1 oz Gin (Death's Door)
2 tsp Lemon Juice (1/3 oz)
2 tsp Grenadine (1/3 oz)
1/2 Egg White
Dry shake, add ice, and shake again. Strain into a Sour glass and garnish with 5 drops of Angostura Bitters.
For a nightcap two Sundays ago, I opened up Charles Baker's South American Gentleman's Companion and spotted the Juanito Rosado which he had at the Guayaquil Yacht Club in Ecuador. The recipe lured me in for it was an interesting Pisco Sour variation that split the pisco with gin and made it a bit more colorful with grenadine. Alternatively, the drink could have also been a Pink Lady variation with pisco in place of the applejack. Given that the recipe stemmed from South America, the Pisco Sour as the starting point seems a little more likely. Searching on the web, the drink name appears to be common in Chile; however, it refers to a wide variety of recipes with the closest one being a Cognac, lemon, and grenadine combination and the quirkiest one being brandy, Fanta orange soda, and condensed milk.
5 comments:
Bitters on foam is my new favourite "garnish". In photos anyway.
Cheers!
Definitely is a garnish without the quotes in my book. Egg white foam is a great canvas and bitters, nutmeg, ground coffee bean, or pulverized dried orange peel all work well on it.
Very prettily done, too. Bravo.
Beautiful... How did you control your bitters on the garnish, and manage not get a big splotch?
The secret is not to try to get drops from the dasher bottle but to put a dash or so in a jigger or other. Then use an eye dropper (or similar) to dispense. A lot of bars and some home people have their bitters already in dropper bottles for this purpose and for a more uniformed dispense during dashing (dashes are widely different by bottle type, force of dash, and bottle fullness, so knowing a certain height on the eye dropper that you are calling a dash is more consistent).
To get the designs, I used a tooth pick, but I have seen others use a thin straw or even the tips of fork tines.
Post a Comment