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Craig E

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Posts posted by Craig E

  1. Trainspotter Rye, St. Germain, Cherry Heering, Fernet Branca, grapefruit twist.

    Wow was this good. I thought from the ingredient list it would be all over the place (spice, elderflower, cherry, menthol, grapefruit) but it held together very nicely. I used Rittenhouse instead of the Dickel specified. That may have helped stand up to the Fernet, which I feared would take over as it often does, but it didn't. A definite keeper.

     

    Dickens Flip Light rum, Cherry Heering, Benedictine, Angostura bitters, syrup, whole egg, orange peel oil, cherry garnish.

    This is rather egg-noggy. The creamy egg tempers the bitterness (there's 1/2 oz. Angostura in there). Taste-wise would make a nice winter holiday party drink, but it's rather ingredient- and labor-intensive, so not too easy to churn out in party quantities I'd guess.

  2. It should be said that White Lyan service isn't just a matter of opening a bottle and setting it down in front of the customer. There's still a fair amount of weighing, frothing, atomizing, glass painting, etc. to the performance, depending on the drink ordered. But mostly the bartender can give more attention to talking to you about the drink than to picking out good mint or rinsing the lemon press. I went in with similar skepticism that it might not really feel like a bar but it was great fun.

  3. Broken Flower (Chris Lane)

    1 1⁄2 oz Reposado Tequila, Espolon Reposado (Cazadores)

    3⁄4 oz Cynar

    1⁄2 oz Lime juice

    1⁄2 oz Grapefruit juice

    1⁄2 oz Cinnamon syrup (Becherovka)

    2 ds Bitters, Angostura

    1 twst Grapefruit peel

     

    Really enjoyed this grapefruity concoction. Had a tingly finish (maybe heightened from my Becherovka substitution?) that left me wanting more with every sip. 

  4. All in all I am loving the Cocchi, very happy with the purchase.

     

    It's great, isn't it? Try the Half Windsor if you get a chance (2oz CA, 1oz grapefruit juice, 1/2oz cognac; brief shake). I think it's terrific too.

     

    EDIT: And the Negroni Jalisco I just poured myself (equal parts reposado tequila, CA, and Aperol, pinch of salt, on rocks with lime wedge) is also wonderful!

    • Like 1
  5. I can vouch for this:

     


    by Kirk Estopinal, Cure, New Orleans, LA

     

    2 oz Cynar

    3/4 oz Sweet vermouth, Carpano Punt e Mes

    18 dr Lemon juice

    6 ds Orange bitters, Regans' orange bitters

    2 pn Salt (sea salt)

    5 twst Lemon peel

     

    Start with one "baker's" pinch of salt in a rocks glass. Add the Cynar and briefly stir. Add the Punt e Mes, bitters, lemon juice and ice. Stir briefly to incorporate. Taste, looking for only the faintest hint of salt. If the drink tastes salty, throw out your first attempt and adjust your salt levels. When the salt level is correct, express the oil from five swatch of lemon peel onto the surface of the cocktail, dropping one in along the side of the glass, skin side facing in. An 1/8 rim of salt will allow your guest to experiment with a few salty sips. Making the following sips pleasantly sweet, which will not make your brain hurt.

     

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    Kindred Cocktails | Craft + Collect + Concoct + Categorize + Community

     

    In the directions it seemed like too much is made of getting the salt balance right, but it's because that is indeed the key. When you hit it right this is absolutely superb.

  6. When evaluating or inventing mixed drinks, how significant do you feel the color of the drink is? Have you found yourself subbing ingredients or rebalancing ratios just for the sake of color?

     

    One problematic ingredient combination I've found is that the green of chartreuse mixed with complementary red/browns can look muddy. I noticed in tonight's tasty Clermeil and before, maybe to a lesser extent, in Phil Ward's Final Ward. (On the other hand, the gorgeous amber color of his Yeoman Warder really struck me.)

     

    Do you have good examples of otherwise great drinks with unsatisfying color?

    Are there drinks you really like where the color is a significant part of the appeal?

  7. I ordered it in part because I was a bit terrified myself. (I find patchouli used as a deodorant a horrible, horrible thing.) A kind of unsound, sounds-so-bad-it-must-be-good theory that is the kind of thing that arises during the last round of the last night of a cocktail tour business trip. Wise or not, it paid off this time.

    The patchouli was light enough to just lend herbal notes, and the Merlet apricot liqueur was similarly restrained. And the basil took the form of the tiniest little leaves perched atop the lemon-slice garnish, for the nose's sake only. The drink essentially tasted like a gin and tonic with an enjoyable complexity to it.

  8. Thanks Gareth. Turns out the Shake Rattle and Stir tours were all booked for weeks, so that helped decide.

     

    I wound up taking the Beefeater distillery tour, which was really enjoyable. A quite nice museum-like self-tour through the history of gin, followed by a guided tour of the distillery itself which was very educational too. And a nice gin and tonic at the end. 

     

    Later we went to City of London distillery, not for the tour but just for drinks. Disappointingly was told they were closing earlier than scheduled, but I had time for one drink, a superb Martinez with their house London dry. 

  9. Agh came very close to going to White Lyan just before Christmas. Tell us more?

    We had the place nearly to ourselves (slow Sunday night) whereas Happiness Forgets was packed to the gills. I started with the Moby Dick Sazerac which includes ambergris. Which, if you read about it, seems like about the most improbable ingredient thinkable. But it seemed to work as intended as a "fixative," extending the flavor of the drink's other ingredients well beyond what I'd normally expect. My adventurous friend had the aforementioned Salad, which was terrific.

    Second round was two shot drinks: See No, which was gin-based and strongly dominated by lavender, and Do No, a tequila/grapefruit/green tabasco concoction that I thought actually tasted like an intensified version of the Salad, though it shares no ingredients. I suppose many of the drinks there, by virtue of adhering to the house assumptions of no ice and no perishables, will wind up having some family resemblances.

    We finished with a carbonated highball called a Legs Eleven, which had prominent and agreeable flavors of brown sugar and salted cashews.

    Enjoyed every drink and would recommend the place to anybody with the slightest bit of adventurousness. Before going I wondered if the place would seem gimmicky and pretentious or not. Happy to report it was a great experience.


  10. by Bobby Heugel, Anvil Bar and Refuge, Houston, Texas

    2 oz Reposado Tequila

    1 t Maraschino Liqueur

    2 ds Bitters, Bittermens Xocolatl Mole

    1 ds Bitters, Angostura

    1 t Agave syrup

    1 twst Lemon peel (as garnish)

     

    Stir, strain, up in a cocktail glass.

    Twist the lemon over the drink, rub the rim, and drop it in.

     

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    Kindred Cocktails | Craft + Collect + Concoct + Categorize + Community

     

    A very enjoyable drink with Xocolatl Mole bitters, but then aren't they all? 

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