Showing posts with label gin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gin. Show all posts

Monday, November 26, 2007

Cocktail Mondays: Same drink, different liquor


You don't really expect me to come up with a different drink EVERY Monday, do you? Today I came home and really needed a martini. My usual recipe is here. But instead of vodka, I've been drinking them with Hendrick's gin lately. I picked up this cute little bottle on a whim, and I must say I've been very impressed. I've stuck with my usual olives rather than the cucumber slice they suggest, but the gin is indeed somewhat cucumbery and I am sure it would taste great that way. (Picture blatantly stolen from their website.)

Monday, November 12, 2007

Cocktail Mondays: What the Hell

I decided to try this drink because of its name, and it was pretty good.

What the Hell
1 oz gin
1 oz apricot brandy
1 oz dry vermouth
dash lime juice

Stir with ice, strain into chilled glass and garnish with lemon twist.

Cross-posted at What the hell is wrong with you?

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Cocktail Wednesday: Pink Gin

Here's a good one if you're like me and never have any mixers around and you don't really want a martini (it does happen occasionally):

Pink Gin

Pour some gin in a glass. Add a dash of Angostura bitters. Swish it around a little. Drink.

This is the lazy version - you're supposed to shake it with ice and strain into a cocktail glass, but I usually just do it on the rocks.

(cross-posted at What the Hell is Wrong with You?)

Monday, March 19, 2007

Martini Monday: How to order a martini

The internets have asked, and they shall receive: ever since I posted on how to make a martini, I have had several hits from google searchers asking how to order a martini. I too suffer from the fear of looking stupid at the bar, so I am here to help!

Generally, when ordering a martini, there are three things to specify:
1. Gin or Vodka? This is a matter of personal preference.
2. Straight up or on the rocks? Most likely you want "straight up", which means shaken/stirred with ice and strained into a glass. "On the rocks," of course, means on ice. I have no idea why you need to specify straight up anymore, since that's how pretty much everyone drinks them these days, but go ahead and say it. It will make you look like you know what you are talking about. Also, I have accidentally received a martini on the rocks, and believe me, you don't want that to happen.
3. Garnish: olive or twist? Personal preference. The olive will be a spanish olive with pimento, the twist is lemon.

So, for example, you would say, "Vodka martini, straight up, with an olive" (or, if you're me, with extra olives). If you are ordering a gin martini you can usually just say "martini".

These days, everyone drinks their martinis dry (meaning with very little vermouth), so you don't need to say that. In other decades, "wetter" martinis were more popular.

You will then be asked what kind of vodka or gin. Don't screw up your coolness now by ordering something nasty.
Gin: Bombay Sapphire is always a good choice. In the last year, I have developed a taste for Beefeater, which has an orangier taste. It's less expensive but still quite respectable.
Vodka: Don't ask for Absolut or something equally overadvertised and lame. Ketel One is a good one that is available at most bars; Grey Goose isn't a bad choice either.

Other: If you like your martinis dirty (i.e., with olive juice in them), you can just order a "dirty martini" or "vodka martini, dirty" without having to specify the other stuff.

What not to ask for: Even if you buy into that crap that shaking "bruises" the gin, don't ask for your martini to be stirred. The bartender will shake or stir according to their own style. Asking for a particular mixing method will just make you look like an asshole.

Price:
If you live in a city where a beer is about $5, expect to pay $8-10 for your martini ($12 or more in a super-swanky bar). If you live in a town where beers are $2-3, a martini will be more like $5-6.

Finally, always remember to tip. I always tip $1 per drink (not per trip to the bar - so if I'm ordering for myself and two friends, that's a $3 tip). The bartenders appreciate this and will subsequently give you better service, especially if it's a busy night. Remember that it takes a lot more work to mix a martini than a well drink or to pour a beer.

Cross-posted at What the hell is wrong with you?

Monday, January 29, 2007

Cocktail Mondays: The Pegu Club Cocktail

The Pegu Club was a British Officer's club in the late 1800s in Burma near Rangoon. Their signature cocktail has long been famous, and made more so by London's Savoy Hotel in the 1930s. There is now a lovely cocktail bar of the same name in New York, dedicated to making excellent cocktails.

The Pegu Club Cocktail

2 oz dry gin
1 oz curacao or Cointreau
teaspoon lime juice
dash orange bitters
dash Angostura bitters

Shake with ice and strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish with a slice of lime.

YUM. This is one of my favorites.

Cross-posted at What the Hell is Wrong With You?

Monday, January 22, 2007

The First Cocktail Mondays: The Saketini

Cross-posted at What the Hell is Wrong With You?

Long ago, Arbitrista and I had a great idea for a blog: Books 'n' Booz, where we would write drink reviews and book reviews. We set up the blog, and then did nothing with it for months. Because we are lazy, useless people.

But I've been inspired by Propter Doc to try again, first by her request for the saketini recipe, and second by her new cocktail, the Propter. So I've decided to start a regular feature cross-posted here and at my blog, in which I will post a cocktail recipe, photo and review every Monday. Why on Mondays, you ask? Well, it's one of the only days I can think of that doesn't already have a blog convention associated with it, and also, often you really need a drink on Mondays.

So, without further ado, the first Cocktail Monday: The Saketini.

Saketini

1 1/2 oz gin
1/4 oz sake

Stir with cracked ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with a slice of fresh cucumber.

Refreshing, simple, and I love the cucumber. There's something about vegetables soaked in liquor...

Suggested appetizers: edamame, wasabi peas