The Shrunken Skull + home made grenadine

Nice Skull.

The Shrunken Skull

Tiki can be tricky. Even saying “Tiki can be tricky” can be tricky. Especially if you’ve had a Shrunken Skull. Thankfully there’s nothing tricky to making one. There’s a basic similarity to the Mai Tai here; an ounce each of two different rums, and ounce of lime juice and an ounce of sweet. In this case the sweet is grenadine. Now that means we have to talk about grenadine. A long time ago grenadine used to be a pomegranate syrup. But pomegranates are kind of expensive and over the years kept getting replaced with cheaper ingredients until we get to a point where there is little (usually none) of the original juice left. As far as I’m aware all commercial grenadines are rubbish. Most are just sugar, artificial flavourings and food colour. But the real thing is a revelation. And essential to the Shrunken Skull – really do not bother trying this recipe with commercial grenadine. So before we get the the Shrunken Skull recipe let’s have a look at my home made grenadine recipe which owes its roots to recipes by Jeffrey Morganthaler and Tiare of the (excellent) A Mountain of Crushed Ice Tiki blog. Actually Morganthaler’s The Bar Book is pretty essential too. There are two grenadine recipes below, which are self explanatory. You will use the grenadine in a wide range of drinks and it’s also pretty damn tasty in a glass of sparkling water too.


Basic home made grenadine.

Warm up some POM Wonderful pomegranate juice in a clean pan to a low to medium temperature. Stir in an equal volume of fine sugar until dissolved. Bottle in a sterilized bottle. Will keep in the fridge for at least 3 months.


Mega-delicious home made grenadine.

1 bottle (710ml) of POM Wonderful pomegranate juice

750g fine sugar

Follow procedure above then while still warm add:

2oz (60ml) pomegranate molasses (from any middle-eastern grocery shop)

1tsp (5ml) orange flower water (ditto)

small handful of dried hibiscus flowers. Aka hibiscus tea. (ditto)

Stir and cover. Leave for between 1 and 2 hours.

Strain out the hibiscus flowers and bottle as above.  You can keep the used hibiscus flowers (or at least the more intact ones) in a jar filled with some of the grenadine to use as a garnish. Especially nice dropped into a glass of champagne or cava.


The Shrunken Skull appears in Jeff Beachbum Berry’s Tiki bible Remixed but is not a prominent Tiki drink. That’s because, in its basic form, it’s just not that good. But it makes a great example of how a modest drink can be transformed by using the right ingredients. The following is my version which I sometimes call a Shrunken Heid (pronounced “heed”) when I use the Scottish* OVD rum. Not only the home made grenadine but the choice of rums are essential in this drink. The gold rum must be very dry because there is already enough sweetness in the grenadine. Havana Club Anejo Especial is rock solid here and widely available. A bit trickier is the second rum which ideally should be a British Navy style Demerara rum such as OVD, Wood’s 100 or Skipper. If that proves tricky try another inky black rum such as Captain Morgan Black which is widely available in Europe. Worth repeating is the 2:1:1 ratio of spirit to sour to sweet which is the secret formula for many Tiki drinks.


Shrunken Skull / Shrunken Heid

1oz OVD (Old Vatted Demerara) rum

1oz Havana Club Anejo Especial gold rum

1oz home made grenadine

1oz fresh lime juice

Shake with ice. I like a mixture of cubed and crushed in this particular drink but either is fine.

Pour unstrained into a DOF glass or skull shaped receptacle. Note: Using a real skull is considered impolite.

Toast Jeff Beachbum Berry for digging up all these old recipes for us.


This is a very quick and easy drink to make at a cocktail party and proves extremely popular if made well. It is suitable for pre-batching and keeping in the fridge.

*Obviously OVD isn’t actually Scottish but it’s aged and bottled in Scotland.

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The Manhattan

First we take Manhattan…

The Manhattan

Whiskey, vermouth, bitters. The Manhattan sounds simple. And it is. And it isn’t. You see everything depends on the whisky you use, which vermouth – and how much, and the same for the bitters. It’s a balancing act, a test of palate. The interplay of the three ingredients, stirred for exactly the right amount of time to achieve optimal chilling and dilution tells you in one sip whether you got it right or not. It’s personal. Very personal. The right Manhattan for you will likely be wrong for most. Start with the whiskey. To call it a Manhattan it needs to be New World whiskey – rye, Bourbon or Canadian (if you use Scotch it’s a Rob Roy). The original called for rye and I still think it’s the most pleasing – the spiciness of a good rye plays well against the sweetness of the vermouth and the bitterness of the bitters. The inherent sweetness of Bourbon throws it too far in one direction. But in any case a cheap whisky just won’t do justice to the Manhattan, make it something with a bit of character. Next up is the Italian (sweet) vermouth and again go for quality and character. The quantity is somewhat personal and dependent on the vermouth; anything from half a ounce to a full ounce is the usual range but three-quarters is a good starting point. The bitters should be of the aromatic variety but there are wide choices within that category. The finishing touch is the cherry and given the effort you’ve already expended, please don’t spoil it all with a neon-red fake one. The Manhattan deserves a real maraschino cherry – the best ones can be sourced from your nearest Italian deli. My personal choices for all these ingredients are outlined in the notes but do conduct your own experiments.


The Manhattan

2oz rye whiskey (or Bourbon or Canadian).

0.75oz Italian (sweet/red) vermouth – more or less to taste.

2 dashes of aromatic bitters (eg. Angostura).

Stir with ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Drop in one (real) maraschino cherry.

Toast the barman who delivered such a perfectly balanced cocktail – hey, that’s you!


Notes:

My choices – as pictured – are Rittenhouse 100 proof rye (2oz), Punt e Mes (0.75oz), De Ooievaar Angostura bitters (2 dashes) and one Van Wees maraschino cherry – those last two made right here in Amsterdam.

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The Singapore Sling

Sling it back to me…

The Singapore Sling

If I had only started this blog a couple of years ago we could have had a bit of a birthday party for this great drink. Harking from 1915 (although accounts differ) this King of the slings is truly one of the greatest drinks ever to occupy a Collins glass. Don’t be put off by the long ingredients list, none of them are at all exotic and should all be in the dedicated cocktailien’s cabinet to start with. And don’t be tempted to skip that mere spoonful of Benedictine, the edgy tang it adds is absolutely essential.

The superbly refreshing Singapore Sling is a summer cooler that can still sock you a real sucker punch. It’s a lot stronger than it tastes and as such I’d suggest enjoying it with a meal rather than just before one. While we know it was created by Ngiam Tong Boon at the Raffles Hotel in Singapore, we really wish we had the original recipe. Unfortunately the Raffles lost it and spent decades pretending their re-invented version was the original. Fortunately cocktail archaeologists like Ted Haigh and Jeff Berry were able piece the recipe back together and banish the lime cordial and sour mix from the Singapore Sling forever.

The Singapore Sling has the look and feel of a Tiki drink but a good few years before the emergence of that joyous genre. It seems perfectly plausible that Tiki godfather, Don the Beachcomber, passed through the Raffles Hotel on his inspirational world tour and paid some attention to the popularity of this drink. Switching the gin for rum (and rum was much easier to come by in the US in the last days of prohibition) would perhaps have created the template for Tiki, along with such Caribbean staples as the Planters Punch and Daiquiri.

To save you a lot of trouble sifting through the many recipes that exist I’ve come up with a version that treads the middle ground between authenticity (as far as we can tell) and familiarity. Still, there must inevitably be two versions. The soda version is the more authentic and the pineapple version the more familiar. They are both so good I can never quite choose between them, although for cocktail novices I suggest the pineapple version first – it’s more popular as well as being more forgiving of small errors.


The Singapore Sling

2oz dry gin (no need to go high end here)

1oz Cherry Heering (a widely available Danish liqueur)

1 teaspoon Benedictine

0.75oz lime juice

0.5oz Cointreau, or another triple sec

0.5oz grenadine (recipe here)

1 dash each of Angostura and orange bitters


Shake with ice. Strain into ice filled Collins glass.

Add either 2-3oz of soda (old school) or 2-3oz pineapple juice (modern). Stir.

Toast Ngiam Tong Boon for this masterpiece of liquid engineering.


 

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Falernum – shelf stable

Falernum is a Caribbean concoction of rum, sugar, lime, ginger, almond and spices (usually allspice and cloves) – a Tiki staple that plays nice with so much more than just rum. The problem is that it can be tricky to find and while the easiest one to come by – John D. Taylor’s Velvet Falernum – is nice stuff, it’s not a patch on a really good golden falernum. The internet abounds with home-made falernum recipes but they often go a bit funky after a few weeks and take up valuable fridge space. They can also be a bit labour intensive. If only there were a way to make a shelf stable golden falernum cheaply and easily that would keep at room temperature for many, many months. I got this.

The following might be a bit controversial but please hear me out. Lime is a key component of falernum and all the recipes I’ve seen use fresh lime juice or peel. Which is why they go off. It occurred to me that, given that falernum contains both lime and sugar perhaps those two ingredients could be replaced with Rose’s Lime Cordial – which is, of course pretty much imperishable. OMG. Did he actually just suggest using that nasty stuff? Hang on – stay with me guys! So, I decided to give it a go and eventually came up with this recipe and – in my humble opinion – it’s good. Damn good. I’m prepared to concede that a fresh lime version might have the edge but in a cocktail this recipe is easily good enough. It’s certainly waaaaaay better than Taylor’s. Proceed as follows…

Shelf Stable Falernum (about 500ml)

Crush gently in a mortar and pestle 12 cloves and 6 dried allspice berries. Don’t try to powder them, just crack them open a bit. Put the remains into a small jar with 150ml of dry gold rum of at least 40% ABV (I use Havana Club Anejo Especial). Leave for two days, shaking well at least twice per day.

Allspice and cloves

Extracting the spicy goodness 

2 days later:

Filter the rum and spice mix until clear with a paper coffee filter.

Make 150ml of 1.5 : 1 sugar syrup (150ml sugar to 100ml boiled water).

Mix both of the above with:

120ml Rose’s Lime Cordial.

80ml ginger syrup (often found in the baking section of your supermarket).

Half a teaspoon (2.5ml) almond extract (really, that is plenty).

Half a teaspoon of citric acid crystals (if you skip this it will probably still be fine).

Mix well and pour into a clean sterilised bottle.

Shelf stable golden falernum

Give it a good shake now and then in the first few days and after that just before use. If you’ve done this right it should keep for a minimum of 6 months. Maybe longer – I’ve always finished it all before then…

Put your falernum to good use in a SaturnRoyal Bermuda Yacht Club,  Jet Pilot Corn ‘n’ OilCalico Jack or  Blackbeard’s Ghost.

XXX Update XXX

Two years and many batches later I can confirm that there is still no spoilage after 9 months at room temperature.

XXX Update 2 XXX

Five and a half years later (and still the most read article here by far). These days I’m using 100ml of Mount Gay Eclipse and 50ml of Wray & Nephew overproof as the rum component. Also I should add that the recipe has a tendency to flocculate. In other words small flecks can form in the mixture. Note that this is not spoilage – just certain components falling out of solution. Just give it a hard shake until they disappear.

 

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The Lord Lucan

Have you seen this man?

The Lord Lucan

This is the most recent of my own concoctions. The serious cocktailien must be able to create his/her own drinks but those starting off should concentrate on the classics first. Making changes to classic drinks is the best way to get off the ground and this one is loosely based on the Boulevardier – which in itself is a version of the Negroni – and all three ingredients are changed for vaguely similar ones. The unwritten rules state that if you change a recipe sufficiently you get to rename it. Hence The Lord Lucan.

The name Lord Lucan (1934 – ?) will be familiar to those hailing from those British Isles – for the rest of you there is always Wikipedia. Basically he is – or was – Britain’s Jimmy Hoffa. I firmly believe the naming of a drink should tell a story, however cryptic that might be. In a way it’s part of the presentation; a story to tell the customer while the drink is prepared. In this case I admit I may have gone a bit overboard. The Lord Lucan cocktail has a three way connection to the notorious peer. The similarity between his family name and the Amaro Lucano, the popularity of smoky Islay malt whisky amongst his London gambling club peers and a sneaky side reference to his favourite game – Baccarat – where one plays as “punto” or “banco”.


The Lord Lucan

1.5oz Islay malt whisky (see notes)

0.75oz Amaro Lucano

0.75oz Punt e Mes vermouth

1 good dash of orange bitters

Stir with ice and strain into a DOF glass containing one big block of clear ice.

Flame a slice of orange peel over glass. Twist and garnish.

Do not drink to “Lucky” Lucan as murderers are undeserving of our toastage.


Alternative version:

Jimmy Hoffa

Replace the Islay whisky with an assertive Bourbon such as Wild Turkey 101 or a spicy rye such as Rittenhouse 100 proof.


Notes: I used Finlaggan Islay malt in the Lord Lucan but if you find it a bit heavy on the smoke/peat try 0.75oz Islay malt and 0.75oz of a milder Scotch such as Johnnie Walker Red Label.

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The Paper Plane

Fly like paper, get high like planes.

The Paper Plane

The Paper Plane is an excellent example of a drink of this wonderful Cocktail Renaissance (c. 2000 – present). Created by Sam Ross, protege of the late great Sasha Petraske (1973 – 2015), the Paper Plane is, in my opinion, well on the way to becoming a modern classic – and those are surprisingly few. Mr Ross is all the more noteworthy for having created a second, and still loftier, modern classic in the Penicillin – more of which very soon. However, we start with the Paper Plane for its simplicity of assembly, assuming, of course, one can get hold of a bottle of its key ingredient Amaro Nonino Quintessentia. The Paper Plane contains equal parts of its four ingredients which doesn’t happen too often – the similarly portioned Last Word seems to have been the inspiration. Of course, this makes the drink easy to remember and easy to make, heck you don’t even need a measure! It’s a real crowd pleaser and a great introduction to bourbon, which barely pokes its assertive nose into this drink. The Paper Plane is beautifully balanced and wonderfully complex – each ingredient playing its part perfectly. Bravo!


The Paper Plane

0.75oz bourbon whiskey (I use Wild Turkey 101)

0.75oz lemon juice

0.75oz Aperol

0.75oz Amaro Nonino Quintessentia


Shake with ice.

Strain into a chilled cocktail coupé.

Toast Sam Ross and the Cocktail Renaissance.


Notes:

Amaro Nonino Quintessentia may be difficult to find in some places. I hauled a bottle back from Italy only to find it sitting laughing at me in one of my favorite Amsterdam bottle shops (Boorsma, Ferdinand Bolstraat 112). Keep your eyes peeled or speak nicely to anyone you know who likes to holiday in Italia. It also seems to be reasonably available in the USA.

Update: Amaro Nonino is also available at Ton Overmars, Hoofddorpplein 11, Amsterdam.

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The Mai Tai

Mai, oh, Mai!

The Mai Tai – an introduction to Tiki

Let’s talk Tiki. What is Tiki? And why do I capitalise it? For the same reason that people capitalise “God”. Tiki is both a style of cocktail (that could otherwise be described as the tropical style or “exotics”) and an entire lifestyle subculture. Let’s stick to the former, at least for now. Tiki drinks are typically, but not always, rum based and usually include fruit juices, syrups and spices. They are often comprised of a larger number of ingredients than normal cocktails and it is not unusual for a Tiki drink to contain three different rums. Yes, in the same drink. Many Tiki drinks contain overproof rum (57% – 75.5% ABV) which has given them a fearsome reputation although these strong spirits are generally used in very small amounts. Tiki is the most joyous style of mixed drink but it should not be mistaken – as it often is – as a frivolous affair. Serious Tiki drinks are complex in both preparation and in taste. The best have layer upon layer of flavour and nuance and they are also notoriously easy to make badly. As always, balance is the key – typically a sweet/sour balance but a spice often plays a role too.

The history of Tiki has two phases, and two key characters. We’ll deal with the second phase first. Obviously. Tiki had existed as an elite fad since 1934 (more of which some other time) but after the end of WWII it was brought to the masses – largely by one man, and one drink. This drink. Trader Vic – pseudonyms are de rigeur in Tikiland – created the Mai Tai, which is apparently Tahitian for “the dog’s bollocks” or somesuch, in 1944 at his Polynesian themed eatery and bar in Oakland, California. Yes, Tiki, bizarrely, is an entirely American invention. There has been some fierce discussion in the cocktail world about the Mai Tai’s origin but it seems to be finally settled in Vic’s favour so I won’t bore you with the details. Suffice to say that a properly made Mai Tai is, in my opinion, one of the finest drinks in the known universe. The problem is that it is almost never properly made, although you probably have a better chance now than at any time in the last 45 years. Ignore any recipe that is not very close to the one below. It will be pure shite, as we say where I’m from. A good trick to ensure the delivery of a quality Mai Tai to your drinking hand is to ask the bartender if they can make a “1944” or “T.V” Mai Tai. If s/he smiles rather than frowns then you are certainly in capable hands.

The Mai Tai sounds tricky but it is in fact quite simple to make, the secret being to first make yourself some Mai Tai mix. The mix keeps for a long time and the Mai Tai is so good that I personally guarantee you’ll never be left with a funky half bottle languishing in the back of your cocktail cabinet.


Mai Tai mix:

1 part 2:1 sugar syrup (which is itself 2 parts sugar to one part boiling hot water)

1 part orgeat (see notes)

2 parts curacao (not  blue curacao – see notes)

Mix well and store in a sterilised glass bottle. Does not need to be refrigerated. Try making an 8oz batch first (2oz / 2oz / 4oz).


The Mai Tai

1 ounce of dry golden rum

1 ounce of rich dark rum

1 ounce of Mai Tai mix (aka 0.5oz curacao, 0.25oz orgeat, 0.25oz rich syrup)

1 ounce of fresh lime juice

Shake hard with about half a shaker of crushed ice. Pour, unstrained, into a DOF glass.

Garnish with half a lime shell and a sprig of mint (this is supposed to look like a desert island). Serve with straw/s short enough that the drinker gets a good whiff of the lime and mint.

Toast Trader Vic Bergeron (or his wooden leg) each and every time.


See, with the mix made in advance, there’s nothing to it. You can rattle these out at high speed all night. And they’re a real crowd pleaser. You’ll be an instant cocktail god/dess.

The observant student will note that the Mai Tai is a convoluted variant of the Daiquiri. Bonus points if you spotted that.

Notes:

Orgeat is an almond syrup – although there’s a bit more to it than that. It’s also a refreshing addition to a glass of soda and ice. Monin brand is a decent start although there are better options if you get very serious.

You can use triple sec (Cointreau is simply a fancy triple sec) in place of the curacao but you will get the best results from an actual (non-blue) curacao. Bols Dry Orange works well and is very affordable and there are others including Pierre Ferrand.

To sterilise a glass bottle, first clean it out well, fill with very hot tap water while you boil some water. Pour out the hot water and fill with the just-boiled water and leave for at least 20 minutes. Your bottle is now sterile and your mixes will last a lot longer in it. A surprising number of cocktailistas don’t do this and seem surprised when some stringy mold shows up in their fancy-ass syrup two weeks later. The pre-fill is important both to prevent the bottle from cracking due to the thermal shock and to keep the temperature high enough to kill any bacteria.

The real joy of the Mai Tai is playing with the rum combinations. There is much discussion about this in Tikiland, often with one of the rums being a rhum agricole from Martinique. In the interests of simplicity I suggest the following as a guideline. Rum 1 should generally be a dry Spanish style rum – Havana Club Anejo Especial or Reserva are excellent here. If you are in a country, ahem, where you can’t get genuine HC then you should have asked your government to be nicer to the Cubans. Or you could use a similar rum like Flor de Cana 5 or 7 year old, Barbancourt 4 or 8 year old, Abuelo Anejo or 7 year old or Brugal Anejo. Rum 2 should be something rich and maybe a little sweeter. Appleton Extra (aka 12 year old) is a good starting point but there a many other options. Have fun experimenting!

If you want to know more about Tiki, don’t fret, we’ll be back on the subject soon and often. If you can’t wait then I massively recommend reading Beachbum Berry Remixed by Jeff “Beachbum” Berry. I warned you about the names, right. They call me The Swizzler.

 

 

 

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The Negroni

The bartender’s best friend.

The Negroni

Wouldn’t it be great if there was a “proper” cocktail you could make without requiring all that pesky equipment and those fancy techniques? A drink you can make with supermarket ingredients and household objects? Say hello to the barman’s favourite, that most exalted Italian cocktail, the Negroni. Count Negroni (1829 – 1913) must have been a pretty astute fellow. Legend has it that he asked a barman to put gin in his Americano (we’ll come to that one later) instead of soda water. This magically turned the popular lunch-time Americano into the king of aperitivos – or should that be aperitivi? Whatever. Never have a second Negroni but if you must, have it before the first one. I found this out the hard way. A wise gentleman once told me you can judge how civilized a country is by the quality of their Negronis.

The Negroni is currently experiencing something of a revival and a well deserved one too. Versions are many and varied. In my experience those using good quality bourbon, rye, mezcal or tequila are the most successful. Further experimentation is encouraged. Nay, demanded.

There are three common ways to make a Negroni and I list them in order of simplicity.

Italian style. Take a decent sized squat tumbler, half fill with ice, pour in equal quantities (see you don’t even need a measure!) of Campari, sweet vermouth (that’s the red one) and dry gin. Stir well with a teaspoon. Drop in a slice of orange. Prego!

American style. One ounce of each of the same ingredients stirred with ice and strained into a chilled stemmed cocktail glass.

Modern style.

My version:

1.5oz London dry gin (I use Broker’s)

1.5oz Punt e Mes (an excellent bittered sweet vermouth)

1.5oz Campari


Stir well with ice in a mixing glass. Strain into a chilled Double Old Fashioned glass (I’m calling this a DOF glass from now on BTW) containing a large chunk of clear ice.

Garnish with a large swathe of orange peel.

Toast Count Negroni each and every time.


Notes: Vermouth tends to go off after a while. I suggest keeping it in the fridge or using a Vacu-Vin stopper to prolong its life. Another option is to pre-mix equal quantities of gin, sweet vermouth and Campari in one bottle. This also prolongs the life of the vermouth (higher ABV) as well as allowing you to call the resultant drinks “Glass Aged Negronis” and running the risk that people start calling you an asshole behind your back. Frankly, it’s a risk worth taking.

Alternative Negroni suggestions:

Replace the gin with rye whiskey to create The Boulevardier.

Good quality tequila (reposado or anejo) or mezcal also make very interesting gin replacements.

 

 

 

 

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The Daiquiri

It’s got to be perfect.

 

The Daiquiri

It begins here. Rum, lime, sugar. Simple, elegant, delicious. Yet the years have been cruel to this wonderful drink. Perhaps no cocktail has been so butchered and debased during The Dark Ages of cocktail history (c. 1975 – 2000). No word – strawberry, frozen – should ever be inserted before the word Daiquiri. No drink is as perfectly refreshing on a sticky summer day. A Mojito!, I hear you cry, but what, dear reader, is a Mojito but a Daiquiri in a long glass with some mint and soda? Favourite of JFK and Hemingway, template to the Tiki revolution, catalyst of the cocktail Renaissance; we are humbled by your perfection, oh mighty Daiquiri. Indeed, I pray to the Tiki gods that I pass from this dark world with a Daiquiri in my hand. I’ll need an ice cold drink where I’m going…

Easy to make well but challenging to perfect. Learning to make a classic Daiquiri teaches the eager cocktail student three essentials.

1. The classic proportions that form the template of a thousand excellent drinks – 8:3:2 (fine-tuned to taste, of course)

2. The technique: the shake, the chilled glass, the freshness of the components. Essentials by which every cocktail stands or falls.

3. The balance of sweet and sour is the key to many a drink but none more so than the Daiquiri. Perfect this and you have reached the very gates of mixological enlightenment.

The Daiquiri also serves as the universal benchmark cocktail for judging a mixing rum. If a rum works well in a Daiquiri then make a place for it in your cabinet. If it does not you may as well let the sink drink it. The classic recipe follows. You can make your own adjustments but go too far and you lose the right to call it a Daiquiri and must give it a new name. Don’t blame me, them’s the rules. With the noble Daiquiri under your belt you are ready to go out boldly into cocktail-land and conquer all that lies before you.

Make thus:

2oz of a good Cuban style white rum

0.75oz freshly squeezed lime juice

0.5oz simple syrup


Shake well with ice and strain into a chilled (pref. champagne coupe) glass.

No garnish is required or, indeed, desirable.


Notes:

rum: For white I suggest Havana Club 3 anjos (the real Cuban one) or Plantation 3 Stars. Lesser rums will crash and burn in a Daq. Do experiment with gold and even dark rums. You will be rewarded. And verily. If using overproof rum reduce the quantity to 1.5oz. Or not.

lime juice: freshly squeezed and ideally no more that 6 hours old. Sourness may vary so see below.

sugar syrup: begin with 1:1 white sugar syrup and fine-tune the quantity until you find the prefect balance. I also suggest trying richer syrup and reducing the amount.

 

 

 

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