Showing posts with label lime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lime. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

365. Waldorf Special Cocktail.

 My interpretation:
  2 oz Rothman & Winter Orchard Apricot
  1 T lime juice

Shake well (30 seconds), strain into cocktail glass, serve. — This recipe, if it may be called that (better, an apricot liqueur treatment neatly balanced with a little lime), which makes a nice post-prandial, is first described in Straub 1913 (specifying “apricotine”) before appearing in JM 1916. It does not appear in the Old Waldorf Bar Days book—which doesn’t mean, of course, that it was not served or invented there. When combined with a dry martini, it becomes a Webster (q.v.)



Tuesday, February 12, 2019

323. Sidecar Cocktail


My interpretation:
  1 oz Copper & Kings brandy
  1 oz Cointreau
  3/4 T lime juice

In shaker with ice, add ingredients including half lime, shake well (30 seconds), strain into cocktail glass, serve. — This recipe from McElhone’s Barflies & Cocktails (1927) proved so popular, it had to be included in JM1933. There the recipe calls for equal thirds of cointreau (triple sec), cognac, and lemon juice, and is attributed to MacGarry of Buck’s Club, London. The Savoy (1930) Sidecar has twice the brandy but still lemon.
 

Sunday, September 16, 2018

174. Honolulu Cocktail

 My interpretation:
  1 tsp powdered sugar
  1 T orange juice
  1/2 T lime juice
  1 dash Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao
  1 dash Angostura bitters

Shake with ice, strain, garnish with lemon twist, serve. — The original recipe appearing in Jack’s Manual 1908 and continued in 1910 is quite different, resembling more a whisky highball:


The realization of this recipe’s similarity to the Whisky Highball in the more organized 3rd Edition (1910s) must have led to the new, more Tropical-inspired, gin-based, citrus-heavy recipe that continues thereafter, and which seems more prescient of the tiki style that would shortly develop.

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

134. Favorite Cocktail


My interpretation:
  3 sprigs of mint
  2 oz Gin Lane 1751 London Dry
  5 oz Hansen’s Ginger Ale
  2 T fresh lime juice

Muddle mint with gin and lime juice in bottom of highball glass. Add 2–3 large ice cubes and fill with ginger ale. Serve with straw. — This recipe, a sort of Cooler or minted Buck resembling a larger version of the Clarendon “Cocktail” above, first appears in JM 1916 from an unknown source, though similar to a number of variously named long drinks of the type which continues to be popular with other, especially exotic, base liquors. It is clearly unrelated to the Favourite in the Savoy Cocktail Book. The specification of “imported” ginger ale is curious, and may indicate the spicier ginger beer of, e.g., British, Australian, or Jamaican origin.
 

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, May 17, 2018

50. Booby Cocktail


My interpretation:
  1.25 oz St. George Botanivore
  1.5 oz fresh lime juice
  0.25 oz Jack Rudy grenadine.

Shake well (20 seconds) with fine ice (use mallet and bag), strain, and serve. — Properly a Booby Sour (cf. Grenadine Gin Sour, p. 216), this drink first appears in Straub and is thence taken up into JM 1916 with the single addition “and serve.” The dilution from a long shake on fine ice should bring this drink up to capacity and sufficiently soften the lime’s acidity. One question is whether or not to strain the drink, since no instruction is given.  This is a shim or lighter drink in any case.
 
  

Friday, April 13, 2018

13. Apple-Pie Cocktail


My interpretation:
  1.5 oz Bacardí 8
  1.5 oz Casa Mariol Vermut Negro
  4 dashes (one barspoon) Hiram Walker Apricot Brandy
  2 dashes Rose’s Grenadine
  2 barspoons lime (not pictured)

Shake well (on broken ice), strain, serve. It doesn’t taste like apple-pie (you can find lots of recipes that do that these days), and I’m not sure if it was meant to, but the specific brand of apricot liqueur might have something to do with it. A nice Abrikos would improve it, as would a better (i.e., not a last-minute purchase) grenadine, like Liber & Co.—which I used up at a party making Applejack Specials—or Jack Rudy.

 

Thursday, April 12, 2018

12. Applejack Cocktail (Special)


My Interpretation:
  2 oz Laird & Co. Applejack
  1 oz Liber & Co. Grenadine
  Juice of 1/2 lime or lemon

Using four barspoons of juice, the lime works better than the lemon. I ended up making several at a party and only had time to snap one before it was grabbed.

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...