Sunday, June 15, 2025

speakeasy blues

1 oz Wild Turkey 101 Rye (Rittenhouse)
1 oz Brandy (Marie Duffau Napoleon Armagnac)
1/4 oz Peche Liqueur (Mathilde)
1/4 oz Simple Syrup
3 spray Herbsaint (24 drop)

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large ice cube, and garnish with mint and powdered sugar (omit powdered sugar).
Two Sundays ago, I decided to make the Speakeasy Blues from La Moule in Portland, Oregon, that I had found a few months ago in a set of online recipe flashcards where I also sourced the Paix to Play. The split spirit base, peach notes, and Herbsaint combination reminded me a little of Russell House Tavern's Sazerac riff called the Crosseyed and Painless, so I was drawn in. Once prepared, the Speakeasy Blues gave forth mint and peach aromas. Next, a semi-sweet sip with hints of orchard fruit hid behind rye, brandy, peach, and anise flavors on the swallow.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

gift horse

1 3/4 oz Yellowstone Select Bourbon (Evan Williams Bonded)
1 tsp Amaro Braulio
1 tsp Giffard Framboise (Mathilde)
1/2 tsp Hampden Estate Rum Fire Overproof White Rum
1/2 tsp 2:1 Demerara Syrup (1 tsp 1:1)
2 dash Peychaud's Bitters

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large ice cube, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Saturdays ago, I turned to the Death & Co. marketplace website and found the Gift Horse by bartender Jack Stevenson at their Denver location in 2024. This Bourbon Old Fashioned was jazzed up with Braulio, berry liqueur, and funky rum, so it seemed intriguing enough to try out. In the glass, the Gift Horse donated a lemon, Bourbon, raspberry, and pine bouquet to the nose. Next, caramel notes on the sip opened up into Bourbon, rum funk, raspberry, bitter herbal, and pine flavors on the swallow.

Friday, June 13, 2025

defeat by greater things

1 1/2 oz Rittenhouse Rye
1 1/2 oz Amaro Nardini
2 dash Orange Bitters (Regan's)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with orange oils from a twist.
Two Fridays ago after I got home a bit tired from my bar shift, I sought out an easy to make drink and landed on the Defeat by Greater Things from the Patterson House in Nashville. I learned of the recipe via online flashcards and then found the cocktail posted about on their Instagram back in February, and it reminded me of the Mayor's Lament with a garnish and different bitters. The name is most likely a tribute to German poet Rainer Maria Rilke who declared, "The purpose of life is to be defeated by greater and greater things." This Black Manhattan of sorts launched off with an orange, herbal, licorice, and mint aroma. Next, caramel notes on the sip subsided into rye, root beer, and mint flavors on the swallow.

Thursday, June 12, 2025

roughneck manhattan

2 oz Wild Turkey 101° (Evan Williams Bonded Bourbon)
3/4 oz Zucca Rabarbaro (Sfumato)
1/2 oz Cocchi Americano
2 dash Grapefruit Bitters (Bittermens)

Stir with ice and strain into a cocktail coupe. No garnish was mentioned, so I opted for a cherry.
Two Thursdays ago, I returned to the set of online recipe flashcards from the County Barbeque in Chicago and picked the circa 2015 creation called the Roughneck Manhattan. I was able to find the drink mentioned on one of their old menus, and the name may refer to the construction workers who built the skyscrapers in the 1920s. Since I enjoyed the restaurant's Malört-bomb, the Fireside, from that collection, I decided to give this one a go. Moreover, rabarbaro and Cocchi Americano have worked well in drinks like the Bark & Bite and A Good Man is Hard to Find, so I was curious to try it here. In the glass, the Roughneck Manhattan ascended to the nose with roast and Bourbon aromas. Next, roast and pear notes on the sip assembled Bourbon, char, bitter herbal, and grapefruit flavors on the swallow.

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

marigold

1 1/2 oz Gin (Treehouse Percy's Gin)
1 1/2 oz Cocchi Americano
2 dash Fernet Branca (1/8 oz)
2 dash Lavender Bitters (Scrappy's)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with an orange twist.
Two Wednesdays ago, I ventured back to The Official Downtown Abbey Cocktail Book ghost written by Lou Bustamante and picked the Marigold. Lou named this Lady Edith-inspired riff on the Hanky Panky after Edith's daughter on the show. In the glass, the Marigold bloomed with orange, floral, pine, and grapefruit aromas. Next, pear and white grape notes on the sip attracted pine, apricot, menthol, and lavender flavors on the swallow.

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

:: somerville distillery rum ::

I first learned of my areas rich history in rum production when I read Wayne Curtis’ And A Bottle of Rum circa 2007-08 where the book alerted me that my city of Somerville, Massachusetts, had a role in rum production alongside the better known neighboring city of Medford. It also pointed out that there was a monument a few blocks from my home where Paul Revere took a detour on his midnight ride to avoid the Redcoats and seek shelter at the home of his friend, rum distiller Isaac Hall. Isaac’s relative John Hall started distilling rum in Medford in 1715 and the city’s tradition lasted until 1905. Very little remains of the industry save for Isaac Hall’s home (that became a funeral home by the time Curtis wrote about it and a Islamic cultural center when I last stopped by around a year ago), a plaque in downtown Medford that I include in my post about my drink the Rum River Mystic, and the brand name Medford Rum which is in the hands of South Boston’s GrandTen Distillery after it was acquired from the previous owner M.S. Walker in 2013.
Somerville’s distilling industry was delayed by a century and a half to open and even less remains as artifacts or remembrances. The later start of Somerville’s distilling was possibly due to the city mostly lacking access to water such as the harbor in Charlestown or the Mystic River flowing through Medford. Somerville’s current geography only has a minor portion near Assembly Square touching a river. However, railroad lines were probably Somerville’s answer with its distillery being adjacent to the Fitchburg Railroad which opened in the 1840s as a means of bringing in molasses raw materials in and finished rum out.

The distillery was opened by Daniel E. Chase when he broke away and moved his operations over from Charlestown. According to Somerville, Past & Present from 1897, Chase was born in Warner, New Hampshire, in 1829, and moved to the Boston area in 1850. The first mention of his entry into the rum industry was when he joined the firm of Ezra Trull & Company in 1857, and when Trull died in 1864, the name changed to Chase and Trull. The book mentions that they “were at one time the largest distillers of New England rum in the world.”

An article on the Edward Everett House in Charlestown written in 1996 offers up a different timeline with distiller Ezra Trull owning that house until his death in 1870. The book Metropolis of New England from 1889 confuses the matter by mentioning that Trull died in 1886 although no first name was mentioned. There were perhaps more than one Trull family member, such as his brother John, involved; before the distillery in Charlestown became Chase & Trull, the distillery was called Trull Brothers’. Perhaps Chase set out on his own when the distillery became the firm of Chapin, Trull, & Co. in 1877, and Nahum Chapin ran the Charlestown distillery after 1886.

Charles Coulombe’s wrote in Rum: The Epic Story of the Drink in 2004, “Nor did the trade with Africa cease, although the end of slavery as a result of the Civil War forced it into more benevolent channels. The Chase distilleries in Somerville and the Lawrence distilleries in Medford, both in Massachusetts, continued to make rum for export. Together with Bibles, the liquor arrived on the West African coast, and in turn bought palm oil for the Lever Brothers and black mahogany for various manufacturers.” The book Boston Looks Seaward 1630-1940 in a chapter called “Rum and Bibles” expounds on this with:
“Although less adventurous than in the past, Boston’s rum trade with the Gold Coast of Africa flourished until the Volstead Act closed down the local distilleries in 1919... The Chase Distillery of Somerville manufactured a large share of the rum, and such shipping firms as John G. Hall, Charles Hunt & Company, Crowell & Thurlow, and the John S. Emery Company carried it, as well as missionary supplies, flour, and lumber, to the West Coast of Africa. Several staid Bostonians, staunch supporters of the temperance movement, participated in this trade, and often a teetotaler Boston sea captain hedged his barrels of rum with boxes of Bibles. Instead of ‘black ivory,’ more than a score of Boston schooners brought back mahogany for a Kentucky manufacturer and palm oil for Lever Brothers of Cambridge.”
The Somerville Directory of the Inhabitants and Institutions proffers up the distillery’s address at 15 Bleachery Court and that they were making “double copper-distilled molasses rum.” Peter’s Rum Labels website provides that they not only produced the Somerville Distillery Rum brand, but the distillery sold Chase’s Fine Old Blend Whiskey (no mention if they distilled grain or merely rectified the spirits for sale). And that site points to The Pre-Prohibition Glass-Collector’s Site which offers up tax records for the distillery that begin as early as 1898 and last reported in 1914. Many of the years’ records were never saved, and the distillery could have been in production before well before 1898 (I show evidence of the distillery being open a decade before this below). Those years show that spirits were deposited in the warehouse, spirits were withdrawn for export with payment of a tax, and that spirits remained at the end of the year. The last record of 1920 mentioned the distillery but did not provide any tax data perhaps due to a final inspection with the onset of Prohibition.

The Massachusetts Historic Commission wrote up an article about Duck Village in Somerville, and it mentions that the house at 85 Properzi Way was built for Daniel and Mary Chase circa 1890, and that Chase’s business a half mile away remained active until at least 1915. Having lived and worked near 15 Bleachery Court (although the current street location has been shifted over), I knew that the distillery laid under the current ice skating rink and parking lot with no trace of its existence left behind by marker or sign (see split image at the end). This lack of evidence all changed after a connection I made in Colorado Springs when I gave my talk on The Cultural Significance of Cocktails pointed me to Matthew Dickey of the Boston Preservation Alliance. Over a few Guinness stouts at the Eire Pub, Matt introduced me to the MapJunction website that overlays historic maps along with modern aerial and satellite photos. I was able to find the distillery clearly labeled on the map in 1888, 1895 (top map), and 1900. For decades after Prohibition, the area appeared to be barren until it was developed into the Founders Memorial Ice Skating Rink.
Of the three maps, the 1888 one (above) opened up a world of information. It clearly shows the layout of the building including the location of the still, fermentation tanks, and two bonded warehouses. The label for the coal pile suggests that was the fuel to power the still (no evidence whether it was direct fire or using the new 1870s technology of steam jacketed). Next to the coal pile were refuse tubs (unlike the Medford distilleries, they could not dump their waste into a river) and return tubs where the water to condense out the distillate in the worm tube was kept. The map also describes how there was one private and one government watchman to keep tabs on the distillery, and safety was ensured by hand grenades and water pipes. Hand grenades in a distillery? Back then, that was the name for hand-thrown fire suppression devices to extinguish smaller fires. The original ones patented in 1863 were glass and filled initially with salt water (since it was harder to freeze) and by 1912 with carbon tetrachloride; firefighting had grenades was phased out in the 1950s well before it was learned circa 1970 that this effective chemical was actually carcinogenic.
Unfortunately, no dram of Somerville Distillery Rum remains. Most of it was probably packaged into barrels for export across the Atlantic and for sale at local taverns. In conversation with rum scholar Matt Pietrek, I surmised that the distillery as “a major producer of non-noteworthy rum” especially in comparison to how well received and respected the rums from Medford were. However, given that the Massachusetts rum that I tasted in 2010 at Steve Remsberg’s house was rather good – an aged rum from the Everett Distilling Company around 4 miles from my home and sold by Brooklyn’s Austin, Nichols & Co. of Wild Turkey fame – yet never got much mention in the literature either. Then again, that rum sat around for 17 years before being bottled due to Prohibition, and much of the Somerville product and the Everett rums sold before Prohibition would not have experienced any wood rest that long due to financial considerations. Given Chase’s pair of bonded warehouses, it was definitely an aged spirit even if were to be sold off relatively young. Perhaps the major cooperage in town under three-quarters of a mile away from the distillery, S. Armstrong & Co., that utilized mills in Athol, Massachusetts, and Brookline, New Hampshire, made sourcing barrels rather convenient.
With the map information and a few other primary sources made available in the last few years, this concludes the research project that I started back in June 2009 (according to my Microsoft Word document file information). The initiation would have been a little over a year before I would have the rare chance in New Orleans to taste Massachusetts rum distilled before Prohibition. Since 2009, rum distilleries started appearing in Massachusetts like Privateer, Bully Boy, GrandTen, Berkshire Mountain, Short Path, and others to continue on the tradition.

isla bonita

1 1/4 oz Reposado Tequila (Espolon)
1/2 oz Campari
1/2 oz Apricot Liqueur (Rothman & Winter)
1/4 oz Caffe Lolita (Borghetti)
2 dash Chocolate Bitters (Bittermens Mole)

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with ice, and garnish with an orange twist.
Two Tuesdays ago, I uncovered a collection of online recipe flashcards for Good Company in St. Louis, and the Isla Bonita called out to me. Their Instagram posted that it was their Negroni Week 2024 offering but did not mention if it was named after the Madonna song; they did describe it as, "If tequila and Campari went camping in the woods" though. Looking at the build, Campari and apricot liqueur are a great pairing that I have tried in A Moment of Silence from Beta Cocktails and utilized in my Boulevardier meets Slope drink, the Intercept. Moreover, Campari and coffee liqueur have worked great in cocktails like the Red Morning Light and were utilized in my Sex Lives of Cannibals Tiki drink. Once prepared, the Isla Bonita gave forth orange, vegetal, and roast aromas. Next, roast and orchard fruit notes on the sip opened up into tequila, coffee, apricot, bitter orange, and chocolate flavors on the swallow.

Monday, June 9, 2025

the refuge

1 1/2 oz Herradura Reposado Tequila (Espolon)
1/2 oz Ron Miel (Zaya)
1/2 oz Punt e Mes
1/4 oz Smith & Cross Rum
1/4 oz Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao
2 dash Orange Bitters (Angostura Orange)

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large ice cube, and garnish with an orange twist.
Two Mondays ago, I reopened the online recipe flashcards for the Paper Plane in Atlanta, and I spotted the tequila-rum stirred drink called the Refuge that dated back to 2014 via a mention in a Yelp review. Here, the Punt e Mes-orange liqueur modifier reminded me of No. 9 Park's Negroni variation the Patrician. I had previously skipped over this recipe for I lack the honey-tinged rum from the Canary Islands, but I figured that a caramel- and sugar-laden rum like Zaya might come close. Once mixed, the Refuge projected orange, grape, and vegetal aromas to the nose. Next, grape and caramel notes on the sip slid into tequila, funky rum, caramel, and orange flavors on the swallow.

Sunday, June 8, 2025

xanto cocktail

80% Aged Cognac (2 oz Courvoisier VS)
10% Benedictine (1/2 oz + 1/8 oz Demerara Syrup)
10% Lemon Juice (1/2 oz)
2 dash Angostura Bitters

Shake with ice, strain into a cocktail coupe, and garnish with a lemon twist (express and discard).
Two Sundays prior, I reached for my copy of the 1000 Misture book from 1936, and the Xanto Cocktail caught my eye. Xanto is an Italian masculine name meaning "golden", and it appeared like a Cognac Frisco Sour with bitters. Moreover, it reminded me of the Yellow Chartreuse variation of the Champs Elysées (it is technically a Green Chartreuse drink though). Shaken and strained, the Xanto blossomed with a Cognac, lemon, and herbal bouquet. Next, a lemon-driven sip ventured towards Cognac, herbal, lemon, clove, and allspice flavors on the swallow.

Saturday, June 7, 2025

smitten cocktail

1 oz Beefeater Gin
1 oz Campari
1 oz Lemon Juice
1/2 oz Simple Syrup
10-12 leaf Mint

Shake with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with a mint sprig.
Two Saturdays ago, I decided to make the Smitten Cocktail by Bobby Heugel at the Anvil in Houston that was published in Imbibe Magazine back in 2015. The Campari, gin, citrus, and mint aspected reminded me of Stephen Shellenberger's Boa Vista, and I tinkered with gin, Campari, and mint in the Count Camillo's Derby. Once assembled, the Smitten Cocktail opened up with mint and peach aromas. Next, lemon and orange on the sip transformed into gin, mint, and bitter orange flavors on the swallow.

Friday, June 6, 2025

soy capitan!

3/4 oz Espolon Reposado Tequila
3/4 oz Aperol
3/4 oz Pamplemousse Rose (St. Elder)
3/4 oz Lemon Juice

Shake with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Fridays ago, I returned to a 2017 era set of online recipe flashcards for Ward 8 in Boston and landed on the Soy Capitan! I was able to find a mention of the drink in a 2018 Yelp review, and it reminded me of the Mildred Pierce and Erika Marie that pair mezcal instead of tequila with Aperol and grapefruit liqueur. In the glass, the Soy Capitan! showcased lemon, tequila, orange, and grapefruit aromas on the nose. Next, lemon and orange notes on the sip gave forth tequila and grapefruit flavors on the swallow.

Thursday, June 5, 2025

this bitter pill

1 1/2 Pineapple-Infused Rum (Planteray Stiggins')
3/4 oz Amaro Montenegro
3/4 oz Campari
2 dash Orange Bitters (Angostura Orange)

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large ice cube, and garnish with a pineapple wedge (omit).
Two Thursdays ago, I decided to make a cocktail from the Polite Provisions "Emo Tiki Pop Up" in 2023 called This Bitter Pill that I sourced from online recipe flashcards. The drink was named after a Dashboard Confessional song from 2001, and I was drawn in by the Montenegro-Campari duo that I was first introduced to by bartender Paul Manzelli at Bergamot in the Monte Cassino and Montenegroni and later saw elsewhere in the Nearly Headless Nickroni, Pink Rabbit, and Smoke in the Well. The recipe's 2:1:1 structure reminded me of the Dashboard Hula Girl given the pineapple rum, but that drink contained Averna and Amontillado though. In the glass, This Bitter Pill lit up with pineapple, orange, and caramel aromas. Next, caramel and tropical fruit notes on the sip slid into rum, pineapple, orange, and bitter flavors on the swallow.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

bowie intro

1 1/4 oz Suntory Toki Japanese Whisky
1/2 oz Giffard Banane du Bresil (Tempus Fugit)
1/4 oz Krogstad Aquavit
3/4 oz Lemon Juice
1/2 oz Rich Demerara 2:1 Syrup (1/2+ oz 1:1)
2 Cherries (Luxardo)

Muddle cherries, add rest of the ingredients, and shake with ice. Double strain into a Collins glass with crushed ice (old fashioned glass with a large cube) and garnish with a cherry or a lemon wheel-cherry bullseye (cherry).
When I landed late Wednesday night two weeks ago from the USBG conference in Atlanta, it was time for a nightcap. For a recipe, I opted for the Bowie Intro by Chaim Dauermann at The Up & Up in Manhattan that was posted on KindredCocktails. The database sourced the drink from a 2024 The Manual article on crème de banane recipes, and since banana and aquavit worked really well in the Mr. Wednesday, I was sold. In the glass, the Bowie Intro gave forth a caraway, cherry, and whisky aroma. Next, lemon, cherry, and caramel notes on the sip transformed into whisky, banana, cherry, and caraway flavors on the swallow. Indeed, the touch of aquavit was rather elegant in this mix.

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

wide eyed

3/4 oz Lucid Absinthe Superieure
3/4 oz Coffee Liqueur (Kapali)
3/4 oz Peychaud's Bitters
1 oz Cold Brew Coffee
1/2 oz Simple Syrup

Shake with ice (shake without ice as I used a frozen package of pre-diluted mix) and strain into a cocktail coupe.
At the USBG national meeting in Atlanta two weeks ago, one of the great presentations was by Darian Everding and Theodore Breaux on Monday entitled "Absinthe - History, Mystery, & Mastering Its Mixology." Darian had prepared two pouched cocktails for us to depart with: one I drank later that night since it had citrus juice that might not last too long, and the other was this one, the Wide Eye, that serves as the Espresso Martini at The London Underground in Ames, Iowa, that I took home. Darian wrote in an article in Chilled Magazine that it was created by Marco Salas. The pouch's recipe sticker was vague on the coffee liqueur whose sweetness seemed importance to hit the stunning balance, and Darian replied to my inquiry with, "I used Kapali for this and often go for Kamora!" In the glass, the Wide Eye opened up with anise and coffee aromas. Next, a semi-sweet roast note on the sip bloomed into coffee and cherry-anise flavors on the swallow with a roast-driven finish.

Monday, June 2, 2025

tiger's tale

1 1/2 oz Sazerac Rye
3/4 oz Lemon Juice
1/2 oz Pineapple Syrup
1/2 oz Falernum
1/4 oz Allspice Dram

Shake with ice and strain into a coupe glass. Garnish with lemon oil from a twist and dehydrated orange dust (orange twist).
Two week ago, I flew down to Atlanta to attend the USBG national conference. On Tuesday, I opted to attend the Sazerac-sponsored event from the two that were offered on the schedule that evening, and it was at a woodsy lodge speakeasy called the Ranger Station up a staircase and above the Ladybird Grove & Mess Hall. For a first drink, I requested the Tiger's Tale that was attributed to San Diego bartender Gabe Fonseca as a riff of the 1937 Lion's Tail that was reminscent of the Tropical Lion's Tail given the pineapple syrup element. Perhaps the drink was named after the book by Colleen Houck or one of the movies by that name. In the glass, the Tiger's Tale lept to the nose with an orange oil bouquet. Next, pineapple and lemon notes on the sip were hunted down by whiskey, allspice, ginger, and clove flavors on the swallow.

Saturday, May 31, 2025

save the last dance

3/4 oz Appleton 12 Year Jamaican Rum (Monymusk Gold)
3/4 oz Rhum JM Blanc (JM 100°)
3/4 oz Campari
3/4 oz Averna
4 dash Angostura Bitters

Smoke an old fashioned glass over ignited cinnamon stick bits. Stir with ice, strain into said glass with a large ice cube, and garnish with an orange twist and an orchid (omit).
Two Saturdays ago, I had spotted a reference to the Save the Last Dance by Brian Maxwell, and I hunted down the recipe from his Shaker of Spirits blog. The drink was part of his 2020 Pandemic recipe series that included such hits as Ground Control to Major Donn and A Million Dreams, and he named this one after the 1960s The Drifters' song for his 68th entry. Overall, it read like a Right Hand with some rhum agricole, but with the Averna instead of sweet vermouth, it reminded me of the Guiding Light and The Departed. In the glass, the Save the Last Dance gave forth an orange, hint cinnamon smoke, and caramel aroma. Next, caramel notes on the sip waited up for grassy rum, bitter orange, caramel, herbal, and allspice flavors on the swallow.

Friday, May 30, 2025

balloon farm

1 1/2 oz Scotch (Famous Grouse Smoky Black)
1/2 oz Cynar
1/2 oz Aperol
1/2 oz Lemon Juice
1 dash Peychaud's Bitters

Shake with ice, strain into a coupe, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Recently, a guest came into work and asked for a Paper Plane, and we began talking about ways to make the drink if Amaro Nonino is unavailable. After I mentioned that I have seen Averna and Montenegro used as substitutes, he declared that Cynar was surprisingly good as a fill-in; therefore, two weeks ago I riffed on it with Scotch at home. Cynar and Aperol are a duo that I have enjoyed in a variety of drinks like the Juan Bautista, Mad Max and Rucola Negroni, so I figured that it would turn out decent. I originally tried as an equal parts number and perhaps it would have worked better with a robust and smoky single malt, but with a blend, I found better success being spirit forward here. For a name, I dubbed this one after a 1960s performance space headed by Andy Warhol that I learned about in the St. Marks Is Dead book. In the glass, the Balloon Farm lifted to the nose with lemon, orange, and Scotch aromas. Next, lemon, caramel, and orange notes on the sip bounced into Scotch, vegetal, orange, and anise flavors on the swallow.

Thursday, May 29, 2025

missed deadline

3/4 oz Laird's Bonded Apple Brandy
3/4 oz Apricot Liqueur (Rothman & Winter)
3/4 oz Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao
3/4 oz Lemon Juice

Shake with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Thursdays prior, I returned to the online recipe flashcards for Ward 8 in Boston and decided on the Missed Deadline. On paper, it read to me like an equal parts apple-lemon Periodista, and my blog searching showed that the closest with lemon has been the 1937 Canadian Glory with Canadian whisky. Once shaken and strained, the Missed Deadline found the nose with a lemon oil over orange and apricot bouquet. Next, lemon and orchard fruit notes on the sip stepped aside for apple, apricot, orange peel, and tart lemon flavors on the swallow.

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

d'yer mak'er

1 1/2 oz Smith & Cross
1/2 oz Kronan Swedish Punsch
1/2 oz Honey Syrup 2:1 (2/3 oz 1:1)
3/4 oz Lime Juice
1 dash Angostura Bitters

Whip shake with crushed ice, pour into an old fashioned glass, fill with crushed ice, and garnish with an orange twist (orange peel snake).
Two Wednesdays ago, I uncovered a set of online recipe flashcards for Monkeypod Wailea in Hawaii, and I latched on to the D'yer Mak'er. The card mentioned to pronounce it like "Jamaica", and an Instagram friend commented that it comes from British slang for "did you make her" thus the pronunciation. This drink perhaps named after the Led Zeppelin song dates back to at least 2014 via a blog post with a drink photo. I utilized a similar rum, Swedish punsch, honey, and lime combination in the Reverend Wise at Loyal Nine back in 2017, so I was curious to try it with a more flavorful base spirit and a greater amount of Swedish punsch. In the glass, the D'yer Mak'er donated Jamaican funk, orange, and floral aromas to the nose. Next, caramel, honey, and lime notes on the sip sailed into funky rum, black tea, allspice, and clove flavors on the swallow.

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

(and) knobs is thirteen

1 1/2 oz Knob Creek Bourbon (Evan Williams Bonded)
1/2 oz Planteray OFTD Rum
1 1/4 oz Orange Juice
3/4 oz Lemon Juice
1/2 oz Cinnamon Syrup
1/4 oz Allspice Dram (Hamilton's)
1/4 oz Vanilla Syrup
1 dash Bitters (Angostura)
8 drop Herbsaint

Flash blend with 6 oz crushed ice and dump into a bucket glass (whip shake, dump, and fill with crushed ice). Garnish with an orange wheel (omit) and mint sprig.
Two Tuesdays ago, I decided to make a recipe that I had spotted on Reddit by Craig Herman a/k/a Colonel Tiki that I had been holding off on until my mint patch came back for the season. The recipe was (And) Knobs Is Thirteen which is his homage to the game Cribbage, a Fibonacci sequence, and an attempt to correct the Ward Eight. On paper, it reminds me of the Nui Nui with a split base driven by Bourbon (albeit supplemented by a more flavorful rum that the original's call for aged Virgin Island rum) and swapping the Nui Nui's lime for lemon. Moreover, this shares some aspects of his delightful tequila recipe, the Vendetta, so it was worth a go. Once prepared, the (And) Knobs is Thirteen opened up with mint, orange, cinnamon, and vanilla aromas. Next, an orange and lemon sip shuffled into Bourbon, funky rum, allspice, cinnamon, and vanilla flavors on the swallow.

Monday, May 26, 2025

sharpen your teeth

2 oz Jim Beam Rye Whiskey
3/4 oz Cynar
1/2 oz Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao
1/4 oz Green Chartreuse
1 1/2 dash Orange Bitters (2 dash Angostura Orange)

Stir with ice, strain into a double old fashioned glass with 4 Kold Draft cubes (1 large cube), and garnish with a lemon twist.
Continuing on with my successed with online recipe flashcard sets, I found a gem in one from The Rose in Jackson, Wyoming. The Sharpen Your Teeth on their Winter 2015-16 menu reminded me of my Continuum that I created at Our Fathers that utilized gin and sweet vermouth instead of rye and orange bitters. Moreover, the call for Jim Beam Rye reminded me that I had a few ounces of a rather old bottle that needed to be finished; I estimate that we bought that bottle around 2007 back before rye options exploded and pushed Beam's namesake rye off the shelves in favor of Beam's other whiskeys like Old Overholt and those from other brands. In the glass, the Sharpen Your Teeth sunk in with lemon, orange, and herbal aromas. Next, caramel and orange notes on the sip unfurled into rye, herbal, herbaceous, and orange flavors on the swallow.

Sunday, May 25, 2025

dagwood

1 oz Tequila (Arette)
1 oz Mezcal (Peloton de la Muerte)
3/4 oz Amaro Ramazzotti
3/4 oz St. Germain (St. Elder)
3/4 oz Lime Juice
1/4 oz Demerara Syrup

Shake with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large cube, float dashes of Pechaud's Bitters, and garnish with a mint sprig.
Two Sundays ago, I returned to the online recipe flashcard sets from The Violet Hour in Chicago. There, I was drawn in by the Dagwood from their Spring 2022 menu as a smoky Margarita of sorts sweetened with elderflower and Ramazzotti. While I have enjoyed recipes pairing amari with elderflower such as Cynar in the Alto Cucina and Averna in the Philadelphia Story, I have never tried one with Ramazzotti. In the glass, the Dagwood blossomed with mint, fruity, and anise aromas. Next, lime and caramel notes on the sip developed into smoky agave, grapefruit, floral, and root beer flavors on the swallow.

Saturday, May 24, 2025

good pals

2 oz Rye Whiskey (Rittenhouse)
3/8 oz Drambuie
3/8 oz Cynar
1/4 oz Sweet Vermouth (Giacomo Speroni)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe glass rinsed with absinthe (Obsello), and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Saturdays ago, I uncovered a set of online recipe flashcards for Good Company in St. Louis, Missouri, and landed on the Good Pals from the opening menu in Spring 2024. On paper, it reminded me of Backbar's Confederation Bridge but with sweet vermouth and absinthe instead of blanc vermouth and Angostura. Moreover, I have had good luck pairing Drambuie and Cynar in the Madame Mustache and 3:20 in the Morning, and I have enjoyed it in two Rusty Nail riffs – namely, the Bitter Nail and Tooth & Nail. Once prepared, the Good Pals showcased a lemon and anise bouquet to the nose. Next, grape, honey, and caramel notes on the sip opened up into rye and herbal flavors on the swallow.

Friday, May 23, 2025

the clapless bell

2 oz Old Forester 100° Bourbon (Evan Williams Bonded)
3/4 oz Lemon Juice
3/8 oz Ginger Syrup
3/8 oz Honey Syrup
2 dash Peychaud's Bitters

Shake with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass rinsed with Laphroaig Scotch, add an ice sphere (large ice cube), and garnish with 7 drop La Muse Verte Absinthe (St. George).
Two Fridays ago, I returned to the online recipe flash card sets for the Patterson House in Nashville and landed on the Clapless Bell. I found a mention on a menu that it was created by bartender Matt Tocco in 2010, and the recipe came across like a Bourbon Penicillin that reminded me of the Federal Buffalo Stamp with honey instead of maple. Once shaken, strained, and garnished, the Clapless Bell generated an anise and peat smoke aroma. Next, lemon and honey on the sip rang out into Bourbon, ginger, and anise flavors on the swallow.

Thursday, May 22, 2025

mi amaro

2 oz El Tesoro Reposado Tequia (Espolon)
1/2 oz Carpano Antica Sweet Vermouth (Giacomo Sperone)
1/2 oz Amaro Ciociaro
1/4 oz St. Germain (St. Elder)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with a grapefruit twist.
Two Thursdays ago, I decided to make a recipe from the Death & Co: Modern Classic Cocktails book that I had spotted on social media called the Mi Amaro. This 2009 creation by Joaquin Simo read like a floral tequila Liberal and reminded me of the Valkyrie with the touch of elderflower to balance the amaro (although the Valkyrie had a second amaro instead of vermouth). Once mixed, Mi Amaro gave forth a grapefruit, agave, and floral bouquet to the nose. Next, grape and caramel notes on the sip opened up into tequila, grapefruit, caramel orange, and floral flavors on the swallow.

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

el tesoro de jerez

2 oz Aviation Gin (Tree House Von Bingen)
3/4 oz Lustau East India Solera Sherry
1/2 oz Domaine de Canton Ginger Liqueur (Barrow's)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Wednesdays ago, I decided to make a recipe that I had spotted on KindredCocktails called the El Tesoro de Jerez. The recipe was attributed to Euclides Lopez at PDT in 2010 through the PDT Cocktails app, and given the name, I was expecting an agave-based drink with sherry instead of a gin one. In the glass, it proffered lemon, ginger, grape, and pine aromas. Next, the sherry's grape blossomed in the sip, and the swallow rounded things off with juniper, ginger, and nutty-raisiny grape flavors on the swallow.

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

souls of the mountain

1 oz Cognac (Courvoisier VS)
1 oz Mezcal (Peloton de la Muerte)
1/2 oz Amaro Meletti
1/2 oz Benedictine
2 dash Mole Bitters (Bittermens)
2 dash Absinthe (12 drop St. George)

Stir with ice and strain into an old fashioned glass with ice.
After writing up the Anyone's Shadow for the blog, I decided to riff on the recipe by extracting the Meletti-Benedictine element and replacing the rye-Jamaican rum for the Cognac-mezcal duo from the 1910 Cocktail. I dubbed this one the Souls of the Mountain after a 1938 painting by surrealist Remedios Varo to keep with the 1910's Mexican theme. Once prepared, the Souls of the Mountain called out to the nose with a caramel, vegetal, and smoke bouquet. Next, a caramel-driven sip released into rich, vegetal, herbal, and chocolate flavors on the swallow.

Monday, May 19, 2025

the cheerful charlies

1/2 oz Rye Whiskey (Rittenhouse)
1/2 oz Cognac (Courvoisier VS)
1 oz Dry Vermouth (Dolin)
1/2 oz Campari
1/2 oz Orange Liqueur (Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao)

Stir with ice and strain into a cocktail coupe.
After someone at work requested a drink called The Final Say, a Last Word riff with crème de violette in place of the Chartreuse, I uncovered that it was a recipe from the Downtown Abbey Cocktail Book. When I learned that Lou Bustamante who penned The Complete Cocktail Manual had ghostwritten that book, I ordered a used copy off of eBay since it had a some decent sounding drinks in there. The one I started with was The Cheerful Charlies as an Old Pal riff with shades of the Lucien Gaudin Cocktail (via the Campari, orange liqueur, dry vermouth trio) that was named after the character Charles Grigg. In the glass, The Cheerful Charlies offered up Cognac and orange aromas. Next, a semi-dry orange sip led into rye, brandy, orange, and bitter orange flavors on the swallow.

Sunday, May 18, 2025

sea legs

1 oz Laphroaig 10 Year Scotch
1 oz Mezcal (Peloton de la Muerte)
3/4 oz Orgeat
3/4 oz Lime Juice
2-3 dash Celery Bitters (Bitter Truth)

Shake with ice, strain into a salt-rimmed coupe, and garnish with a lime wheel (lime twist).
Two Sundays ago, I decided to make a drink called Sea Legs that I had spotted a few instances of on Instagram and elsewhere. The drink created by Alejandro Olivares at Under Current in Salt Lake City was described as having "a nautical feel without the kitch," and it was first published in a 2019 Devour Utah article. With Scotch, orgeat, and citrus, it made me think of the Cameron's Kick, but here with lime instead of lemon plus mezcal and celery bitters instead of the Irish whiskey. In the glass, the Sea Legs donated peat smoke and almond aromas to the nose. Next, a creamy lime sip sailed into smoky Scotch, vegetal, and earthy almond flavors on the swallow with a celery finish.

Saturday, May 17, 2025

dogstar

2 oz Brennivin (Linie Aquavit)
1/2 oz Punt e Mes
1/2 oz Amaro Nonino
1 bsp Maraschino (1/8 oz Luxardo)
1 dash Orange Bitters (Angostura Orange)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe, and garnish with orange oil from a twist and with a cherry.
Two Saturdays ago, I uncovered a set of online recipe flashcards for The Rose in Jackson, Wyoming, and selected the Dogstar from their Winter 2015-16 menu. On paper, it came across like an aquavit Angel of Tombstone or Brown Manhattan with a touch of Red Hook. Once mixed, the Dogstar guided the nose towards orange, cherry, caraway, and herbal aromas. Next, a grape and cherry sip flowed into caraway, bitter herbal, orange, and nutty cherry flavors on the swallow.

Friday, May 16, 2025

flew the coop

1 oz Gin (Ford's)
1 oz Cocchi Americano
1/2 oz Dry Vermouth (Dolin)
1/2 oz Sweet Vermouth (Giacomo Sperone)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Fridays ago, I returned to the online recipe flashcards for the menu-less speakeasy Idlewild in Charlotte, North Carolina, and landed on the Flew the Coop. On paper, it reminded me of Carlo Caroscio's White Light that used blanc vermouth instead of sweet, and the Cocchi Americano plus sweet vermouth reminded me of how elegantly it works in the 1930 Hoots Mon. In the glass, the Flew the Coop showcased lemon, pine, pear, and grapefruit aromas to the nose. Next, grape and pear notes on the sip roosted until juniper, herbal, and red fruit flavors came through on the swallow.

Thursday, May 15, 2025

smoother than a horse on skates

1 1/2 oz Bourbon (Old Grand-Dad Bonded)
3/4 oz Luxardo Bitter Bianco
1/4 oz Yellow Chartreuse
3 dash Orange Bitters (Angostura Orange)

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with ice, and garnish with an orange twist.
Two Thursdays ago, I came across another intriguing use of Luxardo Bitter Bianco in the Smoother than a Horse on Skates. I found the recipe in a 2019 Imbibe Magazine article attributing the drink to Jenner Cormier at Bar Kismet in Halifax, Nova Scotia. In the glass, the Smoother than a Horse on Skates opened up with orange and Bourbon aromas. Next, light honey and caramel notes on the sip slid into Bourbon, honey, herbal, bitter, floral, and orange flavors on the swallow.

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

anyone's shadow

1 oz Rye Whiskey (Rittenhouse)
1 oz Smith & Cross Rum
3/4 oz Amaro Meletti
1/4 oz Benedictine
Stir with ice, strain into a Nick & Nora glass, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Wednesdays ago, I decided to make an intriguing recipe that Daniel Zajik had posted on Instagram called Anyone's Shadow. Daniel cited the origin as the Rum Club in Portland, Oregon, and when I inquired where he got the recipe, he replied, "from a bartender at Rum Club while I was drinking it there. My hunch is that it was created by Michael Shea who owns Rum Club." Since rye, Meletti, and Benedictine appear in Sour format in the Counterfeit Rifle, I had a hunch that a stirred version would be great as well. Once prepared, Anyone's Shadow came forward with lemon, caramel, and rum funk aromas. Next, the caramel continued on into the sip where it was chased by rye, funky rum, herbal, pineapple, and floral flavors on the swallow.

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

jaguar

1 oz Del Maguey Mezcal Vida (Peloton de la Muerte)
3/4 oz JM Rhum Agricole (JM 100° Blanc)
3/4 oz Honey Syrup (1/2 oz 1:1)
1/4 oz Falernum (Velvet)
1/2 oz Lime Juice

Shake with ice, strain into an old fashioned with ice (up glass, no ice), and garnish with a lime twist.
Two Tuesdays prior, I found an interesting recipe on KindredCocktails called the Jaguar. It was not the Jaguar created by Tom Schlesinger-Guidelli at Eastern Standard, but one crafted by David Willhite who created the Doff Your Hat that I made years ago. David posted his drink he created at The Bristol in Chicago to the database in 2013, and the combination of mezcal and agricole reminded me of drinks that I have had like The Wilhelm Scream and Royal Peacock and have created like the Up Jumped the Devil and Miracles Take Longer. In the glass, this Jaguar proffered lime, smoke, vegetal, and floral aromas. Next, lime and honey notes on the sip pounced upon smoky, grassy, funky, lime, ginger, and clove flavors on the swallow.

Monday, May 12, 2025

vagabond

1 1/2 oz Oak-aged Cachaça (Cuca Fresca Gold)
3/4 oz Lemon Juice (1/2 oz)
1/2 oz Pineapple Juice
1/2 oz Demerara Syrup
1/4 oz Fernet Branca
1 dash Angostura Bitters

Shake with ice, strain into a cocktail coupe, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Mondays ago, I began searching the Kindred Cocktails database when I found a 2024 entry for the Vagabond. This one was different from the Vagabond in Pioneers of Mixing at Elite Bars: 1903-1933 as well as from Leo Robitschek's Vagabond in The Nomad Cocktail Book, for this one was created by Leonardo Rezende at the Dandelion Cocktail Bar in Florianopolis, Brazil, who also crafted the Griselda. Once prepared, the Vagabond shuffled grassy funk, pineapple, and menthol aromas to the nose. Next, pineapple and lemon notes on the sip gave way to funky cachaça, bitter, minty, and allspice flavors on the swallow.

Sunday, May 11, 2025

whiskey business

1 oz Rittenhouse Rye
1 oz Ancho Reyes Chile Liqueur
1/2 oz Lemon Juice
1/2 oz Rich Cinnamon Syrup (1:1)
1 dash Angostura Bitters

Shake with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with ice, and garnish with a lemon wheel dusted with ancho chile powder (cayenne).
Two Sundays ago, I decided to finally make the Whiskey Business by Meaghan Dorman at Dear Irving in Manhattan. While I have spotted this recipe in a number of places, I used the one published in Punch. In the glass, things began with red pepper and cinnamon aromas. Next, lemon and roast notes on the sip sold off to rye, vegetal, cinnamon, pepper spice, and clove flavors on the swallow.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

paris is burning

1 oz Beefeater Gin
1 oz Sombra Mezcal (Peloton de la Muerte)
1 oz Pineapple Juice
1/2 oz Lemon Juice
1/2 oz St. Germain (St. Elder)
1/4 oz Cane Syrup (Sirop JM)

Shake with ice, strain into a cocktail coupe, and garnish with 1 dash Angostura Bitters (5 drop).
Two Saturdays ago, I spotted a reference to a recipe on Kindred Cocktails and hunted it down in my copy of the The Nomad Cocktail Book. The drink Paris is Burning was created by Leo Robitschek and was perhaps named after a documentary that I watched years ago about the 1980s New York drag-ball scene and the birth of voguing. Once prepared, the Paris is Burning presented a floral, smoke, pineapple, and clove aroma. Next, lemon, pineapple, and grapefruit notes on the sip danced towards pine, pineapple, smoky, and vegetal flavors on the swallow.

Friday, May 9, 2025

turniquet

1 1/2 oz Olmeca Altos Blanco Tequila (Arette)
1/2 oz House Falernum (Velvet)
1/2 oz Aperol
1/4 oz Orange Liqueur (Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao)
3/4 oz Lime Juice

Shake with ice and strain into a coupe glass.
Two Fridays previous, I returned to a Toast Tab for a restaurant that has a bunch of Alcove recipes in the collection, and I was able to confirm that the Turniquet was created at Alcove by a 2019 cocktail menu. With the Aperol and falernum, it reminded me of the Spicy Dead Lady, and with orange liqueur and falernum, it made me think of the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club. Alas, I have no clue why it was not spelled "tourniquet", but the result was tasty. Once prepared, the Turniquet began with an agave and orange bouquet. Next, lime and orange notes on the sip tightened into tequila, bitter orange, and clove flavors on the swallow.

Thursday, May 8, 2025

man after midnight

1 1/2 oz Old Forester 100° Bourbon (Evan Williams Bonded)
1/4 oz Smith & Cross Rum
1/4 oz Nux Alpina Walnut Liqueur (Russo Nocino)
1 tsp Giffard Banana Liqueur (Tempus Fugit)
1 tsp Maple Syrup
2 dash Bitter Truth Aromatic Bitters (Jerry Thomas Decanter Bitters)
1 dash Saline (4 drop 20%)

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with ice, and garnish with a dehydrated banana chip (omit). The instructions I found have this as a freezer pour over ice, but I did it à la minute as described.
Two Thursdays ago, I returned to a set of online recipe flashcards for Death & Co. and landed on the Man After Midnight that is on the current Denver branch's menu. This Old Fashioned variation named perhaps after the subtitle of the ABBA song "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme!" had the unique trio of walnut, banana, and maple to accent a Bourbon and rum base. In the glass, the Man After Midnight gave forth maple, banana, and walnut aromas. Next, maple and roast notes on the sip opened up into Bourbon, rum funk, maple, walnut, clove, and cinnamon flavors on the swallow.

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

lechuza

1 1/2 oz Mezcal (Peloton de la Muerte)
3/4 oz Lime Juice
1/2 oz Drambuie
1/2 oz Crème de Banane (Tempus Fugit)
2 dash Peychaud's Bitters

Shake with ice and strain into a coupe glass.
Two Wednesdays ago, I was inspired by the Drambuie and banana liqueur combination in The Goodwill that I made the week before. I swapped its rye and lemon for mezcal and lime, and accented the drink with Peychaud's Bitters. For a name, I was inspired by Backbar's cryptid menu, and I dubbed this the Lechuza after the shapeshifting witch of Mexico – a person-sized bird with a human face. In the glass, the Lechuza flew to the nose with smoke on top of caramelized fruit and vegetable aromas. Next, lime and caramel notes transformed into smoky mezcal, honey, banana, and anise flavors on the swallow. The result ended up being a more complex, spirit forward, and fruity version of the Crush on a Bartender shooter that I crafted for a Thursday Drink Night on Mixoloseum back in 2012.

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

pineapple expressions

1 1/2 oz Altos Blanco Tequila (Arette)
1 oz Pineapple Juice
1/2 oz Lime Juice
1/2 oz Cinnamon Syrup
1/4 oz Crème de Banane (Tempus Fugit)

Shake with ice and strain into a coupe glass.
Two Tuesdays ago, I decided to make a recipe that I found in a set of online recipe flashcards for Juniper & Ivy in San Diego. The drink was the Pineapple Expressions by bartender Eric Johnson, and I located an article where Eric explained, "I wanted to make a tiki-style cocktail using tequila, and Pineapple Express was already taken by a bunch of stoner bartenders." It is unclear which Pineapple Express he was referring to, for I found one created by Freddie Sarkis at the Broken Shaker in Chicago published in the New York Times, and one crafted by bartender Caitlin Patterson via Punch Drinks. Overall, it seemed like a pineapple version of Death & Co.'s Gilda Cocktail and a good followup to Between the Cheats, so I was game to give it a whirl. In the glass, the Pineapple Expressions broadcasted a tequila, banana, and cinnamon aroma to the nose. Next, pineapple and lime on the sip gave way to tequila, pineapple, banana, and cinnamon flavors on the swallow.

Monday, May 5, 2025

between the cheats

3/4 oz Smith & Cross Rum
3/4 oz Planteray 5 Year Barbados Rum (Doorly's 12 Year)
3/4 oz Banana Liqueur (Tempus Fugit)
1/2 oz Cinnamon Demerara Syrup
1/2 oz Pineapple Juice
1/2 oz Lime Juice (3/4 oz)

Shake with ice, strain into a Collins glass, fill with crushed ice, and garnish with an orange rose (orange twist).
With pineapple juice in hand, I searched through my to-make recipe list on Sunday night and spotted the Between the Cheats from the now closed Brick & Mortar in Cambridge, MA, via their ToastTab site. I was able to find it on a Yelp menu photo in January 2017. While it is most likely named after an Amy Winehouse song, I recall that it was once Between the Cheeks and that was supported by a Yelp menu photo as well (I remember ordering something else due to that name). Both names reminded me of the classic Between the Sheets although rum and a citrus juice are the only overlaps between the two recipes. Once prepared, the Between the Cheats proffered an orange, caramel, banana, and cinnamon aroma to the nose. Next, pineapple, lime, and caramel notes on the sip flipped into funky rum, caramelized banana, and cinnamon flavors on the swallow.

Sunday, May 4, 2025

seaport

1 1/2 oz Mezcal (Peloton de la Muerte)
1/2 oz Green Chartreuse
1 oz Pineapple Juice
1/2 oz Lemon Juice
1 bsp Cane Syrup (1/8 oz Sirop JM)
Orange Bitters (2 dash Angostura Orange)

Shake with ice and strain into a cocktail coupe.
Two Sundays ago, I searched the Bartender's Choice for pineapple juice recipes that I had skipped over previously. There, I latched onto the Seaport by Brandon Bramhall at the Nashville branch of Attaboy in 2018 as an agave riff on the Downtown (gin, Yellow Chartreuse, pineapple, lemon). Once prepared, the Seaport gave forth a smoky, vegetal, pineapple, and herbaceous bouquet to the nose. Next, a lemon and pineapple sip drifted into smoky, herbal, vegetal, and tart pineapple flavors on the swallow. If I were to riff on this, I would swap out the cane syrup for something more flavorful such as a 1/4 oz of cinnamon syrup with Death & Co.'s Gilda in mind.

Saturday, May 3, 2025

trash & vaudeville

1 1/2 oz Rye Whiskey (Rittenhouse)
1/2 oz Mezcal (Peloton de la Muerte)
1/2 oz Benedictine
1/2 oz Amaro Montenegro

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large ice cube, and garnish with an orange twist.
After posting my Oaxacan Lady on Reddit during the day and making it for a guest later that night at the C-Side Bar, I decided to riff on the Montenegro-Benedictine combination when I got home from work. I crossed a Frisco (rye-Benedictine) with an M&M (mezcal-Montenegro) and named it after a store on St. Mark's Street in Manhattan that I was reminded of in the book St. Mark's is Dead. I used to buy clothes there in the 1990s back when the edgiest clothes in Boston could only be found at Allston Beat and a few other select places. I previously had mashed up the Frisco with the Alaska for the Call of the Wild which worked well, so I went ahead with the idea. I originally made this as equal parts rye & mezcal, but I think the 3:1 works better. In the glass, the Trash & Vaudeville came forth with orange, caramel, vegetal, and smoke aromas. Next, caramel and clementine notes on the sip were transformed into rye, smoky mezcal, vegetal, orange, and herbal flavors on the swallow.

Friday, May 2, 2025

oropa cocktail

60% Aged Cognac (1 3/4 oz Courvoisier VS)
20% Jamaican Rum (1/2 oz Monymusk Gold + 1/4 oz Smith & Cross)
10% Honey (1/2 oz Honey Syrup)
10% Lemon Juice (1/2 oz)

Shake with ice, strain into a cocktail glass, and garnish with a cherry.
Two Fridays ago, I reached for my translated reprint of the 1936 Italian book 1000 Misture, and I spotted the Oropa Cocktail that might have been named after the municipality in Piedmont. Overall, the recipe appeared like a mashup of three parts Louisiana Purchase (Milk & Honey's Cognac riff on a Bee's Knees) to one part Honey Bee from David Embury's The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks. In the glass, the Oropa Cocktail began with lemon, honey, and rum funk aromas. Next, lemon and honey on the sip gave way to Cognac, rum, honey, and funk flavors on the swallow.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

the goodwill

1 1/2 oz Sagamore Rye (Old Overholt 86°)
1/2 oz Drambuie
1/2 oz Tempus Fugit Crème de Banane
3/4 oz Lemon Juice

Shake with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with an orange twist.
Two Thursdays ago, I uncovered an online recipe flashcard collection from The Bygone in Baltimore. There, I was lured in by The Goodwill that appeared on the bar's Facebook page in March 2022. At first I recalled having Drambuie and banana liqueur in the Omertà Cocktail, but I later realized that I had this same combination of Drambuie, banana liqueur, and lemon with Canadian whisky instead of American rye in the Regency from the 1937 Café Royal Cocktail Book. In the glass, The Goodwill gave forth an orange, honey, caramel, and whiskey bouquet to the nose. Next, lemon, honey, and caramel notes on the sip shifted to rye, honey, Scotch, and caramelized banana flavors on the swallow.