1 1/4 oz Blanco Tequila (Cimarron)
3/4 oz Cynar
1/2 oz Sweet Vermouth (Alessio)
3/8 oz Mezcal (Fosforo)
Stir with ice, strain into a cocktail coupe, and garnish with an orange twist.

Two Saturdays ago, I reached for my copy of
The Madrusan Cocktail Companion and spied La Chinesca in the Manhattan section. It was attributed to Paul Hammond and Priscilla Leong now of The Flowing Bowl Cocktail Company in Melbourne. The other drink that I made from that duo was the
Nova Scotia as a Bourbon and Scotch Toronto with honey, and this one read like an agave
Little Italy. Perhaps, they named the drink after the Chinatown in Mexicali, the state capital of Baja California, which historically has contained the largest Chinese community in Mexico. The population arrived to the area to build irrigation systems and either came from the United States to flee a wave of anti-Chinese sentiment or directly from China, and the laborers stayed in the area after the project was completed. The city blossomed during American Prohibition where laborers and farmers moved into the city to open and staff bars, restaurants, casinos, and hotels to welcome thirsty folks from north of the border. In the glass, La Chinesca gave forth an orange, herbal, grape, and smoke aroma. Next, grape and caramel notes on the sip wandered into vegetal, bitter herbal, and smoke flavors on the swallow.
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