1/2 oz Quinquina (Bonal)
1/2 oz Benedictine
1 dash Bitters (Angostura)
Stir with ice and strain into a cocktail glass.
Thursday night after the TDN, Andrea was in the mood for a nightcap and specificially one that involved her new purchase of Bonal Gentiane Quina. Bonal is an aperitif wine I was introduced to by Eric Seed in a tasting room at Tales of the Cocktail last year, and it has recently hit the American market. Bonal functions very much like a sweet vermouth, but it has an added layer of bitter complexity from gentian root and cinchona bark which makes it rather delightful especially before dinner. Instead of using it as a sweet vermouth substitute, I searched for a cocktail that called out specifically for a quinquina and found one in both Trader Vic and Patrick Duffy. Taking a step back from the Beefeater Summer Edition, the drink I chose was called the Spring Cocktail. The Duffy version was scaled up and lacked the cocktail olive garnish that Trader Vic's recipe contained, and therefore, it seemed preferable.
3 comments:
Only recently introduced to this drink by a neighborhood bartender, I am a huge fan. Just looking for any posts about it, this was top of the list even though nearly 5 years old.
I do recommend trying the olive garnish - according to him it must be a Castelvetrano and I can't disagree. The meatiness works and it's not distractingly pickled tasting
Just made this with Plymouth and while I love the combo of Bonal and Benedictine, I felt the gin was a bit hot with too strong of a raw alcohol note coming through. Maybe stirring longer with cracked ice instead of cubes could have solved that through dilution, but I think using Aviation (with it's more floral notes) would make a noticeable, positive, difference.
Perhaps use a sweeter quinquina? Or add a dash of simple? Bonal isn't the sweetest quinquina out there. All recipes can be adjusted to your own (or the drinker's palate).
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