Archive for the ‘Cocktails’ Category
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WHISKEY AND WHISKY
Posted: November 8, 2013 in Cocktails, Drinks, Food, mixology, UncategorizedTags: booze, bourbon, liquor, whiskey, whisky
MAKING YOUR OWN COCKTAIL ONIONS
Posted: October 21, 2013 in Cocktails, drink recipes, Drinks, Food, MARTINI, mixology, RecipesTags: cocktails, drink recipes, onions
I love me my onions! Raw, sauteed, caramelized, yellow, Spanish, Bermuda, Vidalia, Texas Sweets, scallion, pearl, Crimini, Walla Walla…they can do no wrong. In fact, my wife and daughter gave me the Lithuanian nickname: “Ponas Svogunas.” ( “Mr. Onion.”) I answer to it proudly.
I also love me my vodka martinis! So if I’m going to buy a top shelf vodka like Stoli Elit or Chopin, I’m not going to ruin it with vermouth, whether it’s mixed in with the vodka or whether I find it inside a jar of store-bought cocktail onions.
I looked at several do-it-yourself cocktail onion recipes, but I wasn’t inspired to try any of them until I found a package of already peeled pearl onions at Whole Foods one day.
Once that time-saving ingredient was in my possession, I took the best ingredients of all the recipes I found, deleted the vermouth, and proceeded.
Ingredients:
8 oz pearl onions, peeled
1/4 cup white vinegar
1/4 cup cider vinegar
1/4 cup water
1 tablespoon sea salt
2 tablespoons organic cane sugar
1/4 teaspoon brown mustard seed
12 juniper berries
6 black peppercorns
3 allspice berries
3-inch fresh rosemary branch
small piece (1/4″) dried chile pepper
Add all the ingredients except the onions to a medium-sized saucepan. Bring to a boil, making sure the sugar and salt dissolve completely.
Add the onions to the saucepan and bring to a boil again. Reduce the heat, and simmer for 2 minutes.
Remove the pan from the heat and allow the onions to cool to room temp in the liquid. Transfer the onions and liquid to a glass jar with a tight-fitting lid and store in the fridge. It will keep in the fridge for a month.
A “SECRET” LIMONCELLO RECIPE
Posted: October 13, 2013 in Capri, Cocktails, drink recipes, Drinks, Food, mixology, Recipes, travel, UncategorizedTags: Amalfi, Capri, cocktails, drinks, food, limoncello, recipes
Many years ago, my wife and I visited the Amalfi coast, and we spent several nights on the beautiful island of Capri. On our last night, we dined at the legendary Grand Hotel Quisisana, and our incredible meal ended with a glass of the most delicious limoncello I had ever had.
I asked the waiter if it was possible to get the recipe of the limoncello, and he made a big deal about the fact that the recipe was a “secret.” Though disappointed, I understood, and I left Capri thinking that I would never taste that limoncello again.
Two weeks later, now back at home, I was reading the latest issue of Conde Nast Traveler, and there in black and white, was the Quisisana limoncello recipe! WTF?
My twist on the recipe: instead of lemons, use grapefruit. I’ve tried other citrus, too, like oranges, but grapefruit-cello is fantastic!
Four ingredients, easy to make. The toughest part is waiting for it to mellow a bit.
Ingredients:
4 lbs lemons, zest only
2 750-ml bottles 100 proof vodka (I prefer Absolut)
5 1/2 cups sugar
6 cups filtered water
Peel the zest off all the lemons, making sure you don’t get any of the white pith that could make the limoncello bitter. Place all the zest in the bottom of a glass jar with a lid that can hold all the vodka.
Pour the vodka on top of the lemon zest pieces, seal the container, and keep at room temperature for a week, swirling the jar around gently once a day.
On the sixth day, combine the sugar and water in a pot over medium-high heat, and stir until all the sugar completely dissolves. Remove from the heat, cover, and let it thoroughly cool to room temperature (overnight is best.)
On day seven, strain the lemon zest, pouring the infused vodka into a clean glass jar. Discard the lemon zest.
Pour the sugar/water mixture into the vodka and mix well.
At this point, you can pour the finished product into individual bottles, but let it mellow for about a month before drinking.
I keep my limoncello refrigerated.
TEQUILA PIMM’S CUP
Posted: September 9, 2013 in Cocktails, Cucumbers, drink recipes, Drinks, Food, mixology, RecipesTags: cocktails, drinks, mixology, pIMM'S, tequila
I love tequila. I love Pimm’s. And I love Dark & Stormies. I’m a lush. This cocktail has an interesting nod to all three.
Ingredients:
3 oz Patron silver tequila
1.5 oz Pimm’s No. 1
1 dash fresh lime juice
Chilled Ginger beer (I use AJ Stephan’s, a local product made with cane sugar, not high-fructose corn syrup)
Ice cubes
Fresh mint
Cucumber slices (optional)
Combine tequila, Pimm’s and lime juice in a highball glass filled with ice.
Place slices of cucumber in the glass, if desired.
Top with Ginger beer and stir gently.
Garnish with mint sprig.
VELVET ELVIS: 2 INGREDIENTS. 1 DELICIOUS COCKTAIL.
Posted: July 26, 2013 in Cocktails, drink recipes, Drinks, mixologyTags: cocktails, drinks, pineapple, vodka
If you’ve been to the Capital Grille, you might be familiar with the Stoli Doli, a drink made by soaking fresh cut pieces of pineapple in Stoli vodka. A large glass container sits on the bar, and they simply pour out the wonderfully infused pineapple vodka into a cocktail shaker with some ice, shake vigorously, then strain into a martini glass.
When I decided to make this at home for myself, I only had a bottle of Stoli Vanil (vanilla) vodka in my liquor cabinet. But I thought: how could vanilla hurt this recipe? Turns out it made an even better cocktail than I ever could have imagined. The touch of vanilla accents the sweetness of the pineapple.
Comprised of just 2 ingredients and named after my old dog, Elvis, this is a huge hit at parties. Here’s how I make it…
Ingredients:
2 fresh, ripe pineapples, peeled, cored and sliced
1 bottle (1.75l) Stoli Vanil vodka
1 glass jar with lid (1 gallon size)
Cut the top off, then peel, core and slice the pineapples and place the slices in the glass jar. Feed the top, peel and core to your compost pile. Pour the vodka over the slices. Tightly seal the lid, shake well, then place the jar somewhere where it won’t be disturbed for 3 weeks at room temperature.
At the end of 3 weeks, strain the vodka, squeezing as much vodka out of the pineapple slices as you can. Discard the spent pineapple slices.
Store the Velvet Elvis in glass containers in the refrigerator. Enjoy over ice!
BEAT THE HEAT WITH THIS REFRESHING SUMMER CUCUMBER COCKTAIL
Posted: July 17, 2013 in Cocktails, Cucumbers, drink recipes, Drinks, Food, garden, mixology, UncategorizedTags: cocktails, cucumber, drinks, mixology
This a fantastic drink that requires a little prep. If you have a juicer, use that instead of pureeing in a food processor. Just peel the cukes and juice.
Ingredients:
2 English cucumbers or 4 regular cucumbers
Small ice cubes
1 cup loosely packed fresh mint leaves
2 teaspoons granulated organic cane sugar
3 tablespoons fresh lime juice
1/2 cup top shelf vodka, like Chopin
1 oz (2 Tablespoons) Cointreau
Peel and seed cucumbers. Coarsely chop them and then purée in a food processor until smooth. Strain through a fine sieve, pressing solids to extract as much liquid as possible.
To a large glass pitcher, add mint leaves, sugar and lime juice. Muddle ingredients so that mint leaves release their oils. Add 3/4 cup (at least) cucumber juice, the vodka and Cointreau. Muddle again briefly.
Fill tall drinking glasses with ice cubes. Strain cocktail into glasses. Garnish with cucumber spear or mint.
THE CULT FOLLOWING OF SCHWEPPES BITTER LEMON
Posted: June 28, 2013 in Cocktails, drink recipes, Drinks, RecipesTags: cocktails, drink recipes, drinks
Schweppes Bitter Lemon is a carbonated beverage that was invented in 1957 and was available in the United States for a while, but poor sales forced Schweppes to withdraw the product from US store shelves.
Fanatics, however, have kept the demand up for Schweppes Bitter Lemon, and so you can now find the import at websites like amazon.com and britishdelights.com. Some say that a proper Pimm’s cup is not made with ginger ale, but with this stuff. I was curious, so I bought a few bottles and started out with a simple vodka + Schweppes Bitter Lemon: refreshing, and a wonderful twist on the basic vodka-and-tonic.
So I’m hooked.
One of my favorite new drinks of the summer is this recipe that I found on line and tweaked the proportions of the ingredients to make my own. For the light rum, I like to use the new Caliche Puerto Rican rum from the Serralles family of rums, makers of Don Q and Captain Morgan. And second to Angostura bitters, Peychaud’s bitters, invented by famous New Orleans apothecary Antoine Peychaud around 1830, should be a staple of any home bar, especially since it is a key ingredient in making the perfect Sazerac cocktail. It works equally well here.
BITTER BANANA COOLER
Ingredients:
3 oz light rum
3 oz of ripe banana
1 1/2 oz pineapple juice
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
4 dashes Peychaud’s bitters
Schweppes Bitter Lemon
In a blender (no ice) combine all ingredients except Schweppes, and blend until smooth: just a few seconds will do. Pour into a cocktail shaker with ice, shake and strain into a 16 oz glass filled with ice. Top off with Schweppes Bitter lemon.
WHAT YOUR FOODIE FATHER WANTS, PART 3
Posted: June 13, 2013 in Cocktails, Food, MARTINI, mixology, pizzaTags: cocktails, Dad, Father's Day, gifts, grilling, martini, shaker
A couple more ideas for your foodie Dad this Father’s Day…
Baking Steel: I’ve got a pizza stone for my home oven. But if I want to grill a pizza on the barbecue, a stone will simply crack from the heat. This is the solution: a solid slab of steel that can take the heat and will give your pizza the perfect char on the crust. It’s also great on the grill for fajitas, veggies, anything small that could fall through the cracks of your grill. http://www.bakingsteel.com
Mason jar cocktail shaker: A fun new way for Dad to make his martini. http://www.masonshaker.com
THE BEST MOJITOS ARE BY THE PITCHER
Posted: May 28, 2013 in Cocktails, drink recipes, Drinks, mixology, Recipes, UncategorizedTags: cocktails, drink recipes, mixology, mojitos
I love me my Mojitos, and they’re even better when I have fresh organic blueberries and raspberries to add to the mix. Frozen fruit works well, too. Make it by the pitcher and you’ll never make it any other way again!
Ingredients:
Make ahead of time…
1 1/2 cups fresh squeezed lime juice
1 1/3 cups turbinado sugar (Sugar in the Raw)
Mix both ingredients together and let stand at room temp. Shake until dissolved. The mixture can be covered and refrigerated for several weeks and ready to use any time. Shake well before using.
For the Mojitos…
1 cup sugar/lime mixture
1 cup mint leaves, packed
1/2 pint blueberries (fresh or frozen)
1/2 pint raspberries (fresh or frozen)
3 or 4 cups white rum, preferably Don Q Cristal rum
3 or 4 cups club soda
Combine mint leaves and 1/2 cup of sugar/lime mixture in bottom of a pitcher. Muddle mint up very well to release mint oils. Add blueberries and continue to muddle.
Add remaining sugar/lime mixture, rum and raspberries. Mix well. Just before serving, add club soda and ice. Stir. Pour into glasses.
Or…for drinks one at a time, fill a tall glass with ice. Fill one-third to halfway with club soda. Top with Mojito mix. Garnish with mint leaf.






























