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Stop Signal

1 1⁄2 oz Gin
1⁄2 oz Sloe gin
1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
3⁄4 oz Lemon juice
Instructions

Build with Sloe Gin on bottom, then Green Chartreuse, Lemon, Gin, and dash Angostura.

Notes

I made up the name, which makes sense if Green Chartreuse is used.

Yields Drink
Year
2009
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Boston Apothecary
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(9 ratings)
Similar cocktails
  • Thyme and Thyme Again — Gin, Herbal liqueur, Orange bitters, Lemon juice, Simple syrup, Thyme
  • Gin Basil Smash — Gin, Lemon juice, Simple syrup, Basil
  • Daisy Mae — Gin, Herbal liqueur, Lime juice, Simple syrup, Mint
  • Irma La Douce — Gin, Herbal liqueur, Lemon juice, Grapefruit juice, Simple syrup, Cucumber
  • Hummingbird Down — Gin, Herbal liqueur, Lemon juice, Honey syrup
mahastew commented on 2/12/2013:

I was initially afraid of all that lemon juice but my fears were unfounded, turns out. Very nice and well-balanced. I decided to forgo the layering nonsense and opted to shake and strain.


Biff Malibu commented on 2/07/2022:

Go a bit skosh on the lemon juice to let the sloe gin shine through.


Rubicon

2 oz Gin
1⁄2 oz Lemon juice
1⁄2 oz Herbal liqueur, Green Chartreuse
1 spg Rosemary (Soaked in Chartreuse & ignited)
1 spg Rosemary (as garnish)
Instructions

Soak rosemary "wreath" in Chartreuse in lowball. Shake other ingredients. Ignite Chatreuse (perhaps with a Chartreuse mister). Let burn a moment, strain shaker into glass to extinguish. Top with cracked ice, stir, garnish.

Yields Drink
Year
2007
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Jamie Boudreau
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4 stars
(22 ratings)
From other users
  • 4.5 stars for the drink, last half a star for the fire show
  • Made the first time with Letherbee 2016 Vernal gin, the second time with Sipsmith gin. We preferred the latter which allowed the rosemary flavor to shine. — ★★★★★
  • A Last Word with some fun pyrotechnics. — ★★★★★
Similar cocktails
  • Gin e Succo — Gin, Strega, Lemon juice, Lemon syrup, Ginger beer
  • London Briar — Gin, Framboise, Maraschino Liqueur, Herbal liqueur, Lime juice
  • Evergreen Swizzle — Gin, Herbal liqueur, Zirbenz Stone Pine Liqueur, Lime juice, Simple syrup
  • Improved Aviation — Gin, Maraschino Liqueur, Crème de Violette, Bénédictine, Cherry Bitters, Orange bitters, Lime juice
  • Ellen Sagun — Gin, Bénédictine, Orange Curaçao, Lemon juice, Lemon peel
Dan commented on 9/14/2011:

Updated to authentic recipe: removed Angostura Orange bitters and added instructions to ignite Green Chartreuse.


rwilde commented on 9/30/2011:

This seems to be a nice twist on the Last Word. Made a couple of last night and loved how the Chartreuse lights beautifully. I did feel the second sprig of Rosemary a bit overkill.


Southeastern Cocktail

2 oz Cachaça
1⁄2 oz Amaro Abano, Luxardo
1⁄2 oz Cynar
1⁄2 oz Bénédictine
1⁄2 oz Lime juice
1 twst Lemon zest
Instructions

Shake, strain, rocks, low-ball, lemon twist garnish

Notes

From an idea from Eastern Standard. Cynar, Lime, and bitters are my additions. Quite bitter. Good cocktail to linger over. Substitute other pie-spice amari, such as Ramazzotti as desired. Abano has a strong black pepper top note.

History

Cachaca, Benedictine, "Luxardo Amaro", which I assume means Luxardo's Abano amaro.

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Altered recipe
Creator
Dan Chadwick, based on an idea from Eastern Standard, Boston, MA
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3.5 stars
(5 ratings)
From other users
  • Made with LeBlon. The hogo is dominant and accentuated by all of the bitter elements. I'm not a fan of rhum agricole / cachaca as the dominant flavor - 2 stars for me personally, but pushed up to 3 as hogo-lovers may enjoy.
  • Bitter. Slow drinking. Complex. Might benefit from a top-shelf Cachaca (Leblon?) — ★★★★
Similar cocktails
  • Going Asiatic — Cachaça, Cynar 70, Suze, Herbal liqueur, Lime juice, Ginger syrup
  • Crab Cakes — Pisco, Amaro, Ancho Reyes chile liqueur, Rhubarb bitters, Lemon juice, Salt
  • Los Altos Negros — Blanco tequila, Amaro Abano, Zucca, Aperol, Lime juice
  • (the) Four C's — Cachaça, Campari, Cynar 70, Chocolate bitters
  • Dock of the Bay — Sotol, Amaro, Grapefruit liqueur, Orange

Rambler

1 1⁄2 oz Rye, Rittenhouse 100
1⁄2 oz Dry vermouth, Vya
1⁄2 oz Amaro Nonino
1 Maraschino cherry (as garnish)
Instructions

Stir, strain, straight up, cocktail glass, garnish

Notes

Quantities are a guess. Also not absolutely sure about the garnish.

Yields Drink
Year
2010
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Lord Hobo, Cambridge, MA
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(9 ratings)
From other users
  • Maybe less Luxardo
  • As always, the maraschino flavor dominates making it taste indistinguishable from other whisky-based drinks containing the spirit. Still, good enough
  • Test some quantities.
  • Need to test quantites
Similar cocktails
  • The Front Street — Rye, Ramazzotti, Sweet vermouth, Maraschino Liqueur, Maraschino cherry
  • Armistice — Rye, Dry vermouth, Herbal liqueur, Maraschino Liqueur, Bitters
  • Beatnik — Rye, Averna, Madeira, Bitters, Orange peel
  • Bittersweet Romance — Rye, Sweet vermouth, Ramazzotti, Apricot liqueur, Bitters
  • Sabotta Dusk — Rye, Cognac, Sweet vermouth, Averna, Bitters

Pear-Ginger Batida

1 1⁄2 oz Cachaça
1⁄2 oz Pear eau de vie
3⁄4 oz Lime
1⁄2 oz Grenadine, Stirrings (or)
1⁄3 oz Cherry juice (from high-quality jarred baking cherries)
Instructions

Crystallized ginger or cherry, Shake, Rocks, Lowball

Yields Drink
Authenticity
Unknown
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
Not yet rated
From other users
  • Need to verify. Also try 1oz each Cachaca and Poire William. Also try light Rum.
Similar cocktails

K.C.B.

1 3⁄4 oz Gin
1⁄2 oz Kirschwasser (or kummel)
1⁄2 oz Apricot liqueur
1⁄2 oz Lemon
Instructions

If not enough Apricot/Lemon, increase both up to 1/4 oz (1 1/2 tsp)
Lemon twist, Shake, Straight Up, Cocktail

Notes

Good, but not really remarkable. Somehow a bit like pineapple.

Yields Drink
Year
1930's
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Savoy
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
3 stars
(6 ratings)
Similar cocktails
Shawn C commented on 4/12/2023:

I stuck to the Savoy composition, assuming 1/4 oz for the dashes of apricot and lemon juice. The result was 1.5 Tanqueray London dry gin, 0.5 Schladerer Kirschwasser, 1/4 R&W Apricot, 1/4 lemon juice (no bitters or lemon peel.) It is a semi-dry drink this way with only the slightest sweetness from the apricot brandy, which is more than countered by the lemon sour. Dan's 1/2 oz apricot would be better, but I suggest keeping the lemon at 1/4 to make the resulting drink less dry/sour, and therefore more balanced. The primary redeeming feature of the libation is that the kirschwasser's dry cherry pit distillate flavor creates some sort of unexpected synergy with apricot which is worth experiencing. I became aware of this combo recently in another cocktail, and am now looking for other examples of the pairing.


Vieux Carré

Instructions

Stir, strain, rocks, low-ball.

Notes

Some recipes use 3/4 oz of each main ingredient, making a smaller drink.

Yields Drink
Year
1938
Authenticity
Unknown
Creator
Walter Bergeron Monteleone Hotel in New Orleans
Curator rating
5 stars
Average rating
4.5 stars
(112 ratings)
From other users
  • Made this with Rittenhouse, PF 1840, Carpano Antica. It was quite good, but might be better with Punt E Mes?
  • carpano antica
  • Very good. Used Rittenhouse, Remy VSOP, and Cinzano Rosso. Will try with others as well.
  • Quite a lot like a better Manhattan although perhaps a little too sweet for my taste.
  • Made with 2 tsp benedictine — ★★★★★
  • Adding extra 1/2 oz rye and serving up is nice.
  • With 1 oz each High West Double Rye, Sacred Bond, and Cocchi di Torino, 1/4 oz Benedictine, and bitters as specified it didn't seem too sweet to me. Very nice.
  • Nice, slow drink. Used 3/4 oz Punt e Mes (Capano Antica would have ben as good) Rinsed with Benedictine. Use the largest Ice cube(s) possible.
  • One of my favorite cocktails. On a whim tonight I replaced the Rye with Anjeo Tequila, which made for an interesting variation.
  • The recipe I've been using has equal parts (1 oz ea) of the rye, cognac, sweet vermouth, and benedictine, plus 3 ds ea of Ango and Peychauds. The result is somewhat sweet, but I like it.
Similar cocktails
  • All Good Things — Rye, Sweet vermouth, Añejo rum, Peychaud's Bitters, Herbal liqueur, Fernet Branca, Orange peel
  • Heathen VC — Rye, Armagnac, Sweet vermouth, Triple sec, Bitters, Absinthe
  • McClellan's Curse — Rye, Sweet vermouth, Absinthe, Bitters, Allspice Dram
  • Bittersweet Romance — Rye, Sweet vermouth, Ramazzotti, Apricot liqueur, Bitters
  • Greenpoint — Rye, Sweet vermouth, Herbal liqueur, Bitters
Dan commented on 1/02/2014:

A mix of Punt e Mes and dry vermouth is very nice, adds bitter complexity, and tames the sweetness a bit. An improvement IMO.


mikejaz2 commented on 1/31/2014:

I've been experimenting with different combos, looking to make a batch to put into a small (2 litre) charred oak keg for aging. My current combo consists of Old Overholt rye, Carpano Antica, Couvoisier VS, with the requisite herbals and bitters. Tonight, I tried a version using "house bitters" my wife brewed up (recipe courtesy of Brad Parson's "Bitters" book)...they're a little more earthy, dark, and less spicy than Angostura, and I think it allows the Benedictine's herbalness to cut through a bit. I also err on the shy side of the Benedictine and vermouth, preferring a little more bite to my drink. I think I'm getting close...just finished the first one, and I'm going to make a second, but using a stronger rye (Redemption? Don't know...wish I had my trusty handle of Beam Rye, but it disappeared during the holidays...).

Love this site...keep drinking, my friends.


J.S-g. commented on 9/24/2016:

Works wonders with Rittenhouse, Linie, Professore Vermouth, Benedictine, Ango and Peach Bitters! 


J.S-g. commented on 1/07/2017:

Tried it with five year old Zuidam genever instead of the rye, but the genever got lost and the drink needs that rye, I think. 



Mike F commented on 11/08/2022:

I like it with Grassotti vermouth, which has a distinct bitter component that helps keep things from being too sweet. I also go with three shakes of Peychaud's and one of Ango, as someone else mentioned. This is just a great drink.



Shawn C commented on 10/23/2023:

Although the year currently listed for the Vieux Carre is 1938, the first printing of the book that contained it was in 1937 and the drink was perhaps several years older. Per Wayne Curtis of Tale of the Cocktail Foundation, it was created after prohibition ended, to compete with the Sazerac.

The volumes in the recipe in the book were half of what we use now, but the proportions were the same. For some reason Ted Haigh cut the Benedictine in half in the recipe he published. He seems to prefer drier cocktails, and the Benedictine is somewhat responsible for adjusting the sweetness of the drink. One might experiment with the variety/brand cognac used or the vermouth to adjust sweetness instead.


haresfur commented on 5/24/2024:

Made with Wild Turkey 101 rye and Dolin Rouge. Did not find it too sweet but it did benefit from a tiny lemon peel twisted over and discarded. Would be a good one for experimenting with different bitters.


Bitter Elder

1 1⁄2 oz Gin
1⁄2 oz Campari
1⁄2 oz Lemon juice
Instructions

Shake, strain, straight up, cocktail

Notes

Delicious and only slightly bitter.

History

Cocktail resulted from a refinement of an unnamed cocktail using Aperol on Cocktail Chronicles. An anonymous commenter "amateurhour" created the cocktail. A similar comment a month later on ohgo.sh confirms the recipe.

Yields Drink
Year
2008
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
AmateurHour, commenter on Oh Go.sh and Cocktail Chronicales
Curator rating
5 stars
Average rating
4.5 stars
(138 ratings)
From other users
  • Up Campari to .75
  • Straight up pure grapefruit juice
  • grapefruit!
  • Went with the 0.25 Campari/0.25 Aperol split; excellent! In addition, Bitter Luxardo substituted for the Campari works well.
  • Nice, slightly bitter, pretty well balanced. Sort of a grapefruit vibe, as mentioned. Very pretty pink-ish color.
  • Beautiful colour! Definitely use a juniper forward London Dry for this one.
  • Wow. Fantastic cocktail. The degree to which this evokes grapefruit is, as other have suggested, uncanny.
  • yummy. Too much campari for R, but I like it
  • Tastes like grapefruit juice, but there is none in there. Very delicious, bitter, sour and not really sweet.
  • Strong, but not unpleasant, acidity. Absolutely calls grapefruit to mind. Will try variations with Aperol and Cynar.
Similar cocktails
  • Le Antoinette — Gin, Campari, Elderflower liqueur, Lemon juice
  • Flugelhorn — Gin, Elderflower liqueur, Grapefruit bitters, Orange bitters, Lemon juice
  • Novara — Gin, Campari, Passion fruit syrup, Lemon juice
  • French Laundry — Gin, Elderflower liqueur, Maraschino Liqueur, Grapefruit bitters, Lime juice
  • Second Squadron — Gin, Elderflower liqueur, Crème Yvette, Lemon juice, Grapefruit juice, Grapefruit peel

brian.stein@gm… commented on 4/21/2012:

My friend Hugh summed it up, "This is everything a Cosmopolitan wants to be and everything it isn't."


David MacIver commented on 6/17/2012:

Made it with cynar substituting for the campari and got a seriously good drink. I used Berkeley Square as the gin, which is quite herbal, so between that and the cynar this probably ended up significantly more herbal than the original recipe intends but it worked really well.


Leeuummmm commented on 8/29/2012:

I have finally found something nice with Campari in! Really like this drink and the flavour pairing in it. Delightful!


Dan commented on 8/30/2012:

Glad you like this. It is a favorite of mine for when I have a bottle of St Germaine open. You might also try a touch of Campari added to a Pegu Club. This was a drink that got my wife to like Campari.


robertinCLE commented on 5/14/2013:

Delicious. Tried with half Campari, half Aperol per the suggestion below and it's quite good. Lovely pink color and just slightly bitter. Very appealing.


Cocktailian commented on 7/11/2013:

I really agree w/ the rest of the commentators here: 50/50 on the campari & aperol. Awesome drink! So do we call that substitution a Bitter Elder #2?


Dan commented on 10/14/2013:

For the bitter lover, the Bitter Elder works brilliantly using the inverted amaro template:
2 oz Campari
1 oz gin (ideally overproof & high juniper)
1/2 oz Elderflower liqueur
3/4 oz lemon (or lime)


jaba commented on 12/14/2013:

Made this with half Cynar/half Luxardo Bitter in place of the Campari.
Holy crap was that good.


8stringfan commented on 5/07/2014:

Here's my take on this drink using the Campari/Aperol combo..

Lovely rose pink color with a very, very light nose that is gin forward with a touch of fruit sweetness from the Campari and Aperol - I’m somewhat stunned to not smell any of the St. Germaine. Sip is sweet and St. Germaine dominant on the front of the tongue while the midpalate sees the gin and its juniper notes come out immediately followed by the grapefruit-like bitterness from the Campari and Aperol. The back of the tongue and the swallow see that grapefruit profile grow stronger as the tart lemon juice develops. Amidst all these flavors the St. Germaine still darts in and out providing consistent sweet honey and lychee notes. The finish is pretty bitter with the most immediate flavor comparison being grapefruit juice with a hint of juniper and a good deal of elderflower. All in all, the grapefruit juice comparison is the most telling. Let’s say you were serving a customer at a bar and were thinking of something interesting to do for them with St. Germaine, or even trying to guide someone into drinking gin, and you asked them if they liked grapefruit juice, and they said yes, then you would no doubt have great success with this drink, however, if they say they don’t like grapefruit juice, then the chances are they will hate this drink.


Mai Tai (Trader Vic's)

1 oz Jamaican rum (dark, 7-15 year old)
1 oz Rhum Agricole, St. James Ambre
3⁄4 oz Lime juice
1⁄2 oz Curaçao
1⁄4 oz Orgeat
1⁄4 oz Simple syrup
1 spg Mint (as garnish)
Instructions

Shake, pour into low-ball without straining, garnish

Notes

Some use more orgeat instead of simple syrup. Some use Clément Créole Shrubb instead of Curaçao. Smith & Cross is a nice choice for the Jamaican rum.

Picture of Mai Tai (Trader Vic's)
2007, Creative Commons, Duluoz Cats, Astoria, NY, Wikipedia
Yields Drink
Year
1944
Authenticity
Authentic recipe
Creator
Trader Vic's, Oakland, CA, or Don the Beachcomber, Hollywood, CA. Disputed.
Curator rating
Not yet rated
Average rating
4.5 stars
(62 ratings)
From other users
  • Used Trader Vic's Amaretto in lieu of orgeat. Don't forget the mint Alternative: Old Road: 2oz pineapple; 1/4 each: Amaretto, Simple Syrup, Cointreau, lime; 1 oz Old Road Rum; 3ds Angostura. Shake, serve rocks and float more rum {DLL]
  • No simple…orgeat is plenty sweet for me. Also tried w spritz of mezcal (similar to the Tia Mia profile) - great addition! — ★★★★★
  • classic
  • 8/16/20: 1/2 oz S&C, 1/2 oz Appleton Sig Blend, 1/2 oz El Dorado 12, 1/4 oz Barbancourt 8, 1/4 oz La Favorite Blanc, 1 oz lime, 1/2 oz PF curacao, 3/4 oz Liber and Co orgeat.
  • 1/2 oz Orgeat
  • fresh lime juice makes all the difference here
  • Yup use orgeat, skip simple. Used S&C, Barbancourt 8 yr
  • Spring Break
  • Made with S&C and Rhum JM, and more orgeat than simple. Strong! — ★★★★
Similar cocktails
  • Melba Cocktail — Light rum, Swedish Punsch, Absinthe, Lime juice, Grenadine
  • La Florida Cocktail — Blended rum, White Crème de Cacao, Sweet vermouth, Lime juice, Grenadine
  • Peg Leg — Rum, Grapefruit bitters, Lime juice, Simple syrup, Demerara syrup, Grapefruit peel
  • Anne Bonny's Last Call — Light rum, Orange liqueur, Coconut liqueur, Lime juice, Pineapple syrup, Pineapple, Basil, Lime
  • The Express — Virgin Islands Rum, Nicaraguan Rum, Jamaican rum, Thai Bitters, Lime juice, Orgeat, Lemon juice

Zachary Pearson commented on 10/08/2011:

Here's a vote for the RumDood method: 1 oz each light and dark rum, 3/4 lime, 1/2 oz each Clement Creole Shrubb and Orgeat, 1/4 oz simple, shake, strain over crushed ice, garnish with a spent lime shell and mint. I used Smith & Cross and St. James Hors d'Age.

I think the main problem with Tiki drinks is that they all serve as dump buckets for every crazy flavored syrup in the repertiore - falernum, orgeat, grenadine, curacao, Pimiento Dram... they all go in, and it ends up being a messy drink without discernable flavors.

Thanks,

Zachary


Adam Machanic commented on 12/02/2011:

Grenadine? Falernum? Light rum? Dark rum float? No curacao?
I think the current accepted standard recipe is 2oz of rum (both dark or amber, and of different styles in order to make for a more dynamic flavor), 1oz of lime juice, 1/2oz orange curacao, 1/4oz orgeat, 1/4oz simple syrup. Garnished with half a spent lime and a mint sprig.
Personally I double the orgeat, skip the simple syrup, and add a dash of Angostura. But I wouldn't put that in the recipe.


Dan commented on 12/03/2011:

Bingo. You're absolutely right. The previous recipe was a train wreck. Updated to the 1972 Trader Vic's recipe, which is a close approximation to the original, given that the origin 17 year old J Wrap Jamaican rum is no longer available. Thanks for pointing this out.


Dan commented on 12/03/2011:

After fixing this recipe, I merged two nearly identical recipes into this one (previously known as Mai Tai 2 and Mai Tai - Original Version). I hope everyone approves!



Zachary Pearson commented on 12/03/2011:

Adam,

The original 1944 recipe called for the legendary and impossible to obtain J. Wray 17 year old rum, and was designed to highlight that ingredient. The 1972 version referenced here uses an ounce of two different rums to try and approximate the flavor of the J. Wray.

Thanks,

Zachary


Adam Machanic commented on 12/03/2011:

Perhaps the drink was originally created to highlight the J. Wray 17, but the rest of the formula is the same. I would argue that it's the same drink as long as it uses the same ingredients -- two ounces of some kind of rum -- and the same basic ratio.
Regardless of your feeling on that, where did you come up with 1972? That seems way too recent. For reference, see page 162 of Jeff Berry's "Sippin' Safari," which lists the same recipe, "as served at Trader Vic's in Havana, Cuba, 1958." Which is not to say that the formula was invented that late. Vic Bergeron apparently exhausted the supply of J. Wray 17 within a couple of years after creating the drink, so this two-rum formula was probably created in the late '40s.


Zachary Pearson commented on 12/03/2011:

Adam,

The link is under the reference section of the cocktail - it's a Wikibooks page that cites the original, then the 1972 update (which removed the J. Wray, added St. James Amber, and unspecified the brands of Curacao, simple, and orgeat).

Thanks,

Zachary


Dapuma commented on 4/17/2012:

jamaican rum should be appleton v/x
rhum agricole should be Clement VSOP
other than that it is good to go - personally i prefer juice of half a lime, but if using key lime i would use 3/4 oz