Friday, May 15, 2026

soul wandering

3/4 oz Genever (Bols Barrel-Aged)
3/4 oz Gin (Tanqueray)
1/2 oz Cynar
1/2 oz Coffee Liqueur (Borghetti)
1/2 oz Sweet Vermouth (Alessio)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe glass, and garnish with an orange twist.

After making the City to City the day before that was related to the Transmigration, I was inspired to turn the two-Scotch and two-rum drinks, respectively, into a Genever-gin one. Genever and gin have worked in everything from stirred drinks like the Precursor to tropical ones like the Modern Prometheus. Moreover, Genever has paired well with Cynar and coffee liqueur such as in the Wild Card and the Hard Times, respectively, so I figured that the combination had a good chance to click. For a name, I ended up on Soul Wandering to stick with the migration theme. Once prepared, the Soul Wandering opened up with an orange, malty, caramel-roast, and herbal aroma. Next, roast and grape notes on the sip shifted into malty, coffee, and herbal flavors on the swallow.
A day or two later, my Instagram friend Tim Kirkland made this drink and wrote in his own post, "Bold, complex, rich. Genever lovers, listen up! As a huge Genever fan, I'm always looking for creative ways to showcase this amazing spirit. This cocktail checks all boxes. Offering hints of juniper, malt, a little cola, coffee, black grapes, orange peel, and a very slightly bitter/malt/coffee finish, the Genever was perfect in this. The gin/Genever combo worked well to bring out the bitter notes from the Cynar, while accentuating the rich coffee notes. The orange oils sort of brought everything together in a wonderful way."

Thursday, May 14, 2026

city to city

3/4 oz Scotch (Famous Grouse)
3/4 oz Islay Scoth (Ardbeg 10 Year)
1/2 oz Cynar
1/2 oz Coffee Liqueur (Borghetti)
1/2 oz Sweet Vermouth (Alessio)

Stir with ice, strain into a Nick & Nora (coupe) glass, and garnish with an orange twist.
Two Thursdays ago, the second drink I made was one that I found on my Instagram feed as posted by my friend Daniel Zajic called the City to City. The recipe was crafted by Tom Lasher-Walker at Fresh Kills in Brooklyn as a riff on Sasha Petraske's Migration and named after Gerry Rafferty's 1978 album. I learned of the Migration through Tom's other riff, the rum-based Transmigration, that also utilized the coffee element not found in Sasha's drink. Once prepared, City to City gave forth an orange, smoke, and coffee aroma. Next, roast, grape, and caramel notes on the sip traveled to smoky Scotch, herbal, and coffee flavors on the swallow.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

smoke along the crescent bend

3/4 oz Laphroaig 10 Year Scotch
3/4 oz El Dorado 8 Year Rum (Hamilton's Demerara River)
3/4 oz Carpano Sweet Vermouth (Alessio)
1/2 oz Benedictine
2 dash Peychaud's Bitters
2 dash Angostura Bitters

Stir with ice and strain into a coupe glass.
Two Wednesdays ago, I returned home from my trip to Philadelphia for the USBG Bar Summit to a house with no electricity. When I learned that power would not be back until 3am, I decided to go to bed and double up my efforts on Thursday. The first drink I made then was from a set of online recipe flashcards that I found for Club 33 which is a restaurant in the New Orleans Square part of Disneyland in Anaheim. The drink was called Smoke Along the Crescent Bend as a Vieux Carré riff, and a Yelp menu photo from 2025 provided the description, "Aromas of campfire smoke and tobacco fill the air as riverboats travel along the mighty Mississippi. Goods are bought and sold by travelers at each stop along the way." While I have had rum-based Vieux Carré riffs like the Rhum with a Vieux and a Scotch-based De la Louisiane riff called Islay Louisiane, I have not had the combination in a single glass. Once mixed, the Smoke Along the Crescent Bend paddled to the nose with peat smoke, grape, and anise aromas. Next, caramel and grape on the sip unloaded smoky Scotch, woody rum, herbal, allspice, and anise flavors on the swallow.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

pied piper

1 oz Mezcal (Convite Esencial)
1 oz Oloroso Sherry (Lustau)
1 oz Amaro Meletti
2 dash Angostura Bitters

Stir with ice, strain into a cocktail coupe, and garnish with a lemon twist.
The final drink that I had prepared in advance for the bartenders' guild national meeting in Philadelphia was the Pied Piper that I uncovered through online recipe flashcards from Attaboy. The build reminded me of the rum-based Globetrotter from the Waldorf-Astoria, so I was game to try this one out with mezcal. To the nose, the Pied Piper played a melody of lemon, caramel, vegetal, smoke, nutty, and floral aromas. Next, caramel and grape notes on the sip flowed into smoky vegetal, herbal, nutty, floral, allspice, and clove flavors on the swallow.

Monday, May 11, 2026

honey i'm home

1 1/2 oz Blanco Tequila (Cimarron)
1/2 oz Bols Genever (Bols Barrel-Aged)
1/2 oz Dolin Blanc (Servito)
1/4 oz Malört
1/4 oz TVH2 (Honey Syrup)
2 dash Lavender Bitters (Scrappy's)

Stir with ice, strain into a coupe, and garnish with a lemon twist.
The drink that I had prepared in advance while I was at the USBG Bar Summit in Philadelphia on Monday was the Honey I'm Home from Chicago's The Violet Hour for their Summer 2022 menu. I was able to source the spec through online recipe flashcards, and my cheatsheat from the bar defines TVH2 as honey or honey-ginger-cinnamon syrup (which makes perfect sense given the drink's name), so I went with the one that I had on hand. While I have not had a Genever-tequila cocktail before, there are four Genever-mezcal ones on the blog dating back to 2009 with Misty Kalkofen's 1820. Once prepared, the Honey I'm Home gave forth a lemon, malty, and vegetal bouquet to the nose. Next, honey and white grape notes on the sip delved into tequila, malty, honey, and bitter flavors on the swallow.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

jovencourt daiquiri

2 oz Barbancourt White Rhum (110°)
1/4 oz Del Maguey Mezcal Vida (Fosforo Ensemble)
3/4 oz Lime Juice
3/4 oz Simple Syrup

Shake with ice and strain into a coupe glass.
Two Sundays ago, I traveled to the USBG Bar Summit in Philadelphia, so I had three nights of cocktails prepared in advance. The first of these was the Jovencourt Daiquiri invented by Phil Ward at Death & Co. in Manhattan as published in the Death & Co.: Modern Classic Cocktails book. Phil commented, "This cocktail was my first epiphany about using mezcal in a mixed drink," and he noted that while it is very common now, no one was doing it much in 2007 when he created this. Also of note was back then until very recently, the unaged Barbancourt was at a lower strength (86° versus 110°). The concept reminds me of the rhum agricole-mezcal Daiquiri with maple that I crafted called Miracles Take Longer especially given how grassy and funky the unaged Barbancourt is (less so in the 8 Year that I have been more familiar with). Once prepared, the Jovencourt Daiquiri generated a grassy and vegetal funk aroma. Next, a lime-driven sip gave way to grassy, smoky, and vegetal flavors on the swallow with a lime finish.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

cavalier

1 oz Gin (Tanqueray)
1 oz Amaro Montenegro
1 oz Dry Vermouth (Dolin)

Stir with ice, strain into an old fashioned glass with a large ice cube, and garnish with a lemon twist.
Two Saturdays prior, I opened up the Bartender's Choice app and spotted the Cavalier by Sam Ross at Manhattan's Attaboy in 2017. The app described the drink as "a somewhat less bitter take on the Negroni," and it was distinct from the rye-based Cavalier already on the blog. The combination on paper reminded me of Viale's house Negroni back in 2014, the Eldridge, which split the dry vermouth in half with sweet; this is rather curious for the address of Attaboy is 134 Eldridge Street. In the glass, the Cavalier proffered a lemon, tangerine, and pine bouquet to the nose. Next, clementine and a hint of caramel on the sip blossomed into gin, orange, and herbal flavors on the swallow.

Friday, May 8, 2026

attack cocktail

1/2 Calvados (1 1/2 oz Morin Selection)
1/4 Cognac (3/4 oz Courvoisier VS)
1/4 Sherry (3/4 oz Lustau Amontillado)
3 dash Grenadine (1/4 oz)
1 dash Anis (10 drop St. George Absinthe)
1 dash Angostura Bitters

Stir with ice and strain into a cocktail glass. I added an orange twist as a garnish.
Two Fridays ago, I reached for my Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails book from 1996, and I became intrigued by the Attack Cocktail created at Johnny's Bar in Paris circa 1930. Its trio of sherry, grenadine, and bitters reminded me of the Red Riding Hood from Pioneers of Mixing at Elite Bars: 1903-1933 but here with brandies and a touch of anise liqueur (given the era, either anisette or pastis, but I went with absinthe). Once served, the Attack Cocktail reached out with an orange, berry, apple, and anise aroma. Next, grape and red fruit notes on the sip opened up into apple, nutty, berry, allspice, and anise flavors on the swallow.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

as you were

1 oz Banhez Mezcal (Fosforo Ensemble)
1 oz Corazon Reposado Tequila (Cimarron)
3/4 oz Valdespino Pedro Ximenez Sherry (Lustau)
1/2 oz Cocchi Sweet Vermouth (Alessio)
2 dash Mole Bitters (Bittermens)
2 dash Orange Bitters (Angostura Orange)

Stir with ice, strain into a Nick & Nora (coupe) glass, and garnish with a grapefruit disk and a cherry.
Two Thursdays ago, I returned to the online recipe flashcards for The Violet Hour in Chicago, and from their Fall 2021 menu, I was drawn in to the As You Were that was described as an "End of the night agave Manhattan". The idea of agave spirits, sweet vermouth, and Pedro Ximenez sherry was one that I enjoyed in the Stage Dives & Fist Fights created at the Last Word in San Antonio, so it was time to mix this one up. In the glass, the As You Were began with grapefruit, raisin, cherry, and smoky vegetal aromas. Next, a semi-sweet grape sip flowed into smoky vegetal, raisin, herbal, orange, and chocolate flavors on the swallow.