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20 votes
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Whiskey maker's try TikTok holiday cocktails
5 votes -
British cooks try Filipino food and cooking methods
7 votes -
Unique cocktail ingredient workshop thread
An offshoot of /r/cocktails recently had a weekly challenge of making cocktails with specified ingredients. In lieu of that, I thought it might be neat if you had an ingredient (spirit, liqueur,...
An offshoot of /r/cocktails recently had a weekly challenge of making cocktails with specified ingredients. In lieu of that, I thought it might be neat if you had an ingredient (spirit, liqueur, fruit, etc.) that you've wanted to use in a cocktail, we could workshop potential uses. Alternatively, if you've found something that works (maybe unexpectedly), you can share it here.
12 votes -
Bartending made easy: Mix up a Pump-tini!
2 votes -
What are your thoughts or suggestions for a strong "breakfast" cocktail?
Years ago, circa 2017, I spent a few weeks in Portland, OR for work. Naturally, I ended up at Jeffrey Morgenthaler's Clyde Common regularly. On one of the weekends, I went to Common for brunch and...
Years ago, circa 2017, I spent a few weeks in Portland, OR for work. Naturally, I ended up at Jeffrey Morgenthaler's Clyde Common regularly. On one of the weekends, I went to Common for brunch and they served a "breakfast" cocktail in glass coke bottles. From memory it was sweet, earthy, rich with slight chocolate hints, mildly carbonated, and strong. It was totally different from most breakfast cocktails that opt for bright and citrus flavors (i.e. mimosas, bloody Marys) and I think the carbonation definitely helped soften the otherwise heavy design of this drink.
Unfortunately, I didn't have the foresight to ask about the cocktail's construction and Common closed shortly after. Recently, I've been trying to recreate it from memory, or more generously, recreate the idea of it (short of Morgenthaler himself identifying the cocktail, there's no way I'll be able to reproduce it). My best guess is that he made something close to a black Russian and ran it through a carbonator.
Here are my thoughts to riff off of that type of drink for a strong breakfast cocktail:
2 oz Bourbon, 1 oz Mr. Black, .5 oz Amaretto, .5 oz Maple Syrup, topped with carbonated water, built neat in a highball glass.
I'm still tweaking the proportions, but given that Mr. Black is less sweet than other coffee liqueurs, and considering the dilution from carbonated water, I think a half/half mix of Amaretto and Maple Syrup is sweet without being cloying. I also went with Amaretto instead of another syrup like orgeat to keep the alcohol content higher.Any thoughts? Other ideas in a similar vein?
9 votes -
Came up with some cocktails to represent my D&D party :)
Was a fun little project. I worked on the drinks myself first, then gave them to my roommate for a blind taste test, and asked her to describe the kind of character she thought the drink was...
Was a fun little project. I worked on the drinks myself first, then gave them to my roommate for a blind taste test, and asked her to describe the kind of character she thought the drink was about. If she wasn't at least mostly right, then I'd have to try again - but they somehow ended up a lot more accurate than I expected to be, despite the fact that she knows nothing about this D&D game, haha. I guess we're just really on the same wavelength?
Anyway, without further ado, here are the recipes! If there are any other mixologists on here, I'd love to hear what you think - and you want to try (something like) any of these drinks but are missing an ingredient or two, let me know and I'm happy to try to suggest a few possible substitutions.
Avery
- 0.75 oz chartreuse
- 0.5 oz montenegro
- 0.5 oz black walnut liqueur
- 0.5 oz distilled water
Liz
- 0.75 oz peated gin
- 0.75 oz crème de violette
- 10 drops lemon juice
- yuzu bitters
Matoya
- 1 oz mezcal
- 1.5 oz lemon tonic
- cardamom bitters
Morgana
- 1 oz plum gin
- 1 oz white rye
- 1 oz distilled water
- lavender lemon bitters
Sylvaire
- 0.75 oz cognac
- 0.25 oz pomegranate liqueur
- 0.25 oz grand marnier
- 0.75 oz peach juice
- peychaud’s bitters
V
- 0.75 oz peated gin
- 0.25 oz galliano vanilla
- 0.25 oz absinthe
- 1 oz peach juice
- hibiscus rosehip bitters
- cucumber twist (i.e. take a thin lengthwise slice of a baby cucumber and curl around the inside of the glass)
10 votes -
Put alcohol in your cereal
4 votes -
Any cocktail enthusiasts/mixologists here? Feel free to share or workshop some good cocktail recipes!
After seeing the recent espresso post, I figured I'd start a thread for cocktails. I've been recently getting into decent rums (Smith & Cross is a favorite) and have been playing around with...
After seeing the recent espresso post, I figured I'd start a thread for cocktails. I've been recently getting into decent rums (Smith & Cross is a favorite) and have been playing around with different recipes and uses.
So far, I've found a good spring/summer spritzer of cachaça (raw sugarcane distillate from Brazil, with a grassy, vegetal flavor), elderflower liqueur, and tonic water. I need to refine it, but I think I'm at a 2/0.5/4 ratio of spirit/liqueur/tonic. I love the way the herbal-sweet elderflower mixes with the cachaça, balanced by the bitterness of the tonic.
29 votes -
The history of the Hawaiian Luau
6 votes -
ChatGPT and MidJourney made these drinks. Does the world even need me?
6 votes -
Let's unpack some of America's most popular myths while I make early American cocktails. Our founding fathers sure knew how to have a good time.
2 votes -
Fixing the drinks from Outback Steakhouse
3 votes -
I suffer through six drinks straight out of a 70's disco hell
2 votes -
I made eight Mojitos using seven different herbs (mint, basil, sage, cilantro, thyme, rosemary, dill)
11 votes -
Wheel of Whiskey decides my fate - I put random flavored whiskeys into classic cocktails
5 votes -
I put random flavored vodkas into classic cocktails
8 votes -
How did the Blow Job shot happen?
3 votes -
An elixir from the French Alps, frozen in time
9 votes -
Favorite cocktail recipes and unnatural drink experiments?
It's time for another round of "name your favorite mixed drink, and how to make it". Or describe an outlandish, ill-considered, or random mixture and how it turned out. Right now, I'm drinking an...
It's time for another round of "name your favorite mixed drink, and how to make it". Or describe an outlandish, ill-considered, or random mixture and how it turned out.
Right now, I'm drinking an unnatural experiment made with odd drams to get rid of a couple of near-empties prior to moving.
2 oz. jack pine gin (freezer cold, local product, could use any botanical gin)
1 oz. peony baijiu (gift from a friend's visit to China)Shake with ice, serve in a coupe glass with a very small amount of ice. It's good enough that I'll try making peony-infused vodka next spring.
[I don't usually enjoy mixed drinks because so many are too sweet - that's the spouse's domain. But some combinations of herbal, floral, spicy, bitter, or sour flavors work for my taste.]
Feel free to share what's working for you.
11 votes -
How To Drink's top five tiki drinks
3 votes -
Satisfaction: How the Rolling Stones made tequila a hit
4 votes -
Cocktails from the 1970s
6 votes -
One Mai Tai, and hold the colonialism
4 votes -
Your saddest desperation cocktails, ranked
9 votes