Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Chocolate Martini The perfect combination of boozy and sweet for an after-dinner treat. We love topping ours with shaved chocolate, a pinch of cocoa powder, or even adding a crushed Oreo rim.
This chocolate martini is your answer! The chocolate syrup drizzle and chocolate shavings are optional, but so much fun. Get the Chocolate Martini recipe. Will Dickey. Watermelon Wine Coolers.
Pomegranate Martini. More like a cosmopolitan than a classic martini, this recipe replaces the cosmo’s traditional cranberry juice with pomegranate. Garnish with a sugar rim and a fresh rosemary ...
Fix – traditional long drink related to Cobblers, but mixed in a shaker and served over crushed ice; Fizz – traditional long drink including acidic juices and club soda, e.g. gin fizz; Flip – traditional half-long drink that is characterized by inclusion of sugar and egg yolk; Julep – base spirit, sugar, and mint over ice.
This drink, originally called an Adam's Apple Martini because the bartender who created it was named Adam, was created in 1996 at Lola's West Hollywood restaurant. [1] [2] The drink Adam's Apple was advertised by Smirnoff in the July 1972 issue of Playboy on the inside front cover. The recipe called for an ounce or so of Smirnoff added to apple ...
Some newer drinks include the word "martini" or the suffix "-tini" in the name (e.g., appletini, peach martini, chocolate martini, breakfast martini). These are so named because they are served in a cocktail glass. Generally containing vodka, they have little in common with the martini. A porn star martini is a variation of a vodka martini.
Robert Simonson's Martini. Ingredients: 2 ¼ ounces Hayman's London Dry Gin ¾ ounce Dolin dry vermouth 2 dashes Regan orange bitters Lemon twist for garnish
Smirnoff (/ ˈ s m ɪər n ɒ f /; Russian: [smʲɪrˈnof]) is a brand of vodka owned and produced by the British company Diageo.The Smirnoff brand began with a vodka distillery founded in Moscow by Pyotr Arsenievich Smirnov (1831–1898), but its modern incarnation traces back to the 1930s, by American liquor distributor Heublein. [1]