Pousse Cafe Discussion Glassware, Hints, and History
#1
Posted 04 September 2006 - 12:23 PM
I tried Ebay and Googled it, to no avail.
Any help is greatly appreciated, as it's a gift (when I find it) for an old friend...
Regards,
#2
Posted 04 September 2006 - 12:35 PM
Cocktaildb link
I didn't have any, (need them for various cocktails in the Savoy Cocktail Book,) and found some passable examples at Crate & Barrel.
It doesn't seem like Riedel or Spiegelau have anything appropriate.
#3
Posted 04 September 2006 - 12:45 PM
The colorful Pousse cafe drink
This post has been edited by Gifted Gourmet: 04 September 2006 - 12:54 PM
#4
Posted 04 September 2006 - 05:48 PM
Quote
Yes. Absolutely, yes.
Cheers!
Bartendrix, Oyster House
Intoxicologist, Beverage Consultant, Philadelphia, PA
Captain Liberty of the Good Varietals, Aphrodite of Alcohol
#5
Posted 04 September 2006 - 05:50 PM
KatieLoeb, on Sep 4 2006, 08:48 PM, said:
Grenadine (red)
Creme de cacao (brown)
Creme de menthe (green)
Parfait Amour (violet)
Maraschino liqueur (white(
Orange curacao (orange)
Brandy (amber)
Use a tall, straight-sided glass. Pour the ingredients in the order in which they are listed over a the back of a teaspoon into the glass. Make beautiful, colorful layers.
time consuming and delicate ...
This post has been edited by Gifted Gourmet: 04 September 2006 - 05:51 PM
#6
Posted 04 September 2006 - 09:35 PM
It's easier to drain the bar mat into a shot glass and hand it over.
Cheers!
Bartendrix, Oyster House
Intoxicologist, Beverage Consultant, Philadelphia, PA
Captain Liberty of the Good Varietals, Aphrodite of Alcohol
#8
Posted 05 September 2006 - 05:49 AM
#9
Posted 05 September 2006 - 08:53 AM
Snowy is dead, on Sep 4 2006, 09:01 PM, said:
I believe there's a chart in Gary Regan's "Joy of Mixology" listing various liqueurs and liquors and their specific gravities.
Idle question for the bartenders in the group: Do customers order these sorts of drinks?
I can't recall ever seeing one prepared in a bar, at least recently.
I do remember noticing there were quite a number of layered shots in an English cocktail magazine I picked up, (Difford's Guide 5.1,) and wondering if it was a European thing.
#10
Posted 06 September 2006 - 04:53 PM
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Mercifully, no. I've only been asked for one once. I thought my eyes would roll out of my head.
Quote
I suspect ordering something that sounds as pompous as a pousse cafe is not something that most Americans would attempt. Unless they were trying to torment the bartender.
Cheers!
Bartendrix, Oyster House
Intoxicologist, Beverage Consultant, Philadelphia, PA
Captain Liberty of the Good Varietals, Aphrodite of Alcohol
#11
Posted 06 September 2006 - 05:36 PM
Shot Float Kit
Here are some sample drinks. Kinda pretty I think. Some seem like they might even taste good. Nice glasses too.
Layered Drink Photos/Recipes
Here's the above site's complete list of drinks. Check out "The Traffic Light."
Cocktail Recipe Link
One trick I learned is that you can change the specific gravity of a liqueur by adding vodka thus expanding your layering and taste repetoire and enabling one to craft a layered drink with compatible (hopefully enjoyable) tastes.
Many of the drink recipes I've seen on other web sites about layered cocktails seem to be all about the visual affect and the taste, which at least by my reading of the suggested liquors/liqueurs, sound pretty gagtastic
#12
Posted 12 September 2006 - 08:38 AM
Edited to add: There's also one here on Webtender, and I imagine many, many more available online through the magic of Google!
This post has been edited by mkayahara: 12 September 2006 - 08:41 AM
Kayahara.ca
"Nothing clears the mind of a man on the run better than a gelid shot of nearly straight gin backed with a single cocktail onion. The Gibson is as close to zero-degree drinking as it is humanly possible to come."
-Mark Kingwell, Classic Cocktails: A Modern Shake
#13
Posted 12 September 2006 - 09:40 PM
All of you need to stop looking up specific gravity tables and start realizing what we bartenders really mean when we say the blender is broken.
Cheers!
Bartendrix, Oyster House
Intoxicologist, Beverage Consultant, Philadelphia, PA
Captain Liberty of the Good Varietals, Aphrodite of Alcohol
#15
Posted 13 September 2006 - 11:10 AM
KatieLoeb, on Sep 13 2006, 01:40 AM, said:
Yeah, but think of it this way: if we're looking up the specific gravity tables at home, then we're not going to ask you to make the pousse cafes at the bar.
Right?
Kayahara.ca
"Nothing clears the mind of a man on the run better than a gelid shot of nearly straight gin backed with a single cocktail onion. The Gibson is as close to zero-degree drinking as it is humanly possible to come."
-Mark Kingwell, Classic Cocktails: A Modern Shake
#16
Posted 26 November 2006 - 06:45 PM
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Egullet user jackal10 posed the question above to me.
I was not particularly surprised to discover that there isn't a thread dedicated to layered cocktails or Pousse-Cafés. To me they are niche cocktails, which are more about appearance than flavor.
The most layers I have so far mastered were 4 in the Angel's Kiss.
I have to admit I am intrigued by foams, gels, and other manipulations of the specific gravity of solutions. Though, beyond egg whites and cream, a lot of it isn't particularly friendly to home bartenders.
Is there a way to make this category of drinks palatable and relevant to today's cocktail culture?
#17
Posted 26 November 2006 - 06:56 PM
The bottom half of a pousse cafe is sweet, with the top half becoming high-strength alcoholic spirits.
The only way of creating a mixological pousse cafe would be to restrict yourself to about 3 layers, and then only use ingredients that compliment each other, as well as floating in a pleasant layer.
Also, the drink can be drunk from bottom to top with a straw; or from top to bottom by knocking it back. Which way suits the flavour better?
#18
Posted 07 October 2007 - 05:56 AM
#19
Posted 07 October 2007 - 06:19 AM
Around my house I've got the syrup from candying orange rinds, that's got a really high brix, so it would probably go on the bottom. One layer could be the syrup from maraschino cherries or ribena concentrate, grenadine syrup, all those syrups they make for flavouring coffee drinks.
You might want to make some sugar syrups of different densities then add those other syrups to them so the flavour isn't too strong.
#20
Posted 13 October 2007 - 12:16 AM
#21
Posted 13 October 2007 - 11:01 AM
How to Make a Layered Shooter
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I would guess that cointreau has a slightly lower specific gravity than Grand Marnier; but, that shouldn't make much difference, as you're adding it last and either Cointreau or Grand Marnier should float on top of the Bailey's.
Layering with high proof, low specific gravity ingredients like Cointreau or actual spirits is the hardest. They do tend to mix with other layers. Pour very, very slowly.
#22
Posted 20 October 2007 - 11:55 AM
eje, on Nov 26 2006, 05:45 PM, said:
Couple of details on the larger context of these drinks aren't in recent online mentions I've seen, nor the current Wikipedia entry. (I did not get any of the following information online.)
First they're somewhat cyclic in US interest. I've seen a couple of these cycles -- didn't realize the drink had returned until this thread. Footnote I wrote last decade to help explain a scene in a 1940s Warners film-noir: Café brûlot, spiced black coffee flamed with brandy, was an old-fashioned cliché of elegant dining, like silver toast racks, midnight Champagne suppers, and Russian salads. Multilayered pousse-cafés (rediscovered every few years) do not qualify, Toulouse-Lautrec notwithstanding, because they make you sick.
The last, facetious, remark reflects eje's point, they are mainly a visual thing. After all, liqueurs in general are niche products, few people consume them regularly. (They were more routinely offered with coffee a generation or two ago.)
Second, larger point: pousse-café has a much more general meaning than you'd know from this thread (or Wikipedia etc.) It's standard informal French for a liqueur served after coffee (like something that pushes the coffee down). I've seen Europeans surprised to hear that US bartenders understand the word in the special sense of a layered cocktail. Cassell's reference French-English dictionary defines pousse-café only as familiarly a liqueur after coffee. (This situation parallels the even more atypical US use of beignet, from New Orleans, not the main francophonic meaning of beignet. )
I notice also that Grossman's classic Guide to Wines, Spirits, and Beers (mentioned in this forum before) has a table of specific densities (and alcohol contents) of a couple dozen cordials, for use in the multilayered pousse-cafés.
#23
Posted 20 October 2007 - 12:43 PM
Since posting above a year ago I had the pleasure of seeing a bunch of slides from a dinner party in the late 1940s or early 1950s. My wife's Grandfather was quite the shutterbug, so the slides were from every 15 minutes or so. Aside from seeing pictures of my wife's family, it was really neat to see the progression of the drinks. From before dinner Old-Fashioneds, Manhattans, and Martinis to wine with dinner. One of the more interesting things was to see what was for offer on the post prandial table: Coffee, cigarettes, and liqueur bottles. There was Grand Marnier and a bunch of other bottles I couldn't identify. My wife's Dad said one was probably Creme de Menthe, as it had been quite popular at that time.
I grew up in a dry family, so this display of sophisticated drinking seemed pretty cool.
This post has been edited by eje: 20 October 2007 - 01:21 PM
#24
Posted 20 October 2007 - 01:07 PM
The quaint, clinking "post-prandial" cart of liqueurs and brandies still appears at US meal functions put on at restaurants by a wine organization I belong to, based in Europe. The table is conspicuous for being so uncommon now; few people partake, and those normally are not driving. (When I organized one of these events, I didn't bother offering those drinks.)
I rarely think of more drinks after a good meal, even when there's no driving. But it seems like a charming custom and in the right circumstances, good company, etc., liqueurs after coffee might be a very fine end to a meal.
#25
Posted 08 November 2007 - 08:11 PM
Has anyone tried other sweet liqueurs that could complement coffree and irish cream flavours? I was thinking maybe amaretto, or maybe even creme de cacao (although creme de cacao may have layering problems?).
I ask because my bar is limited and doesn't currently include amaretto or creme de cacao. I'd hate to buy a whole bottle and find it doesn't work.
thanks
#26
Posted 09 November 2007 - 11:12 AM
One point that may sound silly. When one sips on these drinks from a proper glass - does everything mix together, or do you get the flavors in different doses? Or are they all pretty much shots? If you get "waves" of flavor - then I would think the drinks could be relevant to today's cocktail culture. If there appeal is purely visual... then not so much.
(btw - I'm using us the layered drink definition of PC if that's not obvious)
#27
Posted 10 January 2008 - 12:50 PM
Quote
#28
Posted 14 April 2008 - 11:02 AM
One interesting point of note that I had never seen anywhere else was that this book suggested freezing your liqueurs beforehand which makes them easier to layer. That seemed to help because the process wasn't as difficult as I'd expected it to be.
First we tried the five-layered Pousse-Café (I've seen other recipes for the namesake drink, but this is how it was laid out in this book):
Grenadine
Green Creme de Menthe
Kümmel
Galliano
Brandy
results:

Another one we tried was the Nuclear Fallout. This one is interesting in that it's what you could call an "action" pousse-café. The idea here is to add the most dense liqueur last, so that it falls down through the other layers creating a maelstrom of color.
Raspberry syrup
Maraschino
Yellow Chartreuse
Cointreau
Blue Curaçao
Duck and cover:
"The mixing of whiskey, bitters, and sugar represents a turning point, as decisive for American drinking habits as the discovery of three-point perspective was for Renaissance painting." -- William Grimes






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