Wednesday, February 4, 2009

State of the Union / Bowling Pin Cocktail

So as much as I love being as original as possible when trying to make drinks, I am a firm believer in a solid variation. In my opinion, taking an established recipe and changing one ingredient does not constitute a new recipe, rather I'd call that a variation.

So, I've exchanged a few emails with the fine people at Piedmont and thought of one of my favourite drinks ( I did start bartending in a bowling alley mind you....) and did a White Russian variation using Catdaddy instead of Kahlua. My apologies to my Pitbull.

The Bowling Pin
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1 oz. vodka ( I used Sobieski as its the only vodka in the house )
1 oz. Catdaddy
fill with half and half.

So in looking up names I found that a White Lightning(according to wiki) is the classic name for a vodka soda. I'm gonna confuse some people with that one. I also saw this story which makes me happy.

Obama Raises the Bar
In politics, as in life, a little alcohol can go a long way.
By John Dickerson
Posted Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2009, at 7:14 PM ET
Barack Obama had a drinks party at the White House on Wednesday night. He invited congressional leaders of both parties for cocktails at 7:30. In his relentless push for his stimulus plan, he's apparently not going to let them out of his sight. He was with the same people on Tuesday, just a few days after he'd met with them at the White House. The cocktail invitation could be a polite gesture—they hosted him Tuesday on the Hill, and he wants to return the favor; or it could be a stratagem—after being with them so much, Obama realizes that everyone could use a good drink. Or it could be a philosophical statement: Sobering times do not necessarily require everyone to be sober.

This is a notable departure from Obama's predecessor, whose relationship with Congress was notoriously chilly and whose relationship with the bottle ended at age 40. But it connects him to a rich presidential tradition that goes back to the Founders, who drank heavily after signing the Constitution.
It's good news. First, drinking in moderation leads to an equitable distribution of the humors, and we want our president to be healthy. Second, among adversaries, drinking promotes relaxation and laughter. I doubt it will lead to an agreement on the size of small-business tax cuts in the recovery package, but a few drinks might shave off a few layers of posturing. All of the guessing at motives will decrease. Without so much chest-thumping, the two parties may even get to genuine points of disagreement faster. As a community organizer, Obama knows the power of getting everyone to recognize themselves in one another. What better way to do that than over a few drinks? (Those who disagree should stop wondering why they are lonely at parties or aren't invited at all.)

Senate historian Don Ritchie reminds me of some other presidential habits. Harry Truman favored bourbon and branch water. (As vice president, Truman had just arrived to have a bourbon with House Speaker Sam Rayburn when he got the call that FDR had died.) When he was president, LBJ came to the Capitol on several occasions for an after-work drink with Senate Republican leader Everett Dirksen.
I am tired of comparisons between the Obama administration and the Kennedy and Roosevelt administrations, but when it comes to drinking, let's encourage them. FDR won the presidency on a platform of ending Prohibition. Every evening, including during the war, Roosevelt mixed drinks in the Oval Office from behind his desk, before him a tray equipped with whatever he needed for the martinis or old fashioneds he was mixing. "He mixed the ingredients," recalled author Robert Sherwood, "with the deliberation of an alchemist but with what appeared to be a certain lack of precision since he carried on a steady conversation while doing it."
Though Kennedy was not a big drinker, the cocktail culture that grew around his administration was exciting. "Every party had at least a few senators or cabinet officials and a few big-time press people. It was all off the record and a lot of business got done," Fred Harris, a former Democratic senator from Oklahoma, recounted to me. "The war on poverty and federal aid to education and civil rights, we hadn't had yet the urban riots and the war in Vietnam was no bigger than a man's hand. There were new and exciting programs and new and exciting people."
After Kennedy, LBJ carried on the presidential carrying on, though in his own inimitable style. Joseph Califano tells the story of drinking while riding around Lyndon Johnson's ranch. "As we drove around we were followed by a car and a station wagon with Secret Service agents. The president drank Cutty Sark scotch and soda out of a large white plastic foam cup. Periodically, Johnson would slow down and hold his left arm outside the car, shaking the cup and ice. A Secret Service agent would run up to the car, take the cup and go back to the station wagon. There another agent would refill it with ice, scotch, and soda as the first agent trotted behind the wagon. Then the first agent would run the refilled cup up to LBJ's outstretched and waiting hand, as the president's car moved slowly along."
The great cautionary tale of presidential drinking, of course, is Nixon. He was both a drunk and a reminder to be suspicious of presidents when they have us over for drinks. After the Watergate story broke, Nixon and his aides decided they needed to humanize the president in the press, so they invited some key reporters over to have cocktails. The gambit was a disaster because Nixon was so socially awkward. Before he was president, when Nixon hosted parties at his home, he used cocktail mixing to replace conversation. He would pop up before his invited guests, offer them a drink, and then disappear to the bar again. Periodically, he'd pop in again to encourage everyone to have another, before returning to the bar.
When he drank alone, Nixon could throw his back into the task. This is why, in many accounts of late-night conversations by former aides, the president comes off as barely coherent. Once the British prime minister was on the phone, and national security adviser Henry Kissinger had to intercept the call. "Can we tell him no?" Kissinger asked the White House operator. "When I talked to the President he was loaded."
The other famous presidential drunk was Ulysses S. Grant. When he was a general, however, his drunkenness worked in his favor. When informed that Grant drank whiskey while leading his troops, Lincoln reportedly replied, "Find out the name of the brand so I can give it to my other generals."

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

I just had a moment...

So I'm doing apartment errands today, I.E. laundry cleaning etc. and I saw in the lobby a delayed package for me containing my copy of The Savoy Iopened it up to the page saying "This book is dedicated to you" and couldn't help laughing and thinking of this clip.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Rigamarole!

So my latest venture of booze shopping coupled with emails from booze companies has spawned my latest late night / early morning creation / horrible idea gone right.

Definition from dictionary.com.

rig·a·ma·role (rĭg'ə-mə-rōl') Pronunciation Key
n. Variant of rigmarole.
rig·ma·role (rĭg'mə-rōl') Pronunciation Key
n.
Confused, rambling, or incoherent discourse; nonsense.
A complicated, petty set of procedures.

[Alteration of obsolete ragman roll, catalog, from Middle English ragmane rolle, scroll used in Ragman, a game of chance : perhaps from Anglo-Norman Ragemon le bon, Ragemon the Good, title of a set of verses about a character of this name + Middle English rolle, list (from Old French, from Latin rotula, wheel; see roll).]

The Rigamarole.
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1 oz. Mitchter's Rye ( Im sure other rye's will work, but I finally got a bottle today. )
1 oz. Catdaddy
1/2 oz. Lime
1/2 oz. SImple
2-4 dashes Bitter Truth Celery Bitters
Rinse glass with Macallan Cask Strength
Lemon twist

Aside: I'd done a bit of reading online lately and tried out the Cameron's Kick from the Cocktail Chronicles (thank you again Paul for being a part of the absinthe event.) I made a point to leave all the bottles in front of the customers and none of the four could believe those ingredients made that drink. I particularly liked the matching of the orange twist with the lemon juice and applied that here by doing a lemon twist alongside lime juice.

Monday, January 19, 2009

MxMo : The Mekhong Wagtail

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The Mekong Wagtail (Motacilla samveasnae) is a species of bird in the Motacillidae family. It is found in Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist shrubland and rivers. It is threatened by habitat loss. The species was recently described in 2001.

So for this MxMo I played around with spirits that I had on my shelves but had not been using at all.

Mekhong (Export)

Mekhong is a special blend of 35 degree liquor, a product of Bangyikhan Distillery, the first distillery in Thailand. Mekhong was first produced in 1941 when the Excise Department's main aim then was to produce a Thai liquor with a high standard of production and taste to replace imported products. It also underwent extensive development in appearance, production process and taste from 1943 to 1946.

Saan Soju

Originally distilled from sake, Soju was a drink reserved for royalty. A distillation of sweet potatoes, rice, barley, or other grains. Soju tastes like vodka or gin, but it's easier to drink because of the lower alcohol content. Made from pure spring water and triple distilled, it's incredibly smooth.

I also decided to cold brew some Jade oolong tea and add that to the mix.

So the drink is the Mehkong Wagtail:

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1 oz Mekhong
1 oz cold jade oolong tea
.5 oz Saan Soju
.5 oz Lemon juice
1 barspood Orgeat syrup
2 barspoons realgrenadine

Shake and serve in a snifter. Garnish with a long lemon peel and pineapple wedge.

Also in the broadening my horizons end I am going to take an interest on tiki drinks.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Malicious Intent

So I'm still enjoying my new schedule. I've worked more shifts than I thought I would be and thats been good. On a unrelated note I FINALLY after 2 years of working at it achieved Sea access in FFXI. Tonight ended afterhours at a friends place and while listening to Brand New's album Deja Entendu heard one of my favourite lines from a song. its from Me vs. Madonna vs. Elvis.

With one or two I get used to the room
We go slow when we first make our moves
By five or six bring you out to the car
Number nine with my head on the bar

And it's sad, but true
Out of cash and I.O.U's

I've got desperate desires and unadmirable plans
My tongue will taste of gin and malicious intent
Bring you back to the bar
Get you out of the cold
A sober, straight face gets you out of your clothes
And they're scared that we know
All the crimes they'll commit
Who they'll kiss before they get home

I will lie awake
Lie for fun and fake the way I hold you
Let you fall for every empty word I say

Barely conscious in the door where you stand
Your eyes are fighting sleep while your mouth makes its demands
You laugh at every word trying hard to be cute
I almost feel sorry for what I'm going to do
And your hair smells of smoke
Who will cast the first stone?
You can sin or spend the night all alone

Brass buttons on your coat hold the cold
In the shape of a heart that they cut out of stone
You're using all your looks that you've thrown from the start
If you let me have my way I swear I'll tear you apart
Cause it's all you can be
You're a drunk and you're scared
It's ladies night, all the girls drink for free

I will lie awake
And lie for fun and fake the way I hold you
Let you fall for every empty word I say

So the recipe is....

Malicious Intent
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1.5 oz Gin ( i tried Millers and Gordons and both worked )
.5 oz Yellow Chartreuse
.5 oz Maraschino Liqueur
.5 oz Lemon

Saturday, January 10, 2009

iPhone

So this is my first post made on my new toy. The best description I have heard so far is it's like having a big penis. It works just as well as the others but for some reason you just want to pull it out and play with it I'm front of people.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Happy New Year

So I didn't make time to do a fully in depth write up about the top drinks but I do want to throw up my favourite drink of 08. Its a delicious blend of apples, oranges, lemon and honey topped with a red wine float.

The Jersey Sour
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2oz. Applejack (my most liked spirit of 08 - Laird&co. please contact me!)
1/2 oz Orange
1/2 oz Lemon
1/2 oz Honey syrup
Float red wine on top.

Enjoy in 2009.