Showing posts with label bacardi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bacardi. Show all posts

Saturday, April 6, 2019

376. White Lion Cocktail

My interpretation:
  1 oz Bacardí Blanc
  1 oz lemon juice
  3 dashes Angostura bitters
  3 dashes Jack Rudy grenadine (in lieu of raspberry syrup)
  
 Fill mixing-glass with ice, shake well, strain into cocktail glass, serve. — This “red” version of the venerable pink-hued “Daiquiri Rose” (recently, paler-hued variants have appeared), appears in Harry Johnson’ manual, where it has powdered sugar, both raspberry and curaçao, and gives the option of lemon or lime juice. In early editions, the drink is built as a Fix, in a glass full of fine ice and garnished with seasonal fruit and a straw; later it morphs into a strained Sour; both have only 2-3 dashes of citrus. Johnson’s strained recipe is also echoed in the earlier Grohusko manuals JM1908, 1910, and 1912, which all call for pulverized sugar, half lime or lemon, curaçao, raspberry, and straining into a stemmed glass. Probably following Straub 1913/1914, JM1916 introduces the newer simplified recipe presented here, dropping the lime option and the curaçao and approaching more nearly the sort of Rum Rose we know today.




Wednesday, October 31, 2018

218. Mah-Jongg Cocktail

My interpretation:
  1 oz Cointreau
  1 oz Bluecoat American Dry Gin
  0.5 oz Bacardì Superior White Rum

Shake well (20 seconds), strain into cocktail glass, serve. — This exotically titled recipe appears first in the Savoy Cocktail Book (1935) and from thence is borrowed only for JM1933, the fifth and final edition. In the process, the ratio is changed, since Savoy indicates a 4:1:1 ratio of Gin to Cointreau and Rum (probably conceived as 2/3 Gin and 1/3 Cointreau-Rum mix); Jack’s ratio is 2:2:1, significantly upping the Cointreau quotient and reducing the rum to a background accent by comparison. Using white rum, this drink affords a pearly white quality when shaken, here enhanced by the iridescent effect of Roman glass.
 

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

140. Folies Bergère "Cocktail" (= Cooler)


My interpretation:
  2 oz Bacardí Superior
  6 strawberries, washed and hulled
  2 sprigs of mint
  4 T orange juice
  2 T lime juice 
  2 oz soda

Muddle strawberries and mint sprigs with the rum, add orange and lime juice, stir, pour into highball or shaker filled with ice, top up with soda, add straw and fresh mint leaves or lime garnish. — Of the three recipes attributed to the old Parisian club first appearing in the later JM 1910 (third) edition, viz.


JM 1933 keeps not the cocktail but the Cooler for the cocktail section. Nevertheless, here it is. Perhaps I will add the cocktail as No. 140 1/2 at some point in the future.


Saturday, August 11, 2018

138. Fluffy Ruffles Cocktail


My interpretation:
  1 oz Bacardi White
  1 oz Cocchi Vermouth di Torino

Shake well (30 seconds) with ice, strain into cocktail glass, express lime (or lemon) peel over glass, and garnish. — I prefer the lime with the rum. I use Cocchi to add a little bitterness which is otherwise lacking in this Duo. The recipe previously appeared in the 1930 Savoy Cocktail Book.
 

Sunday, July 15, 2018

111. Daiquiri Cocktail



My interpretation:
  2 oz El Dorado or Bacardi Rum (white)
  1 T lemon or lime juice
  1 tsp powdered sugar

Shake well (20 seconds), strain into cocktail glass. — The standard version of this rum sour today calls for lime, but lemon is a good alternative. Lemon-lime (1 tsp. each) is another good choice.
   


Thursday, April 19, 2018

19. Bacardi Cocktail


My interpretation:
  1.25 oz Bacardí 8 Años
  0.25 oz Demarara 3 Year
  0.75 oz Casa Mariol Vermut Negro
  0.75 oz Martini & Rossi Extra Dry

Fill mixing glass with broken ice, stir mixture, strain, serve. I wanted to use the Bacardí 8 here but it needed to be balanced a little with some 3 Year Demarara. I much prefer this version of a “Bacardi Cocktail” (what we might call a Bacardi Perfect) as a vehicle for the rum to the usual version with grenadine and lime juice (as e.g. found in Straub 1914).


 

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...