Boston Apothecary

April 3, 2010

martini time!

Filed under: cocktail acids, cocktails — Tags: , , , , — sjs @ 11:26 pm

i never really drink gin martinis.  i’d rather have an interesting sour or something more exotic like a sanru.  after making and drinking a few gin martinis i thought i’d muse a little…

martini

(3 to 1)

2.25 oz. citadelle gin

.75 oz. noilly prat dry vermouth

dash orange bitters

homogenized lemon peel (expressed in the stirring pitcher)

this is fantastic and refreshing.  citadel is a gin with a ratio of juniper and coriander that is not as extreme as other more juniper dominant bottlings.  the acidity of the vermouth does not stand out significantly and the lack of sweetness mutes the effect of the orange bitters to elegance.

(2 to 1)

2 oz. tanqueray gin

1 oz. dolin dry vermouth

dash orange bitters

top notes of lemon peel

this version has a different sense of harmony.  tanqueray has a very large amount of juniper relative to coriander, yet in the drink, because of the inhomogeneous lemon peel, the gin’s aggressive angular aromatic nature is intensely overshadowed.  for some, the acidity from the large quantity of dry vermouth is too challenging.  dolin is also a brand known for its gorgeous bright muscat meets elder flower fruit, but even in such a large quantity and paired with orange bitters, the fruit is not readily obvious.

the martini is a drink in love with exclusivity and has a very skewed sense of harmony.  elitists are quick to defend the iconic beverage as high art and their misty prose leaves others with little understanding of what is really going on.

within, the the martini is composed of two well entrenched high art ingredients.  dry gin defends itself by adding extra exotic-seeming botanicals in trace amounts that have no real bearing on the overall aroma.  the extra ingredients are strictly symbolic (gin is all about aromatic symbolism), yet new producers constantly fall into the trap of actually using the extra botanicals to influence flavor with the consequence of their gins often smelling like someone added cracked black pepper.  gin drinkers are often very brand sensitive but the most important, least analyzed difference between producers is their juniper to coriander ethic.  some producers are in love with juniper and their gins can come across as bottled pine trees while others show restraint and can come across as either elegant or sometimes bland if too much overshadowing happens.  no one way is better, each is just a different sense of harmony related to symbolic value placed on the juniper aroma within an imbiber’s osmology.

vermouth is one of the trickiest beverages to understand, eluding language and being defined only as a “beverage that resembles the characteristics of and tastes like vermouth”.  dry vermouth may have been paired with gin because of its alliterative botanical concept as well as its delicacy and inability to overshadow.   gin’s exclusivity techniques look like white lies relative to the many claims of deliberate misinformation in vermouth production techniques.  the main item of misinformation in question is that botanicals are extracted using high proof solvents when the truth is really the opposite.  the solvents are adjusted to the minimum of microbiological stability so they don’t over extract bitter principles.  if aspiring producers fall for the high proof trap they will never figure out how to replicate existing produers’ success.  exclusivity is furthered with claims that formulas are composed of a massive array of botanicals which conflicts with some open producers claiming the use of only a few.

as the sum of its parts, the martini has a strange sense of spatial effect.  if made as gin and dry vermouth in a varying ratio, sweetness, which is important to so many other styles of drink, is nearly eliminated.  as opposed to a “sour” style drink with voluptuous pornographic proportions, the martini is tall, gaunt and uniquely very attractive.  the function of dry vermouth in the martini is complex.  for starters dry vermouth simply dilutes gin’s alcohol and aroma.  this all happens with a swap for vermouth’s acidity and its largely self contrasted round aroma.  the change in ratio between gin and vermouth is really the push and pull of numerous planes of spatial effect.  angular aromas and real acidity are not exactly an even trade and many people find vermouth’s acidity to be inharmonious with the absence of sweetness in such a high alcohol environment.

besides imbibers enjoying an easy connoisseurial point to distinguish themselves with, aroma may be the reason the gin martini has evolved to the dry, no vermouth style.  if the nature of aromas can significantly effect our perception of structure, modern gin styles employ aroma to effectively create experiences that can go unameliorated.  no acid necessary, modern gin producers took care of that literally (dissolved acid post distillation) or figuratively (aroma).  no contrasting round aroma necessary, modern producers built that in.  not that anything malicious is going on but eliminate a middle man and you can sell more product.

modern gins have enough angular aroma to be refreshing but not too much that they need to be diluted with vermouth to find common harmony.  there is more citrus peel in modern formulas and coupled with orange bitters, as well as effective use of a twist, martini-esque spatial effect can be maintained without the vermouth.

now that the largest points of contention are squared away, what are thought of as mere garnishes, the olive and lemon twist, often become the most exciting and defining parts of the martini.  the olive adds salt from its brine which is still a rare plane to manipulate in the cocktail realm.  the twist can either be applied into the liquid and stirred or directly to the top of the drink with the difference being the creation of a homogenous or inhomogeneous element.  frontal olfaction is very powerful and strong inhomogenous “top notes” have a large tendency to overshadow aromas within the drink therefore they can make an experience very distinct.  a lemon twist should be wielded with a lot of empathy because it really determines the fate of dollar an ounce gin.

with such a skewed sense of space, temperature becomes a plane that is critically important to the martini.  the gaunt, thin drink becomes very cranky as it warms and is best thought of as a three part shot.  stirring the drink to minimize dissolve gas with an adequate amount of ice is important as well the realization that an unchilled glass will suck the cold energy right out of the liquid.

like the architect ludwig mies van der rohe stated, “god is in the details”.  if you understand the landmarks you can move around and shape an entire world with its own spiritual life.  the martini has a surprising amount of relationships that can benefit from more attention than most.  small changes have a very significant influence on spatial effect and therefore emotional response.  with every decision within the martini having such intense impact,  the drink might actually be worthy of all the obsession and fetishism lavished upon it.

December 10, 2008

dry rum & dry gin? i like mine wet…

Filed under: cocktail acids — Tags: , , , , — sjs @ 12:10 am

lately i see the words “dry” confusingly placed on all sorts of spirits from gin to rum and i don’t really understand what it means. dry is even confusingly used in wine speak. many people can’t make heads or tales of whether a wine is sweet or not… is there unfermented sugars or are people referring to levels of acidity? many people think rums are sweet because they are made of “sugar”. well whats the deal?

if like wine, dryness often ends up referring to acidity, what is the acidity of spirits? should unaged spirits mostly be the same and there be some difference in aged spirits? is there “perceived” sweetness due to high extracts in spirits like some times is encountered in wine?

the UV vodka website proudly claims their product is close to PH neutral relative to other budget produces who acidify their product for some spirits tax loophole… this makes really no sense to me but the budget producers would definitely have some “dry” booze. could these practices in neutral spirits be born out of some sort of tradition. should my C.J. Wray “dry rum” be fairly low in PH? and if it is, would the result be due to additives or stuff naturally going through the still?

maybe to solve some of the mystery i should calibrate my Hanna Instruments PH pen and have a go at the spirits that are laying around…

calibrated with fresh solution…

whole foods distilled water… PH??? well my distilled water was below 7 which is kind of a bad omen… but maybe acid is attached to my electrode from my cleaning solutions etc? maybe the temperature is messing with things? well i put on a new electrode, calibrated it and i still can’t get a 7 out of this distilled water but maybe its is messed up…

c.j. wray dry rum PH 4.85

gordon’s dry gin PH 6.90 <— switching back and forth and this rockets back to 6.90!

myer’s “platinum white” PH 4.42

clement VSOP PH 3.78

back to the calibrators… things check out… more or less… i tried to go back and forth from samples to dublicate my initial numbers… more or less they check out.

batavia arrack van oosten PH 5.02

seagram’s distiller’s reserve PH 5.13

trimbach framboise raspberry brandy PH 6.80

lemon juice PH 2.37 (time for a cocktail!)

so wow, i don’t really have too much confidence in the tester but i think it can still teach something about what we drink… its strange how drastically different gordon’s and the trimbach are from the others… your choice here would apparently have a large impact on balancing a sour… are the results here the reason the rum & coke is more popular than the fairly acid neutral UV with coke? Harold Mcgree puts black coffee at PH 5.0 and yogurt at PH 4.5. so are the results here negligable because we pile on the sugar with our mixers or are these PH factors important in shaping consumer preference over the long run?

now i’m curious how the more mainstream gins that i work with at the bar stack up… and how does all this acidity get there in the first place… any insights?

i haven’t really put things to test on what comes through my still, but now i’m even more curious and i think i’m gonna have to test some things… distilled, citric, malic, tartaric, and acetic acids… and it was the last of my bottle, but if i added baking soda to the clement would it have fizzed… could i neutralize that acidity?

do some dry gins have more acidity now because the palate needs it in a martini (or maybe not, my assumption from loving dry wine) but no one wants to get it from dry vermouth… so does a great marriage of gin and dry vermouth like you see in weird reviews really have to do with good balancing of PH?

hmm. quite alot of new mixology questions…

August 26, 2008

advanced soda making basics…

Filed under: cocktail acids — Tags: , , , — sjs @ 6:14 pm

this will eventually develop into a comprehensive post but for the moment i will just start to organize my ideas and recipes…

i think i want to tackle a recipe for extra brut hibiscus soda as a new cocktail acid… and a yeast carbonated tonic water…

amerine’s “technology of wine making” outlines the two most important things to consider in soda making… the ideal PH of a champagne is 3-3.2 and you should plan on fermenting to dryness and only sugar in your dosage after disgorging your yeasts… this advice runs counter to any of the amateur guides on soda making. most guides say sugar to taste and manuelly stop fermentation by putting the soda into the fridge… this introduces a slew of variables that you can never change and your product will be all over the map, not to mention the risk of explosions and bottles that gush everywhere…

this does limit your options to avoiding things with too much built in sugar…

sugaring.

“the pressure desired in sparkling wines at the end of the closed fermentation is about 5 to 6 atm at 10 degree celsius (50F); that is, about 75 to 90lb pressure per square inch. for each atmosphere of pressure approximately 0.4% of sugar (4g/liter) is required. thus to produce 6 atm pressure would require 6 * 0.4 or 2.4%, or 24g/liter sugar, or about 20lb / 100 gal. of wine.”

amerine does note that about 1 gram does not ferment and it needs to be accounted for.

“brut” test batch for two champagne bottles…

1.5 liters with 25 grams per liter of sugar. this reads as 2.25 brix with a hand held refractometer. i didn’t pay much attention to sanitation because it is only a test. 750ml in a classic champagne bottle seems to leave three inches of bottle neck unfilled… the yeast used was a fraction of a “cooper’s brewing yeast” that i think is a beer lager yeast.

one thing to note is that conversion tables put 25g/l of sugar at over 2.25 brix. it is actually closer to three. so i wonder if i have a temperature or calibration problem. there seems to be a few ways to calculate potential alcohol but none of the ways estimate it over 2%.

“brut” test batch 2 for four bottles with flavoring and acidity

3 liters with 25 grams per liter of sugar. one random sized pack of “chai spice” that was a sample and some added malic acid to bring the PH down to 2.4 plus the rest of the coopers brewing yeast…

after fermenting for quite a few days, i drank the first test from a warm bottle and was not impressed by the carbonization. i chilled down test 2 in the fridge and found its bubbles quite comparable to champagne. one thing that you notice is that disgorging is really important. the floating sediment is quite unattractive. another thing to note is that the dry zero dosage structure is kind of awesome… you could add a sugar dosage but because the alcohol level is so low it may need a preservative to prevent the soda from further fermenting… i personally really enjoy this bone dryness and champagne acidity… from the chai soda i seemed to notice the flavor of apples…

disgorging.

getting the yeast out probably is the hardest part of the soda making process and maybe the most time consuming. so far my technique has been to add slightly too much sugar so i get enough pressure that the bottle slightly over flows upon uncapping (hopefully i can follow up with an exact number of extra grams). if the bottles are fermented and riddled downward then only turned upwards just before uncapping for disgorgement, nearly all the yeast will be collected in the neck. quite a lot will be stuck under the cap and hopefully the rest will nearly glue itself to the sides of the neck. when its done over flowing the neck can be swabbed out. freezing the neck into a plug is the classic and most thorough way of disgorging but my understanding is that you still need to swab the neck and its probably not worth the massive amount of prep unless your going to spend eight hours disgorging and get a decent amount of money for your product…

dosaging.

i can’t say i’ve mastered dosaging. so far i’ve just been adding the still tea to refill the bottles all while everything is as cold as possible. you could add more sugar and augment the structure of the drink but i haven’t been tempted.

reseal.

after recapping short term aging like a beer will decrease some of the yeasty aromas created during fermentation. some yeast produce less bread like aroma than others. beer brewers like sierra nevada use “clean fermenting” yeast strains which might be worth experimenting with.

August 22, 2008

an extinct style of drink?

Filed under: cocktail acids, cocktails, vermouth — Tags: , , , , — sjs @ 7:25 pm

due to the pathetic circumstances of my life i have some how evolved in a vermouth drinker. somehow this stuff called vermouth went from totally being in vogue to being completely ignored and barely written about where nearly all real knowledge of it has been lost generations ago and the producers seem to be as quiet as moon shiners. no one is exactly interviewing them for wine spectator which i’d pay to read. luckily with all this decline of things the price, for the most part, has stayed down in two buck chuck territory as well. one reason i think all this persists in modern times anyhow, is because true connoisseurship and afficion is really challenging. vermouth is kind of alienating because its flavors are so adult, and apparently for many people its alcohol levels are too low for most people (the lushes) to bother with which i think is really significant to its decline.

cocktails also are a problem for vermouth. the worst vermouth cocktail ever created was the dry martini. i’m not talking about a 1/8 dry vermouth cocktail or a wave of the bottle. i’m speaking of dry vermouth and gin in any ratio with bitters or not. for some reason variations with little deviation had such a profound impact that so few people moved in other directions after its popularity began… erosion of taste slowly stripped away all the wine and an impatient culture that needed their buzz from one glass took over.

you don’t have a real vermouth drink until you mix up some flavor contrast. and most importantly you can’t be afraid of having two or three if a buzz is your goal. a couple evenings ago i was looking for a drink for the Cocktail Chronicle’s MxMo event. in browsing the always inspirational cocktailDB, i came across “stephen’s cocktail”. i was really impressed by this forgotten Stephen’s good taste. it totally read as my style…

1 oz. sherry (i interpreted this as dry sherry to get a good balance so i used la cigarrera’s manzanilla)

.75 oz. dry vermouth (european noilly prat)

.75 oz. benedictine (sweet enough to need that much dry balance!)

the drink has a serious flavor to alcohol ratio and a really elegant acidity to sweetness ratio. i wish i could have a good bar experience somewhere drinking maybe five or six of these and pay beer prices because it has close to a craft beer cost basis. another big problem for vermouth is the nature of our gouge restaurant economies. to sum it up quickly, distributors and marketers push super expensive products on the market leaving generations not even knowing that 12 dollar liters of rye whiskey and rum are stunningly delicious and to add insult to injury, restaurants in so many cities rather be half dead all night long, gouging guests with super expensive drinks than actually work hard, understand spirits and use products that don’t have pharmaceutical style promotional expenses.

is there any room in the market for this class of fortified and aromatized wine drink? in matters of taste, sherry with its intense barrel treatment is like whiskey flavored wine (i group sherry drinks with vermouth drinks). i feel like people should be able to relate to it more than they think. vermouth and sherry are also damn cheep relative to distilled spirits. tapas places often sell small glasses of them for $5. additionally, restaurants are trying to get people less drunk these days in the world of liability and conservatism and many people have to work increasing hours but still need time to unwind with some adult tasting stimulus. if in milan the vermouth drinkers happy hour is extended well into the evening by the perfect alcohol content and affordability of aromatized wine, couldn’t this new style of drink help revive many lagging urban bar cultures?

so now your curius and want to mix up some vermouth? the king of these drinks is the “half sinner, half saint”

1.5 oz. sweet vermouth

1.5 oz. dry vermouth

.5 oz. absinthe (floated)

twist of something…

i still have yet to find someone that doesn’t like this drink. the sweetness to dryness ratio is perfect. this drink also makes a dramatic mockery of absinthe. the cloying versus the relief… you can’t know pleasure until you know pain… i think i also need to give No. 9 park credit for introducing it to me. now one or two is a daily ritual… the two mentioned cocktails illustrate some of the really simple formats but just a few of the many players… when you know their simple properties like whats sweet and whats dry things can easily be substituted to your wildest imagination.

the players…

sherry: sweet or dry… oxidized to elegance with flor yeast… in love with oak like whiskey flavored wine. fresh styles like manzanilla are very chamomily while 30 year old sweet sherries as made by matuselem are like liquid bread pudding…

vermouth: sweet, dry, or “bianco”… with so many different brands having styles that are hard to nail down, but with little exception all being good. some drys have more fruit than others. some sweets are sweeter and some are more intense… some biancos are more bitter than others…

played out iconic… brand names lillet and dubbonet are usually sweet, usually really orangey… and more or less other stuff is more fun.

forgotten savoy… the savoy which covers parts of southern france and northern italy in and around the alps is aromatized wine country. there are so many forgotten specialties like “chamberyzette” which is vermouth heavy handedly aromatized with alpine strawberries. chocolates best friend is the epic “barolo chinato” which is elegantly bitter aromatized barolo wine. this region makes aromatized wines that would remind you of a more handsome campari or a more complex lillet. (great one are made by vergano)

americano: more intensely bitter aromatized wines that kind of overlap with the savoy specialities. great producers are vergano, gancia, and i would say vya of california. i’ve even made my own with good success.

aromatized cheaters: bitter and low alcohol but do not have a wine base (to my knowledge anyhow…) cynar, campari, aperol, picon bier…

monastic contrast: incredibly masterful aromatized high alcohol liqueurs… cloyingly anisey absinthe producing masochistic flavor contrast, the chartreuses which are an artistic synthesis of the flavor “rocket fuel” via booze and botanicals, and benedictine which is liquid cigar concentrate…

the wines: passito, botrytised, ice wine… sauternes, port, madeira (cercial, bual, malmsey, rainwater!) fresh or oxidized styles, honeyed, mysterious, and made under rare circumstances…

what can be surprising is how well certain brands perform in the randomness of it all… cribari sweet vermouth anyone? try it with some dry sherry like “la cigarrera” manzanilla and a finger of saint james “royal ambre” rhum. there are a million ways to mix this style of drink and a million of them are already on the books. check it out and see how much less whiskey you end up drinking…

August 5, 2008

fighting the good fight with cocktail acids…

Filed under: cocktail acids — Tags: — sjs @ 2:40 pm

i keep reading about stiff drinks made with interesting liqueur combinations. an example would be the window’s kiss.

1.5 oz. calvados or apple brandy

.75 oz. yellow chartreuse

.75 oz. benedictine

dash angostura bitters

stirred.

this drink has wild flavor contrasts and massive nuance but it is still cloying and i can barely enjoy more than a sip. this style of drink is sweeter than port or ice wine but you can learn great lessons from it. epic liqueur duo with an apply contrast… amazing idea. but how can i get in on the action? i need some serious contrast to the sugar. my thought was to split the calvados into a barrel proof spirit diluted with a very dry appley sherry like a manzanilla. i tried making the drink as:

.75 oz. old potrero 18th century style rye (124.3 proof)

.75 oz. la gitana manzanilla (30 proof)

.75 oz. yellow chartreuse

.75 oz. benedictine

dash of angostura bitters

so i preserved the alcohol content that the calvados contributed and added acidity but still found the drink cloying… i then added another ounce of manzanilla and things started to be within the average of my tastes but my alcohol content went down… which is also not good. of course i could decrease the amount of liqueur relative to fortifier.

1 oz. old potrero 18th century style rye (124.3 proof)

1 oz. la gitana manzanilla (30 proof)

.5 oz. yellow chartreuse

.5 oz. benedictine

dash of angostura bitters

mother’s milk… even when reduced, the contribution of the liqueurs is sweeter than the sweet vermouth of a manhattan but now i have acidity from the sherry… this definitely needs to be strained over fresh ice so it can be as cold as possible… and for some reason i wish it smelt of oranges…

so i like this concenpt. the right sherries with barrel proof spirits doesn’t really interrupt my “barrel” flavors and gives me acidity and something economical because barrel proof spirits are never priced correctly and sherry is so affordable… so now i need to find more dry sherry and more barrel proof spirits…

July 23, 2008

manzanilla a.k.a. chamomile acid…

Filed under: cocktail acids, cocktails — Tags: , — sjs @ 12:18 pm

i did double post this on egullet also but hopefully i can expand it to a couple more cocktails that pair hendrick’s gin and manzanilla sherry… i just acquired the “la gitana” which is a classic bottling from bodegas hidalgo. these dry sherries are often beyond the average of most people’s tastes to drink alone, but so is straight lemon juice and that means they can mix spectacularly…

i just entered boston’s hendrick’s cocktail contest… this what i settled on…

1.5 oz. hendrick’s gin
1 oz. manzanilla sherry (la gitana, a very classic bottling…)
.5 oz. sloe gin (plymouth)
.5 oz. yellow chartreuse
dash of peychaud’s bitters
stir…

chartreuse and sloe gin are my favorite liqueur duo’s at the moment… the yellow works especially well. the contest was looking for cocktails that highlight a botanical besides cucumber and rose petal within hendrick’s botanical formula… manzanilla as a sherry style was named after the chamomile flower because its flavor has that earth apple character, but it also has badass cocktail craving acidity! a classic example of the sherry (unlike the la cigarrera manzanilla that i really like) gives “chamomile acid” to balance and contrast the liqueurs and support the gin…

when i tried the drink with green chartreuse all it brought out in the wine was the intimidating oxidized wine character… yellow chartreuse really highlighted the “earth apple” character of the sherry…

now i need a name…

more to come if i can find the time and sobriety…

July 10, 2008

capturing the big easy… (or not)

Filed under: cocktail acids, cocktails, vermouth — Tags: , — sjs @ 8:49 pm

so i’m on the edge of my first real vacation in quite a few years which i’m making out of the tales of the cocktails event down in NOLA. part of getting ready is a little bit of practice drinking. to keep up with everyone else i need a strategy. i’m taking advice from chris charmichael of the tour de france training fame and using a high cadence with smaller sips technique. many great drinkers of the past have used the technique to hold their booze over arduously long evenings… i’m also trying to acclimate myself with cocktails that capture the spirit of new orleans. easier said than done with out every having been there… the first go at it looked something like this:

2 oz. baby sazerac rye (thanks to the people at bauer wines and spirits, noone else has it in boston)

.75 oz. pimento dram (homemade, but alpenz corp.’s product would probably be better)

.25 oz. yellow chartreuse

1 oz. dry vermouth as tart as a lemon (9 grams of malic acid per 250ml of gallo dry vermouth)

dash of peychaud’s bitters.

this drink was ok, but needs a better balance and maybe something other than yellow chartreuse or just more of it. i wanted gross excess and no compromises by way of lots of liqueurs and also the flavor of vermouth but also a dry, refreshing drink that you could only get with lemon or lime juice… i got what i was looking for to some degree, but the particular allspice in my dram may be too fiery to be elegant. as easy going as i hear new orleans is, there still may be a dress code at times and that may hold true for good drinks.

my second try took a different direction. i almost thought of changing up the first drink then i put on some jazz… i wanted a style of drink that could give more length to my night (lower alcohol, fuller flavor).

1 oz. baby sazerac rye

1 oz. dry sherry (la cigarrera manzanilla, but any thing else “highland” like would work)

1 oz. sweet vermouth (noilly prat)

stir over ice then float…

.5 oz. peychaud’s bitters (7 dashes?)

those that drink a lot of vermouth may recognize the “half sinner, half saint” in all of this, but with a couple different notes… flavors like sherry always remind me of either a rich solo by stephane grappelli or sometimes an upright bass. sherry is the greatest expression of wood and oxidation that i can consume to my heart’s desire because of its low alcohol level… i’ve also found that absinthe is the most overrated product in beverage (i’ve never encountered one that was more adult tasting than good & plenty candies). i’d take a large dose of peychaud’s bitters over absinthe any day of the week…

for breakfast i just revisited the riff on the half sinner, half saint…

1.5 oz. sweet vermouth (noilly prat)

1.5 oz. dry sherry (last of la cigarrera’s manzanilla)

.5 oz. of floated peychaud’s bitters

this drink is most satisfying. i personally enjoy the taste of the bitters over an absinthe, but it just doesn’t float the way i’d like it to. the thin barrier of absinthe in a half sinner, half saint coats your lips in a briefly cloying way to enhance the refreshing experience of the vermouths underneath. sinners and saint, pleasure and pain… one can’t exist with out the other and the drink exemplifies. i keep coming across sherries like matusalem that use biblical marketing and they seem to fit in with the role of the saint without missing a beat…

on its own, by the way, this noilly prat sweet vermouth is kind of interesting. it seems to have a drier finish than other sweet vermouths but i guest i taste of its acidity could reveal if that is true. this vermouth seemed darker in character. in a moment of clarity a couple days ago, i thought i perceived strong notes of wormwood relative to any other sweet vermouth. this might be in line with the noilly’s reputation as being more bitter than they others. whether they can actually use wormwood or not who knows. tasting it is from my experience of using it in my projects… this vermouth feels like its in danger of tasting too much like coffee or too much like chocolate… coupled with a whiskey i suspect one might end up with a flavor dead end… i’m willing to invest the drinking to figure out if that’s true or not…

2:1 manhattan baby sazerac to noilly prat sweet vermouth plus a dash of bitters…

not bad at all. hard to describe but dark and quite integrated with no stuck flavors… sazerac is a pretty incredible whiskey relative to the price.

June 16, 2008

fun with la cigarrera’s manzanilla

Filed under: cocktail acids, cocktails — Tags: , , , , — sjs @ 2:35 pm

i picked up a half bottle of “la cigarrera” manzanilla… it is really pale and dry like every other manzanilla i’ve ever had but has a pungent and intoxicating nose of the likes i’ve never come across… the character and complexity of the wine really shows what sherry cask finishes do for highland whiskeys. as hypnotic as this stuff is on the nose, its not really that much fun to drink without the appropriate food to elevate it. i find it beyond the average of anyone’s taste for dryness, which makes it perfect to a cocktail… pair the sherry with something sweet and its back into balance. if paired with a highland whiskey like macallan you can get the acidity a cocktail needs with uninterrupted flavor continuity…

1 oz. macallan cask strength

1 oz. manzanilla (la cigarerra)

.5 oz. luxardo maraschino

.5 oz. cynar

2 dashes peychaud’s bitters

this drink is a beautiful attempt at pairing sherry cask seasoned whiskey with sherry as a cocktail acid… i get an uninterrupted highland experience with no annoying lemon or lime interrupts… the sherry alone with its acidity balances the sweetness of the liqueurs… the whiskey and sherrys’ own flavors are so good together they don’t even need to be elevated with vermouth… i typically despise maraschino, and its subtle almond note always reminds me of poison putting me on edge, but here it works… another beautiful liqueur like strawberry would probably work even better… the cynar really moves this drink deep into the bitter cocktail genre but definitely isn’t the only way to go… hopefully i can come up wiht a drink that is unforgettable…

***update!***

1 oz. macallan cask strength

1 oz. manzanilla (la cigarerra)

.5 oz. sloe gin (plymouth!)

.5 oz. yellow chartreuse

2 dashes peychaud’s bitters

this drink turned out really well with decadently powerful flavors. if blind tasted the cocktail almost resembles a manhattan with fruit and botanicals contrasted against brown liquor. hopefully it wouldn’t be called over engineered… everything is a little more advanced than a manhattan because the blackthorn fruit is more exotic and there is more well integrated structure from the sherry. i would really love to try this again with a common rye whiskey like old overholt instead of the macallan. i think that with the sherry in tandem the cocktail would be wildly fun to drink for low dollars…

June 6, 2008

“interesting or pathetic circumstances”

its before noon but i was up early enough to justify a drink… contrary to popular belief i don’t keep a lot of booze in the house. i mainly keep around obscure italian amaros, eau de vie, and of course lots of projects… you’d be hard pressed to find a lemon unless i really premeditated a drink so all of the cocktails consumed around the house are subject to a lot of ingenuity…

this is much like the artistic constraint of my favorite cocktail book. Henry Lyman’s “Collections and Creations”. the book is a prohibition memoir of a new englander with an exceptional sense of humor which is reflected in his drinks. I highly recommend checking it out…

my favorite cocktail from “collections and creations”

Charlie d’ Almee (in a pint tin mug)

strawberry syrup, quite a lot

brandy (better not fill it entirely full)

“this is inserted, not because it is good, but because it was all we could get in Dannes-Camieres, and also for historical interest– it saved the life of a distinguished and beloved physician”

so this morning i found my self in similiar circumstances and all i could get was…

1.5 St. James ambre (end of the bottle)

1 oz. super tart dry vermouth project (no lemons)

1 oz. chamberryzette (some one’s gotta drink it)

2 dashes peychaud’s bitters

2 dashes “bee sting bitters” (stinging nettle tincture) *watch out for allergies!

this cocktail turned out quite good… next to alpenz co.’s batavia arrack van oosten, st. james is my favorite spirit… i heard cointreau sold it and i haven’t heard who picked it up so i may be drinking old imported stock… luckily i’m the only one i know that drinks it, but that means some day my circumstances may be even more pathetic… atleast i’m luck that i may never have to buy a lemon again because i like my “enhanced” dry vermouth so much… and the flavor contrast between the chamberzette and the rum was really quite stunning and could save lives and end wars… my bee sting bitters are really quite wonderful… my lips already feel fuller and my arthritis is clearing up… they add new subliminal sensations to a drink, but i guess i have to save them for myself so i don’t accidently kill someone with allergies…

June 3, 2008

putting the “extra” back in extra dry vermouth

Filed under: cocktail acids, vermouth — Tags: , , — sjs @ 8:24 pm

acidity is my favorite part of a drink… i like so many people enjoy a dry wine. i like so many people also enjoy a tart cocktail… the golden ratios are beautiful, such as one ounce of lemon juice to one ounce of cointreau or the stunning in a mojito, one ounce of 1:1 simple syrup to one ounce of lime juice… classically there is barely anything to work with besides lemons and limes… not enough people take dry vermouth seriously as an acid or very dry sparkling wines… dry sherries… etc… well one thing i’ve always enjoyed is making some of my favorite slightly dry things drier… (dry vermouth, orange juice) and then just plain inventing things (tart pineapple-irish moss syrup)…

on the long list of things that needs a drier option is dry vermouth. its good the way it is, but i also want the lemon strength option… luckily this can be done in mere seconds…

a couple days ago i bought a bottle of gallo dry vermouth which really turned out to suck (grapey bland swill). well i thought it might be more adult if it were drier so i decided to add some acidity… there are lots of options and i could go into them, but i keep lots of malic acid (think apples) around and decided to go with it… malic is more natural to most fruits and has never steered me wrong… the PH of the gallo dry vermouth was 3.23 and lemons have a range of 2.1 (Harold McGee) - 2.3 (a random forgotten source)

my test volume was 250ml and to get to a PH 2.33 (where i stopped) i had to add 6 grams of malic acid powder (virtually free from a brew shop). i don’t know why i stopped and i think i should have continued. it may have taken 8 grams to get to 2.1. the powder easily dissolved while stirring at room temperature…

the test cocktail was

2 oz. batavia arrack van oosten (my favorite spirit)

1 oz. adulterated dry vermouth

1 oz. simple syrup (40% sugar by weight)

shaken!

the cocktail is pretty cool. this is like a lemon sour but sort of different. same tartness and sweetness but with a different flavor contrast for the spirit… the grapiness of the vermouth is a delicate foil for the expressiveness and pungeant character of the arrack… of course bitters would make it better…

i think i’m going to try this again with noilly prat or stock and take the PH all the way down to 2.1… maybe i’ll even saviche some shrimp savoy style while i’m at it…

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