Monthly Archives

August 2024

3 Lobos 1707 Tequila Batch Cocktails for Labor Day!

By | Mixology News

This Labor Day, give summer the celebratory send-off it deserves with Lobos 1707 Tequila and their signature seasonal cocktails.

Lobos 1707 Tequila offers an unparalleled drinking experience that is sure to enhance any Labor Day weekend festivity. Whether your guests prefer sipping on a juicy margarita or a refreshing ranch water, Lobos’ signature batch cocktail recipes are perfect for parties of any size.

Check them out below!

Watermelon Margarita (Pitcher)

Ingredients

  • 2 parts Tequila Lobos 1707 Reposado
  • .5 part Orange Liqueur
  • 1 part Fever Tree Ginger Beer
  • 2 parts White Wine
  • 5 parts Watermelon juice
  • .5 part Simple Syrup (optional)
  • 1 Lime, sliced into wheels
  • 1 Lemon, sliced into wheels

Preparation

  1. Build in a pitcher, add ice and stir well.
  2. Serve in rock or punch glasses and garnish with watermelon slices.

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Cucumber Ranch (Pitcher)

Ingredients

  • 1 part Tequila Lobos 1707 Joven
  • 2 parts Sparkling Water
  • 1 Lime, sliced into wheels
  • 1 Cucumber, sliced into wheels

Preparation

  1. Build in a pitcher, then stir well and fill with ice.
  2. Garnish with cucumber slice, lime wedge, and salted rim (optional).

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Batanga Grande (Pitcher)

Ingredients

  • 1 part Tequila Lobos 1707 Joven
  • 2 parts Mexican Coca-Cola
  • Bar spoon of Salt
  • 1 Lime, cut into wheels

Preparation

  1. Build in a pitcher, then stir well (traditionally stirred with a knife) and fill with ice.
  2. Garnish any punch or rock glass with a lime wedge and salted rim (optional).

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The post 3 Lobos 1707 Tequila Batch Cocktails for Labor Day! appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Inside Manska’s Mind: Exposing the Traditional Tulip

By | Mixology News

We go inside the mind of George F. Manska for an analytical look at exposing the traditional tulip.

Arsilica, Inc. is dedicated to sensory science research for all alcohol beverages, spirits, wine, and beer. Since 2002, our mission is to empower spirits lovers with a science-based understanding of spirits evaluation to improve appreciation and enjoyment. As Chief of R&D at Arsilica, sensory research is my life’s passion, supported by a BSME, 60 years of product design experience including 20 years of sensory research, four sensory patents, and author of a published, cited, peer-reviewed beverage open access journal research paper on sensory diagnostics.

We take issue when uneducated critics claim tulip glass design is based on science.
Applied scientific principles demonstrate that the drinker who uses tulip style glasses is his own worst enemy when evaluating spirits. In our history of over 20 years of research, we have searched long and hard for any redeeming evidence that the tulip glass contributes any measurable benefit to the spirits drinker and challenge anyone to submit any shred of scientific evidence which conclusively verifies that the aromas are better detected, identified, and discriminated and analyzed from a tulip-shaped glass. Opinions are unacceptable for reasons which will become obvious as you continue to read.

Tulip History and Myth:
1700-1800s, a tiny copita (little cup) designed for 22% ABV fortified wines validated cargo in the sherry trade and was nicknamed “dock glass.” Carried back to the UK, eventually copitas (also called tulips) appeared in every household that drank sherry, port, or wine. In the late 1900s scotch sales boom. Since tulips hold a convenient amount of spirit for a single serving, a different, costly glass which would be time consuming to develop and gain wide acceptance was quickly deemed unnecessary, and wine tulips were enlisted to perform double duty for spirits. The ethanol “nose-cannon” is born, 40% ABV in a 22% ABV designed glass, and the tool is put in place to support expanding scotch popularity. Science is conspicuously absent.

Early 1980s, greedy glass manufacturers twist the International Standards Organization’s official wine tasting ISO-3591 standard, a near exact copy of the copita, renaming it “ISO whisky glass” to sell more glassware. There is no ISO whiskey glass standard. Glencairn introduces a tulip derivative which captures industry and consumer, fueled by spirits marketers, and “nose-cannons” become the norm. Rum and other spirits drinkers borrow them from scotch, and tulip popularity expands. No science here.

Tulip- the Ethanol Concentrator: Early on, whisky drinkers realize the tiny tulip packs a powerful blast of ethanol, frying nose hairs with concentrated ethanol pungency and interfering with aroma identification. The “nose-cannon,” spurs a search for methods to alleviate pungency.

“Fixes” from whisky educators include: (1) inhale through mouth and nose simultaneously, (2) don’t swirl, (3) wafting aromas to the nose adjusts to pungency, and (4) add a little water. These band-aid fixes become the life-blood for tulip justification, augmented by the axiomatic false-science Tiny Rim Doctrine: “Small rims collect all aromas so none can escape detection.” The fact that anyone was looking for ways to alleviate overpowering ethanol is proof enough that the experts considered it a problem; something drinkers completely ignore.

To the untrained, these “fixes” became “science” only because expert marketers, critics and bloggers have repeatedly said so over the decades. Perhaps science was too busy to analyze how glass shape can control aroma profile until we (Arsilica, Inc. came along).

However, when true scientific principles are applied: (1) simultaneous mouth and nose inhaling reduces the olfactory aroma sample, (2) no swirl = few aromas, (3) wafting acclimates pungency, but can’t prevent ethanol numbing, (4) adding water raises surface tension, shuts down ALL aroma evaporation, not just ethanol. Tiny rims mask aromas which hide behind concentrated, pungent ethanol. All the “fixes” fail to handle ethanol, the enemy of accurate evaluation.

A different glass would have avoided the hoopla. As opposed to “twisted-marketing science,” “blogger-opinion science,” and “fill-in-the-blank science, true, professional science disciplines (sensory, chemistry, physics, behavioral) dispel myth, disseminate usable knowledge, and reduce the revered critics to just another opinion. We are reminded of a saying attributed to the stoic philosopher Marcus Aurelius, “The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none know anything about the subject,”

The Ethanol Problem: Highly volatile ethanol is medically classified as an anesthetic because it numbs sensory receptor neurons. Drinkers are unaware since numbness occurs painlessly, aided by faulty thinking, “If you can’t see or feel it, it’s probably not there.” A tulip of 1 ½ oz of 40% ABV spirit contains 65% anesthetic ethanol in the headspace. The rest is air, water, and 2-4% character aromas. Ethanol raises detection, identification, discrimination thresholds, slows response time, blocks signals to olfactory receptor neurons, and ruins accurate evaluation with distracting pungency. That’s science. Our studies show that after 4 sniffs of a neutral spirit from a tulip, most aromas from a spirit sample are undetected or unidentifiable, and many of those detected cannot be discriminated (e.g. peach from apricot, anise from fennel, etc.).

State-of-the Art: For reasons unknown, a scientific approach to glass design was non-existent until 2002 when Arsilica began research. Decades of marketing have ensconced tulips as the popular glass shape for industry and consumer, subconsciously training multiple generations to rely on the presence of pungent, anesthetic ethanol at first sniff to validate a spirit. This sets the stage for high ABV levels (cask strength anyone?) to numb the senses, and hands over purchasing decisions to subliminal, suggestive marketers and vicariously-influential videos. Ethanol’s mental fog is the perfect screen for opportunistic, prurient marketing and bogus product claims. Craving and seeking out the ethanol when tasting spirits has taken priority over distillers’ craft and art. Tulips have created drinkers, not evaluators. Marketing-stoked popularity may be fun, but it’s not science.

Conclusion: The facts: short, fat, wide-rim glasses and swirling provide more aromas to sniff and can mitigate ethanol for better evaluation, providing a pathway to enjoy aromas for longer than the quickly fading first-sniff memory. A decade of research by Arsilica led to introduction of the sensory engineered NEAT glass in 2012. Other glasses such as wide-mouth tumblers provide some olfactory ethanol relief as well. To set the record straight, we love ethanol too, but we don’t want it in the way when we are evaluating spirits. Some will argue “It’s part of the spirit,” and rightly so, as are the many subtle aromas you can’t smell through the overpowering, nose-numbing ethanol.

Tulips may have topped the marketing game, yet scientifically, they fail miserably, working against accurate spirits evaluation. Drinkers encounter a major crossroads on their spiritual journey; (1) stick with the traditional, iconic, unscientific, dysfunctional tulip, or (2) embark on a new experience with a state-of-the-art diagnostic tool. Simply put, you can follow the ethanol-ruled-good-times-party, or discover the spirit. Your glass, your choice.


About George Manska

George is an entrepreneur, inventor, engine designer, founder, Chief R&D officer, Corporate Strategy Officer, CEO Arsilica, Inc. dedicated to sensory research in alcohol beverages. (2002-present). He is the inventor of the patented NEAT glass, several other patented alcohol beverage glasses for beer and wine, (yet to be released). Director ongoing research into aromatic compound behavior, and pinpointing onset of nose-blindness. George is a professional consultant for several major spirits competitions, has been published in the MDPI Beverage Journal Paper, is the founder or member of over seven different wine clubs for the past fifty years, is a collector of wines and spirits, has traveled the world, and is an educator and advisor of multiple spirits sensory seminars.

George F Manska, CR&D, Arsilica, Inc.  Engineer, inventor of the NEAT glass, sensory science researcher, entrepreneur.

Mission: Replace myth and misinformation with scientific truth through consumer education.

Contact: george@arsilica.com, phone 702.332.7305. For more information: www.theneatglass.com/shop

The post Inside Manska’s Mind: Exposing the Traditional Tulip appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

9 Labor Day Cocktails to Kickstart Fall

By | Mixology News

Kick off fall this Labor Day (9/2) with some delicious cocktails!

Prepare for apple picking with Proper Whiskey’s Irish Apple Cider, warm up by a bonfire with Dos Hombres and Ilegal’s smoky mezcal cocktails, or find another recipe below to bring on the chilly weather with.

Rum

Planas Chai Tea

Ingredients

  • 1.5 parts Diplomatico Planas
  • 2 parts Hot Chai Tea
  • 0.5 part Coconut Syrup
  • 0.25 part Fresh Lemon Juice

Preparation

  1. Combine all ingredients in a glass.
  2. Garnish with cinnamon powder.

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Proper Irish Apple Cider

Ingredients

  • 2 oz. Proper No. Twelve Irish Apple
  • 4 cups Apple Cider
  • 6 Sticks of Cinnamon
  • 4 Tbs Nutmeg
  • 10 Cloves
  • Orange Zest

Preparation

  1. Over heat, combine Proper No. Twelve Irish Apple, apple cider, cinnamon sticks, nutmeg, cloves and fresh orange zest.
  2. Pour into a heat-protected mug, garnish with an orange twist and enjoy warm.

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The Rob Roy

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. The Glendronach Original Aged 12 Years
  • 1/2 oz. Sweet Vermouth
  • 1 dash Angostura Bitters

Preparation

  1. Combine all ingredients in a mixing glass with ice.
  2. Stir until very cold and strain into a chilled coupe.
  3. Garnish with cherry.

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Oaxacan Coffee

Ingredients

  • 1.5 oz. Dos Hombres Mezcal
  • 1/4 oz. Demerara Syrup
  • 1 oz. Cold Brew
  • 3 dashes Chocolate Mole bitters
  • 3/4 oz. Amaro 

Preparation

  1. Add ingredients to a shaker filled with ice.
  2. Shake and strain into a rocks glass over a large ice cube.
  3. Garnish with expressed orange peel.
  4. Enjoy!

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F&Tea

Ingredients

  • 1.5 parts Fraser & Thompson
  • 4 parts Iced Tea
  • .5 parts Citrus Juice

Preparation

  1. Combine all ingredients in a tall glass over ice.
  2. Garnish with a lemon wheel.

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Salted Plum Sake Martini

Ingredients

  • 2 oz. Revivalist Garden Gin
  • 1 oz. Joto Umeshu Plum Sake
  • ¼ oz. Dry Vermouth

Preparation

  1. Add all ingredient to mixing glass, add ice and stir until perfect dilution.
  2. Strain into Nick n Nora glass and garnish with Saline solution mist.

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Photo by Carnelian Cooks

Batch Tequila Sunrise

by Carnelian Cooks

Ingredients

  • 1 750 ml bottle of Dulce Vida Pineapple
  • Jalapeño Tequila
  • 1.5  cup Fresh Lime Juice
  • 1.5 cup POG Juice
  • 1-1.5 cup Water
  • Grenadine, for topping

Preparation

  1. In a pitcher, add your Dulce Vida Pineapple Jalapeño with fresh lime juice, POG juice and water.
  2. Stir until combined.
  3. Place in the fridge for at least 1 hour.
  4. When ready to enjoy, serve in glasses filled with ice.
  5. Top with your desired amount of grenadine.
  6. Garnish with a cherry and a lime wheel.

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The Horseshoe Carajillo

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. Herradura Reposado
  • 1 oz. Licor 43
  • 1.5 oz. Fresh Espresso
  • 0.5 oz. Vanilla Syrup
  • 1 dash Orange Bitters

Preparation

  1. Shake all ingredients over ice.
  2. Fine strain into glass.
  3. Garnish with Dehydrated Orange slice and Ground Nutmeg or Cinnamon to dust one half of the drink.

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Ilegal EL POBLANO

Ingredients

  • 2 oz. Ilegal Mezcal Joven
  • 2 slices of Poblano Pepper
  • 1 oz. Lime Juice
  • 0.5 oz. Agave Nectar
  • Chipotle Salt (3 tsp Chipotle en Adobo Purée + 1 cup Kosher Salt)

Preparation

  1. Mix Chipotle Salt ingredients together and let dry.
  2. Add ingredients to shaker and shake.
  3. Strain into stemmed glass with chipotle salt rim.
  4. Garnish with a Poblano slice.

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The post 9 Labor Day Cocktails to Kickstart Fall appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

A Day Drinking in Paris

By | Mixology News

I pull up to the Hotel Le Grand Mazarin for what will be my first moments in the City of Lights.

Paris is taking center stage this summer as the Olympic Games descend on the metropolis. I’m here, ahead of the games to experience a place I’ve only heard about on TV and in my breathless stories from other people. For some Americans these days, the city is best known as the titular place on Netflix’s Emily in Paris. For me, I’m more excited about its connection to Ernest Hemingway. And, if there’s one thing I’ve learned from his vivid depictions of Paris in books like A Moveable Feast and The Sun Also Rises, the writer knew how to throw a few back.

Dirty Martinis in La Marais

My first stop is the Boubalé bar here at the Mazarin, which opened in October. Me and my friend can’t help but compare the surroundings at the hotel to a Wes Anderson film: vivid colors, spectacular designs. The pool has a stunning al fresco wall, the nearby Boubalé restaurant does as well, boasting a menu of Eastern European dishes, like succulent lamb and warm challah.

The wall next to the marble bar is a warm red and covered with illustrations of flowers in white bubbles; in front is what seems to be a hand painted lamp with brushes of navy blue and touches of red swathes. Needless to say, there’s also a feast for the eyes here, all the work of the designer Martin Brudnizki. It’s 4 pm and we’re about to hit the town, but a drink is in order. To kick off my trip, I order a Dirty Martini; a perennial go-to for me. I usually opt for Ketel One, but here, I’m a bit more adventurous and I choose a Polish vodka called Potocki.

The bartender takes a slender martini glass with a lime green bottom and fills it with ice. Once he prepares the drink, he dumps the ice out of the chilled glass, replacing it with the cocktail. Most dirty martinis I order are murky brown; this one has a red hue, mimicking the walls that surround us. The red stems from the fact I saw him pour the juice from a jug of Kalamata olives directly into the shaker. The Potocki and Kalamata compliment each other perfectly.

Chardonnay by the pool

Paris should actually be dubbed City of Light, because in the summertime, the sun sets here around 10 pm, which will be perfect for future Olympic revelers. That doesn’t mean that the days are full of bright sunshine, however. Some days during my week-long stay in Paris were bright; others were a bit more gloomy, especially in the morning. After taking in iconic tourist spots like The Louvre, on this particular day we headed to the Hotel Molitor for the afternoon.

A massive Art Deco complex built around its iconic pool has been in disrepair for decades after thriving as a sun-drenched playground for kids and adults for sixty years prior. Its claim to fame is that its pool was the spot for the unveiling for the very first G-String Bikini in 1946, courtesy of designer Louis Reard.

A renovation revitalized the pool and installed a spa and a restaurant on the roof dubbed Rooftop Molitor. I order a scrumptious house Chardonnay, which goes perfectly with a plate of Beef Tartare; mixed in are capers and lobster chunks.

Champagne on the Champ

One of the most iconic restaurants in the city is Fouquets, a buzzing eatery since opening way back in 1899. Located on the famed picture-perfect street Champs-Elysées (as well as Avenue Georges V), the red awning that stretches from the building is as memorable as the nearby Arc de Triomphe.

To capitalize on the fame, the swank Hotel Barriere later opened right upstairs, featuring views of the aforementioned sights, sprawling guest rooms, and a stunning spa and pool which wraps around museum-quality sculptures and paintings.

Down at the restaurant, a walk of fame boasts the famous names who have been honored throughout the years; many Hollywood heavyweights like Harrison Ford, Sofia Coppola and Dustin Hoffman made the list. Along with a menu of Parisian delights, duck foie gras and cheese plates are delivered promptly. For this dinner, I opt for a classic bottle of Veuve Clicquot, the famed French champagne; deliciously dry and bubbly, the homegrown product of nearby Reims. The restaurant, the hotel, and these sips amount to pure elegance.

Espresso by the Eifiel

The restaurant Maggie is located in another long-standing Parisian landmark: Hotel Rochechouart, which has been in the Montmartre neighborhood since 1929. It’s another elegant location, and if you’re sensing a theme, elegance has certainly become the motif of the city. Maggie is named after an 18th century neighborhood icon named Marguerite de Rochechouart (she ran the convent here), and the massive dining room boasts high ceilings, white tablecloths and a smattering of plants on top of tiled floors. In other words, you won’t find stuffy elegance here, but a breezy form of class.

Meanwhile, downstairs, a club called Mikado pops off on the weekends. Upstairs at the restaurant, I’m feasting on grilled cheddar and pastrami sliders and a platter of steak. Since it’s early, I order an Espresso Martini. Made with care at its bar which flaunts white pillars, it’s the perfect pick-me-up for my final days here.

However, upstairs from Maggie is the real stunner: a rooftop bar open to the public with Instagram-worthy views of the neighborhood and the Eiffel Tower which sparkles in the distance. To complement the vision, I order sparkling water.

Au Revoir with experimental cocktails

It may be hard to believe, but cocktail bars haven’t always been a Paris staple. As the lore goes, one day in 2007, three friends opened one up in an empty storefront in the city’s Montorgueil neighborhood. The result is the Experimental Cocktail Club, largely credited with influencing the city’s cocktail scene with an inventive menu and locations in London, Venice and soon, New York City.

With a soundtrack of laidback pop (as I sit at the bar, “(Feels Like) Heaven” by Fiction Factory plays over the speakers), the low lights give the space the feel of a speakeasy. I hear the menu changes, but today I spot a Polite Cosmo (with cranberry purée and Scrappy’s Orange Bitters), a Bananarama (with banana liqueur, Michter’s ourbon, and Vermouth), and a Chapulin made with Del Maguey Mezcal, Pimm’s No.1., Chartreuse, and lime bitters.

I order a luscious Chapulin and think back on my experience. Up until last week, Paris was a dream. Now, I’m here in a dream-like state; with the city surprising me with its kindness, elegance, and perfect weather. It’s an ideal concoction for an Olympic city. And, the drinks aren’t too bad, either. Would I return? One word: Oui.

The post A Day Drinking in Paris appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Celebrate National Mai Tai Day with the 1944 Trader Vic Mai Tai!

By | Mixology News

Happy National Mai Tai Day!

The award-winning tropical cocktail bar in Chicago, Three Dots and a Dash, has mastered the art of the classic Trader Vic Mai Tai which has become a staple in their bar.

The speakeasy-style take on the traditional island bar transports you to the glamorous bygone eras of Trader Vic, Stephen Craneand Don the Beachcomber. Beverage Director Kevin Beary has infused the global rums found in the traditional tropical cocktail, and we have the recipe below for you to try at home!

1944 Trader Vic Mai Tai

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. Aged Jamaican Rum
  • 1 oz. 100-Proof Blanc Rhum Agricole
  • ½ oz. Dry Curaçao
  • 1 oz. Fresh Lime Juice
  • 1 oz. Almond Orgeat
  • Jamaican overproof float (optional)

Preparation

  1. Build the cocktail in a double rocks glass; add crushed ice until the drink fills the glass.
  2. Swizzle the cocktail until it’s homogeneous (becomes opaque).
  3. Garnish with a bouquet of mint.
  4. Add a float of funky Jamaican overproof (optional; it's not considered traditional but adds an extra flare!).

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The post Celebrate National Mai Tai Day with the 1944 Trader Vic Mai Tai! appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Check Out Blu on the Hudson’s New Summer Cocktail Menu

By | Mixology News

Located in Weehawken, New Jersey, Blu on the Hudson is a chicly designed modern American restaurant with sweeping views of the Manhattan skyline.

Their new summer cocktail menu was crafted by Beverage Director, Jeremy LeBlanche, to delight both the eyes and the palate. His drinks substitute fussy ingredients in favor of theatrical presentations and uncommon garnishes to retain their familiarity while creating a memorable experience for each guest. Check out three of them below!

Don’t Be Shy

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 oz. Dry Rosé Wine (preferably from Provence, France)
  • 1/2 oz. Tito’s Vodka
  • 1 oz. Strawberry Soju
  • 1 oz. Aperol
  • 1 oz. Simple Syrup
  • 1 oz. Lemon Juice

Preparation

  1. Shake all the ingredients together with ice and strain in a coupe glass.
  2. The cocktail can be enjoyed neat or with a big ice rock.
  3. We recommend that the garnish reflect the ingredients of your cocktail, but feel free to be creative!

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Gin

Naked After Midnight

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 oz. Nasturtium Leaf-infused Botanist Gin
  • 1 oz. Cucumber and Shiso Leaf Homemade Syrup
  • 1 oz. Lime Juice
  • 1/4 oz. Japanese Sochu

Preparation

  1. Shake vigorously with ice and serve into a champagne glass.
  2. Top up with Fever Tree Mediterranean Tonic.
  3. Garnish with bamboo leaf.

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The post Check Out Blu on the Hudson’s New Summer Cocktail Menu appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

This Summer’s Favorite Refreshment: Boozy Desserts!

By | Mixology News

Imagine lounging by the pool, hosting a backyard barbecue, or simply seeking a sweet escape from the sweltering August heat; boozy desserts and dessert cocktails offer the ultimate solution.

They not only satisfy your sweet tooth but also provide a refreshing kick, making them the ideal companion for some end-of-summer relaxation.

Check out three awesome recipes below!

This delightful treat offers a perfect balance of tangy and sweet flavors with a sharpness from the limoncello, providing a sophisticated and refreshing finish to your meal, cooling you down from the inside out.

Lemon Ripieno

by Mezze on the River — Battery Park City, NYC

Ingredients

  • 6 Lemons
  • 12 oz. Lemon Sorbet
  • 12 oz. Sorrento Limoncello
  • Fresh Mint

Preparation

  1. With a sharp pairing knife, cut about 1/2” off the top and about 1/4” off each lemon bottom.
  2. Discard the bottom piece and save the top piece for a ‘lemon hat’ to be placed on top of the Ripieno when served.
  3. Use the knife to cut into the top end to separate the lemon meat from the rind.
  4. Massage the lemons by rubbing them back and forth in between both hands to soften the interior for easier removal.
  5. Use a teaspoon to scoop out the lemon meat Be sure to remove everything down to the rind.
  6. Once the shells are empty, place them in a bowl in the freezer until frozen solid, approximately 30 minutes.
  7. Remove the lemon shells from the freezer, place each in a martini glass or small bowl.
  8. Place two scoops of lemon sorbet into each lemon shell.
  9. Add a sprig of mint and drizzle 2 oz. of Limoncello over each Ripieno.
  10. Place a ‘lemon hat’ on each, serve and enjoy!

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Dante’s Grasshopper is a classic cocktail combining green crème de menthe, white crème de cacao, Branca Menta, and cream, garnished with Valrhona chocolate. The rich and creamy beverage offers a harmonious blend of minty freshness and chocolatey indulgence, making it a decadent and refreshing treat that mimics a milkshake!

Photo by Steve Friehon

Grasshopper

by Dante — West Village, NYC

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. Marie Brizard Crème de Menthe (green)
  • 1 oz. Giffard Crème de Cacao (white)
  • .25 oz. Branca Menta
  • 1.5 oz. Heavy Cream

Preparation

  1. Add all ingredients and shake.
  2. Fine strain into a Nick & Nora glass.

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The Burleigh’s Whoopie Pie Ice Cream Milkshake is a cool delight with a punch from a liquor of guest’s choice, such as Baileys, Kahlua, or Jameson. Topped with whipped cream and cocoa powder, this decadent treat combines rich flavors and creamy textures!

Rococo Whoopie Pie Ice Cream Milkshake

by The Burleigh — Kennebunkport, Maine

Ingredients

  • 8 oz. Rococo’s Ice Cream (3 scoops)
  • 1 cup Whole Milk
  • 2 oz. Alcohol (Bailey’s, Kahlua, Jameson)

Preparation

  1. Blend ingredients together and top with whipped cream and cocoa powder.

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The post This Summer’s Favorite Refreshment: Boozy Desserts! appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Check Out the Chicago Regional Winner in the Craft the Fun Cocktail Challenge

By | Mixology News

Chicago semi-finalist winner Makenzie Helem earns a spot in the Craft the Fun finals and is going to Austin, Texas!

“Craft the Fun really is the embodiment of fun and I think when you work hard, you want to play hard and not always have to worry about the technicalities and the stress of presenting and I think this competition does a great job of allowing you to have some fun, be creative and just have a good time overall and really remind you what the industry can be about,” says Makenzie.

“I’ve always tended to work in smaller more intimate bars and I think part of that is I do enjoy creating more intimate experiences by getting to know people. I think feeling like you’re at home and welcome in the space is always the most important thing: having that sense of hospitality and building relationships with new people is a great experience and I hope that when I’m working and people are at my bar, they leave thinking, ‘Oh, I can come back and I can have a good time and I have someone I can talk to that is kind of a friend.”

Congratulations, Makenzie!! Good luck in Austin!

Deep Eddy Vodka and Chilled Media wish to thank all the participating bartenders. Good luck to the finalists going to compete in Austin, Texas!

A total of five bartenders, one from each of the regional competitions, are chosen to compete as finalists in Austin, and receive $1,000 each as a prize. Regional runners-up will receive $500 and regional competitors who placed 3rd-6th will receive $100.

Additionally, the five regional winners will receive an all-expense paid trip to Austin, TX September 15th-18th for a chance to become the 2024 Craft the Fun Cocktail Challenge Winner. The trip will include a unique Austin-experience, brand education, interaction with national judges, the final competition, and a celebratory dinner.

One Grand Prize Winner will receive $5,000 and the opportunity to be featured on the Deep Eddy Vodka website, social media, and an advertisement in Chilled Magazine announcing the winning 2024 Craft the Fun cocktail.

Good luck, bartenders!

The post Check Out the Chicago Regional Winner in the Craft the Fun Cocktail Challenge appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Santa Teresa Coffee Spritz

By | Mixology News

Santa Teresa 1796, Venezuela’s oldest and most-awarded super-premium rum, proudly introduces Santa Teresa 1796 Arabica Coffee Cask Finish.

This uniquely rich expression is crafted with their time-honored Solera method, then patiently aged in casks that once held a mixture of rum and Arabica coffee enjoyed at their Hacienda. Now is your chance to try this creation for the first time yourself and savor an entirely new side to award-winning, triple-aged Santa Teresa 1796 Rum.

This can be enjoyed neat, on the rocks, or in a uniquely rich cocktail.

Rum

Santa Teresa Coffee Spritz

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 oz. ST1796 Arabica Coffee Cask Finish
  • 1/2 oz. Cold Brew
  • 1/4 oz. Orgeat
  • Top with Soda Water

Preparation

  1. Build in Collins glass with ice, then gently stir until combined.
  2. Garnish with orange twist.

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The post Santa Teresa Coffee Spritz appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News

Top 5 Tequilas for a Perfect Margarita

By | Mixology News

Since its creation in the 1940s, the margarita has become an indispensable bar staple.

There is a great deal of controversy around the cocktail’s beginnings, with several arguments being made regarding its true origins, but one truth always remains the same. The key to a perfect margarita is choosing the perfect tequila. Here’s a carefully chosen collection of tequilas, each with its own unique opportunity to make a superb cocktail!

Classic Margarita

Ingredients:

  • 4 oz. high-quality blanco tequila
  • 2 oz. triple sec
  • 1 ½ oz. fresh lime juice
  • 1 lime wedge (garnish)

Preparation: Optional 1 tbsp. coarse salt for glass rim.


Don Fulano Blanco

This tequila, which contains orange blossom and jasmine aromas, is a silky and refined selection for a margarita. Having been distilled in copper and slow-cooked, the flavor and fragrance of agave blend exquisitely with apple, resulting in a harmonious and balanced finish. The seamless combination of the orange blossom and lime juice in the classic cocktail recipe results in a wonderfully balanced drink.


Tequila Ocho Blanco

This tequila has an aroma and flavor that are more rustic and organic. This blanco, which has been cultivated and refined by five generations of agave farmers, is an outstanding element for margaritas. Its citrus finish and peppery undertones will complement the lime and triple sec to create a harmonious and satisfying cocktail for everyone who tries it.


Patron Silver

This tequila is widely favored by bartenders and is frequently selected for margaritas, due to its exceptional reputation. The recipe, refined over a long period of time, is both precise and intricate. Farmers meticulously choose agave, a plant that may be harvested approximately every eight years. By subjecting it to a slow and thorough processing and heating method, a tequila of impeccable clarity and crispness is produced. The tequila’s inherent tastes are enhanced by its citrus overtones and sweetness, making this a great option for your margaritas!


Casamigos Tequila-Blanco

Unlike the previous tequilas, this tequila has a unique distinction; its flavor profile contains vanilla. Fermented extra slowly, this crystal-clear spirit delights drinkers with vanilla, grapefruit, and sweet agave. In a classic margarita, this tequila is sure to leave drinkers satisfied, as the flavor profiles pair wonderfully with the other ingredients. George Clooney, the recipient of multiple Academy Awards, founded this tequila.


1921 Blanco Tequila

This award-winning tequila is an excellent industry representative. The company’s meticulous attention to detail and knowledge of Mexican culture is evident in its products. 1921 Tequila Blanco is a clear and vibrant spirit that is ideal for combining into a cocktail. Citrus tones complement the herbaceous and sweet aromas to produce a superbly balanced and smooth tequila. This is an excellent choice for a refreshing and delectable margarita!

The post Top 5 Tequilas for a Perfect Margarita appeared first on Chilled Magazine.

Source: Mixology News