Showing posts with label cocktail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cocktail. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

A Mocktail Summer

 Thos who know me know that Madame teaches in London in the summer. While she is away, I "play in the kitchen" experimenting, riffing on ideas that require time and are sometimes a bit messy. This year is no exception. There is enough research out there that suggests that in general alcohol is not terribly good for us. This is being impressed on us by our excellent physician. However, we do like to have a contemplative drink at the end of the day. Enter the mocktail. The trouble is that most of the exlixirs, bases, and other products that go into mocktails generally don't deliver for us. They are eother too inspid, too light, too sweet, too everything - except tasty.

So with the challenge set for the summer of 2023, I reached out to Mr. all things cocktail and flavor, J.M. Hirsch of Milk Street. A simple request, one might think. Cutting to the chase, he recommended that I at lkeast look at the book, "Zero", by the folks behind the amazing Chicago restaurant called Alinea. I swear they must all own stock in exotic ingredients. I ended up buing angelica root, black cardomom, verjus, lots of (really expensive) vanilla pods, gentian root, dried fruits of all kinds, pineapples - to use the bark, not the flesh, bananas for roasting, chamomile, juniper berries, glycerine, all of the above for making the "back bar" items.

The point of this book is really that when we are making the back bar items, we may want to think like a chef rather than like a bartender. In other words we want to find ways of making the base concoctions taste and feel really good. And then bring expert bar-tending, flavor blending skills to bear on making drinks that use these basic items. Well, suffice it to say, I am no expert, but the blending - once the back bar items were made is definitely a big part of the fun.

For me the key gas been not to attempt to recreate the specific taste of any spirit, but to acquire the feeling. So the "gin" substitute doesn't taste like gin, per-se. But when made into a cocktail with some lime juice and a sugar cube, one ends up with something that feels like a daiquiri.

I was much more interested in just making the back bar items, and then playing mixologist - and learned a few universal truths.

  • Balance is critical
    • Bitter
    • Sweet
    • Sour
    • Salty
  • Deep flavor is critical
    • Herbs
    • Barks
    • Fruits
  • Temperature is critical
    • The drinks are best served cold
    • But allow them to warm gradually to release their full potential
  • Serving method is critical
    • Shaken with ice, and strained into a coupe - a little dilution helps
    • Over ice with a mixer - more refreshing, but with less complexity
I made the following back bar items
  • The gin replacement
  • The American whiskey replacement
  • The tequila replacement
  • The orange liqueur replacement
  • The bitter amaro replacemnt
  • The Jamaican rum replacement
  • The sweet vermouth replacement
Many of the items are best prepared sous-vide. The recipes do say what to do if you can't do that for one reason or another.

I have found that sweet/tart fruit juices (pomegranate, lychee, guava) with a squeeze of lemon or lime bring out the flavors of these quite nicely. the bitter amaro is incredibly strong, so it defintely needs to be used sparingly.

All in all, lots of fun being had. I am excited for Madame to return and to experience the science projects.

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Coronagroni

This is a cocktail that we came up with during the Covid-19 "social distancing" time in 2020. We had some of the delicious Diplomatico Reserva rum at a tasting event a month or so ago, They had made a Negroni like cocktail with it. We ordered a bottle and played around with it. The result was this delicious cocktail. The tart cherry juice cuts through the sweetness brought by the Cointreau.

Ingredients

1 3/4 oz Diplomatico Reserva rum
1 1/4 oz Dolin Rouge Vermouth
3/4 oz Cointreau
1tsp Tart Cherry Juice

Combine all the ingredients over ice in a rocks glass. Garnish with a twist of Orange peel.
Relax

Monday, December 3, 2007

A seasonal cocktail...

At this time of the year, clementines are cheap and prevalent. They are juicy, have a great sweet/tart citrusy flavor and are seedless. So, how to use them in a cocktail?

Ingredients (for 2 quite potent drinks!)

6 pieces of candied ginger (+2 pretty pieces for garnish)
5 OZ Vodka (being in Texas, we use Tito's)
a few mint sprigs
2 OZ simple syrup
Juice of 2 Clementines

Method

Steep the candied ginger in the vodka for about 30 minutes. Put plenty of ice in the cocktail shaker, and add the mint and simple syrup. Muddle together for a while until the mint has infused the syrup. Add plenty of ice, followed by the vodka (leaving the ginger in) and the Clementine juice. Put the lid on and shake hard until thoroughly chilled - about 6 hard shakes.

Strain into a small martini glass, and garnish with some candied ginger on a cocktail stick.

Note use less mint than you think, the aggressive mint flavor can overpower the Clementine. Yes we did learn that the hard way and had to make a second drink