Thirty Three: The Unnamed One
In which the Company makes an elementary mistake.
Read MoreI've been thinking a bit about gin cocktails of late, which is useful given that all the recipes I'm currently owe various people and competitions are supposed to be rum based. I set myself to making a summery drink that wouldn't be torture to make - essentially the polar opposite of A Walk In The Clouds.
Drake's Fortune
50ml Tanqueray Gin
25ml pink grapefruit juice
10ml St. Germain Elderflower Liqueur
1 dash Angostura Bitters
6 mint leaves
Shake all ingredients with ice and fine-strain into a chilled martini glass.
***
The recipe is inspired by the Victorian Mojito - basically a standard Mojito, but with gin and apple juice instead of rum and soda - but I wanted to get away from the shorthand of using crushed ice to signify summer drinks. From there, it seemed obvious to use elderflower to complement the gin and a touch of Angostura to bring everything together.
And yes, more drinks should be named after videogames.
It seems like just two weeks ago that Diageo's Reserve Brands division named Aristotelis Papadopoulos as the World Class Bartender of 2009. But two weeks is a long time in the cut-throat world of cocktail competitions and the search for Aristotelis' sucessor starts on Monday at a training day for Edinburgh's bartenders on the Reserve Brands rum portfolio. It's so unfair, having to go to a secluded bar and spend the afternoon tasting Pampero and Ron Zacapa.
As part of the competition, bartenders from all over town are invited to submit recipes with the top five facing off in a regional heat with a trip to Venezuala up for grabs, not to mention a spot in the UK final sometime in 2010.
Jade Sky
3 slices of cucumber
50ml Pampero Especial
25ml lime juice
10ml sugar cane syrup
3 dashes Fee Brothers Peach Bitters
1 dash egg white
Muddle the cucumber in the base of a shaker. Add other ingredients and shake with ice. Fine-strain into a chilled martini glass. Garnish with a cucumber slice on the rim.
New Zealand. The land of the long white cloud, famed throughout the world for its zeals and their newness, and if there's any justice in the world, 42 Below Vodka: the world's most awarded vodka, according to, uh, 42 Below Vodka and hosts of the annual Cocktail World Cup.
The Cocktail World Cup. An annual cocktail competition open to bartenders all over the world which may or may not involve shaking a cocktail while being thrown off a bridge.
In fairness, they tie you to the bridge first. Apparently.
Entries have been open for next year's CWC since early July and the ednbrg inbox is appropriately full of reminders from both 42 Below and their corporate overlords at Bacardi, given that they close at the end of the month. The competition follows the now standard write-in/regional/national/global format, but is seemingly a little less restrictive in terms of ingredients. A lot of competitions specify a maximum number of ingredients or restrict brand usage, but the CWC seems to only request that drinks are made with 42 Below or one of their flavoured vodkas. While the Manuka Honey, Kiwi and Passionfruit vodkas are all pretty awesome, I opted to use the Feijoa, mainly because I like making my life difficult.
Feijoa is a fruit that is firmly planted in the exotic category. It has been adopted as New Zealand's national fruit (originating from South America and named for a Portuguese explorer), looks something like a lime and tastes something like root beer. It's a divisive flavour, like Marmite or Vegemite or anything else that ends in -mite. As for the vodka, it's all eucalyptus and menthol on the nose, with rich herbal flavours and a smooth mouthfeel. If you've never tried it, it's probably worth doing at least once.
Anyway, this one's in the electronic post to the Vodka University.
A walk in the clouds
60ml 42 Below Feijoa
1 barspoon Acacia honey
15ml lemon juice
An eighth of a Galia melon, diced
A third of an avocado, diced
10ml sparkling water
Muddle the diced avocado with the sparkling water in the base of a shaker tin until it forms a smooth paste. Muddle the diced melon with the vodka, honey and lemon juice in the base of a mixing glass. Add this to the puréed avocado and shake with ice. Fine-strain into a chilled coupette and garnish with a melon ball on a cocktail stick with a spear of spring onion.
Change, it has been said, is a good thing. The world turns and becomes new. I've just started a new job. After more than three years in one place, I felt it was time to seek a new challenge and so far, everything's going well. We're getting ready to head into the Festival - one of the busiest trading periods in the Edinburgh year - which is the perfect time to be facing a metric ton of cocktail competitions.
The next two/three weeks see deadlines for entries for 42 Below's Cocktail World Cup, Chambord's Hunt for Holly (supporting their sponsorship of the West End revival of Breakfast At Tiffany's) and the Havana Club Cocktail Grand Prix. The upshot of all of that is I've been forced into thinking of new recipes perhaps more than usual.
Yes, life is hard.
2000 Man
45ml white rum (I used Element 8 Platinum)
20ml Navan
25ml lemon juice
15ml orgeat
1 dash egg white
1 dash La Fée Parisienne Absinthe
Shake first five ingredients with ice and fine-strain into a chilled coupette or martini glass. Using an atomiser, flame Absinthe across the top of the drink as a garnish.