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sbumgarner

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Posts posted by sbumgarner

  1. A recent experiment that wasn't horrible.

     

    1.5 oz Sotol

    .5 Mezcal

    .75 amontillado

    .5 Giffard banana

    .25 Bigallet

    Dash mole bitters

     

    Stir, strain, coupe. I like this one. Could maybe use a small pinch of a fruity, moderately hot ground chili pepper on top?

    • Like 1
  2. Peaches have been really good in NJ this year so I threw a bunch in a liter of Rittenhouse for a few weeks, here's two drinks I've enjoyed from the results.

     

    2.25 oz peach-infused rye

    .75 oz Dolin Blanc

    .25 oz Suze

     

    Stir, strain, up, lemon twist. Not bad, Suze is a natural pair with peach and helps give a dry, bitter backbone to a drink that could easily veer into too sweet territory.

     

    1.5 oz peach-infused rye

    .5 oz El Dorado 8

    1 oz Cynar 70

    .75 oz Lustau Amontillado

     

    Stir, strain, OF glass with big rock, grapefruit twist. This one I really enjoyed, a perfect summer sipper.

    • Like 1
  3. 54 minutes ago, Tri2Cook said:

    Maybe my drinks palate just isn't up to par or maybe it just speaks to the quality of grapefruit I can get where I live. I've not noticed any real quality drop in tiki drinks calling for Don's Mix if I use white grapefruit juice from a carton and cinnamon syrup. Truthfully, I don't notice sufficient drop in quality in most of the drinks using BG Reynold's Don's Mix to take that away as an option. But I'm just an enthusiast, not a connoisseur. :D

     

    I only meant comparing a 100% spirit-based "Donn's Mix" with a one containing juice, fresh-squeezed or not. A juice-based version is always going to taste different, but I have no problem bringing other flavors, especially from the Becherovka, into the fold to create something familiar but distinct from the traditional mix. I also would imagine once opened even the BG Reynolds version has a shelf-life, but agree it's a nice shortcut if you want that exact flavor.

  4. 11 hours ago, JoNorvelleWalker said:

     

    While I suspect mine beats yours alcohol-wise hands down, white grapefruit is all but impossible to source.  Have you tried your combination in a zombie?

     

     

    Not yet, but that would be an interesting application, with perhaps some tinkering of the overall ABV to keep that drink from becoming even more lethal. But yeah, Donn's mix isn't terribly shelf stable with the fresh juice, it would be nice to have those flavors without having to always have cinnamon syrup and fresh grapefruit around, or if you want the flavor but less sugar. I'd like to tinker with ratios to see how close it could approximate the overall flavor (while knowing there's no real substitute for fresh juice). Adding some drops of that cinnamon tincture is a good thought. 

  5. Threw this together last night as a way to do something sort of tiki, liked it enough to put it on KC.

     

    The Gods Must Be Lazy

    1 oz Hamilton Jamaican Black

    .5 oz reposado tequila (I used Arette)

    .75 oz lime juice

    .75 oz Giffard Pamplemousse

    .5 oz Becherovka

    1 dash Bittermens Mole Bitters

    .5 tsp simple (optional, omit if you like drier drinks)

     

    Shake, strain, coupe. The Giffard/Becherovka subbed as a more potent (alcohol and flavor-wise) Donn's Mix.

    • Like 2
  6. 49 minutes ago, EvergreenDan said:

    @PassionateAmateur Those are some great looking bottles, not of which I've tried except the Zacapa Solara. It is highly sweetened. Treat it like rum liqueur, or like a rum Old Fashioned -- just add bitters. When you try the Vino Amaro, I'd be curious to know what it is like. I bet it makes a great Manhattan.

     

    The Pasubio is really interesting, a little menthol mixed with some dark, earthy notes in the background (not Novasalus dark by any stretch, but you are subtly reminded it's made by the same people), but still very "fresh" tasting, with some fruitier notes up front. I have not tried it in a Manhattan, but it added a really nice element to a Negroni when I split the vermouth portion 50:50 vermouth/Pasubio.

    • Like 1
  7. Yeah, it looks like recipes are all over the place for that drink, but with 3/4 oz of grenadine, you'd want the same amount of lemon juice to balance that out. You also might find half an ounce or less of grenadine would be better too.

    • Like 1
  8. 4 hours ago, damaaster said:

    First of all - just wanted to say I am extremely jealous of some of the choices you American's get as far as booze goes.  Here in Canada - we can only get what our Liquor commission decides to sell - and we pay a hefty premium :(

     

    I made a new drink for my sister "The Pink Lady"

     

    https://moneymaaster.wordpress.com/2018/03/03/off-topic-the-pink-lady/

     

     

    I read in the URL that you thought the drink was too sweet, did you leave lemon juice out of the drink or was it just accidentally omitted from the ingredients list on the page?

  9. On 1/31/2018 at 2:05 PM, sbumgarner said:

    A slight riff I tried over the weekend that I enjoyed:

     

    1 oz St. George Dry Rye gin

    1 oz Campari

    .5 oz Carpano Antica

    .5 oz Cappelletti Pasubio

     

    The Pasubio (yet another amazing offering from Cappelletti, one that I was in the dark about until a recent Astor trip) gave some nice earthy/piney tones, as would be expected. I'd like to push this further into the herbal realm by splitting the Campari with Bruto Americano, and maybe using the Terroir instead of the Dry Rye.

     

     

     

    I went ahead and tried augmenting this with my above suggestions:

     

    .5oz St George Dry Rye gin

    .5oz St George Terroir gin

    .5oz Campari

    .5oz Bruto Americano

    .5oz Punt E Mes

    .5oz Cappelletti Pasubio

     

    Bruto tends to be a dominant force in any drink it enters, and the same held true here, but it was pretty good if you like those bitter herbaceous flavors.

  10. Two drinks from recent posts in this thread last night, first up:

    On 2/8/2018 at 7:52 PM, Craig E said:

    @Rafa's Good Country People, just posted to Kindred Cocktails.

    • 1 oz Gin, Beefeater
    • 1/2 oz Maraschino Liqueur, Luxardo
    • 1/2 oz Grapefruit juice
    • 1/2 oz Lime juice
    • 1/4 oz Simple syrup
    • 2 ds Peychaud's Bitters 

    Shake, fine strain, up.

     

    I used Tanqueray, and red grapefruit juice (I assume white was intended). 

     

    This is a superb drink; maraschino complemented wonderfully by the other ingredients. Five stars!

     

     

    I liked this as well, but I was glad I happened to have both Beefeater and a white grapefruit on hand, it might have crossed the threshold into too sweet for my tastes otherwise. But the play between the grapefruit and maraschino is really nice.

     

    Next up was Dan's Traveling Scotsman:

    On 2/6/2018 at 8:49 PM, EvergreenDan said:

    When made with Nikka and Laphroaig, EU-then-Asia?

     

    https://kindredcocktails.com/cocktail/traveling-scotsman

     

    This is excellent. I used Black Bottle Blended in place of the single-malt non-peaty Scotch, but the aggressiveness of the other ingredients kept each other in check. A really good nightcap.

  11. I've been focusing on making simpler drinks. And then last night happened:

     

    .5 oz Sotol

    .5 oz St George Raspberry Brandy

    .5 oz Hamilton Jamaican Pot Still Black

    .5 oz Lustau Amontillado

    .75 oz lime

    .5 oz orgeat

    1/2 tsp Luxardo maraschino

    Dash Boker's bitters

    Dash Angostura

     

    Shake, strain, coupe. I think I wanted to see how many funky ingredients in my current inventory I could cram into a drink before it broke. It was like drinking a slightly sweet, creamy green banana or plantain. I liked it.

     

    • Like 3
  12. A slight riff I tried over the weekend that I enjoyed:

     

    1 oz St. George Dry Rye gin

    1 oz Campari

    .5 oz Carpano Antica

    .5 oz Cappelletti Pasubio

     

    The Pasubio (yet another amazing offering from Cappelletti, one that I was in the dark about until a recent Astor trip) gave some nice earthy/piney tones, as would be expected. I'd like to push this further into the herbal realm by splitting the Campari with Bruto Americano, and maybe using the Terroir instead of the Dry Rye.

     

     

    • Like 2
  13. I decided to try the updated Kaiser Penguin orgeat recipe (http://www.kaiserpenguin.com/the-perfect-orgeat-syrup-recipe/) over the weekend, because why not I guess. It's touted as being easy, but after toasting almonds and letting them cool, crushing by hand (though I see no reason to not use the food processor) and then letting it sit for 12 hours, the D&C or any number of other recipes are definitely easier. However, the syrup itself is a dark brown instead of the typical milky white due to using skin-on almonds, and it does seem to impart a slightly different flavor that I like. Plus it doesn't make every orgeat drink look like light and sweet Dunkin Donuts coffee, which typically doesn't bother me but sometimes is not as appealing.

     

    Long story short, glad I made it once but probably will go back to the D&C recipe, or try the one @FrogPrincesse posted about with the cardamon and macadamia, that looks great.

  14. 6 hours ago, Smokeydoke said:

     

    Kinda missing the point, my mother, who ran a liquor store, told me that cocktails were for "cheap" liquors and anything over $50 was to only be drunk neat or you were defeating the purpose.

     

    When I was younger and frequenting bars, this was accepted philosophy and when you ordered "top-shelf" cocktails, you were secretly laughed at, not to mention most likely swindled.

     

    I know times have changed and people are ordering cocktails with $100 bourbons with reckless abandon, but I still feel a twinge of guilt, as it was something that was not done back in the day.

     

    And I agree with @JoNorvelleWalker Chartreuse is something that "should" be drunk neat to fully appreciate the fine nuances of flavor. YMMV.

     

    If you have a personal threshold for what you'll spend on a bottle to be used in cocktails that's perfectly fine, but I'm not missing the point. I don't mix with $100+ bottles of anything (and let's not pretend the $300 Mai Tai or any other big bucks cocktail is commonplace), but unless you drink nothing but Chartreuse Swizzles that $57 bottle is going to get you a lot farther as far as the number of cocktails it can contribute to than a $57 bottle of rye/rum/some other base spirit. Again, if it's a philosophical thing about not spending x amount on any cocktail ingredient then we'll probably never agree, but I'm trying to point out that it's not necessarily a 1:1 comparison.

    • Like 1
  15. 15 hours ago, Smokeydoke said:

     

    Yeah, little painful mixing Chartreuse, a $57 liquor, with anything.

     

    But we're all a little mad here, aren't we? If we mix it with another $57 liquor, it's ok, right?  xD

     

    Due to its strong flavor profile, Green Chartreuse is rarely used in quantities over an ounce in a drink, and usually considerably less. A $57 bottle will help you make more cocktails than a $57 bottle of a base spirit where you might be using 1-2 ounces each time, just as point of comparison.

    • Like 1
  16. 14 hours ago, Craig E said:

     

    I was wondering the same thing, and pondering that maybe Sfumato for the less-smoky (?) Zucca and tequila for the more-smoky mezcal might be a workable double switch.

     

    I used smoke-bomb Sombra in the drink and the smokiness still wasn't over-powering, but you might be right, that sort of switch might better replicate the original intent.

  17. On 1/9/2018 at 7:01 PM, EvergreenDan said:

    Someone posted this from Fred Yarm's site, CocktailVirginSlut. I tried it tonight and thought it was pretty great. My wife, who isn't a huge Zucca or Cherry Heering fan, loved it too.

     

    Estocada
    by Sahil Mehta, Estragon, Boston

    3/4 oz Mezcal
    3/4 oz Cherry Liqueur, Cherry Heering
    3/4 oz Zucca
    3/4 oz Lime juice
    1 twst Lime peel

    Shake with ice, strain into a coupe, garnish

     

     

     

    I think I've seen this mentioned on the board somewhere but memory loss and lack of initiative to find the thread is prevailing - is Sfumato a reasonable substitute for Zucca? Regardless this looks great, I'll have to try this.

  18. Just grabbed a bottle of Sfumato for the first time, damn is it good. Gave this one a spin:

     

    1.5 oz reposado tequila

    1 oz Sfumato

    .5 oz Amontillado sherry

     

    Stir, strain, coupe, grapefruit twist. I'd make it again.

    • Like 2
  19. I agree with Dan and Craig, I find when you start getting much over the 3.5 oz mark pre-dilution (excluding Tiki or Collins style drinks obviously) you run the risk of overflowing the "standard" ~5oz coupe size. I prefer a little headroom in my drinks, it's more practical for spillage prevention and to my eye looks nicer, but that's clearly subjective. For shaken drinks especially, much bigger than that (again, excluding tiki or Collins-style drinks) and you also run the risk of the drink getting too warm before finishing.

  20. A "Johan" Collins last night (a name that's surely been taken but I'm too lazy to both Google it or think of something different)

     

    1 oz Tanqueray

    .75 oz Linie aquavit

    .75 oz lemon

    .5 oz 1:1 simple

    Dash of Boker's bitters

    Dash of Coastal Root Pine bitters (added for some "freshness", I'm sure there's plenty of more-available bitters that could be subbed in, absinthe maybe?)

     

    Short shake, strain into ice-filled Collins, top with club soda, lemon twist. A nice end-of-summer drink that looks in the direction of autumn.

  21. Few Cask Strength Rye. Although I added water to get down to about 100 proof, I took a small sip at the 120 proof mark and it was still pretty damn good (my bottle of Thomas Handy rye, as a comparison, is mostly undrinkable to me at full proof, though also very good once diluted). Lots of baking spices, with a slightly sweet finish from the corn in the mashbill (I think I read it's about 70% rye, 20% corn, and 10% other stuff). I'll take more detailed tasting notes at some point but at $65 it's very nice for a cask-strength rye.

  22. 15 hours ago, tanstaafl2 said:

    If I knew the proportions of the Dandelion Soda I would definitely give it a shot. My bottle of Novasalus hasn't had much to do as of late.

     

    Here's what they wrote down for me that night, which I realize is a little different than what some articles online are saying (for instance, no cacao).

     

    .75 Cynar

    .75 Novasalus

    .5 lemon

    .5 simple

    .5 Jamaican rum (they used Hamilton Jamaican, he said S&C could work but not to use something like Coruba)

     

    Short shake, strain into Collins glass with ice, top with soda water. Bracingly bitter in a surprisingly pleasant way.

    • Like 2
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