D. Gertsen to act out the creation of the Sazerac.


ovractiv commented on 7/09/2023:

Anyone else wonder about the 1oz maraschino cherry? Assuming that’s just one cherry, right?


Craig E commented on 7/15/2023:

Yes, that must've been a "units" error. Fixed, thanks.


Shawn C commented on 2/17/2025:

Curated to remove erroneous creator information that snuck in from vandalized Wikipedia page. Tightened description, fixed year and source for unaltered original. Replaced defunct dry recipe source link with web archive link.


The Notorious F.L.I.P.

1⁄2 oz Amaro Nardini
3⁄4 oz Demerara syrup
1 pn Nutmeg (as garnish)
Instructions

Dry shake, shake with ice, strain, fizz glass, garnish with freshly grated nutmeg.

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Michael Rubel, the Violet Hour, Chicago, IL
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
5 stars
(1 rating)
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  • Calabura Flip — Jamaican rum, Cherry Liqueur, Bitters, Demerara syrup, Whole egg
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  • Noggin Knocker — Bourbon, Fernet Branca, Milk, Grade B maple syrup, Whole egg, Nutmeg
  • Coraje — Dark rum, Bonal Gentiane Quina, Coffee liqueur, Orange bitters, Bitters, Orange peel
  • Oh Flip — St. Lucian Rum, Cognac, Becherovka, Bitters, Whole egg, Sugar, Black pepper, Cinnamon

Fernando

1 1⁄4 oz Fernet Branca
3⁄4 oz Galliano
1 spg Mint (smacked, as garnish)
Instructions

Stir, strain, straight up, cocktail glass, smack mint on palm and lay on surface as garnish

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Employee's Only bar, New York, NY
Source reference

Speakeasy by Jason Kosmas & Dushan Zaric http://egullet.org/p1789975

Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(6 ratings)
From other users
  • sweet and minty... weird
  • Excellent with cocchi americano substituted for the white vermouth.
  • Strong Fernet presence. A bit chocolaty, if you use your imagination. Good drink for a Fernet lover. Plenty sweet with Bianco. Nicely dry and complex with fin — ★★★
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The Paternal Drunk commented on 1/27/2014:

Pretty impressed with this - a Fernet cocktail (with more than 1/4 oz. of the stuff) that I can get behind. I know it's an Employees Only original, but any ideas as to where the name comes from?


DrunkLab commented on 1/27/2014:

In Argentina, a Fernet & Coca-Cola (effectively the national beverage) is sometimes called a Fernando. I don't know if the EO boys had that in mind when they named their decidedly not Coke-tasting beverage, but it could be the source, or perhaps both drinks draw from some older piece of Fernet lore I don't know about. Or maybe the EO guys are just huge ABBA fans.


The Paternal Drunk commented on 1/27/2014:

DrunkLab, thanks for the info! And thank you for presenting it in a manner that made me lol at least twice.



Alaska Forest

1 1⁄2 oz Gin, Beefeater
1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
Instructions

Stir for 30 seconds, strain into profoundly cold coupe. No garnish.

Notes

Heady, herbal, strong, bracing. Not for the faint of heart, generally one is enough as an apéro. Any classic London Dry would be appropriate.

History

Created for Forest Collins, cocktail and nightlife blogger based in Paris (http://52martinis.blogspot.com) and on Twitter as @52martinis Alaska: 1.5 oz gin, .5 oz yellow Chartreuse

Yields Drink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Your original creation
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(16 ratings)
From other users
  • Used .75 St. George Terroir and .75 Tanqueray 10. Will try with a sprig of rosemary next time. — ★★★★★
  • I like this more than the Alaska cocktail. I also lives up to the name. This is a fantastic herbally piney stirred drink.
  • St. Georges Terroir Gin — ★★★★★
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mahastew commented on 11/09/2013:

I'm under the weather with something called "para-influenza," which apparently is a legal term for "hatin' life," and this drink is treating me just right.


Rob Marais commented on 11/23/2013:

Just catching up with the site, and I appreciate your comments. Surprised you have that kinda eau de vie, it's not too common but man is it original and fun to use in weird drink formulas.
It takes a strong man or woman to enjoy an Alaska Forest! Hope you follow @52martinis on Twitter too.


Eeyore's Requiem

1 1⁄2 oz Campari
1⁄2 oz Gin, Tanqueray (or use more Campari)
1⁄2 oz Cynar
1⁄4 oz Fernet Branca (scant)
1 ds Orange bitters (50% Fee / 50% Regans')
3 twst Orange peel (expressed, one as garnish)
Instructions

Stirred, garnished with heavy orange oil and a pigtail twist.

History

Originally with 2oz Campari and no gin. Revised in the second edition of Beta Cocktails.

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Toby Maloney, The Violet Hour, Chicago, IL
Source reference
Curator rating
5 stars
Average rating
4.5 stars
(75 ratings)
From other users
  • Love it, but I do notice Beta has .25 oz Cynar. Not that I prefer the lesser amount...
  • Well crafted. Campari made more complex. — ★★★★
  • Fabulous. Quite bitter, without any acid to soften it. Fernet adds complexity and depth without obvious menthol. A great drink, even for the Fernet hater. A touch sweet; split with dry? — ★★★★★
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DrunkLab commented on 3/11/2013:

Delicious. Bitter and refreshing. The Campari/Cynar/vermouth is the center of the drink: the Campari is definitely in control, but the Cynar adds interesting herbal/honeyed/savory accents; the blanc vermouth lightens it all up and adds wine, vanilla, and orange notes. Subtle mint from the Fernet and botanical complexity from the Tanq. Some unexpected leather notes on the way down. The orange oil upfront is worth the three twists. I made this half-sized and upon my first sip immediately wished I'd made more.


Cara A commented on 3/05/2023:

Did not have bianco vermouth; subbed in Lillet Blanc. Very refreshing, bitter with just enough sweet to balance 👍🏼


Mixin In Ansley commented on 4/22/2023:

Bottom three ingredients differ from Amaro by BT Parsons. This is better.


Dagreb's Hat (nee Medicine Hat)

3⁄4 oz Canadian whisky
3⁄4 oz Fernet Branca
3⁄4 oz Brandy
Instructions

Build over ice.

Notes

If desired you can stir/strain and garnish with an orange twist.

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Your original creation
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
2 stars
(1 rating)
Similar cocktails

Meletti Lemon Flip

Instructions

Dry shake, shake with ice, strain, straight up, lowball.

History

Ordered an "amaro flip, not too minty" and Ned offered this. Cocktail is not officially named; name given is merely descriptive

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Ned Greene, Hungry Mother, Cambridge, MA
Source reference

Conversation with bartender. http://www.hungrymothercambridge.com/

Curator rating
4 stars
Average rating
4.5 stars
(6 ratings)
From other users
  • Fabulous. Great flip for the non-flip lover. Surprisingly not bitter. I get a gestalt of chocolate from Meletti, but others don't. — ★★★★★
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No similar cocktails found.

Fumidus

Instructions

Shake, strain, float bitters on top of drink, flame orange peel over top.

Yields Drink
Year
2011
Authenticity
Your original creation
Creator
Zachary Pearson
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(9 ratings)
From other users
  • The lemon does not bring it together.
  • Very good complex cocktail for the Islay lover. — ★★★★
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  • Machine Gun Etiquette — Scotch, Apple brandy, Fino sherry, Cynar, Peychaud's Bitters, Apricot liqueur, Orange peel
Dan commented on 2/11/2011:

Fascinating cocktail. I was initially skeptical about the Islay Scotch. I often find that Islay-heavy cocktails are good, but not as good as a nice Islay neat. I made it as stated (1:1:0.5:0.5), except with Bowmore Legend.

This drink however brings together the disparate flavors of the bitter, spicy Punt e Mes, the bitter, savory Cynar, and the smoky Scotch. I thought that maybe the Lemon would be the odd man out, and I tasted the drink at room temperature before adding the lemon. It was very good. I usually don't like sweeter drinks, but I found it very appealing without the lemon. The lemon does add both brightness and the actual lemon notes, which complements the Cynar. It reduces the bitterness a bit, but there is sufficient bitterness to retain interest. It also lends a nice transition, with the smoke and acid and lemon flavors giving way to the lingering bitterness. A good sipper.

I had two thoughts for other directions to try. The first would be substituting lemon bitters for the lemon, and garnishing with a huge expressed lemon peel. The second was to try Xocolatl Mole bitters becauese I think the bitter cacao flavor would go well with the peaty scotch and the Punt e Mes spice.

As written this is a very good cocktail, and a surprise as well.


Zachary Pearson commented on 2/12/2011:

So I made this again, with the sub of Bittermens Xocolatl Mole Bitters, as Dan suggested. I still like the flamed orange peel, though. With the addition of the Mole Bitters, the drink is more cohesive.

I liked the sweetness of the Fee's Whiskey Barrel Aged 09, but the cocktail is now firmed on the back end by the bitters - it's citrus fruit up front, smoky/tobacco in the midpalate, then bitter and chocolatey that lingers. I like this. I'm changing the recipe entry to Xocolatl Mole Bitters... now for a name ;)