Cocktail of the Hour: the Jefferson’s Ocean Manhattan

Before it came on board at my house, Jefferson’s Ocean Aged at Sea small batch bourbon sailed to five continents and crossed the equator four times.

Jeffersons_Ocean_Aged_Bourbon_BottleIn theory, the gentle rocking of the ship exposes more of the bourbon to the inner surface of the barrel, elevating the flavor—and also driving up the price. With only 300 bottles, the bourbon from Jefferson’s first voyage fetched around $600.

On this evening, we are testing bourbon from Jefferson’s third crossing, which produced a more bountiful 300 barrels. We are looking at a price point of $85. (Full disclosure: our bottle was provided by the nice folks at Jefferson’s.)

Tonight’s taste testers are: Donna and Jeff, and Clare and Mark, two couples who are longtime friends and neighbors; my friend Doug; and me, the thirsty hostess. An experienced Manhattan drinker, Doug is in charge of mixing. He also shares his birthday, April 13, with Thomas Jefferson. Clearly, he is the man for the job.

Because we are pouring for six, we mix our Manhattans in batches. Doug favors a ratio of 3:1, Jefferson to Dolin rouge, the most expensive red vermouth I can find at Kreston’s, my trusted local purveyor. We want a spirit that is a good match for our premium bourbon. Our finishing touches: Stirrings Blood Orange Bitters and Morello’s cherries from Trader Joe’s. No sickeningly sweet maraschinos for us.

tumblr_m1ng001hTT1qerulcI serve our drinks in the crystal rocks glasses handed down from my grandmother, on the silver tray she kept so brightly polished. Cocktails are  civilized. They differentiate us from wild animals, who are stuck lapping water from streams because they don’t have a decent bar in the forest.

As we sip, we ponder the restorative power of sharing cocktails. Doug says he recently went out for drinks with his son, who had a rough day on the job. His son is a huge Mad Men fan. So they order a retro cocktail. Bartender, an Old-Fashioned, please. Then another.

The next afternoon, the son comes home from work. It’s a banner day. He gets a promotion. He feels appreciated. The ice has barely melted, but the cocktails have worked their magic.

We throw back our glasses. We throw back our heads. We laugh. We talk. The fire crackles. The conversation sparks. I am happy we are together, diverse yet kindred spirits, in this time, in this place.

IMG_0832And, yes, the Jefferson bourbon did not disappoint. Stalwart tasters, we sipped it in cocktails and straight up. I discern notes of raisins, vanilla and citrus in the bourbon, which play nicely with the figgy vibe in the vermouth and the fruity blood orange bitters.

For the record, my personal poll reveals we are split down the middle as to whether we prefer our Jefferson’s straight or mixed. (Also, it should be noted that there are now Jefferson’s batches from six different ocean crossings and we understand each has its own unique profile.)

Soon after our exuberant tasting, I touch base with one of our celebrants, who reports that she, too, enjoyed a great day after tipping a few in a warm and friendly place.

A coincidence? We know better.

Here’s a toast to the restorative power of cocktails and conversation.

Happy birthday, Doug. Many happy returns.

 

 

 

 

Cocktail of the hour: A Sip of Spring

It’s spring, a glorious day and my sister Roni and I are hiking on the Delaware Greenways Trail.

How can life get any better? Some wine, perhaps.

moscato1After our trek, we uncork a bottle of Woodbridge by Robert Mondavi Moscato, which had arrived earlier that day, sent by the nice folks from the winemaker. Roni has graciously agreed to quaff a glass or two with me so that we might advise others on the wines they might share with their kinfolk for Easter. Our mother raised us to be helpful.

We like the slightly fizzy quality of the pour. The bubbles and hints of citrus, floral and figs make it a festive choice to serve with dessert after Easter dinner.

We pour the moscato after it has been chilling for several hours and recommend that you serve a nippy nip, as well. Take it from the Smith sisters.

unnamed-1This spring arrives with exuberant stirrings in the garden, which remind us that moscato also plays nicely in cocktails. After all, this is National Cocktail Day. (Although I confess I’m  at a loss as to why a boozy, made-up holiday shares the calendar with Maundy Thursday. Better to celebrate cocktails whenever you feel the calling.)
Here’s a moscato cocktail recipe to try a few weeks from now when mint overtakes your herb garden:

Woodbridge by Robert Mondavi Cool Melon-Mint

Yield: 1 cocktail

 

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 honeydew melon, cut into small cubes
  • 1/4 cup elderflower cordial
  • 3/4 cup Woodbridge by Robert MondaviMoscato, chilled
  • 1 cup crushed ice
  • Seltzer water, to finish and to taste
  • Fresh mint, for garnish

 

Directions:

  1. In a food processor or blender, combine melon cubes and elderflower cordial.
  2. Process or blend until pureed smooth, about 1-2 minutes. Add the Moscato and ice; process or blend until fully smooth.
  3. Finish by adding seltzer water to taste. Garnish with fresh mint or melon wedges. Rim serving glasses with ginger sugar if desired.

Call your sister. And serve.

The first month of 2016: Veganuary

The first emerging lifestyle trend of 2016 is Veganuary, a month when ethical- and health-minded folks are encouraged to give up all animal products.

I’m making it lots less complicated. Starting on New Year’s Day, I will forgo all meat, alcohol and refined sugar for one month. Call it the trifecta.

v1Still, I’m not going whole hog on vegan. I will take half and half in my coffee, enjoy an omelet, drizzle honey on my oatmeal. I am not the vegan police and I don’t view a nibble of goat cheese as an act of animal thievery. And giving up wine and sweets strikes me as a fair trade for yogurt.

Ultimately, I just want to do something nice for my body, a 31-day spring cleaning, of sorts.

2015 was a year of getting my home and career in order. In 2016, it’s me who needs to be set right.
beefwellington_2647597bAs V-Day looms, I indulge in beef Wellington and free-flowing Cabernet Sauvignon at a New Year’s Eve party hosted by longtime friends in the Sovereign State of South Jersey. As we count down to midnight, I say good bye to cow and cab, hello to green salads and green tea.

I’ll check in throughout the month to share foods that work for me and various gadgets I discover along the way. I’ll also post a Cocktail of the Hour I tested before I took the pledge. A reminder that February will soon be here.

One month. 31 days. Starting today.

Cocktail of the hour: The Newman Negroni

I first sipped Campari in Umbria, in an open air café in a square in the ancient city of Perugia. Even mixed with club soda, Campari struck me as a bit medicinal with its strong, herbaceous notes.

IMG_0577
I soon learned what the Italians have known since Campari was first distilled in 1860. Enjoying a tot with friends at the end of a long day is just what the doctor ordered.

The Negroni dates back to 1919 in Florence, when Count Negroni asked for gin in his Americano in place of the soda. It’s a classic before-dinner drink, a blend of Campari, sweet vermouth and, of course, gin. Traditionally, all three ingredients are mixed in equal portions, so it’s a favorite with home bartenders who don’t need a cheat sheet to mix one.

My friend Mike Newman has perfected his own Negroni, which relies more on gin and less on Campari and vermouth.

Unknown-1“Cut the Campari in half, cut the vermouth to a quarter and leave the gin alone,” Mike advises.

I’ve enjoyed many cocktails over the years with Mike and his lovely wife Linda. So I was looking forward to sampling what I now think of as the Newman Negroni.

Here’s Mike’s recipe:

2 jiggers gin

1 jigger Campari

½ jigger vermouth

We used Tanqueray gin, Martini and Rossi sweet vermouth and, of course, the one and only Campari.

Ice and fruit also are important components of this refreshing drink. Mike meticulously measures the liquors into a shaker with lots of ice. He gives the Negronis a vigorous mixing, then serves over more ice in rocks glasses.

IMG_0574Typically, a Negroni is garnished with orange peel but Mike says you can use lemon in a pinch. Take a thin half-wheel of fruit, place it on the rim of the glass and then swoosh around the rim to impart the fragrance and flavor of the orange.

With its ruby tones and bright pop of orange, the Negroni is bellissimo. The herbal qualities of the Campari play nicely with the juniper tones of the Tanqueray and the sweetness of the vermouth. It’s drier than the traditional Negroni, yet maintains its freshness.

We say “si” to the Newman Negroni.

 

 

A spirited cocktail for Halloween

rszagwabottleshot300dpi2Hosts can bring an otherworldly glow to their Halloween festivities with AGWA de Bolivia, literally “Water from Bolivia,” touted as the world’s original coca leaf liqueur.

It’s a truly international blend. Choice coca leaves are plucked high in the Andes and shipped to Amsterdam where Dutch artisans quickly macerate the leaves into tea and blend with Chinese green tea, ginseng, Amazon guarana and African mint for a 60-proof herbal liqueur that is a striking bright green in color.

(MSRP: $31.99 for 750 ml)

When frozen for four hours, AGWA forms ice crystals, which concentrates the color and transforms the liquid into a green glow you would be proud to serve to Martians. Fiendishly clever!

Here’s a recipe for your Halloween sipping pleasure.

Green Angel

Ingredients:

8 basil leaves

12.5ml limoncello

37.5ml gin

25ml AGWA,

25ml pure apple juice

Vanilla sugar

 

How to Mix:

In a chilled cocktail shaker, place 7 basil leaves, fill with crushed ice, drizzle limoncello and stir.

Strain off limoncello, add 3 other liquids and stir to taste.

Rim a chilled martini glass with a lime wedge and vanilla sugar. Strain contents into glass, garnish with remaining basil leaf and serve to spirited applause.

 

A Prévu to romance

As  Valentine’s Day approaches, we are coming up with novel ways to say I really, really love you.


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Enter Prévu,  a new and engaging blend of wheat-based vodka and cognac,  distilled in Cognac. In France, of course.

First, let’s talk about the bubbles, the harbinger of celebration. This  sparkling liqueur is an effervescent blend of 70% vodka and 30% cognac. Expect black currant, raspberry, blackberry and a bouquet of violets,  a combination that offers natural sophistication.

The color is so gorgeous you will be tempted to dash to the paint store and ask the clerk to match it. Plus, Prévu’s ingredients are all certified organic and natural. The proof? It’s 17%.

That’s less than other liqueurs. That means you can actually taste the blend of vodka and cognac. It also presents the option of mixing a cocktail or simply enjoying a pour on the rocks, chilled, with lemon or lime.

Prévu was created by 27-year-old entrepreneur Simon Tikhman, who was raised in an organic household and then studied business. After immersing himself in San Francisco, he developed Prévu, which is now served in the hippest lounges in the city by the bay.

If you want to impress your date or mate, consider The First Kiss, a simple but potent cocktail. Here’s the recipe:

– 3 oz. Prévu

-1 oz. champagne

-Add a raspberry for garnish — and enjoy a big smooch

Toast the holidays, not guilt, with DiSaronno’s low-cal cocktails

In this season of holiday celebrations, hosts are spreading the joy — and mixing the cocktails.

Alas, that spirit of generosity also is accompanied by extra calories, a sign of the season that is even less welcome than a regifted fruitcake.

Happily, there are recipes that enable guests to enjoy a cocktail without the guilt, including  a holiday-themed recipe from the folks at DiSaronno, the centuries-old maker of amaretto.

In fact, the legend of DiSaronno dates back to 1525, when Renaissance artist and Leonardo da Vinci protege  Bernardino Luini was commissioned to paint a fresco in Saronno. To portray the Madonna of Miracles, he chose a comely local innkeeper as his muse.

As a thank you gift, she bestowed the artist with a flask of a fragrant and delicate  amaretto flavored with fruit and herbs. With its distinctive stopper and iconic square faceted Murano glass bottle, DiSaronno is still pleasing patrons — and still makes a great gift.

Here’s the recipe:

Holiday Delight – 205 calories per serving

1 ounce rye whiskey

1 ounce DiSaronno

1 heaping bar spoon of pumpkin butter

.5 ounce soy creamer

.75 ounce egg white, foamed separately

1 dash orange bitters, Regan’s if it’s handy

Foam egg whites using hand blender, set aside. Combine remaining ingredients into shaker and dry shake without ice. Add ice and foamed egg whites to shaker and shake again. Fine strain into a cocktail glass. Go for a coupe, if you have them. Top with freshly grated cinnamon.

Cocktails with Don Julio

Typically, folks try to avoid repossession.

Unless it’s the cocktail hour and they are enjoying a Repossession, the classy mixed drink crafted from Tequila Don Julio 70 Añejo Claro, the clear spirit that is made from mature,  ripened blue agave selected by hand from the rich, clay soils of the Los Altos region in Mexico.

This cocktail serves up the crystalline flavors of premium tequila, with the freshness of pineapple and sweet bouquet of elderflower liqueur. It’s clearly more desirable than the repossession that follows missing a couple of car payments.

Don Julio makes a range of wonderful tequilas that can be enjoyed straight from the bottle, on their own. This cocktail doesn’t dilute the pleasure of the tequila and results in a lovely presentation. Here’s the recipe:

Repossession

Created by New York Mixologist, Leo Robitschek
Ingredients:
1 1/4 ounces Tequila Don Julio 70 Añejo Claro
1/3 ounce Elderflower Liqueur
2/3 ounce Fresh Pineapple Juice
1/3 ounce Fresh Lemon Juice
1/4 ounce Cane Syrup

Preparation:
Combine Tequila Don Julio 70 Añejo Claro, elderflower liqueur, fresh pineapple juice, fresh lemon juice and cane syrup into a cocktail shaker. Shake well.
Strain contents into a cocktail glass.

Ideal Serving Glass:
Shapely stemmed cocktail glass

Yield:
1 drinkie