An amateur mixologist prepares and assesses the cocktails and miscellaneous drink recipes in Jack Grohusko's mixed drinks manual.
Showing posts with label 1/2 lime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1/2 lime. Show all posts
Friday, March 1, 2019
340. Sunshine Cocktail
My interpretation:
1.5 oz Beefeater London Dry Gin
0.5 oz Noilly Prat Extra Dry Vermouth
1 tsp lime juice
1/2 tsp Jack Rudy Grenadine
1 egg white
Shake vigorously with a little ice about 45 seconds, strain into claret glass or 5-6 oz stemmed glass, serve. — This gin-and-lime brunch recipe, resembling a frothed up, fancy Gin Daisy/Sour, first appears in Straub 1913 with some additional details (Old Tom gin, 2-person drink), whence it finds its way into JM1916. An unrelated drink by this name in Barflies & Cocktails (1927) is essentially a brandy-rum sour. The 1931 Old Waldorf Bar Days has a somewhat related Sunshine amounting to a lemon-lime silver fizz in a lemonade glass, omitting sweetener. Modern drinks bearing this name are unrelated, or perhaps derived from McElhone’s recipe.
Thursday, February 7, 2019
318. Schulke Cocktail
1 oz Beefeater London Dry Gin
0.5 oz home-infused orange gin (Gin Lane 1751 Old Tom + orange peels)
0.5 oz Plymouth Sloe Gin
1 T lime juice
Fill mixing-glass with broken ice, stir, strain, serve. — This interesting Trio balanced with a little lime juice, comes off like a Savoy punch-style drink, though it makes its appearance much earlier in JM1910. The orange gin of the day was Booth’s. Today a number of options are starting to appear again, but home-infused orange gin may still be the best resort in many parts of the States.
Saturday, November 17, 2018
236. Mill Lane Cocktail
My interpretation:
2 oz Bacardí Ocho Años
1 T lime juice
1 tsp Jack Rudy Grenadine
4 dashes (1 tsp) St. George Abinsthe Verte
3 dashes Peychaud’s Bitters
Fill mixing-glass with cracked ice and ingredients including squeezed half lime; shake, strain into cocktail glass, serve. — This cocktail, appearing only in JM1912(Third Edition) through 1933, and apparently an invention of Mr. Grohusko himself, is essentially a Rum Sour using grenadine for sweetener and augmented with anise qualities from Peychaud’s bitters and absinthe. More directly, it is a Bacardí Cocktail so augmented.
Wednesday, November 7, 2018
225. Marqueray Cocktail
My interpretation:
2 oz Bluecoat American Dry Gin
1 egg white
2 dashes Jack Rudy Grenadine (about 1 tsp)
1 dash St. George Absinthe Verte
1/2 T fresh lime juice
Shake all ingredients well with cracked ice, about 30 seconds, strain into cocktail glass, serve. — Borrowed from Straub 1913 for JM 1916, this Gin Sour recipe, with lime for the sour and grenadine for the sweet, distinguishes itself from similar recipes (like the Sunshine Cocktail) by the added enhancement of absinthe, which for a modern twist could be dashed or sprayed on top before serving instead of shaking in. Another example is found here.
2 oz Bluecoat American Dry Gin
1 egg white
2 dashes Jack Rudy Grenadine (about 1 tsp)
1 dash St. George Absinthe Verte
1/2 T fresh lime juice
Shake all ingredients well with cracked ice, about 30 seconds, strain into cocktail glass, serve. — Borrowed from Straub 1913 for JM 1916, this Gin Sour recipe, with lime for the sour and grenadine for the sweet, distinguishes itself from similar recipes (like the Sunshine Cocktail) by the added enhancement of absinthe, which for a modern twist could be dashed or sprayed on top before serving instead of shaking in. Another example is found here.
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Turning the Page
Greetings! We have come to the end of the Cocktails section from Jack’s Manual (1933). In the process of our study, we have discovered so...

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My interpretation: 1 oz Plymouth Gin 0.5 oz Martini & Rossi Extra Dry 0.25 oz Rothman & Winter Orchard Apricot 0.25 o...
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Greetings! We have come to the end of the Cocktails section from Jack’s Manual (1933). In the process of our study, we have discovered so...