Cocktails, the libationary art!

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A place for conversation about cocktails, ingredients, home mixology, the bar industry or liquor industry, glassware - this is not an exhaustive list. If you think it's in some way related to cocktails it's probably fine.

If you post something you didn't create give credit whenever possible.

Pictures and recipes are encouraged when posting a drink as a standalone post. Example of an ideal drink post:

https://lemmy.world/post/13010582

We love garnishes.

Remember the code of conduct, keep it nice. In terms of cocktails- specific etiquette that might be different from other communities:

Mentioning your blog, insta, website, book or bar is allowed, yes. For now at least, we do allow self-promotion. If it gets out of hand this might change.

A good post with a drink you don't like is still a good post! Try not to conflate the drink and the post or poster. If someone has a relevant title, gorgeous photo and clearly formatted recipe of what you consider a truly terrible drink, a comment is more appropriate than a downvote.

On that topic: Polite critique/reviews of drinks (or posts, images, etc.) is allowed here. Encouraged , even. It's a good tool for improving your drinks and content. Really, just be nice.

founded 1 year ago
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1
 
 

The spooky season is upon us. Make a cocktail that looks or tastes like Halloween. Remember that tonic water glows in blacklight!

My favorite Halloween cocktail is a Black Jellybean - vodka, sambucca, and cream soda.

Winner is most upvoted, and for this particular round it doesn't need to be original but a picture IS required, and full recipe.

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A place to post recipes and links to recipes for delicious, complex, non intoxicating beverages.

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I don't understand how they get this drink to look pretty in pictures, maybe the dark rum is not as dark? Anyway - sitting here watching the sideways rain and enjoying a hurricane.

2oz white rum (Miami Club)

2oz dark rum (Mahina)

1oz orange juice

1oz sweetened passionfruit puree

1oz lemon

1 spoonful grenadine

It's not bad, but not great.

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2oz bourbon 1oz Heirloom Pineapple Amaro 6oz Tepache

Delicious. Usually I'd put some lemon but supper was very lemony. This is sweet and bitter but in a very approachable way, lightly sweet, lightly bitter.

The rain is beautiful today, storm coming but today just a gentle rain cooling things off, it's only 23c/73f.

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We went to a cider pressing party at a friend’s farm last weekend, so I threw this together tonight. Really nice lil thing; I love the allspice dram, and its dark, almost bitter flavor is beautifully balanced by the cider.

  • 2 oz blended scotch
  • ½ oz Punt e Mes sweet vermouth
  • ¼ oz St. Elizabeth allspice dram
  • 3 oz apple cider

Shake all ingredients with ice and strain into a glass over ice.

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Got to visit Murlarkey Distillery and tried this variant of an Old Fashioned. Was worried that it might be too sweet but the nice thing about a distillery is that they're gonna give you plenty of their whiskey

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My other cocktail from Murlarkey Distillery. A little sweeter but definitely still heavy on the whiskey! Glad I have a designated driver because I am done for

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submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Got this from the Mixel app, credited to Brad Farran. Recipe sounds strange AF, I was looking for something with Galliano that wouldn't use my two oranges (as the storm Milton may call for a hurricane later this week I want to save them) and something with some amount of citrus. This is really quite nice. Would not have thought tequila and rum would work together like this. I put a little more Galliano and no agave - if doing it again I might sub honey syrup though.

3/4 oz tequila Reposado

1/4voz mezcal joven

1 oz dark rum

1/2 oz Galliano

Dash of Absinthe

1 oz lime (scant, since no agave, closer to 3/4 oz)

3/4 oz agave syrup

1 dash tiki bitters (I didn't have, used Angostura)

Shake all with ice, pour over one ice cube.

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Ok - first of all, I didn't make this as written because it calls for 5.5oz of bourbon, which would put me under the table, and I'm out of good orange liqueur. So:

First pour a little absinthe in coupe and toss it in the freezer.

2oz bourbon

1/2 oz orange Curacao

Scant 1/2 oz lemon juice

Shake with ice. Retrieve glass from freezer and twirl it right side up then upside down to coat it with the absinthe. Pour drink in glass.

It tastes like Christmas. Bourbon mostly, even with less than half what's in the recipe. Hint of orange, hint of licorice/anise. This is a successful licorice orange cocktail. Would be much better with Cointreau, even though there's not much in here.

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Here’s Maggie Smith, from Death & Co. As written, I found it a little sweet, so I made a variant after with dark rum, no honey syrup, and added aquafaba, that I found to be, personally, more palatable.

  • 1 ounce pisco
  • 1 ounce white rum
  • ½ ounce orange liqueur
  • ¾ ounce lime juice
  • ¼ ounce orgeat
  • 1 teaspoon honey syrup
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Not a looker but it's nice.

2oz bourbon

1.5oz orange liqueur, 1oz vanilla liqueur

0.5oz lemon juice

One egg white.

Dry shake, then shake with ice.

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Corpse Reviver (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Girlfriend asked for a cocktail with no specific preference and we had leftover lillet blanc in the fridge so I wanted to see what I could do with it. I can see why this is called corpse reviver because it hits strong despite it seeming like a cute pink drink.

Recipe found online, not sure how accurate it is but it's what I used:

  • 1 part lillet blanc
  • 1 part cointreau
  • 1 part gin
  • 1 part lemon juice
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I thought this was interesting, a whiskey sour is how I evaluate a bar, my reference drink. Never thought of it as difficult, maybe I'm not picky enough because different doesn't equal bad, but I do rate a bar higher if there is egg white, it's not too sweet, and an amaretto cherry.

Margarita they can only be overthinking, I don't think it's difficult, but it's bad so often I always think there must just be budget constraints. I don't even order this as a margarita if there is visible margarita mix - I ask for tequila and orange liqueur with lime, shaken.

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Very sweet, too sweet but the flavors work.

2oz good tequila (Gonzalez Reposado)

1oz Nixta

1oz honeydew syrup*

1oz lemon

Shaken together. Pour over ice, Tajin rim.

Thoughts- I'm not sure this needs fixing, it's good just too sweet for my palate. The tajin rim helps. The caramel corn and melon together, yum.

*There was leftover melon. Blendered it with equal weight in sugar. It's really good but hyper sweet.

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Show off your collection, or organizational skills, or decorating prowess! This is my wall o' booze. I am lucky to have a little nook off the kitchen, and a glass cabinet from my grandmother.

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What are you drinking? I had a whiskey sour with Jameson at a bar, as part of our "world's slowest bar crawl" we've been doing, trying all the bars at a local shopping and dining center. Pretty good. The place had a very good playlist though, when we walked in they were playing Joy Division, then Vampire Weekend, then Boz Scaggs! It was all over the place but good.

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2 oz bourbon

1 oz heirloom pineapple amaro

1/2 oz roasted pineapple syrup

1 oz fresh lemon

Shake shake shake!

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Congratulations to our August winner, u/[email protected], and welcome to September!

This month's challenge is to create a cocktail highlighting a savory ingredient. Salt, brine, pickles, something savory is the only ingredient rule. Entries should be original creations or variations.

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Occidental (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

This one is from PDT’s cocktail book. Of the “all-alcohol” drinks I’ve made, this has ended up being one of the more approachable ones. It has an aggressive nose from the Fernet, but a lot of the taste’s edge is tempered by the Grand Marnier. It’s still a heavy hitter, but I liked it a lot!

  • 2 oz Linie Aquavit
  • ¾ oz Grand Marnier
  • ½ oz Nonino Quintessentia Amaro
  • Fernet Branca rinse

Stir with ice and strain into a Fernet Branca-rinsed glass.

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El Vampiro! (punchdrink.com)
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

This was a delightful article and the drink sounds great.

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I want to see the winning entry!

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My husband's work friend gave him 2 ripe homegrown ripe guava this week, so Guava margaritas. This is:

2 oz Tequila Ocho claro.

1 oz lime

1/2 oz orange liqueur (passion fruit would be better but I'm out)

About 1/4 cup guava flesh muddled with quite a bit of sugar, maybe 1.5 TBSP? Guava has lovely flavor but is not very sweet.

Shake all together and double strain over ice, splash of Topo Chico.

It's really good!

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Has anyone here tried aloe liqueur? The rest of this I have, but aloe juice is so yucky, like the idea of mezcal and raspberry.

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Hemingway Daiquiri (sh.itjust.works)
submitted 1 month ago by Lighttrails to c/[email protected]
 
 

I was feeling tropical

  • 2 ounces white rum (Bacardi)

  • 1/2 ounce maraschino liqueur (Luxardo)

  • 3/4 ounce lime juice, freshly squeezed

  • 1/2 ounce grapefruit juice, freshly squeezed

  • Garnish: lime wheel

Light shake then strained into a coup glass

Salud

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The 1600 cocktail. The website hosting the recipe seems to be offline but it's from East Imperial Tonic Water.

50ml / 1 ¾ oz Premium Aged Rum.

5ml / ⅙ oz Orgeat.

15ml / ½ oz Cold Brew Coffee.

150ml / 5 oz East Imperial Grapefruit Tonic.

Fresh Orange Slice.

Stirred everything but the soda (I used a spoonful of tonic syrup and 150ml of Fever Tree grapefruit soda) and no I can't measure 5ml of orgeat, just poured as little as I could.

It's a lot better than it sounds, honestly. The coffee makes it. And hello to the 1,600 of you!

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