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Disaronno can be served neat as a liqueur, on the rocks, or as part of a cocktail mixed with other alcoholic beverages, cola, ginger ale, or fruit juice. It may also be added to hot chocolate and is an ingredient in the Italian variant of an Irish coffee. The amaretto liqueur can also be used in the Italian dessert tiramisu. [5]
Shrub – one of two different types of drink – a fruit liqueur typically made with rum or brandy mixed with sugar and the juice or rinds of citrus fruit, or a vinegared syrup with spirits, water, or carbonated water; Sling – traditional long drink prepared by stirring ingredients over ice in the glass and filling up with juice or club soda
Disaronno recommends a one-to-two ratio of amaretto to whisky (25 ml amaretto to 50 ml whisky) [2] The godmother cocktail uses vodka in place of whisky, while the French Connection uses brandy. [3] The godchild, meanwhile, replaces Scotch with cream, leaving a drink with much less alcohol. [citation needed]
B-52 (and related B-50 series cocktails) B & B (brandy and Bénédictine) Baby Guinness; Bacardi cocktail; Backdraft (also a pepperdraft variation) Batida (traditionally made with cachaça) Bay breeze; Bee's knees
A mojito Bellini Made with Prosecco and peach purée or nectar. Black Russian Made with vodka and coffee liqueur. Bloody Mary Made with vodka, tomato juice, and other spices and flavorings including Worcestershire sauce, hot sauces, garlic, herbs, horseradish, celery, olives, salt, black pepper, lemon juice, lime juice, and celery salt.
A Tequila Sunrise is a basic layered drink of grenadine syrup (bottom), orange juice, and tequila. Black and Tan; Black Velvet; Blue Eyed Blonde [2]; B-52; Oatmeal Cookie; Pousse-café (1/2 ounce Grenadine, 1/2 ounce yellow chartreuse, 1/2 ounce crème de cassis, 1/2 ounce white creme de menthe, 1/2 ounce green chartreuse, and 1/2 ounce brandy, layered in order given).
Baileys Irish Cream, a cream liqueur. A cream liqueur is a liqueur that includes dairy cream and a generally flavourful liquor among its ingredients. [1] [2] Notable cream liqueurs include: Amarula, which uses distillate of fermented South African marula fruits; Amarula, the South African liqueur. Irish cream, which uses Irish whiskey [3 ...
A recipe of the old drink, as written in The Cook's Oracle (1822): [6] To make a quart of Flip:— Put the Ale on the fire to warm, — and beat up three or four Eggs with four ounces of moist Sugar, a teaspoonful of grated Nutmeg or Ginger, and a quartern of good old Rum or Brandy.