Archive for recipes

Octopus Menagerie

// February 28th, 2010 // 1 Comment » // mixology, recipes

First day back to ye old mixology lab, and my project today is the Octopus, inspired by Facebook wall post by my friend Corey. I got a bunch of Octopus variations here… perhaps enough for an Octopus Menagerie?

… Starting with: the original Octopus. Jeff Berry says that it was a recipe of Al Hong, restaurateur of Trader Vic’s Waikiki (no apparent relation to Raymond Hong of House of Hong, which closed in 2004). Al Hong’s Octopus is as follows:

The Octopus
1.5 oz passion fruit juice
1.5 oz orange juice
1.5 oz Puerto Rican 151
1.5 oz club soda
Dash Angostura bitters
Mix in a tiki mug with crushed ice.

This, as you can see, is basically passo with a Puerto Rican 151 and soda. Why anyone would want to drink that is kind of beyond me… except that canned passo (like by Hawaiian Sun and Aloha Maid) is so plentiful back home that making drinks with them is really cheap and easy.

I actually have 3 different 151s here, so my first variation used all three of them:

Octopus a Trois
1.5 oz passion fruit juice (I used Aunty Lilikoi’s of Kauai)
1.5 oz orange juice
1.5 oz club soda
0.5 oz El Dorado 151
0.5 oz Lemon Hart 151
0.5 oz Bacardi 151
2 dashes Angostura

That really came out nice. I don’t particularly like the taste of Bacardi 151, and since each of the others are demerara-based, I feel like they make a good combo together.

Helen wanted a Virgin Octopus. Without the rum, it would be carbonated passion orange… so I had to find something else to substitute for the rum. Orgeat worked pretty well… but too much of it makes it too almondy. I had a spare clementine laying around, so I sprayed a puff of its juice when I was pau… then I remembered Don’s Mix—cinnamon syrup & fresh grapefruit juice; used for the Donga Punch—and was inspired to do a variation on that: cinnamon-clove syrup & fresh clementine juice—I call it Con’s Mix… (haha)

Virgin Octopus
1.0 oz passion fruit juice (I used Aunty Lilikoi’s of Kauai)
1.0 oz orange juice
1.0 oz fresh lemon juice
1.0 oz simple syrup
1.0 oz club soda
1.0 oz orgeat (I was out of my homemade orgeat so had to use Fee’s)
1.0 oz Con’s Mix
2 dashes Angostura
Rinse of Con’s Mix

Wong’s Con’s Mix
1 part fresh cinnamon-clove syrup
1 part fresh clementine juice

Build at room temperature. Shake all ingredients (incl. 1 oz of Con’s Mix) with rocks. Double strain into an old fashioned glass that’s also been rinsed with Con’s Mix.

Lastly is today’s crown jewel, the Octopus Sour! The recipe for this one is the same as the Octopus a Trois, except at the end you add a 1 oz drizzle of sour mix: 0.5 oz fresh lemon juice + 1.0 oz rich simple syrup.

Octopus Sour
1.5 oz passion fruit juice (I used Aunty Lilikoi’s)
1.5 oz orange juice
1.5 oz club soda
0.5 oz El Dorado 151
0.5 oz Lemon Hart 151
0.5 oz Bacardi 151
2 dashes Angostura
Build at room temperature and shake with rocks. Double strain into a double old fashioned glass with crushed ice.

Sour Drizzle
0.5 oz fresh lemon juice
1.0 oz rich simple syrup
Stir in a beaker until thoroughly mixed. Strain and drizzle.

I found the fresh lemon juice really helps to balance the sweetness of the passion fruit and orange juices, yet while the rich simple syrup drizzle (2:1 sugar to water) gives the palette a little treat as the drink goes down.

After I had an Octopus Sour, I felt like the shark in this video:

Brandy Daisies, Sidecars, and the Japanese

// February 12th, 2010 // No Comments » // mixology, recipes

Recently I have been on somewhat of a brandy kick, perhaps because of all the Alfred Hitchcock movies we’ve been watching in Ran Blake’s Film Noir class at NEC. (Hitchcock often has his characters drink brandy in his films… see The Rope, Strangers on a Train, and others).

The Sidecar and the Daisy

I first started getting into cocktails back in 2006 (not so long ago, I guess), and the Sidecar was the what got me into it… thanks, Cleve for the introduction! The Sidecar, as you probably know, consists of brandy, cointreau, and fresh lemon juice, in equal parts. As I got more into the tiki side of cocktails, I kinda forgot about the Sidecar…

…Until I learned about the Daisy. Which some say is the forerunner to the Sidecar. Same basic idea, except in different proportions, and with yellow chartreuse as the sweetener instead of cointreau. John said that the golden ratio depends on where you live; in Boston it’s 2 – 1/2 – 1/2, and in NYC it’s 2 – 3/4 – 3/4. (That is, for that basic recipe. Jerry Thomas calls for curacao, Jamaican rum, and gomme syrup. Other recipes add grenadine in addition to the chartreuse). Yellow chartreuse is something I still haven’t acquired for my home bar, which means that Jerry Thomas’s recipe is more accessible for my own tinkering.

Here’s the Jerry Thomas recipe:

3 or 4 dashes gum syrup
2 or 3 dashes of Curaçao liqueur
The juice of half a small lemon
1 small wine-glass of brandy
2 dashes of Jamaican rum

I’ll post some variations when I got some worthy ones.

The Japanese

The Japanese is a really old cocktail, and very easy to make: 2 oz. brandy and 1/2 oz. orgeat, with a dash or two of Angostura bitters.

As I mentioned earlier, I’ve been experimenting with Falernum, and one of the batches I made came out a little more almond-y than I wanted. So, in it went into my Japanese. Actually, I decided to call it a Vietnamese, in honor of the lime sour I added (many Vietnamese dishes use fresh limes).

The Vietnamese
2 oz cognac
1 oz falernum
1 oz orgeat
.5 oz lime sour

Shake with rocks and double strain.

Please share your wisdom with me and post some Daisy, Sidecar, or Japanese-inspired cocktail recipes for me to make! Thanks!

La Poloka [Cocktail Recipe]

// February 11th, 2010 // 1 Comment » // mixology, recipes

I came up with this recipe yesterday while hanging out with one of my best friends, Tim Mayer. Tim introduced me a while back to Convento, a brand of artesian grogue from Cape Verde. (Tim is a well-known recording artist in Cape Verde. In addition to knowing a lot about Cape Verdean music, he is a big fan of their grogue, which is pretty similar to rhum agricole). I used Convento in this recipe to balance out some of the smokiness of the La Favorite agricole.

LA POLOKA
1.5 oz La Favorite amber
1.0 oz homemade falernum* (see note below)
0.5 oz LH 80
0.5 oz fresh lemon
0.5 oz fresh grenadine
0.5 oz cinnamon
.25 oz Cabo Verde Convento (artesian grogue)

Shake with rocks and double strain over crushed ice into a rum barrel! Squeeze a few drops of fresh lime into the top of the drink, and float the lime shell in the drink.

Here’s what Tim has to say about the recipe:

Man, that La Poloka is one of the finest new drinks I have tried in a very long time! The interaction of that La Favorite and Convento grogue with that home-brew falernum and cinnamon syrup is a thing of exquisite subtlety and nuanced interplay of flavors evoking memories of cane fields of Cape Verde!

**Making your own Falernum

There are many recipes available online for making Falernum. I’ve tried the ones posted at AoD, RumDood, Kaiser Penguin, and Cocktail Chronicles. They’re all great recipes, and the instructions provided by their authors are equally awesome. I mean, the whole Falernum thing at one point basically took over all the blogs I just named plus a bunch of peoples’ lives. I am nowhere near being an expert on Falernum!! (And definitely not like the guy who writes for Cocktails Old Fashioned).

The recipe I used for the falernum used in La Poloka, however, came from yet another source: Matt “Kuku Ahu” Thatcher whom I know from the tiki scene. Matt’s recipe is simple enough to do on-the-spot (you don’t need to let things sit overnight or gather a zillion ingredients). First make clove rum. Use 1/8 cup whole cloves to a fifth of white rum (your choice … but Cruzan white is good enough and hella cheap). Steep the cloves in the rum while the rum heats on the stove. Be careful to keep the heat low enough so that the fumes don’t get ignited by the fire (if you’re on a gas stove). Let that cool. Next, make lime sour (simple syrup + fresh lime juice in equal parts. You can use the 1 lb.-1 cup rule for your syrup). In an empty bottle, mix equal parts of your clove rum and lime sour. Shake it up. Feel free to add more of either ingredient until you feel the lime and clove flavors speaking equally. Next, add a few drops of high-grade almond extract. Shake the bottle again. Taste. Repeat…

You’ll recognize that this falernum recipe is extremely different from the ones posted by Rick at Kaiser Penguin, Cocktail Chronicles, etc., in that it calls for fresh lime juice. In fact, the other recipes specifically call for lime zest and not juice because the lime juice will cause the falernum to mold. This is totally true. On the other hand, Matt’s recipe is a quick one that you can use whenever—no planning in advance needed. Matt suggests storing the clove rum for a later date (either as its own liqueur or for future falernum-making). The falernum will keep for a week or so… though actually, I’ve found it lasts me little over one drinking session! Hahaha.