Showing posts with label white absinthe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white absinthe. Show all posts

Saturday, November 24, 2018

243. Narragansett Cocktail


This recipe with a toponymic name, as if the Rhode Island yacht-clubbers’ take on a Manhattan, appears in a 2:1 ratio in Straub 1913 (where absinthe is used instead of anisette), which translates, as usual, to a slightly less tipsy 3:2 ratio when borrowed by JM in 1916. The vermouth, anisette, and olive recall the Montana Club listed a few entries above on the same page, but the effect with sweet vermouth and rye is decidedly different. Both authors likely got the recipe from the old Waldorf manual, which finds expression in the Old Waldorf Bar Days (1931). There we see first the important note “No Bitters.” This was to prevent the bartender from automatically adding the typical bitters to a drink which had every sign of being a cocktail, which everyone knew meant liquor, sweetener, bitters, and dilution. This delves back into the pre-cocktail Sling. Here the anisette (is this an indication that JM is more faithful to the original?) serves the purpose of bitters, though. Incidentally, the Old Waldorf also specifies straining the drink onto the olive, not dropping the latter in after. I include the Straub version with absinthe for comparison:


Tuesday, August 14, 2018

142. Fourth Degree Cocktail

My interpretation:
  0.75 oz Copper & King’s Absinthe Blanche
  0.75 oz Martini & Rossi Extra Dry
  0.75 oz Cocchi Vermouth di Torino

Shake with ice about 30 seconds, double strain into cocktail glass, serve. — This recipe comes to JM 1916 from Straub 1913. The Savoy Cocktail Book recipe has equal parts dry vermouth, sweet vermouth, and gin, with only 2 dashes of absinthe. This seems more accessible. Nevertheless, the present recipe is itself more accessible than the Duchess above, the only difference being the specified absinthe. In the Duchess, I used St. George Absinthe Verte. Here, since it called for white, I used the Copper & King’s absinthe alembic blanche, which is noticeably smoother and harmonizes better with the vermouths.
 

Saturday, May 12, 2018

45. Blanche Cocktail


My interpretation:
  1.25 oz Cointreau
  1.25 oz Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao
  0.5 oz Romana Sambuca

Shake well (20 seconds), strain into glass. — A dessert duo or trio which should be called simply a Blanche, this is a fine drink, if a little sweet. It is also a post-Prohibition newcomer to the Jack’s Manual, not appearing in earlier editions. Other sources suggest that the drink may originally have called for absinthe blanche, or white absinthe, rather than anisette. Also, it may have originally called for clear curaçao and hence had a white rather than pale orange appearance.

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...