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In some places a Baby Guinness is served with black Sambuca instead of coffee liqueur [3] [4] creating a drink similar to a Slippery Nipple.. Baby Guinness Shot: Origins The Baby Guinness shot, a popular drink in Ireland, is believed to have originated in the late 1980s at a Dublin pub called The Waxies Dargle.
Sambuca (Italian: [samˈbuːka]) is an Italian anise-flavoured liqueur. Its most common variety is often referred to as "white sambuca" to differentiate it from other varieties that are deep blue ("black sambuca") or bright red ("red sambuca"). [ 1 ]
The drink is made from 1/2 oz. sambuca, 1/2 oz. Irish cream liqueur, and optionally, a drop of grenadine or a cherry. Some versions of the drink replace the sambuca with equal parts of anisette and peppermint schnapps. [2]
Jerry Thomas, the author of the first book with cocktail recipes. The first bartender's manual, written by Jerry Thomas and published in 1862, contains the recipe for the first flaming cocktail, the blue blazer. [3] The book, How to Mix Drinks, describes [4]: 76–77 how to turn a hot toddy made with Scotch into a "blazing stream of liquid fire ...
Sambuca; Orange-flavored liqueur; Served: warmed: Standard garnish: Cinnamon: Standard drinkware: Shot glass: Commonly used ingredients: Grand Marnier; Drambuie; Cinnamon; Ice; Preparation: The preparation of this drink is complex, and is explained below. Notes: The cinnamon can be replaced with black pepper if desired, creating a much more ...
Arak is very similar to other anise-based spirits, including the Turkish rakı and the Greek ouzo, [2] [6] the Greek tsikoudia, [3] the Italian sambuca and anisette, the Bulgarian and Macedonian mastika, and the Spanish anis. [6] However, it is unrelated to the similarly named arrack, a sugarcane-based Indonesia liquor. [2]
B-53, a B-52 with Sambuca rather than Irish cream; B-54, a B-52 with Amaretto almond liqueur in place of triple sec; B-55, a B-52 with absinthe rather than Triple Sec, also known as B-52 Gunship; B-57, a B-52 with peppermint schnapps rather than Irish cream; B-156, a B-52 but three times larger in an Old Fashioned glass
The flavoring ingredients are often closely guarded company "recipes", and distinguish one ouzo from another. [11] The result is a flavored alcoholic solution known as flavored ethyl alcohol , or more commonly as ouzo yeast — μαγιά ούζου in Greek—the term for "yeast" being used by Greeks metaphorically to denote that it serves as ...