How do you make yours? Garnish? How much bitters? Etc.
And which Bourbon?
(I will remain mum on my bourbon choices for awhile, after the pasting I got on the "Best Gin for Martinis" thread.
Posted 18 February 2003 - 02:42 PM
Margaret McArthur
"Take it easy, but take it."
Studs Terkel
1912-2008
A sensational tennis blog from freakyfrites
margaretmcarthur.com
Posted 18 February 2003 - 02:53 PM
Posted 18 February 2003 - 02:56 PM
Ron, is this standard procedure, or personal preference?never, ever, use soda water. garnish with half orange slice.
Margaret McArthur
"Take it easy, but take it."
Studs Terkel
1912-2008
A sensational tennis blog from freakyfrites
margaretmcarthur.com
Posted 18 February 2003 - 02:57 PM
Posted 19 February 2003 - 02:01 AM
Posted 19 February 2003 - 06:28 AM
LOL. Yeah, we call them that too. I just thought more people here would be familiar with highball.The glass I use is... an old fashioned glass!
Posted 19 February 2003 - 06:52 AM
Posted 19 February 2003 - 07:10 AM
The father of one of my childhood friends is a silversmith and he is well known for his Julep cups. I think he gave some to the Queen when she was here a while back to check out the horses around Lexington.and why has so much ritualistic drinking emerged from kentucky? the mint julep even has its own "cup"--a high-sided silver tumbler. this must be the legacy of our friends the Victorians.
Posted 19 February 2003 - 07:50 AM
Posted 19 February 2003 - 08:04 AM
Posted 20 February 2003 - 09:45 PM
Posted 21 February 2003 - 06:27 AM
Posted 11 March 2003 - 05:50 PM
seriously? The mind begins to swim . . . I know she has been in the South for some time, surely a renegade Kentuckian has made it to the Georgia state line, to pick up a new set of tooth at the very least. STELLA!and why has so much ritualistic drinking emerged from kentucky?
Posted 11 March 2003 - 05:58 PM
Posted 11 March 2003 - 07:15 PM
Posted 11 March 2003 - 07:24 PM
My Mr. Bostom Official Bartender's Guide lists it as Old Fashioned. I have no idea of the origin of the nameLong ago I used to hit the Top of the Sixes whenever I was in New York. The first visit was during the hotel school senior trip. We were introduced to the Wheeler Special Old Fashioned (at least I think it was the Wheeler Special, named for the manager at the time). What made it special, Scotch instead of Rye or Bourbon. Was quite good... I still order a scotch old fashioned on occasion.
BTW, is there still a Top of the Sixes? Still owned by Stouffers? If so, any good?
Edit: I went in to change "Old Fashioned" to "Old Fashion. Then I saw the topic heading. Is it an Old Fashioned or an Old Fashion? Any idea the origin of the name?
Posted 12 March 2003 - 07:13 AM
Scotch Old Fashioned?I still order a scotch old fashioned on occasion.
Posted 12 March 2003 - 08:48 AM
Tis so. Give it a try.Scotch Old Fashioned?I still order a scotch old fashioned on occasion.
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Oh Holly, say it ain't so.![]()
Posted 12 March 2003 - 09:02 AM
I shall, but I just can't imagine scotch with sugar, orange, and cherries.Tis so. Give it a try.
Hmmmm. Time to venture further; dare I suggest a scotch and tonic, a scoth bloody mary, a scotch manhattan? Nah, I'll just have a Rob Roy.
Posted 05 January 2007 - 07:20 PM
Posted 05 January 2007 - 08:57 PM
Posted 06 January 2007 - 09:23 AM
Posted 06 January 2007 - 10:42 AM
Ouch! Harsh words. A couple of notes in my defense. I am well aware that the whiskey community is among the most conservative and discerning drinking forces around, and for such reasons I never mess around with a traditional whiskey old fashioned. Countless times I have been tested, and the vast majority of my customers come back for more and to thank me for the best old fashioned they've ever had.
In making a vodka old fashioned, I was merely using the old fashioned method and applying it to a different spirit, and true adding some mint, perhaps not making me such a serious minded person. For me, the old fashioned method is a fantastic way to showcase a spirit, a touch of sweetness and a little water take out some of the alcohol's burn, still retains a bite but allows the drinker to experience much more the spirit's characteristics. Is this such a bad thing?
They say that the old fashioned is a good test of a bartender and a reflection of their art, I feel that my use of the old fashioned sums me up perfectly. I respect that a classic is a classic for a reason, and as such, it is absolutely none of my business to try to change years of tradition. However, I also consider myself to be progressive and creative, and if that calls for using such a marvellous technique to create a drink for the vodka-loving customer in front of me, well then so be it. Oh, and I used Hoppe because Angostura threw the balance of the vodka drink, I'm aware of the difference in taste and used this knowledge accordingly...
A mixologist should be able to recreate any classic correctly, but mixology also needs to move forward to prevent becoming stagnant. It should cater to each customer individually, rather than splitting hairs over which type of whiskey was used in the very first old fashioned, I would adjust the type of whiskey I use to the palate of the customer I am serving and to their particular mood that day.
Perhaps my ideas of mixology are not quite sophisticated enough for some, but I have very happy, satisfied customers who come back time and time again.
Posted 10 January 2007 - 10:24 AM
Posted 10 January 2007 - 02:02 PM
There are times when muddling makes sense and times when it doesn't, I suppose.
There is not much to be gained from muddling a sugar sube with bitters, if that's all you do, compared to simply combining the bitters and the appropriate amount of simple syrup. However, if you muddle the bitters and the sugar sugar cube together with a fat slice of lemon zest and "abrade" the surface of the zest against the sugar grains, you will extract flavors that are simply not possible with an aggressive twisting of the lemon peel. Try it and see.
While I would perforce have to agree with this from a strictly gustatory point of view, I think that there's another perspective that some might want to take into account.There is not much to be gained from muddling a sugar sube with bitters, if that's all you do, compared to simply combining the bitters and the appropriate amount of simple syrup.
The Old-Fashioned, the drink being referred to here, is the world's first retro cocktail--an 1890s reaction to the gussification of the cocktail. At the time, to make a "standard" whiskey cocktail, if there was such a thing, a bartender would've filled a large bar glass with a mess of fine ice, dashed some simple syrup and some bitters into it out of little bottles with squirt tops, added a "gigger" of liquor (most likely bourbon or rye) and as often as not a dash of absinthe, stirred the whole thing or shaken it depending upon his doctrinaire preference, strained it into a fancy stemmed glass and applied the lemon peel to it (sometimes there was also a cherry, or a pickled walnut, or what-have-you).
Now, there's absolutely nothing wrong with this. But it's not the way old-timers had learned to take their cocktails, back in the days of Andrew Jackson, when the barkeeper produced a cocktail by taking a small tumbler, placing a lump of sugar in it, adding a little water and crushing the sugar with a "toddy-stick" (basically, a slimmer version of our muddler; it could be made of hardwood, silver or even--at the El Dorado, in Gold-Rush San Francisco--of solid gold). Once the sugar was crushed, he would dash in some bitters from of a bottle fitted out with a cork with a length of goose quill thrust through it, pour in a tot of liquor (as often as not, brandy) and add a large lump of ice hacked from the block behind the bar. If it was a fancy cocktail, he might splash a little "curacoa" in it, twist a swatch of lemon peel over the top and rub it around the rim.
So the Old-Fashioned was an automobile-age look back to the days when railroads were a dangerous novelty; when Indians still roamed east of the Mississippi; when the best restaurants served roast bear and the passenger pigeon was a popular game bird; when barrooms were alive with "the merry raps of the toddy-stick." It's a liquid plea for a saner, quieter, slower life, one in which a gent can take a drink or two without fear that it will impair his ability to dodge a streetcar or operate a rotary press.
That's why I like to muddle my sugar cube when I make an Old Fashioned.
Great post, Dave. There is definitely something to said for the entire ritual that goes into making a cocktail, and the Old Fashioned is one where it comprises a signifncant part of the process. I had an OF sitting at the bar at Milk & Honey a few weeks ago -- stirred with one big lump of ice cut from the block, with the twist cut to order and trimmed of pith, sugar and bitters muddled, etc. It took a long time to make, and watching the process was just as good as enjoying the drink.
Posted 10 January 2007 - 02:09 PM
Posted 10 January 2007 - 02:56 PM
Posted 10 January 2007 - 03:03 PM
Good Lord, you pantywaist! Yes. It. Will.I'm not hardcore opposed to a splash of soda water...it won't kill it, it's just unnecessary.
Posted 10 January 2007 - 03:25 PM
Posted 10 January 2007 - 03:29 PM
It's always interesting to order one in a bar and see what you get.