A few weeks ago Rich proudly announced a new series called ‘cocktail corner’ by publishing his recipe for the Martini. I knew nothing of this until he sent me the feature with the words ‘your turn’.
So here’s my first contribution – the dead easy ‘Old Fashioned’. Over to you, Rich…
The Old Fashioned
Brief History
For this recipe we’re traveling back to 1806 and the first documented definition of the word ‘cocktail’, which appeared in an edition of the weekly newspaper The Balance and Columbian Repository and was described as a mix of spirit, bitters, water and sugar. Over the decades this combination of liquids went in and out of fashion, so when their popularity rose in the 1860s they became known as ‘old-fashioned’ cocktails.
The first known mention of a specific cocktail under the name ‘Old Fashioned’ was said to have been in Kentucky at the Pendennis Club. Although various whiskeys had previously been used to create similar cocktails, this first recorded version used bourbon. So it’s bourbon we’ll use in ours.
After a bit of an identity crisis the Old Fashioned is back in vogue, largely thanks to it being the manly booze of choice for brooding ad-man Don Draper in the telly show Mad Men.
How to make an Old Fashioned.
Difficulty level: Easy
What you’ll need:
2 oz bourbon whiskey
2 or 3 dashes Angosturas bitters
A lump of sugar
A splash of water
Ice
It’s worth getting a decent whiskey for an Old Fashioned as it does most of the work in the cocktail. We’ve chosen an authentic Kentucky bourbon, produced by Wild Turkey, that has been aged for 6 to 8 years in oak barrels.
Instructions:
1 Drop a lump of sugar (or half a teaspoon) into an Old Fashioned* glass and squirt two or three dashes of bitters onto, along it with a splash (teaspoon) of water.
2 Crush the sugar in the manliest manner you can muster.
3 Casually hold the rim of your glass and swirl in nonchalant manner for effect.
4 Add an ice cube or three and pour in the bourbon.
5 Give it another swirl, summon some sort of manly pout, and sip with furrowed brow.
Garnish options
You may have noticed from the photograph that our Old Fashioned is un-garnished. This is because no garnish was mentioned in that original cocktail recording. In 1833 nutmeg gets a run-out for Team Garnish and in 1895 an Old Fashioned recipe includes a ‘piece of lemon peel’.
Contemporary Old Fashioned cocktails often include orange peel or slices and sometimes they’ll insist on a cherry as well. This fruitiness likely comes from the prohibition era when such flavours were added to disguise the liquor. We’re using decent bourbon, and it’s legal, so no disguise required.
Variations
You can substitute the bourbon for any other form of American whiskey or be like a Wisconsinite and use brandy – in which case you had better call it a ‘Brandy Old Fashioned’. Heck, these days you can probably use whatever spirit you like and get away with it, but we would prefer not to go there. And nor will be performing another modern twist by substituting the water with a load of club soda. We want to taste the bourbon…
* The short tumbler used for various cocktails was named after the drink. My glass is probably a little bit bigger than a proper Old Fashioned glass, but you will notice other photographers have filled their glasses with more than the prescribed measures to make them look a little more photogenic. This is very much a short cocktail.
The post How to make the perfect Old Fashioned cocktail appeared first on Two Thirsty Gardeners.
from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2016/11/make-perfect-old-fashioned-cocktail-easy-recipe/
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