Posts tagged gin
Spiked Rhubarb Soda
Ali Hedin's rhubarb syrup is the perfect way to elevate a summer cocktail

When we were in Copenhagen, Jud tried to order a soda, but we were at a very swanky restaurant - and, as I’m sure you know, swanky restaurants don’t have “soda.” Luckily the waiter recognized that a 12 year old boy was just looking for something more fun than water. So he suggested their “rhubarb soda” that they make sometimes. Jud was in - he loves rhubarb. And I turns out I loved this soda. We all did. As soon as we got home I figured out how to make it ourselves!

It’s fabulous without gin (that’s what inspired it) but even better with a good gin. I’ve had so many people tell me how much they hate gin when I tell them that’s what I drink. I’ve realized it’s because there is SO MUCH gin out there.

Here are my picks and my advice on drinking gin:

  • Don’t start with an exotic flavor profile, choose a gin you’ve heard of before.

  • Read labels and know what the herbs and flavorings in the gin are. If you don’t like black licorice, don’t get one with anise. If you like things that taste floral, look for gins infused with florals.

  • The top three most popular are Tanqueray, Hendricks, and Sapphire. Tanqueray is the most evenly balanced with a little anise; Hendricks leans toward cucumber and floral flavors; while Sapphire is very herbal. Tanqueray is my personal favorite, but Hendricks is a popular starting place.

  • The first time you try gin, mix it with tonic water or soda. A martini is not the place to start if you aren’t sure you like gin.

Ali Hedin's rhubarb syrup is the perfect way to elevate a summer cocktail

Spiked Rhubarb Soda

1 tablespoon Rhubarb Syrup

2 ounces gin (Hendricks or something floral)

4 ounces soda water

In a cocktail shaker filled with ice, shake together Rhubarb Syrup and gin. Pour all of the ingredients (including the ice) into a highball glass. Top with soda water.


Cocktailing | Corpse Reviver no.2

If there was a better name for a Halloween cocktail than this, I can’t think of it. I have friends who adore this drink. They are constantly ordering it at the bars and I haven’t really seen the allure.

Then I made my own. Here’s what I discovered - the amount of lemon juice traditionally called for (1 ounce) is too much. It curdles your stomach. I made this with both fresh lemon juice and the stuff in the carton. Both ways, it needed less than the original recipes called for. With fresh lemon juice 1/2 ounce is plenty, with the juice in the carton, I recommend a little less than 1/2 an ounce.

The absinthe rinse seems optional because it’s a rinse, but it’s totally not. The slight licorice flavor with the absinthe and the citrus from everything else is a perfect combination. You can’t beat it when it’s done right. I buy a tiny bottle of absinthe because I don’t really need more than a little bit for this drink. And I don’t need more than a little for the rest of the cocktails I make either.

You will not regret shaking one of these up for Halloween - or really any time! Cin cin!

Corpse Reviver no. 2

makes one cocktail

1 ounce lillet blanc

1 ounce cointreau

1/2 ounce lemon juice

1 ounce dry gin

1/4 ounce absinthe

STEP 1

Pour the absinthe into the cocktail glass and swirl it around. Then dump it out. Or dump it in the next glass if you’re making more.

STEP 2

Pour all of the remaining ingredients into a cocktail shaker and fill it with ice. Shake until chilled. It’s about 21 times.

STEP 3

Strain into a cocktail glass and serve cold.


Cocktailing | Vesper

The original James Bond drink

The perfect Friday night clink-clink

It’s a little lillet and vodka and gin

Pour it in a pitcher - add ice - and begin

Not shaken, but stirred

More than one and your vision is definitely blurred.

Vesper Cocktail

1 ounce vodka

2 ounces gin

1/2 ounce lillet blanc

lemon peel


Combine all ingredients in a cocktail pitcher. Add ice and stir gently. Strain into two cocktail glasses and garnish with a lemon peel.


Cocktailing | The Bee's Knees

In the era of prohibition, gin was terrible. It was made in bathtubs and buckets and could have actually been poison. In order to cover up the taste of the terrible gin, a bartender added honey and lemon and shook it up - like a martini only so it was palatable.

There are lots of stories about where the cocktail came from and most people like to say Paris. HOWEVER - prohibition was in the US not in France so how would the above explanation, which is the common explanation, make any sense at all? Here’s the better story that ties things together:

Do you know who Margaret Brown is? Molly Brown was traveling alone on the Titanic when it hit the iceberg. She loaded passengers on to lifeboats before she was finally persuaded onto one herself. Following the sinking, Ms. Brown organized the first class passengers to secure funding and necessities for the second and third class passengers who had survived. Her passion for philanthropy started long before she set foot on the Titanic and continued long after.

Here’s how she ties into the Bee’s Knees. The Unsinkable Molly Brown was on the Titanic because she needed to leave Paris, where she was visiting with her daughter, to get home to a sick grandchild. In the years following the sinking, Ms. Brown continued to travel to Paris - and as the wealthy woman she was - she stayed at the Ritz. The Ritz claims it originated the cocktail in 1921. However, another story says that Ms. Brown, the strong and independent woman that she was, brought the drink to Paris and had the bartender shake her up one. Ms. Brown bringing the drink to Paris makes way more sense - gin was readily available in Paris and would have been much more delicious than what was available back home in Denver.

Now that gin is delicious, we don’t need the honey and lemon to cover up the flavor. I chose a gin that has the flavors highlighted by the lemon and the honey serves to smooth out the lemon. I also chose this Empress Gin because it’s blue and turns this pink/purple when mixed with the lemon! Empress gin is one of the coolest you can have on your bar cart. It stays blue or gets a little more blue when mixed with basic ingredients (like soda water) but gets pink-y when mixed with anything acidic! It’s almost impossible to find cool colored liquors that aren’t mixed with weird ingredients - this one gets it’s purple color from the Butterfly Pea Flower. And it’s delish!

The Bee’s Knees

1 tablespoon honey

1 tablespoon hot water

2 ounces Butterfly Pea Flower Gin

3/4 ounce fresh lemon juice

In a cocktail shaker, stir together honey and hot water to melt the honey. Add gin and lemon juice. Stir a little - then add ice to the shaker. Shake well and strain into two cocktail glasses. Garnish with a twist of lemon.


Cocktailing | Gin Rickey

Who hasn’t heard of a classic Gin Rickey? It’s a refreshing drink that’s made in a quicky. Created in D.C. in the campaign season of 1883, this refreshing way to cool off was created by campaign manager Colonel Rickey. Originally made with rye and not gin, mixed with lime juice and soda they both seem like a win. But the gin version took off and it’s been a hit since then, this is basically the drink I order again and again.

GIN RICKEY

3 oz gin

1 1/2 oz lime juice

4 oz soda water

lime wedge


In a tall glass, stir together gin and lime juice. Add ice, and top with soda water. Garnish with a lime wedge.


The best gin to use for this is a subtle gin like Malfy. I really like Hendrick’s in this too. Usually I choose Tanqueray, but not for this drink. Cin cin!




Cocktailing | French 75

This drink is steeped in controversy, mostly because my friend and I have a different story of the nature of this popular drink - if it’s made with cognac or gin, like I think. At the Savoy the recipe calls for gin, in Paris it’s cognac - but both are a win!

In a shaker stir together lemon and sugar - add gin and ice & shake with vigor. Strain into a glass and top with champagne. This Valentine’s Day will be anything but plain!



Here’s a snapshot of the history

1867 Charles Dickens visits Boston and drinks “Champagne Cups with Tom Gin” (a Champagne Cup is champagne, sugar and lemon over ice)

1915 Harry’s New York Bar in Paris claims to create the drink and names it for the French 75mm field gun because of the kick.

1918 Arnaud’s in New Orleans opens and features the French 75 - made with cognac - on it’s cocktail menu

1927 The French 75 appears in print in a New York humor magazine made with gin.

1930 the Savoy publishes a recipe made with gin

1932 “The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks” insists the drink be made with cognac



French 75

3/4 ounce lemon juice

1 tsp sugar

2 ounces gin (or VSOP Cognac)

2 ounces champagne



In a cocktail shaker, stir together lemon juice and sugar. Fill the shaker with ice and pour in the gin. Shake well. Strain into a champagne glass and top with champagne. Garnish with a lemon twist.




Cocktailing | Singapore Sling

For Lunar New Year I’m pouring a drink that’s filled with history and delightfully pink! In public in Singapore in 1915, women could only drink fruit juice and tea. So a clever man names Ngiam Tong Boon created this drink that’s over the moon. Filled with cherry liquor and gin, it looks like fruit juice which made it a win. Ladies in Singapore could drink at the bar. Now it’s beloved near and far.

Ali Hedin | Singapore Sling

Singapore Sling

Makes 2 drinks

1 1/2 ounces gin

1 ounce benedictine

1/2 ounce cherry liquer

1 ounce lime juice

1/2 ounce grenadine

dash of bitters

2 ounces pineapple juice

4 ounces soda water

Stir together gin, benedictine, cherry liquor, lime juice, pineapple juice, grenadine and bitters. Pour into glasses filled with ice and top with club soda. Garnish with a lime and a cherry.

Ali Hedin | Singapore Sling
Ali Hedin | Singapore Sling

Cocktailing | Negroni

You all loved my barware, I felt all the love. To celebrate I’m mixing a drink that’s beyond - and above. A negroni is equal parts campari, vermouth, and gin. Stir it, don’t shake it - shaking’s a sin! These glasses I bought in Venice ages ago. One broke so I banished them all - you have to save them, you know. Then I decided, to not use is a pity. If they break, I’ll just need a trip back to the Floating City. Garnish with orange and raise a glass to cin cin! I hope you all love this drink made with gin.

Negroni

Makes one drink

one ounce gin

one ounce red vermouth

one ounce campari

Pour all ingredients into a pitcher or a tall glass and stir gently. Pour into a glass filled with ice and garnish with an orange twist.

Cocktailing | Basil Martini
Irish-Cocktail.jpg

I realized a few years ago that if you shake a martini with basil leaves in the shaker, it dyes the whole thing green. It’s like the perfect St. Patrick’s Day cocktail. Why? Because it’s green, it’s not going to cause beer-bloat, and it’s SO DELICIOUS. I can’t even. If basil isn’t your favorite then we probably aren’t friends.

Irish-Cocktail-Detail.png

You should probably mix one of these up tonight just to make sure you’re ready for next week.

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Cocktailing | Bubbly Cucumber Mint
Ali Hedin | Cucumber Mint Cocktail

I had the most amazing realization this week - if I muddle some green things together it will turn the drink a lovely shade of green! Which means it’s perfect for St. Patrick’s Day without being dyed green or filled with something gross.

This isn’t just a St. Patrick’s Day drink that’s not gross - this is your new favorite spring cocktail. It’s light and refreshing, it’s made with all that mint growing in your yard, and it has a vegetable in it - healthy! I cannot wait for you to drink this. Tonight is the perfect night for it - or tomorrow - or the next day.

Ali Hedin | Cucumber Mint Cocktail
Ali Hedin | Cucumber Mint Cocktail
Ali Hedin | Cucumber Mint Cocktail

BUBBLY CUCUMBER MINT

makes 2 drinks

6 slices of cucumber

10-12 mint leaves

4 ounces Hendricks Gin

Sparkling water

In a cocktail shaker, muddle together mint and cucumber using a muddler or the back of a wooden spoon. Add ice and gin. Shake well. Strain into two glasses and top with bubbly water (try Too Chico if you haven’t already)

Garnish with cucumber wheels and mint leaves.

Ali Hedin | Cucumber Mint Cocktail

Cheers!