Episode 63: Brown Derby

  • 2 oz. bourbon

  • 1 oz. fresh grapefruit juice

  • 1/2 to 3/4 oz. honey syrup (to taste, see note)

  • Optional garnish: Grapefruit twist

Combine bourbon, grapefruit juice, and honey syrup in a cocktail shaker and fill with ice. Shake until well chilled, about 20 seconds. Strain into a chilled stemmed cocktail glass. Pinch grapefruit twist over top of glass to express oils and add twist to drink. 

Note:
Honey syrup: simply mix equal parts hot water and honey, stirring or shaking until dissolved, and let cool completely before using. Syrup will keep, refrigerated, up to 2 weeks.

According to Dale DeGroff’s 2002 book, “The Craft of the Cocktail,” the Brown Derby was created at the Vendôme Club in Los Angeles in the 1930s, and it was named for a popular Hollywood Haunt called the Brown Derby. The Brown Derby was a diner chain in LA with domed buildings built to look like brown derby hats.

While the recipe for the Brown Derby cocktail appeared in the book “Hollywood Cocktails” in 1933, it turns out that an identical cocktail called the De Rigueur was published in England’s “The Savoy Cocktail Book” in 1930. There’s no way to be certain if the Brown Derby was ripped off from the De Rigueur or if they were both just invented independently of one another. Either way, the Brown Derby became way more famous and popular than the De Rigueur.

A bartender and cocktail authority Jeffrey Morgenthaler said,
“Honey is this weird ingredient that can tie flavors together when you need it to. And by some miracle it sits in this perfect place between bourbon and grapefruit.”


Episode 58: Gimlet

  • 2 oz Gin

  • ¾ oz Lime

  • ¾ oz Simple syrup

Combine all ingredients in cocktail shaker with plenty of ice. Shake until frosty and strain into a chilled coupe or stemmed cocktail glass. I recommend double straining to capture any ice shards broken off in the shaker. Garnish with a lime wheel if desired.

The gimlet is one of our absolute favorite drinks, and as it turns out, it also has a really interesting history.

During the height of British colonialism, scurvy was a serious problem on English ships. In the 17th century we began to understand that consuming citrus fruit helped prevent it, but we still didn’t really understand how or why, and people were resistant to accept that the cure could be so simple and easy, so the scurvy remained one of the most common illnesses on board ships. We know today that scurvy is caused by a Vitamin C deficiency that’s easily cured by the vitamins in citrus, but it took centuries for citrus rations to become standard practice on ships. Finally in 1867 the Merchant Shipping Act made it mandatory for all British ships to carry rations of lime juice for the crew, and the sailors started adding the lime juice to their booze, earning them the nickname 'Limeys'. In fact, rum was often used as a preservative to keep the lime juice from spoiling on long voyages.

The same year the Merchant Shipping Act went into effect, a Scottish shipyard owner named Lauchlin Rose patented a process for preserving fruit juice with sugar rather than alcohol. To give his product wider appeal he packaged the mixture in an attractive bottle and named it 'Rose's Lime Cordial'.

Legend has it that while lowly sailors liked to drink their lime juice with rum, officers preferred gin and soon started mixing Rose's lime cordial with their gin, thus creating the gimlet out of necessity rather than pleasure. They would have been drinking it warm of course, there was no ice on their ships, but they developed a taste for it and brought it back to British society. It turns out that lime and gin are a match made in heaven, and chilled with ice, the gimlet blew up. It was delicious, sweet, easy to make, and easier to drink.

Though the drink was popular since the mid-19th century, the name Gimlet didn’t appear in print until the 1920s. After that though, it was in cocktail books across the globe. As for where name comes from, a 'gimlet' was a small tool used to tap the barrels of spirits which were carried on British Navy ships. Most people believe this is where the name comes from. Another story cites a naval doctor, Rear-Admiral Sir Thomas Desmond Gimlette, who is said to have mixed gin with lime 'to help the medicine go down'. This story is possible but not exactly plausible. First of all, during his career mixing lime juice and gin was already standard practice, and the possibility that the cocktail was named after him wasn’t mentioned in any of the literature about him during his lifetime, nor in his obituary.

The most common, original recipe was simply ½ rose’s lime cordial and ½ gin.

The problem is, the recipe for roses has been changed over the years, and Rose’s lime cordial is now known as roses lime juice. This syrupy sweet, artificial tasting new recipe makes for a syrupy sweet, artificial tasting gimlet. But modern tastes have also changed, and most people prefer a slightly less sweet gimlet.

Some cocktail nerds will complain that the modern standard recipe of mixing gin with fresh lime juice and simple syrup isn’t a gimlet at all, but rather a gin daiquiri. What’s wrong with that?
I’ve also seen some bartenders use a mix of fresh lime juice and rose’s lime juice rather than simple syrup.

Some purists have come up with recipes to try to replicate their own version of the original rose’s lime cordial at home, but the recipe we’ve shared above is the simpler, modern gin daiquiri version of the gimlet, which is seriously fucking delicious.  


Episode 15: The Classic Daiquiri


  • 3 oz. white rum

  • 1 1/2 oz. fresh lime juice

  • 3/4 oz. simple syrup (1:1) *see note

Combine ingredients in a cocktail shaker with plenty of ice. Shake well to chill and strain into a chilled cocktail or coupe glass.
Garnish with a lime wheel, wedge, or curl if desired.

note: to make simple syrup heat equal parts sugar and water until sugar is completely dissolved. Cool before use.

daiquiri.jpg

The daiquiri is said to have been invented in Cuba around the turn of the 20th century by an American mining engineer named Jennings Cox.

They became popular in the United States during and just after WWII because rum was cheap and easy to find, while whiskey was rationed for the troops.

Daiquiri’s are also said to have been JFK’s favorite drink. He’s reported to have celebrated with a daiquiri when he won the election, and Jackie Kennedy is said to have trained the white house staff to make daiquiris just the way they liked them.