Episode 62: Rattle Skull

  • 12 ounces porter beer

  • 1 1/2 ounces dark Caribbean rum

  • 3/4 ounce lime juice

  • 1/2 ounce brown sugar syrup (1:1, sugar:water)

  • Garnish with freshly grated nutmeg

Add all ingredients to a large beer mug and stir gently to combine. Sprinkle with freshly grated nutmeg over the top before serving.

Colonial Americans drank very differently from the way we drink today. Cocktails weren’t exactly a thing just yet, but on special occasions punch was about as close as they got. Most of the time most people drank much more simply: Cider, beer, wine, or maybe straight spirits, like rum or whiskey, served room temperature. If they were feeling really fancy they might add some water and maybe even some sugar to their spirits, or sometimes they’d mix things together.

Flip, Bellow-Stop, Yard of Flannel, and Stone Fence were all common tavern drinks that combined spirits with beer or cider. Another popular colonial era concoction mixed beer, in this case a porter, with dark Caribbean rum (sometimes they’d use brandy or applejack), a little sugar and nutmeg, and sometimes some lime juice if they had it. This common colonial era beverage was called a Rattle Skull, which was a British slang term for someone who talked too much. It basically meant that if you drank a Rattle Skull you’d be spilling all the tea at the local tavern.


Episode 61: Golden Cadillac

  • 1.5 ounce Galliano

  • 1.5 ounce crème de cacao

  • 1.5 ounce heavy cream*

Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker with plenty of ice. Shake until frosty and stain into a chilled coupe or cocktail glass.

*NOTE: You can used coconut cream in place of heavy cream in the same proportion if desired.

The Golden Cadillac (or sometimes just Gold Cadillac) calls for Galliano which is a sweet Italian liqueur flavored with anise, herbs, and vanilla. This sweet and creamy cocktail was invented at a roadside bar in El Dorado, California called Poor Red’s BBQ. According to Poor Red’s website, they invented the cocktail in 1952 when a newly engaged couple came in to celebrate their engagement. They asked bartender Frank Klein to create a special cocktail just for them that would match their brand-new purchased gold-colored Cadillac parked outside. He tried a few things and eventually decided on this sweet creamy cocktail shaken until frothy. He decided to serve them their cocktail in two different glasses, a champagne coupe glass to signify its celebratory nature for her, and a more manly and masculine sidecar glass for him. To this day, when you order a Golden Cadillac at Poor Red’s, they serve it to you in two glasses.

Poor Red’s became famous for the drink throughout the 50s, and eventually Galliano noticed how high sales had climbed in Northern California, and decided to find out what was going on. They eventually ran an advertising campaign with a Golden Cadillac recipe from 1964 to 1967. From there, the drink became famous around the world.

Side note, if you’re not a dairy fan, you can still drink a Golden Cadillac. In the 1970s a bar in the East Village started selling them made with Coconut Cream instead of Heavy Cream, and their version became so popular that many recipes online today call for coconut cream.


Episode 60: Stinger

  • 2 ounces cognac or brandy

  • 1/2 ounce white crème de menthe*

Pour ingredients into a cocktail shaker and fill with ice; shake well and strain into a chilled cocktail glass.**
Garnish with a fresh mint leaf.

* To avoid an unappetizing color, be sure to use the white (clear), rather than the green crème de menthe
** You can also pour it over shaved ice in an old fashioned glass, for an extra refreshing treat.

stinger cocktail

The Stinger seems to have originated sometime around 1890 and may have been a twist on another popular cocktail at the time called the Judge, which was made with brandy, crème de menthe, and simple syrup. It was immediately popular in New York City, and quickly became known as an upper class "society" drink, reportedly a favorite of Reginald Vanderbilt in the 1920s.

Strong, sweet, and minty, it makes a perfect after dinner night cap, and many people in high society saw the Stinger not as a cocktail, but rather a digestif, only to be served after dinner. Over time though, that changed, and people started drinking Stingers as a cocktail.

The Stinger remained popular during Prohibition because crème de menthe helped mask the flavor of the inferior-quality brandies that were available. It remained popular all through the 1960s, but eventually it begin to lose favor in the late 70s. Today many people have never even heard of it.

Stinger recipes can vary quite a bit in proportion, with some drinkers preferring a drier version made with less crème de menthe, and others preferring it sweeter. Stinger recipes also typically call for the drink to be shaken, which is a bit strange for cocktails made from all spirits. They’re usually served up in a small cocktail glass, but for an extra refreshing treat they can also be served over crushed ice like a julep.

Episode 59: Rob Roy

  • 1 1/2 ounce blended scotch whiskey

  • 1 ounce sweet vermouth

  • 2 dashes aromatic bitters (angostura)

  • Orange twist

  • Brandied or Luxardo cherry

Combine scotch, vermouth, and bitters in a mixing glass filled with ice. Stir until well chilled and strain into a cocktail glass. Twist a piece of orange peel over the glass to express the oils, and serve neat with a cocktail cherry.

Rob Roy

A Rob Roy cocktail is basically just a Manhattan made with Scotch whiskey in place of bourbon or rye. It was named after an operetta that told the story of a great Scottish folk hero who supported the poor. Robert Roy MacGregor was a 17th century outlaw often cited as a sort of Scottish Robin Hood who led battles against noblemen in the Highlands. The operetta, titled Rob Roy, debuted in New York City in 1894, and a bartender at the nearby former Waldorf Astoria Hotel, on the site where the empire state building stands today, created the cocktail for opening night and to publicize the play.

Some cocktail historians however claim that the Rob Roy was actually invented at another luxury hotel, the Fifth Avenue Hotel, down by Madison Square.

In recent years however, cocktail historian David Wondrich has found evidence that a bartender named Henry A. Orphal actually created the Rob Roy while working in Hoboken, N.J, around 1895. A blended Scotch whisky salesman came in wanting a Manhattan, but according to his own company’s policy, he wasn’t allowed to drink anything not containing his own whisky. Orphal’s solution was to swap in 2 ounces of Scotch alongside the sweet vermouth and Angostura bitters.


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 57: Cosmpolitan

  • 2 ounces vodka

  • 1 ounce cranberry juice cocktail

  • ¾ ounce fresh lime juice

  • ¾ ounce triple sec (Cointreau)

  • Orange or lemon twist (garnish) 

Combine vodka, cranberry juice, lime juice, and triple sec in a cocktail shaker with plenty of ice. Shake vigorously until frosty.

Strain into a chilled martini glass. I recommend double straining to capture any ice shards broken off in the shaker. Garnish with an orange or lemon twist if desired.

There are few cocktails more immediately recognizable than a Cosmopolitan. This blush-pink cocktail with sweet-tart blend of vodka, triple sec, cranberry and lime juices served in a tall martini glass is completely synonymous with 1999 or the early 2000s. That’s because, while the cocktail was around earlier and had some moderate popularity, the cosmo didn’t become the ubiquitous girly drink we know it as today until it appeared in the second season of Sex and the City in 1999. After that the drink made several cameos on the show, and for a good decade became one of, if not the, most popular cocktail in America.

So we know why the cosmo blew up in 1999, but we don’t know exactly who invented it or when or where, because about a dozen different origin stories exist.  

Some people believe it evolved from a 1930s era cocktail called a Cosmopolitan Daisy that was made with gin, Cointreau, Lemon Juice, and Raspberry Syrup. Others believe it was invented by the gay community in Provincetown in the 60s or 70s. Some say it came out of Ocean Spray’s quest for easy cranberry juice cocktails in the 1960s. A very popular cocktail called the Harpoon is basically a cosmo without the triple sec, so many believe that’s where they come from. Others believe it was a play on a Kamikaze. Bartending legend and author Gaz Regan, believes the original Cosmopolitan was created in 1985 in Miami Beach by bartender Cheryl Cook when she added citrus flavored vodka and cranberry juice to a Kamikaze and served it in a Martini glass. Some believe that Dale DeGroff came up with the cosmo at the Rainbow Room in New York, and others still believe that Toby Cecchini first did at New York’s Odeon restaurant in Tribeca.

What we do know is that before Sex and the city, Cecchini’s Odeon version using Absolut Citron and Cointreau was by far the most popular and well known recipe out there. The Odeon was a very trendy restaurant and the cosmo spread from there all over Manhattan, which is probably how it landed on Sex and the City in the first place.   

And the rest is history.


Episode 56: Harvey Wallbanger

  • 1.5 oz Vodka

  • 4 oz Orange juice

  • .5 oz Galliano

Combine vodka and orange juice in a glass filled with ice and stir. Pour the Galliano over a barspoon held over the top of the glass so that it floats on top of the drink. Garnish with an orange slice.

Made with vodka, orange juice, and a splash of Galliano (a sweet, herbal, vanilla flavored Italian liqueur), essentially a Harvey Wallbanger is just a gussied up screwdriver.

The most common origin story you’ll find when looking for the history of the Harvey Wallbanger is that a Bartender named Donato “Duke” Antone created it in the early 1950s at his Blackwatch Bar on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. Supposedly a local surfer and bar regular named Tom Harvey came into the bar after losing a surfing competition and asked for his favorite cocktail that Duke made. After getting a little drunk, he supposedly started venting about losing the competition and eventually started banging his head against the wall in frustration. Some stories just say he got so drunk he banged into the wall, but either way, Harvey. Wall. Banger. The end.

From there the cocktail puttered along until sometime in the 1960s when a marketing director for a liquor importer came up with a tagline and a cartoon for the cocktail in an attempt to boost Galliano sales. By the 70s it was one of the most popular cocktails in the country.

However, there are a few problems with this story. First of all, a surfer from Manhattan beach going all the way to Sunset Boulevard for a fancy screwdriver is hard to believe. Also, cocktail historians haven’t been able to find any written record of a competition surfer named Tom Harvey.

Not only that, but Antone is also supposedly responsible for creating a bunch of other well-known cocktails like the Rusty Nail, the White Russian, the Kamakazi, and the Freddie Fudpucker; and some people say he was actually taking credit for cocktails he didn’t actually create himself. While he was quoted many times in newspapers about some of his most famous drinks, he never even mentioned the Harvey Wallbanger in print until the early 1970s, some 20 years after he supposedly invented it.

Also, in addition to owning the Blackwatch bar in Hollywood, Antone also worked for both Galliano and Smirnoff Vodka as a corporate mixologist. So, the more likely story is that there never was a real surfer, it was just a story concocted by a marketing department to go along with a cocktail that a corporate mixologist either created himself or stole from another bartender.

Either way, by the end of 1969 the cartoon mascot for the Harvey Wallbanger was everywhere. On pop art posters, bumper stickers, buttons, t-shirts, and mugs.  According to David Wondrich, with the Harvey mascot “to blaze the way, Antone’s simple—even dopey—drink would go on to be the first drink created by a consultant to actually take the nation by storm.”

 Thanks to this ad campaign, Galliano became the number one most imported liqueur in the 70s, exporting 500,000 cases a year to the U.S.

 


Episode 55: Hanky Panky

  • 1½ ounces dry gin

  • 1½ ounces vermouth

  • ¼ oz Fernet-Branca

  • Orange twist, for garnish

Fill a mixing glass with ice, and pour in all of your ingredients.
Stir until well chilled and strain into Martini or coupe glass.
Garnish with an orange twist.

The Hanky Panky was invented sometime in the early 1900s by Ada “Coley” Coleman at the world famous American Bar in the Savoy Hotel in London. It was really rare to see women behind the bar back then, but that didn’t stop Coley, who was the head bartender there for over 20 years. She loved creating new recipes, but the Hanky Panky is her most famous creation ever, and it’s still on the menu at the American Bar to this day.

According to Coley, she created the drink for a famous London stage actor Sir Charles Hawtrey. When she retired in 1925, Coley told a newspaper,
“The late Charles Hawtrey… was one of the best judges of cocktails that I knew. Some years ago, when he was overworking, he used to come into the bar and say, ‘Coley, I am tired. Give me something with a bit of punch in it.’ It was for him that I spent hours experimenting until I had invented a new cocktail. The next time he came in, I told him I had a new drink for him. He sipped it, and, draining the glass, he said, ‘By Jove! That is the real hanky-panky!’ And Hanky-Panky it has been called ever since.”

The Hanky Panky is made with gin, sweet vermouth, and a bit of Fernet, which is a bittersweet herbal Italian Amaro. Fernet is very strong and a bit overwhelming on its own, but used sparingly in this cocktail it adds a wonderful complexity.


Episode 54: Sazerac

  • 1/4 ounce absinthe, or anise liqueur

  • 1 sugar cube

  • 3 dashes Peychaud's Bitters

  • 2 ounces rye whiskey

  • Lemon twist, for garnish

Add absinthe to a well chilled old-fashioned glass and swirl it around to coat the glass. Discard any excess absinthe that pools in the glass.
In a separate mixing glass, soak the sugar cube with the bitters and muddle to crush the cube.
Add the rye whiskey and plenty of ice and stir for about 30 seconds.
Stain the cocktail into the absinthe-rinsed glass.
Gently squeeze the lemon twist over the drink to release its oils. You can use it to garnish the rim, but traditionalists say it should never be dropped into the actual cocktail.

The Sazerac is New Orleans most famous cocktail, and some people claim it’s one of the oldest American cocktail recipes ever recorded. There are two origin stories, but both of them involve a now defunct brand of cognac, Sazerac de Forge et Fils, and a pharmacist and Creole immigrant named Antoine Amédée Peychaud, who invented Peychaud’s curative bitters.

One story has it that the owner of a New Orleans bar, originally called the Merchants Exchange Coffee House, started importing Sazerac cognac and changed the name of his bar to the Sazerac Coffee House. He created a cocktail by adding absinthe and a locally produced cocktail bitters to his imported French cognac, and the rest is history.

The other story says that Antoine Peychaud invented the cocktail himself as a way to boost sales of his medicinal bitters. Either way, we know the Sazerac was invented in New Orleans sometime between the 1830s and the 1850s, and we know that in the 1870s, when phylloxera almost completely wiped out France's wine and brandy production, the cognac in the Sazerac was replaced with American rye whiskey, which remains the main ingredient in the cocktail today.

Along with Rye whiskey and peychauds bitters, the Sazerac also contains a sugar cube and an absinthe rinse, though other anise flavored liqueurs were used when absinthe was illegal in the US.

This classic wasn’t just popular in the mid-nineteenth century though. In the late 2000s, at the height of the cocktail culture resurgence, many bartenders were moving backward from prohibition era cocktails to even older recipes. Not only were old fashioned cocktails making a comeback, so were old fashioned spirits like Rye whiskey. Before the mid 2000s, the majority of American whiskey drinkers preferred Bourbon, but in their quest for balance and flavor, mixologists discovered that the dry spiciness of rye made for better mixed cocktails than the sweeter bourbon. Between 2007 and 2008, sales of Rye whiskey spiked by 30 percent.

Also, In 2007, the nearly century old ban on Absinthe in the United States was finally overturned, so absinthe suddenly flooded the bar scene in the United States.

Suddenly all the high-end cocktail bars in the country had both absinthe and rye on their menus, and they make up two out of four ingredients in a Sazerac. Ten years earlier the Sazerac was almost completely forgotten outside a few specialty bars in New Orleans, but thanks to cocktail historians like David Wondrich, by 2007 it was on cocktail menus across the nation. In 2008, the Louisiana Legislature voted to make the Sazerac New Orleans’ official cocktail, and by 2009 it was everywhere.

Some bartenders prefer to use an anise flavored liqueur rather than absinthe, and some prefer a mix of peychauds and angostura bitters rather than peychauds alone. But almost all bartenders agree that a Sazerac should always be stirred, never shaken, and should always be served without ice in an oversized rocks or old-fashioned glass.


Episode 53: Amaretto Sour

  • 2 oz. Amaretto

  • 1 oz. Fresh lemon juice

  • ½ of a fresh large egg white (or ½ oz of Pasteurized egg whites if you prefer)

  • Garnish: Good quality cocktail Cherries and a few dashes of Angostura bitters

Combine all of the ingredients in a shaker and “dry” shake without ice for 5 seconds. Add ice and shake again for 15 seconds. Strain into a chilled rocks glass filled with ice and garnish.

No-one knows for sure who first came up with the recipe for the Amaretto Sour, but we do know that it was created somewhere in the USA, sometime in the 1970s, when Italian liquors were starting to become fashionable in America.

Italians had been trying to introduce their spirits to an American audience for years, but it seemed that the bitterness of many Italian spirits was too much for most Americans in the 70s, who preferred their alcohol on the sweet side. Campari and the Negroni cocktail, for example, had a really hard time squeezing into the American market, but thankfully for Italy, Americans found the sweet nutty flavor of Amaretto to be very easy to drink.

 Amaretto (Italian for "a little bitter) is a sweet, slightly bitter, almond flavored liqueur traditionally made by soaking apricot kernels in brandy. Today it can also be made with peach stones, sweet almonds, or bitter almonds.

While we don’t know who or where or when the amaretto sour was invented, we do know that in the 70s the recipe would have been as simple as mixing amaretto with ready mixed bar sour mix. Such a simple recipe could have come from anywhere and it’s highly likely that multiple bars started selling them independently of one another and the popularity spread until they were ubiquitous in the 1980s. They remained popular in the 90s but eventually fell out of favor. Today though, they’re actually starting to make a bit of a comeback, but most of the new-fangled recipes that bars are serving today mix the amaretto with whiskey to increase the alcohol content and balance the sweetness. The recipe above contains only amaretto, but instead of sour mix, it calls for fresh lemon juice and egg white. Since amaretto is sweet enough on its own, no sour mix is necessary.