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Libertine (bourbon, simple syrup, rosemary, lemon juice, marmalade, maple syrup, orange juice, egg white) [13] Bourbon lift (bourbon, coffee liqueur, orgeat, heavy cream, club soda) [ 14 ] Old Fashioned (bourbon or rye whiskey, sugar, Angostura bitters) [ 15 ]
Cocktails often also contain various types of juice, fruit, honey, milk or cream, spices, or other flavorings. Cocktails may vary in their ingredients from bartender to bartender, and from region to region. Two creations may have the same name but taste very different because of differences in how the drinks are prepared. This article is ...
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 ...
Dating back to at least the 1900s, it was a non-alcoholic mixture of ginger ale, ice and lemon peel. [2] By the 1910s, brandy, or bourbon would be added for a "horse's neck with a kick" or a "stiff horse's neck." The non-alcoholic version was still served in upstate New York in the late
The World's Drinks And How To Mix Them is a cocktail manual by William "Cocktail" Boothby originally published in 1891, with revised editions in 1908, 1930 and 1934. The publisher was the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, where Boothby worked.
A non-alcoholic version is a lime rickey. [2] A recipe for the rickey appeared as early as 1903 in Daly's Bartenders' Encyclopedia by Tim Daly (p. 57): GIN RICKEY. Use a sour glass. Squeeze the juice of one lime into it. One small lump of ice. One wine glass of Plymouth gin. Fill the glass with syphon seltzer, and serve with a small bar spoon.
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A pre-2010 Southern Comfort bottle with its label showing an illustration of Louisiana's Woodland Plantation.The label was redesigned in 2010. [6]Southern Comfort was created by bartender Martin Wilkes Heron (1850–1920), the son of a boat-builder, in 1874 at McCauley's Tavern in the Lower Garden District, two miles (3 km) south of the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana. [7]