Bee's Knees
Shake, strain, cocktail glass
Honey syrup is honey and hot water 1:1, mixed and cooled.
Prohibition-era recipe was 1:1:1 with honey, rather than honey syrup, a sickeningly sweet drink by modern standards, no doubt
David Embry, The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks, 1949
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- *Very* good with Barr Hill Reserve Tom Cat gin (made in honey barrels) - and increasing lemon and honey syrup to 0.75oz each per the other comment - definitely brings this from a 4 to a 5 for me. — ★★★★
- Many proportional variations out there but I found that 2oz gin, 3/4 honey syrup, 3/4 lemon brought this from a 3 to a 4
- Very good. Not terribly exciting.
- Too gin forward
- Pretty good for a 3 ingredient, 1 spirit concoction.
- Classic for a reason. Use good/strong honey to make your syrup!
- Increase Lemon and Honey syrup to .75 oz. Add 2 dash Lavender Bitters.
- Vary honey to taste
- Good, but not awesome
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"Prohibition-era recipe was 1:1:1 with honey, rather than honey syrup, a sickeningly sweet drink by modern standards, no doubt"
What evidence of this other is there other than hearsay from Embury 15 years after Prohibition ended? Boothby 1934 coming right out of Prohibition has it greatly more spirit forward and was closer to the Prohibition era.