Broken Shoe Shiner
Dry shake, shake with ice, strain, cocktail glass, garnish with 9 drops of rose water. Makes two.
Substitute other floral flavor for rose water, such as Crème de Violette. Some may prefer a touch more lemon.
Beta Cocktails
- I try less Pernod.
- will probably try this with Muse Verte...
- Nice. A bit sweet though.
- Very good. Used Absinthe and Creme de Violette. A tad sweet and candy-like. Might be better with more Aperol and less pineapple and pernod.
- Black Mirror — Absinthe, Falernum, Bitters, Lime juice, Vanilla syrup, Soda water, Mint
- Dapperman Sour — Absinthe, Grapefruit juice, Lime juice, Simple syrup, Egg white, Mint
- Viking Funeral — Aquavit, Amaro Abano, Lemon juice, Simple syrup, Egg white
- Czechers in Paradise — Dark rum, Becherovka, Licor 43, Lime juice
- Fifth Stage — Absinthe, Pineapple juice, Lime juice, Orgeat, Cucumber
This exact recipe is posted on About.com and is called "Rimbaud's Left Hand." Any background on which name is more authentic?
http://cocktails.about.com/od/cocktailrecipes/r/rimbaudlefthand.htm
That is odd. The recipe came directly from the first edition of Rogue Cocktails -- now renamed Beta Cocktails. The blurb from the first edition is reproduced in this blog post by Fred Yarm on Cocktail Virgin Slut, along with some interesting backstory.
The only difference I see in the two recipes is that the one from Rogue Cocktails specifies merely "Pernod," but which we assume Stephen means Pernod brand pastis. Rimbaud's Left Hand on about.com specifies "Pernod Absinthe." This is a quite different from the sweet low-alcohol pastis of the Rogue Cocktails recipe. Interestingly, the photograph on the about.com page is copyright Pernod Absinthe.
I wonder if Pernod modified the recipe when it introduced its Absinthe. This is mere speculation, of course. I will see if I can contact Stephen Cole and find out.