Recommend Me a Coctail

71
Christopher J. McGarvey wrote:
electrons wrote:Did you know that Eagle Rare (Buffalo Trace) was owned by Seagrams!?
Sazerac Company owns Buffalo Trace and have since 1989.


I stand corrected, I guess.

So I had never tried Eagle Rare, but had meant to. Tonight, I went to Bourbon on Lincoln. Wednesday night is 1/2 price whiskey night, the best deal in the city by far. I asked for an Eagle Rare, neat. Bartender said that the Eagle Rare 17 year is normally $16, which meant it was $8 tonight. I had one, it was brilliant. I mean fucking brilliant. Nice call y'all. I had 2 before I moved to Evan Williams manhattans. Bourbon drinkers, lets make Wednesday nite at Bourbon a regular thing, eh? Gene Honda was there as he is every wednesday night. Really nice, outgoing whiskey lover guy. Anyway, the final bill, 2 Eagle Rare 17yrs, 2 manhattans, 4 miller lites and 2 shots of Petron Silver was a $36 tab. Love it.
Ryan Kevin Rezvani (:u)~
Go You Sox

Recommend Me a Coctail

74
burun wrote:
Ty Webb wrote:They've got one called the Moscow Mule that's top-shelf vodka, homemade ginger syrup, lime juice, and seltzer.

That sounds like my kind of drink.


Delicious and, being so, deadly. I predict you'd drink way more than you realized you were drinking and would start fondling the waiters. We'll have to hook you up ASAP.
You had me at Sex Traction Aunts Getting Vodka-Rogered On Glass Furniture

Recommend Me a Coctail

75
First of all, bit of a Kerble.

Second of all, the greatest mixed drink is the martini. The only concession I would possibly make to this statement is that you cannot drink a martini in a warm/hot environment. But in a cool to cold place, it's unmatched.

The best thing about a martini is that it's a wonderful litmus test for the bar's ability to handle a classic drink. The second best thing about a martini is that it's an extremely effective method for delivering alcohol. And when I say extremely, I think there's no other drink that will get you as pleasantly (i.e. no shots of grain) drunk as quickly.

Some questions about the martini -
"What kind of martini?"
Shut up. There's only one kind of martini. Vodka, cranberry juice and Sara Jessica Parker have nothing to do with a martini.

"Who cares about a martini?"
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Mencken – “…the only American invention as perfect as a sonnet.”

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Dorothy Parker -
“I love to drink Martinis,
Two at the very most
After three I'm under the table,
After four I'm under my host.”

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Bogart
“I should never have switched from Scotch to martinis.” – Note: These were his last words. BAD ASS.

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Speaker of the House Jim Wright
"If the Lord hadn't intended to have a three Martini lunch, then why do you suppose He put all those olive trees in the Holy Land?"

Also, Churchill, EB White, Jack London, FDR, RMN, Mae West, Hemingway and a host of others.


”How do you make a good martini?”
The secret to a good martini is very good gin and not much else. After trying about 20 different gins, I prefer Bombay Sapphire. Try others if you like, but remember that good gin in a martini is the equivalence of a good performance in a recording. Without it, you won’t get what you want. And there is no ProTools in drink making.

That said, you’ll need
    - Some ice cubes and some crushed ice
    - A stirrer
    - A strainer
    - A drink shaker
    - A spotlessly clean martini glass
    - Excellent gin
    - Dry vermouth
    - Three pitted non-canned olives (I like olives)
    - Cold water
    - A stopwatch
    - Some salted, mixed nuts

Get everything prepped ahead of time, as the timing’s important on this.

    1. Spear the olives.
    2. Fill your martini glass about ¾ full of warm gin. Set aside.
    3. Put one ice cube into the drink shaker. Pour in enough vermouth to handily coat the sides of the shaker when shaken – maybe two capfuls. Cap the shaker, shake vigorously and quickly dump the ice/vermouth mixture into the sink. Don’t wait for every last drop to come out, just quickly chuck it.
    4. Fill the internally-coated shaker with ice cubes. Grab your martini glass and pour the gin into the shaker. Hit go on your stopwatch. Gently stir the gin/ice/vermouth mix for about 10 seconds.
    5. Quickly rinse out your martini glass with water. Fill the martini glass with crushed ice. Gently top the glass off with more cold water and set by the sink.
    6. Grab a handful of mixed nuts and eat them while looking at the stopwatch. At the one minute mark, stir again for 10 seconds.
    7. At the 1:50 mark, dump the icewater into the sink and put the speared olives in the glass. Put the strainer over the shaker and slowly pour the mixture into the glass. As it approaches the tippy top, have a quick slurp (bringing your face to the glass) to make sure you can get most of the drink to fit.
    8. Dump what’s left in the shaker into the sink. Slowly pick up the glass and look at it for a moment. It’s so pretty. Now have your first sip and feel the tension just slip away.

Don’t expect this treatment everywhere you order one. But think of the joy of making two of these when that special someone shows up at your home, coming in out of the rain. Turn to him or her and say, as Robert Benchley did to Ginger Rogers, “why don’t you get out of that wet coat and into a dry martini?”

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Lucky bastard.

= Justin

Recommend Me a Coctail

79
Marsupialized wrote:
nick92675 wrote:
The MayorofRockNRoll wrote:I saw one bartender making a drink called a Dark and Stormy, which sounded kinda gay, but it was dark rum, lime, ginger beer and something else.

Anyone ever tried one of these?


my best friend had these at his wedding and it was amazing - but the key was the insane ginger beer that he had special ordered in for the wedding. i had one in new orleans last week and it was terrible.

i had dinner at sultan's market the other night and had a ginger beer there. it is my aim to try and make one with that ginger beer. like most things, it's all about the ingredients.

there's also been a lot of talk about that new wicker park place - the violet hour.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vAHM9js19A

i want to give them a shot. my friends was a little more spartan, just high quality ingredients which ruled.


Ok, sold. They look like they know what the fuck they are doing with a drink over there. Anyone wanna do some fancy drinking one night like civilized people lemmie know.
What are the prices like? I bet that dark and stormy is over 9 bucks.
All their cocktails are $11, but are basically 1-1/2 or 2 times the size of the glass (they come with a little jar for the excess). Compared to the shitty cocktails other places serve for about the same amount of cash it's not that expensive, and really I'd rather have one drink at the Violet Hour than, say, two pints or something at some other bar.

The Violet Hour is fucking awesome, though I think Bourbon & Branch in San Francisco is even better.
http://www.myspace.com/leopoldandloebchicago

Linus Van Pelt wrote:I subscribe to neither prong of your false dichotomy.

Recommend Me a Coctail

80
Antero wrote:*cracks knuckles*
...
And that's just a modified Negroni, which is hardcore.
1 part gin
1 part Campari
1 part sweet vermouth
Stir and strain. Some people throw a dash of orange bitters in there too, I don't see the point.


Ah, another Negroni fan. Good man, Antero. My favorite summer cocktail. (Though you do have to watch out--as with several good classic cocktails, they can be so tasty that you're hammered before you know it.)

Winter cocktail of choice: the Cable Car. As I've probably said here before, very tasty and relaxing...but just make sure you don't have to go anywhere afterwards.
http://mauricerickard.com/ | http://onezeromusic.com/

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