
plattetude
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Everything posted by plattetude
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Poet's Dream, using Dave Wondrich's proportions -- 2 oz gin (Beefeater) 1 oz dry vermouth (Dolin) 1/2 tsp Benedictine 2 dashes orange bitters (Srappy's) Very good, but not as transcendant as I'd had at Lantern's Keep. Next time, I'll try with Plymouth, which I think will keep it a little more "dreamy." Christopher
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Don't think that can be classified as a Negroni . I can certainly call it a variation.
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I tried an interesting variation last night -- subbed Krogstad aquavit for gin (with Carpano Antica and Luxardo Bitter). Really nice. Christopher
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Gruet, maybe? The best New Mexican bubbly you'll find. (Actually, really good. Particularly good for cocktails.) Christopher
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Negroni -- Ransom Old Tom, Luxardo Bitter, and Punt e Mes (equal parts). Really nice, rich variant on the standard. Christopher
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Off-the-cuff use of my new bottle of Bitterman's Hellfire Shrub: 2 oz blanco tequila (El Tesoro) 1 oz blanc vermouth (Dolin) 1/4 oz Cynar 12 drops Hellfire Shrub Me likey.
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You can only assume so much about the quality of the food and the judging based on how the Magical Elves have edited. Invariably, *every* judges' table session is likely going to be edited to make it look close so there's some degree of suspense. It's entertainment first and foremost. If you want a clearer explanation of why they made the choice they did, check the Top Chef blogs. (Frankly, I'm so little invested in the outcome with this lot that I don't have the interest myself.) But piling on with everyone, yeah, those were some ludicrous challenges last night. Christopher
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Except that was Heather who made the cake twice, not Sarah.
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Spot for a serious drink right near Marea/Time Warner?
plattetude replied to a topic in New York: Dining
I think the (geographically) closest viable option is Lantern's Keep at the Iroquois. But that's not exactly in the same neighborhood. Christopher -
Last night's tipple: 2 oz Patron Reposado 1/2 oz Cynar 1/4 oz Yellow Chartreuse 3 dashes Bitterman's Xocolatl Mole Bitters Good stuff.
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One key difference: Final Ward also subs lemon for lime. But either can certainly work. Christopher
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Me, I certainly lean heavily on Chartreuse (always have both yellow and green, but tend to use the green more), apricot liqueur (Rothman and Winter), but even moreso, Cynar is a major ingredient for me. Probably due more than anything to Rogue Beta Cocktails, which features a few absolute knockout cocktails featuring Cynar. (Favorite being "Growing Old and Dying Happy Is A Hope, Not an Inevitability", which as a cocktail, certainly earns it's long, long name.) Christopher
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Cobbled together this last night: 2 oz Laird's bonded Applejack 3/4 oz Bonal gentiane 1/4 oz Cynar 1/4 oz R&W Orchard Apricot 3 dashes TBT orange bitters Stir, coupe, enjoy. Probably could've bumped up the R&W, or even dashed in a bit of simple, but overall, a winner. I do like the dual but distinct bitternesses of the Bonal and the Cynar. Christopher
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Not exactly, but something similar I got some years ago (and love): Click! Christopher
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What I've come to call a "Hemingway Mocquiri": 2 oz white rum (Matusalem) 1 oz lime 1/4 oz Campari 1/4 oz maraschino simple syrup to taste float of Wray and Nephew's overproof rum Basically (and one assumes obviously) a riff on a Hemingway Daiquiri, with the lime+Campari standing in for the lime+grapefruit, which is useful when one's larder has limes far more often than grapefruit. And it's so tasty, mock or otherwise. Christopher (edited to add float)
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I like Oren's Daily Roast for my beans. Plenty of retail locations around midtown and Upper East Side, and a good variety of estate beans from all over. Christopher
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70 percent? Really? 140 proof? I hope you mean 70 proof. From what I recall, though, there's 50 proof and 64 proof, but I could be wrong. Christopher Really - it's 70%. Zoinks. Guess that's essentially a grappa rather than a liqueur. Pardon my doubting!
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70 percent? Really? 140 proof? I hope you mean 70 proof. From what I recall, though, there's 50 proof and 64 proof, but I could be wrong. Christopher
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It may be a relatively new concept to apply méthode champenoise to beer, but I know DeuS, from Brouwerij Bosteels (Kwak, Tripel Karmeliet) and Malheur Brut have both been around nearly 10 years. So is Sam Adams doing something never-been-done? Not so much. Christopher
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Ransom Old Tom, neat. Whoa. Late to the game, but man how frickin' incredible this stuff is. Followed by an Ephemeral cocktail (sort of) 1 1/2 oz Ransom Old Tom 1 oz Dolin blanc vermouth 1/3 oz St. Germain 2 dashes Angostura bitters (because I have no celery bitters) Christopher
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Light Horse Tavern is a very good neighborhood joint in the Paulus Hook section of Jersey City, food better than you'd expect for the area and a killer beer menu (and a pretty decent wine list too). Very accessible by the Light Rail (as is Liberty State Park, and Zeppelin Hall for that matter -- so you can park once, then get around by Light Rail as needed). Christopher
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Finally mixed a couple of these this weekend to have with my wife. Oh lordie that's good stuff. Christopher
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That looks very strange, to say the least. Seems like fig stuff might work with brandy though, using it sort of like the marmalade in an Omar Bradley. If I was being charged to make a citrus-free drink with fig jam thats where I would start. Still, you go first. I'd maybe ditch the maraschino and absinthe and do a 1/2 oz Cocchi Barolo Chinato with the bourbon and bitters. The spice in the Chinato would seem to me to be a good foil for the fig. If you don't have the Chinato, maybe a 1/2 oz Carpano Antica and a scant tsp pimiento dram.... Of course, now you're essentially in the world of Manhattan variations, but who said there's anything wrong with that? Christopher
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I'm staring at the box of Lemon Chalet Cremes on my desk and thinking they're not *that* much different than eating a muffin in the morning.... So. Good. Christopher
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If I may interject, I'm pretty sure Sam meant to type "seek out" and not "seek our". And I agree with him, fwiw -- you certainly should seek it out. Makes for some interesting cocktail variations when subbed for sweet vermouth, too. Christopher