Boston Apothecary 3
Stir, strain, straight up, cocktail glass
- Luxardo Maraschino instead of Kirschwasser - 1/4 oz. Garnished with brandied cherry. Served over large rock.
- Thyme Machine — White port, Gin, Bénédictine, Poppy liqueur, Thyme
Stir, strain, straight up, cocktail glass
Stir, strain, rock, lowball
Still playing with this.
4+ more like a 4.5. I could even see giving it a 5 just for the simple (equal parts), effective and innovative combination of components which blend together seamlessly. The Clear Creek Cranberry is a component I have wanted to circle back to, in order to find what really works with it--I didn't have Zucca on my bingo card for that. The sherry provides some wine-base depth.
Shake, strain, serve straight up, granish
We had a Life Sentence vs. Prosecutor Throwdown; these cocktails are rather similar (Benedictine vs. Yellow Chartreuse; bitters or not; slight differences in Rye: liqueur ratio). In these recipes, the Benedictine and Yellow Chartreuse are pretty interchangeable. While both were good, for us, the slight edge went to the Life Sentence; the bitters made the difference. Used Wild Turkey Rye.
Stir, strain, cocktail glass, garnish with a lemon twist.
Clarified that the sherry should be very dry, preferable a Manzanilla.
Shake, strain, straight up, cocktail glass.
Basically a Rob Cooper Aviation
Death and Co, pg. 154
Candylike.
Updated this as per the recipe in the Death and Co. book.
Thanks,
Zachary
Hard to believe it needs the simple!
Mine wasn't candylike: reduced st germain to .5, omitted syrup, probably would do better with even less st germain as it overpowers the creme yvette even at the reduced amount, sprig of rosemary which I didn't think would work but lent a nice spicy herbal touch to tame the sweetness a little.
Shake, strain, serve up
As made at John Dory - too sour for some, may want to add simple syrup
This pre-dates Sasha. It's based off of a century old classic that they made famous by taking it out of obscurity and putting on a menu at the John Dory Oyster Bar. Couldn't find which book had the curaçao version but I did find a few that had the grenadine Star Daisy. The NY Times article (behind a paywall) about it describes the lineage a little better (but I can't get to it now).
It's definitely on the sour side, but pleasantly so. I feel like the applejack is a bit lost so I upped it to 1 or so and it made a difference and cut the sour a tad which made it much better for me.
Build in shaker, add egg white, and dry shake. Add ice, shake well, strain into collins glass without ice. Top with soda and lemon peel expressed and discarded.
Build in a mixing glass, add ice and stir. Strain into a chilled, stemmed glass
Amazed by the perfect balance of this recipe. VERY well done IMHO.
Build in shaker, add ice, shake briefly don't over dilute
Cocchi and grapefruit start sweet then sing together in a lightly sour/bitter finish
Not bad, but I mostly taste grapefruit juice. I think this would be worth trying again with 1/2 oz grapefruit juice and a little club soda.
I made this up with a laphroaig rinse, 1.5 oz cocchi, 1 oz cognac, and 1/2 oz grapefruit. A different drink, but really delicious.
Build over ice, lowball, don't stir.
Originally written as 3oz to 6oz in a highball -- a rather big drink by modern standards.