Ginger Batida aka Ginger Caipirinha

2 oz Cachaça
3 t Cherry juice (or 2 tsp grenadine)
2 t Grenadine (if no cherry juice)
Instructions

Shake, rocks, lowball, garnish with cherry or crystallized ginger,

YieldsDrink
Authenticity
Unknown
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Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(6 ratings)
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Alamagoozlum Cocktail

1⁄2 oz Egg white
2 oz Genever
2 oz Water
1 1⁄2 oz Jamaican rum
1 1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse (or yellow)
1 1⁄2 oz Gomme syrup
1⁄2 oz Bitters, Angostura
1⁄2 oz Curaçao
Instructions

Shake very, very hard and long. Chilled glass. Makes about 3 drinks.
, Shake, Straight Up, Cocktail

Notes

JP Morgan's cocktail, supposedly.

YieldsDrink
Year
1939
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Updated by Dr. Cocktail
Source reference

"VS&FC", Ted Haigh, pg. 39. Cites "The Gentleman's Companion", AKA "Jigger, Beaker and Flask" (1939) by Charles H. Baker Jr.

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  • The Close Call — Applejack, Genever, Port, Herbal liqueur, Bitters, Heavy cream, Orange juice, Grade B maple syrup, Cinnamon
  • European Union — Old Tom Gin, Sweet vermouth, Calvados, Strega, Bitters
  • Tammany Hall — Irish whiskey, Genever, Sweet vermouth, Bénédictine, Bitters, Cherry, Lemon peel
  • Zander — Genever, Sweet vermouth, Bénédictine, Bitters, Orange bitters, Lemon peel
  • Cherry Russell — Cognac, Gin, Aromatized wine, Peychaud's Bitters, Sour cherry syrup, Cherry, Lemon peel

This comes off pretty sweet even for a punch recipe. As is, it might be best served in a goblet of crushed ice with straws and fruit garnish. For the cocktail-style drink, after cutting the recipe in half, I still dropped the syrup and liqueurs down to a couple dashes each and omitted the egg white. I think the yellow chartreuse works better here, and Grand Marnier instead of Curaçao was a good choice. Granted, that may be starting to veer away from the original drink.


Buck's Fizz

1⁄4 oz Gin
4 oz Champagne
Instructions

Slowly pour the ingredients in the order listed into a champagne flute or wine glass.
, Build, Flute

Notes

Boring -- like a slightly revved up Mimosa. Pretty. Might be good for a brunch.

YieldsDrink
Year
1920's
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Updated by Robert Hess
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(2 ratings)
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Yellow Daisy

1 1⁄2 oz Gin
1 1⁄2 oz Dry vermouth
1 ds Absinthe
1 Cherry (as garnish)
Instructions

Stir, up, coupe. Garnish with a cherry.

Notes

3/4 oz grand Marnier might be a bit much for today's palate. Perhaps start with 1/4.

YieldsDrink
Year
1930
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Savoy Hotel
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(3 ratings)
From other users
  • "Would you like some perfume in your Martini?"
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Cranberry Brandy Sour

1 oz Brandy
1 oz Cachaça
3⁄4 oz Lemon juice
1⁄2 oz Lime juice
2 t Cassis
Instructions

Shake all but Soda, serve on ice, top with soda, stir.
Cranberries, Shake, Highball

YieldsDrink
Authenticity
Unknown
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(4 ratings)
From other users
  • Very good sour - maybe a bit too sour, but I had to sub Myers dark rum for cachaca cuz I was out.
Similar cocktails
  • Doctor Funk (Trader Vic) — Jamaican rum, Herbal liqueur, Club soda, Lemon juice, Lime, Grenadine, Sugar
  • The S.O.S. — Light rum, Aperol, Lime juice, Club soda, Maple syrup
  • Sabor de Soledad — Reposado Tequila, Pear eau de vie, Herbal liqueur, Soda water, Lime juice, Cinnamon syrup, Ginger syrup
  • Fake Patois — Jamaican rum, Bonal Gentiane Quina, Lime juice, Honey syrup, Soda water, Grapefruit peel
  • Suffering Travis — Gin, Whiskey, Rhum Agricole, Hibiscus Liqueur, Ginger beer, Lime juice, Grenadine
Dan commented on 11/21/2012:

This is a great crowd-pleasing Thanksgiving cocktail. When you're making your cranberry relish, simply reserve some cranberry syrup for use later in cocktails. If you don't have cachaça (a Brazilian rum-like spirit made from sugar cane juice), you could substitute a light rum.


Old Fashioned

3 oz Bourbon (or rye)
1 cube Sugar (or 1 tsp simple syrup)
1 twst Lemon peel (as garnish)
Instructions

Wet sugar cube with bitters and a dash of soda or water in an old fashioned glass, muddle, add ice and whiskey, stir to dissolve thoroughly, garnish

Notes

Some prefer a fruity garnish, including an orange slice, lemon twist, and 2 maraschino cherries. Some top with a splash of soda. Perhaps more so than any other cocktail, the Old Fashioned may be endlessly varied by using different spirits, or by adding a dash of curacao, absinthe, or other liqueur. Some would argue that these latter additions make it an "Improved" cocktail.

History

The original cock-tail, a combination of whiskey, sugar, bitters, and ice.

YieldsDrink
Year
1806
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Pendennis Club, Louisville, KY.
Source reference

Gary Regan, The Joy of Mixology. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_fashioned_cocktail

Quickstart
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(60 ratings)
From other users
  • Add orange peel.
  • Typically make mine short with 2 oz whiskey, 2 ds bitters, muddle orange peel with simple and bitters and then add ice and whiskey.
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It's that time again - we now have 36 variations of the Old Fashioned, and I'm going to thin them out (by hiding them) based on how many people have the drink in their cocktail book - I feel it's better than either deleting them or merging them into this drink and making a note. Just as a heads up, I'm also going to do this to the Negroni and the Martini - any new variations of these three drinks will need to come from a great bar or be so compelling it deserves to be seen by everyone.  Thanks, Zachary


J.S-g. commented on 2/18/2017:

Made an altered version using 2 oz rye and a 1/2 oz of orange oleo saccharum and two dashes of Angostura. Made me think of the orange-forward on-tap Old Fashioned at the Union Kitchen (Copenhagen) I had a few years ago. Really nice and simple. 



Martini

2 1⁄2 oz Gin
1⁄2 oz Dry vermouth
1 ds Orange bitters (optional)
1 twst Lemon zest (or olive, as garnish)
Instructions

Stir, strain, up, cocktail glass, garnish with a twist or olive

Notes

Ratios of Gin to vermouth vary widely. Many enthusiasts prefer much more than the capful or whisper sometimes used. The inclusion of orange bitters is a relatively recent revival of an original ingredient. Use only good, fresh vermouth.

History

Originally made with sweet vermouth. A "dry" Martini designated the use of dry vermouth.

YieldsDrink
Year
1911
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Knickerbocker Hotel, NYC (maybe)
Quickstart
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(34 ratings)
From other users
  • Preferred preparation: [Tucci, S.; Taste: My Life Through Food; New York: Gallery Books, 2021.; page 201]. — ★★★★★
  • 2:1 Beefeater 24 to Dolin Dry, orange bitters, lemon peel
  • Letherbee Vernal Gin 2016 — ★★★★★
  • Formula #1 (Turf Club)
  • Use 2.66:1 (2 oz gin, 0.75 vermouth) + orange bitters +lemon peel
  • I tend to use 3:1 instead of 5:1 gin to vermouth.
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When making a Dry Martini with St. George Terroir Gin, I recommend adding a small amount, no more than a quarter ounce, of Clear Creek's Douglas Fir Eau de Vie. One of the Terroir's botanicals is Doug Fir, and the two spirits meld together beautifully with the vermouth to make something redolent of West Coast forests without being overwhelmingly pine-y (your tastes may vary). Grapefruit bitters are a good way to go in this Martini. If Douglas Fir can't be found, the Terroir still makes an excellent, richly herbal Martini on its own.


Norm commented on 10/11/2014:

The 3-1 ratio of gin to dry vermouth along with orange bitters and a lemon peel is the recipe I use. I've seen this particular variant called the "Nick and Nora". Moving on to "which gins" and "which vermouths" could fill pages.


miker commented on 2/06/2016:

I like this variant from David Wondrich's Imbibe, called Formula #1 (Turf Club). It's a lot sweeter, but I tend to like things on the sweet side.

1.5 oz Old Tom Gin

1.5 oz Italian Vermouth

2-3 dash bitters (I used angostura, but calls for Peruvian)


Gin and Sweet Vermouth with a twist is occasionally known as a "Gin & It".  Not worth making a new recipe, but also delic.


Probably worth mentioning Audrey Sanders' Fitty Fitty Martini (equal parts London Dry and dry vermouth, orange bitters and lemon twist) and Eel Bar's Wet Martini (2:1:1 London Dry, blanc vermouth, and dry vermouth, orange bitters and an expressed orange peel). 


Caipirinha

3 oz Cachaça
2 t Sugar
4 wdg Lime (1/2 lime)
Instructions

Squeeze lime wedges into low-ball glass and muddle with sugar until dissolved. Add cachaça. Stir.

Notes

Brazils most famous drink. Time-savier: use 1/2 oz lime juice and 1/2 oz simple syrup. For some, 2 oz of of cachaça is sufficient.

YieldsDrink
Authenticity
Unknown
Source reference

Gary Regan, The Joy of Mixology

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Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(21 ratings)
From other users
  • Went with lime juice and simple sugar option.
  • Refreshing and boozy. I lived in Brazil for 3yrs. Cut 1/2 - 1 lime into pieces & put 2 T sugar in a bottom of rocks glass, muddle, add ice & at least 3oz cachaca - cheap stuff ok. Enjoy! Never liked simple w/ this drink.
  • I like this: 2 oz cachaca; 3/4 of a lime; 3/4 oz simple; 1 cube. Muddle, shake with cracked ice, strain to chilled DOF with cracked ice.
  • Use 2 oz Cachaça
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  • Casa Samba — Cachaça, Bénédictine, Peychaud's Bitters, Absinthe, Sugar, Lime, Salt Solution
  • Libélula — Cachaça, Elderflower liqueur, Maraschino Liqueur, Lime juice, Simple syrup

Refreshing and boozy. I lived in Brazil for 3yrs. Cut 1/2 - 1 lime into pieces & put 2 T sugar in a bottom of rocks glass, muddle, add ice & at least 3oz cachaca - cheap stuff ok. Enjoy! Never liked simple w/ this drink.


Amber Hive

1 oz Cachaça
3⁄4 oz Sloe gin, Plymouth
1⁄2 oz Lemon juice
1⁄2 oz Egg white
1⁄3 oz Campari
1⁄3 oz Simple syrup
Instructions

Dry shake, then shake vigorously with ice, strain, straight up, cocktail glass

Notes

Strong sloe flavor with bitter undertones. Very pretty pink color. Created with Abelha Silver Cachaça in mind

YieldsDrink
Year
2009
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Jay Hepburn, Oh Gosh
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(10 ratings)
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  • Girls Can Tell — Pisco, Campari, Maraschino Liqueur, Lime juice, Strawberry, Pineapple syrup
  • Eden Terrace Fizz — English-style rum, Aperol, Sloe gin, Lemon juice, Soda water, Simple syrup
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Aviation Cocktail

2 oz Gin (London Dry)
Instructions

Shake. strain, up.

Notes

Ensslin's recipe is 2 parts London Dry gin, 1 part lemon juice, 2 dashes each Maraschino and Creme de Violette, with no garnish. Ted Haigh, in Vintage Spirits and Forgotten Cocktails has this as 2 1/2 oz gin, 3/4 oz lemon juice, and 2 or 3 dashes of Maraschino - it omits the creme de violette, which is a transcription error from Ensslin to the Savoy Cocktail Book. This can be made more floral with more violette and sweeter by reducing the lemon juice.

Aviation Cocktail
Wikipedia public domain
YieldsDrink
Year
1916
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Hugo Ensslin, Hotel Wallick, New York, NY
Source reference

Recipes for Mixed Drinks, Hugo Ensslin, pg. 7

Quickstart
Curator rating
4 stars
Average rating
4 stars
(104 ratings)
From other users
  • Gin- sour, floral
  • Reduce lemon juice to 1/2 ounce.
  • 1/6/13
  • I did 2oz gin (Solveig), .5oz+ lemon, .5oz Maraschino, 1tsp CdV. Happy with taste and color.
  • Violette, for blue tint, or nothing. Creme Yvette makes it red.
  • Very happy with: 2 oz gin, 3/4 oz lemon juice, 1/3 oz maraschino, 1/4 oz créme de violette. — ★★★★★
  • I prefer 2oz gin, 1/2oz each maraschino/lemon and 1-2 barspoons violette with a cherry
  • Dates to 1930. Except for addition of creme de violette, this is version in Gary Regan's "Joy of Mixology." 4:1:1
  • current preferences: 2 oz gin 0.75 oz lemon 2 t (0.33 oz) maraschino 1 t violette 0.25 oz simple
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famico commented on 11/02/2012:

Gary Regan's Joy of Mixology book does a simpler, less lemon, more cherry, no violette, version: 2oz gin, 1/2oz maraschino, 1/2 lemon. If I like Regan's version, I'll get Creme de Violette later.


Dan commented on 11/02/2012:

I suspect that Gary, like Ted Haigh, omits the Violette or Yvette because at the time of the writing, it wasn't available. I think it's pretty clear that the original had either Yvette or possibly Violette in order to give it the characteristic light blue color. Today, Cooper's Yvette isn't blue, so I think most people are using Violette. That said, the Violette is very strong, so I personally recommend starting with only 1/2 tsp and increasing if you like that perfume-like floral flavor. I do think that the cocktail is much more interesting with Violette. The funkiness of the Maraschino somehow offsets the yuckiness of grandma's Violette -- in a counter-intuitive sort of synergy. I hate to say it, but since Violette is artificially colored, you could add a drop of diluted blue food coloring to achieve the color if you don't have (or don't want) Violette.


I'm going to clean up this cocktail and its five variations tonight. If you think one of them is worth saving - other than the Aviation Cocktail #1, which I think we should rename Aviation (Jacques Straub), please let me know.

Thanks,

Zachary


DPlum commented on 3/21/2013:

I've tried to like this cocktail with similar proportions, but the lemon needs far more sweetener to make a comfortable balance on my tongue. I do find that the Creme de Violette does a wonderful job of toning down the harsher edge of the Maraschino and I really like the pairing in equal proportions. My current favorite proportions are 1.5 oz Gin, and .5 oz across the board for the Creme de Violette, Maraschino and Lemon Juice. The drink loses the famous sky-blue color, but still is quite a beauty with a cherry resting at the base.


I tried this cocktail last night for the first time using the proportions listed in the Haus Alpenz recipe which differs slightly from your recipe. Both, if I'm not mistaken, differ from Hugo Ensslin's recipe which I liked the best. I've started on a classic cocktail kick and didn't realize what I was missing.


jaba commented on 1/26/2014:

Are you sure it's only 2 dashes of Violette? I used the Rothman and Winter CdV for this recipe and I tasted no creme de violette and it wasn't at all blue.


Jaba,

I'm sure it's 2 dashes. You could try setting a "part" at 3/4 oz (which will make a small drink), or increasing the Violette until you like it.

Thanks,

Zachary


Dan commented on 1/26/2014:

I use 1/4 tsp per dash, so about 1/2 tsp for this, which I find gives a nice background floral aspect and a slight greyish color. There is always uncertainty in what a dash is, especially for an ingredient that doesn't come in a dasher bottle.

Some use up to a 1/2 oz of Violette. There's no reason you shouldn't adjust this to your taste. You may have to adjust the lemon too.


jaba commented on 5/27/2014:

Liked:
2 oz gin
1 oz lemon
1/2 oz maraschino
1 tsp CdV


Jmmrad commented on 5/29/2016:

It's hard to measure dash of CdV and Maraschino liqueur. I prefer the 1/4 oz CdV, 1/3-1/2 oz Maraschino along w 1/2-3/4 oz lemon juice and 2 oz gin.