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Citrus fans will love this drink made with fresh blood orange juice, fresh lime juice, and orange bitters. It's a fun twist on a classic gin and tonic! Get the Blood Orange Gin and Tonic recipe at ...
The original Beefeater recipe book dated 1895, specifies that nine botanicals are essential (juniper, angelica root, angelica seeds, coriander seeds, liquorice, almonds, orris root, seville oranges and lemon peel) to create the full-bodied and robust flavour so distinct in this gin.
While the cocktail is widely perceived to be a more modern creation, there is a recipe for a "Cosmopolitan Daisy" which appears in Pioneers of Mixing at Elite Bars 1903–1933, published in 1934: Jigger of Gordon's Gin (1 + 1 ⁄ 2 US fl oz [4.4 cl] Beefeater) 2 dash Cointreau (1 ⁄ 2 US fl oz [1.5 cl] Cointreau)
A lemon-lime soda cocktail is a cocktail made with lemon-lime soda such as Sprite. 7 and 7 (whisky and 7 Up) Citrus splash (vodka, Sprite, and grapefruit juice) [65] Corbins Riptide crash (blueberry vodka, Gatorade Frost Riptide Rush, Sprite) [66] Mediterranean sunset (vodka, blood orange liqueur, Sprite, grenadine) [65]
Made with gin, orange juice, grenadine and absinthe. Created in the 1920s by Harry MacElhone, owner of Harry's New York Bar in Paris, France. [17] Negroni An Italian cocktail made with one part gin, one part vermouth rosso (red, semi-sweet), and one part Campari, garnished with orange peel. [18] Old fashioned
But the earliest recipes for a Gibson – including the first known recipe published in 1908 by Sir David Austin – are differentiated more by how they treat the addition of bitters. [1] William Boothby's 1908 Gibson recipe. Other pre-Prohibition recipes all omit bitters and none of them garnish with an onion. Some garnish with citrus twists.
A screwdriver with one part of sloe gin, one part of Southern Comfort, one part Galliano, one part tequila, and filled with orange juice is a "sloe comfortable screw up against the wall Mexican style". [14] A "virgin screwdriver" is a mocktail (non-alcoholic variation), usually made with orange juice and tonic water. [15] [16] [17]
A gin and tonic is a highball cocktail made with gin and tonic water poured over a large amount of ice. [1] The ratio of gin to tonic varies according to taste, strength of the gin, other drink mixers being added, etc., with most recipes calling for a ratio between 1:1 and 1:3.