Original Recipe: Desert Orange

I’ve been inspired by the cocktail recipes I’ve been seeing this season making use of blood orange, which is in peak form from January through March.  (One example:  the brûléed blood orange spiced winter gin and tonic at Craft & Cocktails.)  So in addition to experimenting with “dressed can” cocktails this month, I’ve put together a couple of recipes of my own that feature blood orange.  I now present the first of these, the Desert Orange:

Desert Orange

This cocktail combines flavors of smoke, spice, and citrus.  It begins with mezcal as the base spirit, which provides the smoky flavor.  Spice and savory flavors are provided by Ancho Reyes Verde liqueur and a tomatillo, tamarind and hibiscus shrub by Calvit’s.  And the citrus of course comes from freshly squeezed blood orange juice.  To round off the drink, I added a bit of burnt sugar syrup from Tippleman’s and Aztec Chocolate Bitters by Fee Brothers.  I also salted the rim of the glass with pink Himalayan salt.

This is a great cocktail for February.  The smoke and spice keep you warm, while the citrus foreshadows sunny summer days ahead – a margarita for winter, if you will.  Here is the recipe:

Desert Orange

Enjoy the Desert Orange cocktail, which combines smoke, spice and citrus that takes advantage of blood orange season.
Prep Time6 minutes
Total Time6 minutes
Course: Drinks
Cuisine: Sour
Servings: 1 cocktail
Calories: 240kcal
Author: Geoffrey Wyatt

Ingredients

  • 2 oz. mezcal I used Mezcal Vago Espadín
  • 1/2 oz. Ancho Reyes Verde
  • 1/2 oz. Calvit's Tomatillo-Tamarind-Hibiscus Drinking Shrub
  • 1/2 oz. freshly squeezed blood orange juice
  • 1/4 oz. burnt sugar syrup I used Tippleman's
  • 1 dash Fee Brothers Aztec Chocolate Bitters
  • blood orange wheel
  • pink Himalayan salt

Instructions

  • Salt the rim of a rocks glass with the salt.  Add a large ice cube.
  • Combine the mezcal, Ancho Reyes Verde, shrub, juice, syrup and bitters in a shaking tin with ice and shake vigorously.
  • Strain into the glass and add an orange wheel as garnish.

Enjoy!

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Original Recipe: Raspberry, Rhubarb & Rye

As past posts reveal, I’m a fan of shrubs.  I’ve used them in cocktails like the Autumn Breeze.  And because they are nonalcoholic they also work in mocktails like the Mexican Candy Soda.  In part because of their versatility, I’ve also recommended shrubs as great cocktail-themed gifts.  In that vein, I was recently given a gift of a rhubarb shrub from Tulip Tree Hill.  I immediately set out to find a good use for it in a cocktail.  And lo, the Raspberry, Rhubarb & Rye was born:

Raspberry, Rhubarb & Rye

The inspiration for this drink was the strawberry-rhubarb preserves my grandmother always had on hand when I was a kid.  I figured raspberries would do just as well as strawberries and are a bit easier to use in cocktails.

That proved true, but these ingredients needed a little support to stand up against the base spirit – rye, in this case.  I thought it would help to add some sugar and citrus.  For these I used burnt sugar syrup from Tippleman’s and lemon juice.  I also added a dash of walnut bitters.

These additions rounded out the drink nicely, giving it a smooth, tangy and slightly sweet taste.  Although I put this together in January, the spring-summery flavors of rhubarb and raspberry hinted at the warmer days ahead.  This would be a perfect pre-dinner cocktail on a night of an outdoor meal.  Here’s the recipe:

Raspberry, Rhubarb & Rye

This Raspberry, Rhubarb & Rye cocktail combines raspberry and rhubarb flavors to provide a smooth, tangy and slightly slightly sweet cocktail that is perfect for your next happy hour.
Prep Time5 minutes
Total Time5 minutes
Course: Drinks
Cuisine: Sour
Servings: 1 cocktail
Calories: 195kcal
Author: Geoffrey Wyatt

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 oz. rye I used Whistle Pig
  • 3/4 oz. Tulip Tree Hill rhubarb shrub
  • 3/4 oz. burnt sugar syrup I used Tippleman's
  • 1/2 oz. freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 1 dash walnut bitters I used Fee Brothers
  • 5 raspberries

Instructions

  • Combine the rye, shrub, syrup, lemon juice, bitters, and three of the raspberries with ice in a shaking tin and shake vigorously.
  • Strain into a rocks glass.
  • Add a large ice cube.
  • Garnish with two fresh raspberries.

Enjoy!

Dry Recipe: Mexican Candy Soda

I recently posted my first recipe for dry January – the Actually Dry Martini.  With its botanical and vegetable flavors, the Actually Dry Martini might serve as a reasonable mocktail alternative for martini drinkers.  But what about everyone else?  Before January ends I wanted to get one more non-alcoholic recipe up so we have a broader spectrum of tastes covered.  In this post, I present to you the Mexican Candy Soda:

Mexican Candy Soda

For this drink we will once again be making use of the Garden 108 non-alcoholic spirit by Seedlip.  As noted in the Actually Dry Martini post, Garden 108 features flavors of “leaf,” “herb,” and “pod.”  In that post, I used Garden 108 as a reasonable non-alcoholic proxy for gin.  (To temper expectations, I also cautioned that Garden 108 is not really gin.  But that fact is less significant here, where other flavors make the drink less dependent on Garden 108.)

We will also be using a shrub.  In the past, I’ve recommended shrubs from D.C.’s own Shrub District.  (See my gift guide and recipe for the Autumn Breeze.)  For this recipe I tried out one of Calvit’s Shrubs, the Tomatillo-Tamarind-Hibiscus drinking shrub.

The final flavor comes from freshly squeezed grapefruit juice.  I used ruby red grapefruits for the color of the juice and peel.  But the particular variety is not as important as the fact that you use fresh ingredients.  (You’ll note I always include “freshly squeezed” to describe fruit juice used in my recipes.  Fresh juice is always important in cocktails, but all the more so in mocktails, where there is no alcohol to hide behind.)  You’ll also need soda water to top off the drink.

These flavors combine beautifully for a light and refreshing drink that makes for a perfect pre-dinner mocktail before a spicy meal.  In fact, that’s partly how I decided on the name here.  I enjoyed one of these mocktails prior to a spicy chorizo stew dinner.  And in researching for inspiration for the name, I found that tamarind is popular flavor in Mexican candy.  That description seemed to fit, and I liked the name, so the Mexican Candy Soda was christened.

Here’s how to make it at home:

Mexican Candy Soda

If you're in the mood for something light and refreshing and alcohol-free, try the Mexican Candy Soda, made with Seedlip's Garden 108, a tomatillo-tamarind-hibiscus drinking shrub from Calvit's Shrubs, fresh grapefruit juice and soda water.
Prep Time5 minutes
Total Time5 minutes
Course: Drinks
Cuisine: Mocktail
Servings: 1 cocktail
Calories: 35kcal
Author: Geoffrey Wyatt

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 oz. Seedlip Garden 108
  • 3/4 oz. Calvit's Tomatillo-Tamarind-Hibiscus Drinking Shrub
  • 3/4 oz. freshly squeezed grapefruit juice
  • grapefruit peel

Instructions

  • Fill a highball glass with ice.
  • Combine the Garden 108, shrub, and juice in a shaking tin with ice and shake vigorously.  
  • Strain mixed ingredients into the glass and top off with soda water.
  • Garnish with grapefruit peel and add a metal or paper straw.

Note that if you are not observing dry January, I tried a version of this with gin instead of Seedlip, which was quite good.  Tequila or mezcal should also substitute nicely.   However you decide to make it, I hope you enjoy!

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Original Recipe: The Autumn Breeze

If you read my last post offering cocktail gift ideas for the 2017 holiday season, you know I’m a fan of shrubs and Chartreuse.  This recipe – the Autum Breeze – shows you how to make good use of these things together.

The context for this recipe is my frame of mind when I was dreaming it up:  thinking about the last days of fall and avoiding unpleasant thoughts of winter by imagining myself on a Caribbean vacation.  This daydream inspired island ingredients like pineapple and rum on the one hand and warm autumnal flavors like smoky scotch and spices on the other.  My ingredient list became clear:  rum, scotch, a pineapple-allspice shrub by Shrub District, and yellow Chartreuse.

This is a spirit-heavy cocktail so I decided that stirring rather than shaking was the way to go.  I stirred the ingredients with ice and strained into a couple glass and garnished with a lemon peel.  And here was the result:

Autumn Breeze

This is a sweet drink, with a pleasant complexity provided by the different flavors.  The smokiness of the scotch and the herbal goodness of the Chartreuse come through clearly, offsetting what might have been an overpowering sweetness if the rum and pineapple flavors had been left alone.  It definitely works as a fall sipping drink, but you could easily pour this over crushed ice and swizzle for a fine poolside (or seaside) drink and throw a number of these back quickly.

Here is the recipe:

Autumn Breeze

The Autumn Breeze is the perfect cocktail for that fall day when you're daydreaming about a tropical vacation, with rum, scotch, pineapple and Chartreuse.
Prep Time5 minutes
Total Time5 minutes
Course: Drinks
Cuisine: Sour, Tiki
Servings: 1 cocktail
Calories: 175kcal
Author: Geoffrey Wyatt

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. aged rum I used Appleton Estate 12-year
  • 1/2 oz. Laphroaig 10-year
  • 1/2 oz. yellow Chartreuse
  • 1 oz. pineapple-allspice shrub by Shrub District
  • lemon peel

Instructions

  • Combine the rum, Laphroaig, Chartreuse and shrub with ice in a mixing glass and stir.
  • Strain into a coupe.
  • Express lemon peel over the glass and add the peel as garnish.

Enjoy!