Monthly Archives

September 2021

Drink of the Week: I’ll Be Your Huckleberry

By | Mixology News

I'll Be Your Huckleberry cocktail, bottles, picnic blanket, featured image

Start out the week and the transition to fall with this easy transitional Cocktail!

Using a huckleberry vodka (your choice or house infused) adds a seasonal touch to a take on a mule. Opt for a bolder fruit flavor like huckleberry or blackberry to bring a full depth of flavor to this simple mix.

I'll Be Your Huckleberry cocktail, bottles, picnic blanket

I’ll Be Your Huckleberry

I’ll Be Your Huckleberry

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz Grand Teton Huckleberry Vodka
  • 1/2 oz Lime Juice
  • 2 oz Ginger Beer (or Naked Mixer Moscow Mule)

Preparation: Add ingredients to a copper mug over ice. Top with ginger beer. Garnish with huckleberries.

The post Drink of the Week: I’ll Be Your Huckleberry appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Embrace Autumn With Angostura

By | Mixology News

Must Mix Angostura Cocktails featured image

Made with fresh, quality ingredients, ANGOSTURA® is offering fall flair with these autumnal libations.

These easy to mix and dynamic drinks are a great way to add new options to your bar menu this season!

Using more than a dash of Angostura bitters brings dynamic layers of flavor and drama to any concoction. The three cocktails below showcase the brand’s three flavor varieties: Angostura aromatic bitters, orange bitters, and their most recent varietal, cocoa bitters. The nuanced profile of each blend unlocks unique flavor qualities in your favorite cocktails!

What flavor exemplifies fall more than apple? The Apple and Ginger Mojito is a refreshing seasonal sip. A spin on a classic, Angostura 5 Year Gold presents notes of caramel, lemon and vanilla that are complemented  by ginger and fresh lime.  Angostura Aromatic bitters ties it together with a nuanced bouquet of fruits, spices and herbs.

Apple and Ginger Mojito

Apple and Ginger Mojito

Apple and Ginger Mojito

Ingredients:

  • 1 3/4 oz. ANGOSTURA 5-Year Gold Rum
  • 10 mint leaves
  • 1/2 oz. fresh lime juice
  • 1/2 oz. simple syrup
  • 3/4 oz. apple juice
  • 3 dashes ANGOSTURA aromatic bitters
  • Ginger beer

Preparation: Place all ingredients (except for the ginger beer and apple juice) in a highball glass. Muddle mint gently to extract flavor. Add the apple juice and some crushed ice. Gently stir the drink and top up with ginger beer and ANGOSTURA aromatic bitters.

Garnish: Mint Sprig & Apple Fan

Glassware: Highball

As the leaves turn burnt orange, saffron yellow and crimson red, an Amaroni will sweep you away with the fervor of fall. What makes this cocktail so much more dimensional than a Negroni riff? Angostura’s orange bitters adds a blend of tropical oranges, citrus oils and exotic spices that plays off of the cinnamon-infused flavors of Amaro di Angostura.


Amaroni Cocktail

Amaroni

Amaroni

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Amaro di Angostura
  • 1 oz. London Dry Gin
  • 1/2 oz. Sweet Vermouth
  • 2 drops ANGOSTURA orange bitters

Preparation: Add all ingredients into a mixing glass, add ice, stir and strain over ice into an Old-Fashioned Glass.

Garnish: Orange Twist

Glassware: Old Fashioned

Fall is the season when you want to break into dark, aged spirits, like whiskey. Whiskey brings a feeling of warmth and coziness as the weather shifts. Bourbon typically posseses notes of vanilla, chocolate, cherry, and warming spices like cinnamon. The Gold Rush, is a bourbon-based cocktail that compliments this palate with cocoa bitters’ rich, floral, and nutty flavor profile.


Gold Rush

Gold Rush

Gold Rush

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Bourbon
  • 3/4 oz. Thistle Honey
  • 1/2 Lemon
  • 3 dashes ANGOSTURA cocoa bitters

Preparation: Shake all ingredients and double strain into chilled glass.

Garnish: Orange zest

Glassware: Rocks glass, Coupe

The post Embrace Autumn With Angostura appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Q&A: Inside The Carlyle Hotel’s Bemelmans Bar with Manager Dimitrios Michalopoulos

By | Mixology News

Bemelmans Bar featured image

Open since 1947, The Carlyle Hotel is a New York City institution on par with the Empire State Building, the Statue of Liberty and Radio City Music Hall.

A playground for the super-rich and ultra-famous whether out-of-towners or nearby Upper East Siders, the center of the famed hotel’s culture is Bemelmans Bar. Taking its moniker after Ludwig Bemelmans (the creative mind behind the Madeline series of children’s books who painted its incredible walls), the standout watering hole has attracted a litany of impressive names who come for the spectacular cocktails, live music and all-around shimmering scene.

CHILLED spoke to bar manager Dimitrios Michalopoulos who gave us a peek inside Bemelmans, from its famed clientele (JFK and Jackie Kennedy), to how he utilized quarantine for cocktail experimentation.

Dimitrios Michalopoulos

Dimitrios Michalopoulos

What’s it like to work at one of the most famous bars in the world?

It makes you proud to work for a big company like Rosewood (who owns the hotel), a bar like Bemelmans and a hotel like The Carlyle. Everything has extremely high value. It makes me feel proud and makes me feel like I’m doing something important in my life. It gives me experience and confidence.

Your position at Bemelmans is bar manager. What was your path to a career in hospitality and how did you work your way up to The Carlyle?

I’ve been working in hospitality since I was 14. I’m from Greece and my cousin has hotels there. I lived in Athens, but every summer I would go to Rhodes (the Greek island) and I worked all the positions in the hotel. Out of all of them, the most interesting and exciting jobs for me was food and beverage, specifically the bars. So when I was 18, that’s when I decided what I wanted to do in life. From there I earned a Masters Degree in tourism management. I studied oncology for wines. I did a lot of reading and attended a lot of seminars. I used to work for the Starwood brand, which is now Marriott and helped open a hotel for them.

When did you arrive in the United States?

I came to the States in 2013. I just started wandering around. It doesn’t matter your experience in Greece when you come to New York. You have to start from scratch. I was working.

That’s incredible. You also had to teach yourself English, right?

Yes, I was studying English.

Spherical Rosewood Carlyle

Spherical Rosewood Carlyle

When was the moment you applied to work at The Carlyle? Was it always a goal?

Early on, I Googled what the best hotels in New York were and on that list was The Carlyle. I sent my resume and they replied back and I went in for an interview. The interview lasted almost all day. I was interviewed by everybody in the hotel. At the end of the day, they offered me the position. I started as an assistant in-room dining manager in 2016.

Bemelmans and The Carlyle in general have quite a history and they’re known for attracting an impressive clientele. Can you recall some memorable nights?

A lot of stories come to mind. Many of them! One day we had former President Clinton join us at the bar like a regular person. I was stunned. I tried my best to accommodate him at a really nice table. I greeted him and made sure everything was good and he was comfortable. I actually went to security because I never had a situation like that, so I wanted to ask (what the protocol was). His security said that he liked when people talked to him and didn’t mind taking pictures. One other night, the bar was super busy. It was a random Tuesday in October, and Mariah Carey in a long red dress, shows up.

I said to her, “Thanks for joining us, it’s a big honor, a big pleasure!” There were 10 people around her. She decided to go and sing with the piano player. She sang two or three songs and it was amazing. Everyone was taking pictures and videos, very excited.  Paul Mcartney has also joined us many times and he always likes to talk to the pianist. He used to play the piano too, in the past. He’s a regular and whenever I see him, I say hello. He’s a legend and is not demanding at all. The waiters know what he likes, so all they’ll ask is:  “Are you having the usual?”

Spherical Rosewood Carlyle

Spherical Rosewood Carlyle

Bemelmans was closed for fourteen months, but I understand you utilized that time to experiment? Can you talk about that period?

It was a great opportunity. For me, it was great because for the most part I stayed with my family at home. I have two little kids, two and four; I used to work a lot of hours and it’s not easy to be all together, so that was incredible. But on the other hand I was missing the Bemelmans. I really had the need to work on something. So for a lot of that time, I was working on cocktails and recipes. I was talking to Tony Moscow (the director of Food and Beverage) that I was thinking of coming in there to start mixing, tasting and experimenting. He said it was absolutely fine. I walked into the hotel and was emotional; everything was empty and the bar was closed.

It was the first time I ever saw the bar empty. I was saying to myself, “How is this even possible?” You couldn’t see anybody. So I set up my bar in the kitchen, which was the best. Everything was around me, and I brought my ice, glassware and bottles. I used to go there making my infusions, taking notes, mixing and tasting. That was the fun part. After, I set up a meeting with my director. We had a tasting and it went very well, they were excited but the most important was to see the happiness in their faces. It was the first sign everything was going to get better. I saw the joy in their eyes.

I know that you have some cocktails on the menu named after famous guests. Can you tell me about the Jackie O?

When we knew when we were going to open soon, we wanted to be ahead of the game to present something different for our guests. So we thought, what if we did a project where all of the cocktails link to the history of The Carlyle? I also had a lot of cocktails in my mind, so I did a lot of research about the hotel and put it all down on paper. Jackie Osnasis Kennedy used to stay at the hotel, as did JFK. So after my research about Jackie’s drink preferences. I found she liked fruity drinks, refreshing cocktails, and champagne. So that’s how I came up with the Jackie O. It’s a passion fruit-infused Vodka with some lime juice and champagne on top.

It’s all of the elements she likes in one drink. We also came up with a drink named after JFK, which is essentially a daiquiri. We never had them on the menu. Bemelmans is a special bar and Daiquiris are connected more to a frozen, tropical vibe without sophistication. But after doing research on JFK, that was his favorite drink and it will be the first daiquiri we have on the menu. We make it with Mount Gay XO rum from Barbados and Golden Falernum Liqueur, and it has flavors of almond, ginger, honey and herbs. There’s also Rose’s Lime, lime juice and simple syrup. We garnish it with lime leaf. The Jackie O and JFK are now our two biggest sellers.

Spherical Rosewood Carlyle

Spherical Rosewood Carlyle

Tell me about your twist on the Manhattan. The Carlyle is located in the borough, after all!

Well aside from the Kennedys, we have a Manhattan named after Bobby Short. He was one of the most well-known musicians who ever played at The Carlyle. I’ve only seen videos of him, but my staff worked with him and knew him personally. We knew that he liked Manhattans, so we came up with Bobby’s Manhattan. It has Santa Teresa 1796 rum, cherry, sweet vermouth and Angostura Bitters.

Can you share the recipe for one of your famed cocktails?

This one made for the veteran actress Elaine Stritch. She would come to Bemelmans and was one of our residents, too. So because of her personality we made a smoky martini named Elaine’s Smoky Martini. All you need is a mixing glass and a martini glass.

Martini Setup Andrew Moore

Elaine’s Smoky Martini

Photo by Andrew Moore

Elaine’s Smoky Martini

Preparation:

  1. Place 3 oz Ki No Bi / Kyoto Dry gin in a jigger. It’s from Japan and they’re really well known for their clean water. This gin is amazingly tasty. It has a nice citrus taste and is a little bit smoky. It’s very well balanced.
  2. Add a splash, about 1/4 oz., of Aberlour 16 year Single Malt. This is also very smoky.
  3. Finally, add 1/2 oz. of dry vermouth. We use Noilly Prat French Vermouth
  4. Add ice to a mixing glass. Start string. Stir, stir, stir. What gives you the balanced flavor is the right amount of dilution with the melting water. So you stir for about 30 seconds. Y
  5. Strain it with a julep strainer into a martini glass.
  6. Serve garnished with lemon peels. We have ones with the Bemelmans logo branded on them.

The post Q&A: Inside The Carlyle Hotel’s Bemelmans Bar with Manager Dimitrios Michalopoulos appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Celebrate Mexican Independence Day with Lobos 1707 Tequila

By | Mixology News

Tequila Cocktails for Mexican Independence Day , featured image

Raise a glass to Mexican Independence with 10 bartender made cocktails featuring Lobos 1707 Tequila.

Celebrate Mexican Independence Day this September 16th with the last 10 cocktails from the Lobos 1707 Tequila Challenge. At the beginning of the summer, the team at Lobos challenged one hundred Chilled 100 bartenders to create unique recipes using their new tequila line. Bartenders all around the country contributed, creating stunning cocktails that showcased their own creativity and talent while highlighting the tequila.

Check out the final round of cocktails and mix up your favorite to celebrate the day.

Wolf Moon - Cliseria Padilla Flores

Wolf Moon

Wolf Moon

By Cliseria Padilla Flores / Tampa

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 3/4 oz. Pedro Ximenez Sherry
  • 1/4 oz. Green Chartreuse
  • 1/2 oz. Espresso Liqueur
  • 1 Double Shot Espresso

Preparation: Shake all ingredients with ice. Double strain into chilled coupe glass. Lightly torch foam. Garnish with 3 coffee beans.


Vipers Veneno - Armando Conway

Vipers Veneno

Viper’s Veneno

By Armando Conway / Palm Beach County

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 3/4 oz. Lime Juice
  • 1/4 oz. Agave Nectar
  • 1/2 oz. Ancho Reyes
  • 3/4 oz. Jalapeno Syrup

Preparation: Shake all ingredients with ice. Double strain over crushed ice in tajin rimmed bucket. Garnish: Tajin rim, mint bundle, and red fresno chili slice.


Lobos de Cantalupo - Ariana Dimou

Lobos de Cantalupo

Lobos de Cantalupo 

By Ariana Dimou / San Diego

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Fresh Lime
  • 1/4 oz. Cantaloupe Syrup
  • Top with Grapefruit Radler

Preparation: Add all ingredients except radler to tin, shake vigorously, strain over fresh ice into rocks glass. Top with grapefruit radler. Garnish- lime wheel & half black lava salted rim 


The Buzzer Beater - Stephanie Saputo

The Buzzer Beater

The Buzzer Beater

By Stephanie Saputo / Atlanta

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1 oz. Passionfruit Liqueur*
  • 1/2 oz. Lime Juice
  • Sparkling Rosé

Preparation: Build in glass with ice or in cocktail shaker. Stir/shake & strain everything but sparking rosé. Top glass with Sparkling roée. Garnish with lime wedge.

*Passionfruit Liqueur

  • Pulp from 12 Passionfruit
  • 150 mL grain alcohol/high proof spirit (I used Wray and Nephew)
  • 8 oz 1:1 simple syrup

Preparation: Allow passionfruit pulp and alcohol to soak in a sealed container in a dark place for 30 days. After 30 days, add simple syrup and seal and store for another 2 weeks. After this, strain out pulp with a fine strainer and strain out finer particles through a coffee filter. Bottle and keep in refrigerator for months, if it lasts that long!


Pack Mentality - Matthew Mcintyre

Pack Mentality

Pack Mentality 

By Matthew Mcintyre / St. Augustine

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Tequila Lobos 1707 Reposado
  • 1/2 oz. Yellow Bell Pepper Liqueur*
  • 1/2 oz. Lemon
  • 1/4 oz. Campari
  • 1/4 oz. Velvet Falernum
  • 1/2 – 1 Datil Pepper Muddled

Preparation: Shake all ingredients with ice. Double strain into Nick and Nora glass. Garnish dehydrated lemon wheel with sliced Datil Pepper.

*Yellow Bell Pepper Liqueur 

Sous vide 3 yellow peppers sliced at 125 Fahrenheit for 3 hours in 3 cups of water. Blend everything up and strain through cheese cloth, heat up and add a cup of sugar and neutral grain spirit. Stir thoroughly, chill and serve.


Jalisco Sour - Jan L Bland

Jalisco Sour

Jalisco Sour or Devil’s Sour

By Jan Lee Bland / Denver

Ingredients:

  • 1 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1 oz. Fresh Lemon Juice
  • 1/2 oz. Agave Syrup
  • 1 oz. Aquafaba
  • 1 oz. Mexican Red Wine (preferably with notes of berry and spice)

Preparation: Add Tequila, Lemon Juice, Agave, and Aquafaba to a shaker.  Dry shake for 30 seconds. Add ice. Shake for 15 seconds.  Strain into a Chilled glass.  Pour Red Wine over a spoon or bar spoon spiral to float. 


Slam Dunk Joshua Marthy

Slam Dunk

Slam Dunk

By Josh Marthy / Albany

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 3/4 oz. Ancho Reyes Chile Liqueur
  • 1 1/2 oz. Fresh Pineapple Juice
  • 3/4 oz. Lime Juice
  • 1/2 oz. Agave Syrup
  • Muddled Cucumber
  • Muddled Mint

Preparation: Prep a Rocks Glass with Salt and Tajin rim. Muddle cucumber and mint in a shaker, add ingredients, shake. Double strain into glass over ice. Garnish with cucumber wheel and mint sprig


Kiko - Michael Buonocore

Kiko

Kiko

By Michael Buonocore / Denver

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Tequila Joven
  • 1/2 oz. Chareau Aloe Vera
  • 1 oz. Lime Juice
  • 3/4 oz. Watermelon Syrup*
  • pinch Tajin

Preparation: Combine ingredients in a mixing tin and shake with ice. Strain into a Nick & Nora glass.

*Watermelon Syrup

Equal parts strained watermelon juice and sugar, with a pinch of salt, blend until dissolved.


The Lilac - Jonathan Turner

The Lilac

The Lilac

By Jonathan Turner / Atlanta

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1 oz. Coconut Cream
  • 1/2 oz. Honey Syrup
  • 1/4 oz. Blackberry Liquor
  • 2 bar spoons Taro Powder

Preparation: Combine all ingredients in shake mix with bar spoon then add ice and shake. Double strain into coupe glass garnish with blackberry on a pick


Berried Agave - Emma Alexander

Berried Agave

 

Berried Agave

By Emma Alexander / Denver

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Apologue Persimmon Liqueur
  • 1/2 oz Demerara Syrup
  • 1/2 oz Fresh Lime Juice
  • 1/2 oz Melletti Amaro
  • 8 Raspberries

Preparation: Muddle the raspberries with Demerara and lime juice in a shaker before adding the rest of the ingredients. Shake and strain into highball glass, add ice, top with 1 oz Fever Tree Ginger Beer. Garnish with a Lime Wheel, Fresh Raspberry and an edible flower.

The post Celebrate Mexican Independence Day with Lobos 1707 Tequila appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

2 Cocktail Syrups To Pump Up Your Fall Cocktails

By | Mixology News

Fall Cocktails by Ash Edmonds, featured image

Spice up your fall cocktail game with two seasonally inspired cocktail syrups.

One of the best things about Fall is the return of deeper flavors and brown spirit heavy cocktails. This month, we’re sharing two cocktail syrups that can be used in a wide range of cocktails. Maple Rye syrup uses a base of Rye whiskey instead of water creating a dynamic syrup that adds layers of flavor and a little more ABV to anything you add it to. While it works wonderfully in an Old Fashioned, we love it in a lighter, sparkling wine-based cocktail.

Pears by Khloe Arledge

Seasonal Pears

Photo by Khloe Arledge

Making use of the seasonal produce, a spiced pear syrup infuses the delicate flavor of pears with warming spices. Roasting the pears before adding them adds a caramelized sweetness and depth of flavor that works well with a wide range of spirits. We particularly like to pair the syrup with a smoky mezcal, sparkling wine, and spiced rum.

Fall Cocktails by Ash Edmonds

Fall Cocktails

Photo by Ash Edmonds

Maple Rye Syrup

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup Rye Whiskey
  • 3/4 cup Brown Sugar
  • 1/4 cup Maple Syrup

Preparation: combine ingredients in a saucepan and heat while stirring until sugar is dissolved. Pour into a sanitized, airtight container and this syrup will keep for several months in the refrigerator.


Spiced Pear Syrup

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups of Roasted, Chopped Pear
  • 2 cups Water
  • 1 cup Brown Sugar
  • 1 tbsp. Grated Fresh Ginger
  • 2 Cinnamon Sticks
  • 1/4 tsp. Grated Nutmeg
  • 4 Whole Cloves

Preparation: Prep the pears and spices. Pears should be diced and roasted in the oven to develop flavor and reduce. For a smokey flavor, finish the pears under a broiler for a few moments. Toast the spices lightly in a pan to improve the flavor. In a saucepan combine all ingredients. Simmer until sugar is dissolved and the mix is aromatic, stirring occasionally and lightly mashing the cooked pears to release the maximum juice and flavor. Let simmer for 10 minutes then set the mix aside to cool. Strain twice and store in a sanitized container.

The post 2 Cocktail Syrups To Pump Up Your Fall Cocktails appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Diep 9 Genever; A Belgian Bottling Expands Stateside

By | Mixology News

De Moor Distillery, stills, featured image

The American presence of Diep 9 genever begins with a love story.

After emigrating to the U.S., Flemish-born Veronique Beittel fell in love with an American, and married him in 2007. The wedding took place in Belgium where Beittel introduced her new American family to genever, the malted botanical spirit considered to be the great-grandfather of gin. Every time she returned to Belgium, she did so with requests from family to bring this genever back to the States. Eager to have regular access to her country’s national spirit, she quit her job in marketing and founded Flemish Lion LLC to import Belgian genever directly to the States.

Veronique Beittel

Veronique Beittel

Until Diep 9 appeared on the market, the only true old-school genever available was from the Dutch company Bols. However, Belgian genever differs greatly from Dutch genever, offering a less-juniper-forward flavor profile where the characteristics of the malted grains – rye, barley, and wheat – shine through. In contrast, Dutch genever uses corn in its mash and tends to focus more heavily on the piney botanicals. That softer profile sets Belgian genever apart from the Dutch style and also lends itself to many elegant cocktails.

Genever Distillery

Genever Distillery

Beittel’s first memories of genever are inextricably linked with happy times. As she recalls, “I first tried genever as a teenager at a Christmas market in Bruges, Belgium. Christmas markets are an essential part of the holiday season and feature tiny A-frame chalets set up around ice skating rinks. These markets offer Christmas decorations, Belgian waffles and, of course, genever. Genever is served chilled in an hourglass-shaped shot glass filled to the brim. This makes it impossible to pick up the glass without spilling, so tradition dictates that people take their first sip without using their hands. Then, with the genever safe from spilling, patrons raise their glasses in a toast, saying ‘Gezondheid!’ Experiencing this tradition firsthand in my youth ignited my fascination with genever.”

Patrick Van Schandevijl, Stokerij De Moor

Patrick Van Schandevijl, Stokerij De Moor

When Beittel decided to import genever, she wanted a distiller whose style captured the true flavor of the Belgian genever she remembered. She immediately knocked on the door of Stokerij De Moor, which had always been her favorite brand. Founded in 1910 and almost completely destroyed during World War II, Stokerij De Moor is Belgium’s smallest active grain distillery, still making its malt wine and neutral grain base in house. She also set about writing an English-language book about genever’s history, entitled “Genever: 500 Years of History in a Bottle”.

Ironically, when choosing a name, Beittel ran up against some amusing issues. In Belgium, the genever is part of the Dirk Martens brand, but Beittel thought this might lead to an association with the Dr. Martens shoe company. She changed the name to Diep 9 to reflect, as she says, “the deep 500-year old history of genever and the nine botanicals immersed in its centuries-old distillation process.” Despite the name change, the bottling is exactly the same as that sold in Belgium, reflecting the unchanged original recipe and presented in a traditional clay genever bottle.

Perhaps surprisingly, Beittel chose to import both ‘oude’ (old) and ‘jonge’ (young) genever. “I decided to offer both styles so I could tell the genever story,” she explains. “It is crucial to know the difference between your ‘jonge’ and ‘oude’ genever, both protected products of origin with a very different taste profile.” ‘Oude’ genever is not about aging, but rather the distilling technique which results in a rich, malted, more whiskey-like product. ‘Jonge’ genever was created in the 19th century to appeal to the changing, more neutral flavor leanings of the market.

For Beittel, each style has its merits.

“The aromas of malt of the old genever attract the whiskey drinkers, while the spice and complexity of the taste intrigues the gin drinkers.”
– Veronique Beittel

“The young genever’s neutrality is palatable to the vodka drinker and its delicate spices serve as a welcomed substitute for gin. Young genever provides bartenders with a great stepping tool to introduce vodka drinkers to classic cocktails without having to mix with the highly juniper flavored gin.”

Released in small amounts on the East Coast in 2011, Diep 9 is now poised for broader release thanks to a distribution deal with Henry Wine Group. Meanwhile, Beittel and her team of brand ambassadors have been knocking on the doors of craft cocktail bars across the country to spread the genever gospel. “Education is key”, she believes because genever is a fairly unknown and mostly misunderstood spirit, even though its history is intricately integrated in the way Americans and the rest of the world drinks today.”


Flemish Martinez

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Diep9 ‘oude’ genever
  • 1 1/2 oz. sweet vermouth
  • 1 spoonful maraschino liqueur
  • 2 dashes orange bitters

Preparation:

  1. Stir with ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass.
  2. Garnish with an orange twist.

Belgian 75

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Diep9 ‘jonge’ genever
  • 3/4 oz. fresh squeezed lemon juice
  • 1/2 oz. simple syrup
  •  Brut Champagne, to top

Preparation:

  1. Shake first 3 ingredients over ice.
  2. Strain into a champagne flute and top off with Champagne.
  3. Garnish with a lemon twist.

The post Diep 9 Genever; A Belgian Bottling Expands Stateside appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Mix Up Dale DeGroff’s Grasshopper for National Crème de Menthe Day

By | Mixology News

grasshopper_credit Daniel Krieger, cocktail, featured image

Celebrate National Crème de Menth Day with Dale DeGroff’s take on a Grasshopper for Marie Brizard.

Invented in 1885 as a digestive, Crème de Menthe is a sweetened mint liqueur used in a range of classic cocktails. The added sugar gives the spirit a thicker mouthfeel that makes it interesting to work with.

Marie Brizard Crème de Menthe, bottle on white

Marie Brizard Crème de Menthe

One of our favorite Crème de Menthe bottles comes from Marie Brizard, who’s bold green spirit is made using essential oils extracted from mint leaves and is rectified three times to ensure a pure and powerful flavor. This smooth and fresh expression has a 25% ABV and can be enjoyed on the rocks or in cocktails, such as this take on a Grasshopper. Award winning bartender Dale DeGroff created this version of the classic cocktail using Marie Brizard’s stunning expression.

Grasshopper cocktail

Grasshopper

Photo by Daniel Krieger

Grasshopper 

By Dale DeGroff for Marie Brizard

Ingredients:

  • 1 oz. Marie Brizard Green Crème de Menthe
  • 1 oz. Crème de Cacao
  • 1 1/2 oz. Heavy Cream

Preparation: Combine all ingredients in a mixing tin and shake with ice. Strain into a Nick and Nora glass.  Garnish with shaved chocolate.

 

The post Mix Up Dale DeGroff’s Grasshopper for National Crème de Menthe Day appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

10 Tequila Cocktails to Celebrate Mexican Independence

By | Mixology News

Bountiful Cup By Wendy Hodges feat

Continue the countdown to Mexican Independence Day with 10 cocktails made by Bartenders.

Lobos 1707 Tequila challenged 100 Chilled 100 bartenders to create unique cocktails using thier premium tequila line. From infusing their tequila to creating unique syrups, bartenders went all out creating dynamic cocktails that showcase the unique flavors of Lobos 1707.

As you plan your specials for Mexican Independence Day, make sure to check out the incredible cocktails made during the Lobos Challenge and get inspired.

Bountiful Cup

By Wendy Hodges / Las Vegas

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Potter Wines Premier Jalapeno and Grape Wine
  • 1/2 oz. Perfect Puree Green Apple
  • 3/4 oz. Basil Syrup*
  • 1/4 oz. Malic/Citric acid solution**
  • Top with yuzu fever tree soda

Preparation: Shake all ingredients (except soda) with ice. Double strain over crushed ice in a Collins glass. Top with yuzu soda. Garnish: Dehydrated apple chip and grated jalapeno over the top.

*Basil Syrup

Simmer 1 bunch of basil with ½ cup sugar and ½ cup water until sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature. Double strain and store in refrigerator.

**Malic/Citric Acid Solution

6 grams malic acid, 4 grams citric acid, 100 grams water. Combine and whisk until dissolved, bottle and store.


Vanessa Lan - Feathered Serpent

Feathered Serpent

Feathered Serpent

By Vanessa Lan / Reno

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Benedictine
  • 3/4 oz. Dragon fruit Agave*
  • 3/4 oz. Lime Juice
  • 1/2 cup. red dragon fruit cubed

Preparation: Muddle dragon fruit in tin. Add the rest of the ingredients. Shake with ice for 8-10 shakes. Double strain into a martini glass rimmed with chamoy and tajin. Garnish with a lime wheel and dragon fruit cube.

*Dragon Fruit Agave

  • 2 parts Dragon fruit Puree
  • 1 part Agave

Preparation: Combine in a saucepan and bring to a boil. Turn down the heat and let summer for 10 minutes. Cover, turn off heat, and let cool.


Kiss from a Rose

Kiss from a Rose

Kiss from a Rose

By Leslie Edwards / Tampa

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1 oz. Lemon Cordial
  • 1/2 oz. Real Kiwi Puree
  • 3/4 oz. Blueberry Syrup
  • 3/4 oz. Simple Syrup
  • 1/4 oz. Grand Marnier

Preparation: Shake all ingredients with ice. Double strain and serve up in a martini glass. Garnish with dehydrated mini rose.


Pineapple Angel - Vladymyr Buryanov

Pineapple Angel

Pineapple Angel

By Vladymyr Buryanov/ Las Vegas

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 3/4 oz. Peach Liqueur
  • 1/4 oz. Simple Syrup
  • 3/4 oz. Fresh lime juice
  • 4-5 fresh Sage Leaves
  • 50 grams Pineapple Chunks

Preparation: Muddle pineapple and simple syrup in mixing glass. Add lime, sage, tequila, peach liqueur, and ice and give it a good shake. Double strain into chilled coupe glass. Garnish with fresh sage leaf.


Ryne Hoffman - Jacaranda

Jacaranda

Jacaranda

By Rynne Hoffman / Phoenix

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Martine Honeysuckle Liquor
  • 1/2 oz. Cocchi Americano Dry Vermouth
  • 2 dashes Angostura Bitters
  • 2 dashes Orange Bitters
  • 1 dash Liquid Saline

Preparation: Stir with ice and strain into Nick and Nora glass. Garnish with orange twist and jacaranda flower.


Asuka - Marlowe Johnson

Asuka

Asuka

By Marlowe Johnson/ Detroit

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Hibiscus and Passionfruit tea infused Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 3/4 oz. Marie Brizard Yuzu liqueur
  • 3/4 oz. Dolin blanc vermouth
  • 1 dropper Scrappy’s Black lemon bitters
  • pinch of Sea Salt

Preparation: Build in mixing glass and stir with ice for about 30 seconds. Strain into cocktail glass and enjoy.


Kyle Darrow - Wolf Hunter

Wolf Hunter

Wolf Hunter

By Kyle Darrow / Philadelphia

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Fresh Lime Juice
  • 1/2 oz. Fassionola Syrup (cocktail and sons)
  • 1/2 oz Allspice Syrup
  • 1/4 oz Agave Syrup

Preparation: Shake all ingredients with ice. Strain over crushed ice in bucket glass. Top with amontillado sherry. Garnish with torched cinnamon stick and edible orchid.


Summer's Cancelled - Kurt W Rogers II

Summer’s Cancelled

Summer’s Cancelled

By Kurt Rogers II / Jacksonville

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Spanish Brandy
  • 1/4 oz. PX Sherry
  • 1 oz. Pineapple juice
  • 1/4 oz. Fresh Lime juice
  • 1 oz. Coconut crème

Preparation: Mix all ingredients in tin and shake with ice. Strain over crushed ice. Top with Aromatic bitters. Garnish with pineapple fronds and enjoy


There's A Wolf In My Shrub by Cynthya Halog

There’s a Wolf in My Shrub

There’s a Wolf in My Shrub

By Cynthya Halog / Las Vegas

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 oz. Lobos 1707 Joven Tequila
  • 1/2 oz. Lime Juice
  • 1/2 oz. Blackberry Pepper Shrub
  • 3/4 oz. Vanilla liqueur

Preparation: Shake all ingredients with ice. Double strain over ice sphere in bucket glass. Garnish: Dehydrated lime wheel and cracked black pepper.


Mango Tango by Beau Macik

MANGO Tango

MANGO Tango

By Beau Macik / Indianapolis

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz. of Lobos 1707 Blanco Tequila
  • 3/4 oz. Giffard Pineapple Liqueur
  • 1 oz. Mango Puree
  • 1 oz. Fresh Lime Juice
  • 4 dashes of Hellfire Shrub
  • 4 dashes of Smoked Chili Bitters
  • 1 egg white

Preparation: Combine ingredients and dry shake first. Add ice and shake again. Strain into a glass and let it settle before garnishing with a fresh mango slice, one mango macaroon and one sprig of cilantro.

The post 10 Tequila Cocktails to Celebrate Mexican Independence appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

How To: Add Seasonal Flavors To Your Cocktail Menu

By | Mixology News

Cocktail with Persimmon garnish, featured image

Fall produce is just starting to hit market stands, making it the perfect time to plan for your fall cocktail menu.

Opting for seasonal produce helps naturally transition your menu and can help improve the footprint of your establishment. Fall staples like apples, pears, and woody herbs like rosemary and thyme are all ready for fall cocktails, but we’ve got a few other suggestions.

Figs

Sliced for a garnish, muddled into a cocktail, or made into a syrup or jam, figs are a showstopper on a cocktail menu. The sweet fruit pairs effortlessly with a range of spirits and works well with bold and savory leaning herbs. Because they have a semi-short season working with figs can be tricky. To extend their usage period you might try buying in bulk and making jam or syrup that can be carefully stored or frozen until needed.

Sparkling Fig Cocktail by Gaby Yerden

Sparkling Fig Cocktail

Photo by Gaby Yerden

Quince

Tart, tannic, and highly perfumed, quince is an often-overlooked fall fruit that has significant potential behind the bar. When raw the fruit isn’t very palatable, but cooking reveals a lightly piquant and sweet flavor with a slightly pink hue. If your kitchen is using fresh quince reduce food waste by using the peels and cores to create an aromatic syrup that is a fantastic pairing for vodka and sparkling wine.

Fresh Quince by Judy Doherty

Fresh Quince

Photo by Judy Doherty

Poached Quince and Syrup

Ingredients:

  • 4 lbs. Quince
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup Brown Sugar

Preparation: Prep your quince by peeling, coring, and quartering the fruit. In a saucepan, add 8 cups of water and the sugar. If you want a spiced flavor, add seasonings like ginger, cardamom, and cinnamon sticks. Once the sugar dissolves add the quince and led the mixture simmer for about an hour. The quince will turn slightly pink and become tender when done. Strain the mixture and saving both the syrup and the fruit.


Persimmon

Sweet orange persimmons make for stunning garnishes and an excellent addition to drinks made with brown spirits. When unripe they have high tannin levels that can be quite astringent, so in most instances you’ll want to allow them time to ripen before use. A puree of persimmon makes a wonderful, autumnal addition to a whiskey sour or a riff on a French 75.

Cocktail with Persimmon garnish

Cocktail with Persimmon

Persimmon Puree

Ingredients:

  • 8 Ripe Persimmons
  • 2-4 oz. Simple Syrup

Preparation: Remove the stems from your persimmons and add them to a high-powered food processor with simple syrup. If your fruit is riper use less syrup. Blend until smooth and transfer to sanitized containers. If making in bulk the puree can be frozen to extend your menu.

The post How To: Add Seasonal Flavors To Your Cocktail Menu appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Inside The Bottles Of The World’s Best Whiskey: A Look At Glen Scotia’s Award Winning Line

By | Mixology News

Glen Scotia Single Malt Story, featured image

Making the best Whisky in the world is no small feat, but for the team at Glen Scotia Distillery, it’s all in a day’s work.

Based in Campbelltown, Scotland, Glen Scotia is a relatively small distillery that’s been operating since 1832. The distillery is one of the few in the region that has survived. At the peak of whiskey production in the 1800’s Campbelltown was one of the world’s leading whisky producers, today only a fraction of that history remains, and Glen Scotia is at the forefront.

Glen Scotia Single Malt

Glen Scotia Single Malt

The brand is looking to put Campbeltown back on the map, and after bringing home the 2021 award for Best In Show at the San Francisco Spirits Awards for their 25 year old Single Malt (as well as a host of other awards for their line), they’re well on their way. After we caught up with Master Distiller Iain McAlister, we wanted to take a deeper look at the full line of whiskies the company produces.

Glen Scotia Festival 21 Bottle

Glen Scotia Festival 21

All the whisky starts from the same place. Malted barley sourced from the east of Scotland is placed in Mash Tuns where 66-degree water is added first, and then within an eight-hour period a second batch of 72-degree water is added. Once the wort is created it’s placed in a Washback at 22 degrees and yeast is added to the mix. This sits for at least 70 hours and is then added to the Wash Still to begin the first stage of distillation. When the mixture reaches about 20% ABV it’s moved to the Spirits Still to begin the second distillation and the foreshorts are taken off, this process increases the ABV to about 74%. The pure spirit begins to be taken off resulting in an average spirit strength of just below 70%, a small quantity of water is added, and the whisky enters the casks at a 63.5% ABV.

Glen Scotia Single Malt 10 year old packaging

Glen Scotia Single Malt 10 year old

Once the whisky enters the casks the magic begins. The casks are delivered to the Dunnage warehouse and the unique weather of Campbeltown begins to work with the wood to transform the liquid into award winning whisky. What happens inside those casks? Each expression has a slightly different finishing process that results in a delightfully unique final product.

Glen Scotia Single Malt Story

Glen Scotia Single Malt Story

Double Cask Single Malt Whisky

Glen Scotia’s Double casks starts its aging process in first-fill bourbon barrels and then spend 12 months finishing in Pedro Ximenez Sherry casks. The final whisky has won three awards and has a rich and spicy profile with notes of sea spray and vanilla oak characteristic of Glen Scotia’s spirit.


Victoriana Single Malt Whisky

Inspired by the whisky of the 1800’s, Glen Scotia’s Victoriana is a cask strength whisky made to recreate the bold expressions popular during the Victorian period. The whiskey starts by aging together before 30% finishes in Pedro Ximenez sherry aged casks and 70% finishes in heavily charred oak. After 12 months the two are blended back together to create a robust spirit with subtle wood and vanilla flavor with a mild, smoky aftertaste and a crème brulee nose. The bold flavor opens with a sweet and concentrated start that leads into fruity, jammy blackcurrant.


Glen Scotia 11-Year-Old Sherry Double Cask Finish

You’ll find spiced rum, toffee, citrus peel, and juicy plum on the nose of this limited-edition expression. After maturing in first fill bourbon barrels the spirit is split between Pedro Ximenez and Oloroso Sherry first fill Hogsheads. The incredibly smooth whisky has a velvety mouthfeel with notes of salted butter, sweet vanilla, raisins, cinnamon, nutmeg, and warming clove.


15-Year-Old Single Malt Whisky

Hints of vanilla oak, spicy aromatic fruits and subtle notes of sea spray open this richly colored whisky. On the nose you’ll find aromas of citrus peel, ginger snap and apricot that fade into warm wood. Specially selected casks are hand-picked by Master Distiller Iain McAlister to mature in American oak barrels.


18-Year-Old Single Malt Whisky

This luxuriously smooth single malt starts its maturation process in refill bourbon or American oak hogshead. After careful selection, the best casks are vatted together and finished in first-fill oloroso sherry. The award-winning whisky has floral notes and a crisp saltiness with sweet honey and salted caramel on the nose. On the palate, fruity flavors create a rich opening with thick and sweet toffee, pineapple, apricots, and plump sultanas with a warming spice closing.


25-Year-Old Single Malt Whisky

It’s easy to see how Glen Scotia’s 25 year won the 2021 San Francisco World Spirits Competition Best In Show. This stunning amber whisky has a strong maritime influence with intense background spice on the nose and red apple with vanilla syrup on the palate. The whisky is gently matured in the finest American oak barrels and is married in first-fill bourbon casks before bottling.

The post Inside The Bottles Of The World’s Best Whiskey: A Look At Glen Scotia’s Award Winning Line appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News