Saturday, June 10, 2017

Tweaking An Old Favorite

Tweaking An Old Favorite


Welcome to the June edition of my weekly blog that is updated monthly. 


[This space is reserved for lame excuses and dubious promises about posting more regularly going forward, to be drafted just as soon as I get around to it.]


The good news is, as usual, my lack of posting does not correlate to a lack of drinking. In fact, over the last few weeks, I spent a lot of time tracking down ingredients and experimenting with cocktails that no reasonable person would drink on a regular basis (specifically due to the difficulty and expense of sourcing the ingredients). Thus, this week's (month's?) blog post will be the flip side of last time, in which I sort of advocated limiting ingredients in your bar (or, at least, seeking ways to use the ingredients you already have before seeking out new ones). 

This week's cocktail is definitely not the result of such silliness. Instead, it is the direct result of 3-4 weeks of indulging whims and experimenting with fun ingredients I will never use with any regularity. Do you recall the booze devil I mentioned last time? The one constantly tempting me to buy odd ingredients and fine spirits of very limited utility? Well, he won out over the past month, in spades. I've been using ingredients I dislike outside the context of cocktails, such as celery and tea; I've purchased even more bottles of incredibly bitter Italian liqueurs, such as Fernet-Branca, which booze devil specifically recommended in May; I've even combined way too many habanero peppers with ginger and beer in an attempt to create my own cocktail (it wasn't very good). 

All of that exploration led to some really good cocktails, and one of the big stars was a complicated twist on one of my favorites, the Caipirinha cocktail. I've already explained how much I love the simplicity and jungle funk of the classic Caipirinha, one of the best 3-ingredient cocktails I know, but I recently found a recipe for a middle-eastern take on the drink and decided I would invest the time necessary to try it out. Not a small investment, either, since this was easily the most time-consuming libation I've ever mixed up. From finding the necessary ingredients to preparing all of the components for mixing, this cocktail was a multi-day endeavor.   

The Drink:  Caspian Caipirinha

Ingredients Used:
  • Fenugreek-infused Cachaça - 2 oz
  • 3 Lime Wedges
  • Dried Persian Lime Cordial - 0.5 oz
  • Gilka Kümmel - splash
Recipe Courtesy of:   Payman Bahmani & Jeff Bell, Winter 2013 (PDT Cocktails Companion App)

So, okay. For starters, just look at that ingredient list. If you're feeling adventurous, that is exactly the kind of ingredient list you want to see, right? I mean, first off, there's Cachaça, which is not the most common base spirit for cocktails. And then it's infused? With fenugreek? Aside from being enchanted by the idea of middle-eastern flavors in a cocktail, I instantly knew I had to try "Fenugreek-infused Cachaça" -- even though I had no idea what fenugreek was. (I was later reminded by my wife that she took fenugreek as a supplement while breastfeeding, which made her smell like maple syrup. Maybe that's too much information, but trust me--a wife who smells like a delicious waffle is just as awesome as it sounds.)

Having an opportunity to infuse alcohol for the first time was a big draw, of course, but the rest of the ingredient list was equally compelling. Sure, lime wedges are old hat, but how about Persian limes? They sounded exotic and delicious, and the word "cordial" has a nice, fancy ring to it. And Kümmel? What on Earth is Kümmel??

The Prep:



Fenugreek was first up on the shopping list, and it wasn't very difficult to find. Wikipedia says dried fenugreek leaves are common in southern Asian and Indian cuisines, and I had no trouble locating a bag of the stuff at a Mediterranean market near my office. I also swung by the liquor store and picked up an extra bottle of Cachaça, taking this opportunity to try out a new-to-me brand (Leblon), which I did not like quite as much as Novo Fogo. 


Infusing the Cachaça with the fenugreek was a simple, if time-consuming, process, involving steeping the leaves in the alcohol for 15 minutes and then straining the liquid back into the bottle. It took multiple passes through a coffee filter to remove all of the small particles, and the end result was a murky, piney green bottle of Cachaça, as well as a kitchen that smelled a lot like waffles.


 
The Persian limes were also available in the Mediterranean market, but they were not quite as easy to find. No one knew what I was talking about when I asked for them, so it took about a half hour of scouring the shelves to find a bag of whole limes. This was partly due to the fact that I had a very inaccurate picture in my head while searching. Remember when I said Persian limes sounded exotic and delicious? Well... exotic, maybe, but they were certainly not what I envisioned:



A bit on the drier, browner, and hard-as-a-rock side, really. Though I will admit they smell pretty nice. To make the lime cordial, I needed to pulverize these things into powder, add a bunch of sugar, and boil with water. It was basically a rich simple syrup (2 parts sugar : 1 part water), with 6 tbsp of lime powder added. Unfortunately, pulverizing dried, whole limes is more difficult than it sounds. My first thought was to drop them in our cuisinart and let 'er rip:


That picture is after "letting 'er rip," btw. Turns out that, aside from making a horrible squealing sound, smoking a tiny bit, and emitting a smell like burned citrus, cuisinarts are not very effective at making lime powder. So, discouraged but not defeated, I decided to break out the big guns:


I don't know that my Ninja blender is any more powerful than a cuisinart, but it has more blades (like any good ninja), and I also took the added precaution of hand-splitting each of the limes before adding them to the blender. That gave me the opportunity to take a look inside, which did not really improve my opinion regarding the visual appeal of Persian limes. Have you ever looked at something people eat and wondered how it caught on as food in the first place? I think the desiccated corpses of tiny limes fit in that category rather well. Luckily, though, chopping them up and employing industrial ninjutsu produced a damn fine Persian lime powder, which improves their looks.


Boiling the powder for a while with the aforementioned quantities of sugar and water resulted in a nice, thick syrup. About 2.5 cups of Dried Persian Lime Cordial. Of which I needed half an ounce. The PDT app tends to recommend quantities as if you are running a commercial bar, which is fine for most ingredients, but I'm finding precious few uses for this one. Lime Cordial, sweet and translucent, pale green, is called for in a number of cocktails, but Persian Lime Cordial is not high in demand. Thick, brown, and viscous, it has a home in the Caspian Caipirinha, but nowhere else that I've found.

After the hours spent preparing ingredients for this cocktail, the rest of the prep was ridiculously straightforward. Like the original Caipirinha, the lime wedges are muddled in the bottom of a cocktail shaker (this time with the Persian Lime Cordial instead of demerara sugar), then the fenugreek-infused Cachaça is added and the whole thing is shaken with ice. 

What about the Kümmel, you ask? Well, it turns out Kümmel is a caraway-based liqueur, sweet and mostly colorless, also tasting a bit like cumin and fennel. For the Caspian Caipirinha, it plays a very modest support role: after shaking the cocktail mixture but before pouring, the cocktail glass (a standard rocks glass) should be rinsed with the Kümmel. Rinsing a glass with alcohol seems kind of like a waste of time, since very little of the alcohol makes it into the drink, but cocktails using this technique almost always employ a very distinctive spirit for the rinse. Absinthe is a popular rinsing agent for a lot of drinks, and the Kümmel performs similarly in this role--the hint of caraway and cumin is strong enough to be noticed, but limited enough to avoid overpowering the rest of the drink. 

With the glass prepped, the shaken cocktail is poured in, ice and all, and served without a garnish.

The Verdict:

It is probably important to note that, after so much effort preparing this cocktail, I was kind of predisposed to like it. As in, even if I didn't like it, I sort of felt like I needed to pretend that I did. Otherwise, what a colossal waste of time.

Fortunately, I didn't really have to pretend. I will admit it wasn't love at first sip, and I think my first comment to my wife was, "You're so not going to like this one," but I began to enjoy it more and more with each taste. The caraway, fenugreek, and aggressively dark lime notes give it a powerful, herbal and savory edge, but it is also distinctly appealing. I don't know how authentically middle-eastern it is, but it is very reminiscent of the types of flavors I think of when I think of Indian or Mediterranean food. 

Even better news: my wife actually liked it a lot. 

Is it better than a classic Caipirinha? Not in my book, but that shouldn't detract from this cocktail on its own merits. Since we have more Persian Lime Cordial than we know what to do with, the Caspian Caipirinha continues to make occasional appearances on the weekend, and I like it a little bit more each time. It is unique, interesting, and delicious in its own way. I'm running a bit low on fenugreek Cachaça at this point, but I can see myself restocking everything as needed to facilitate this cocktail. It's a keeper.


Rating:  

4 out of 5


Monday, May 1, 2017

Dusty Backbar?


I've mentioned in the past I have a collector's mentality. I like to collect things. There generally isn't anything wrong with that, but it is an aspect of my personality I try to keep in check. Aside from cocktails, one of my favorite hobbies is board gaming. I fell into that hobby pretty much by accident in the late 1990s, and now my board game collection requires so much shelf space that IKEA sends me Christmas cards. Recently, I've begun to realize I may be hitting a tipping point, where amassing more stuff for that hobby will require either (a) a bigger house, or (b) some judicious pruning. If something new comes in, something old needs to go. That sort of thing.

I'm also realizing it's possible reach a tipping point with cocktails. Most people just don't have bars big enough to house endless bottles of alcohol, and I'm no exception. Also, it just isn't realistic to have every type of alcohol on hand at all times--even for a large, commercial bar. 

In one of my earlier posts, I recommended MixologyTech's "PDT" iOS app, which is a great, handheld database of 400 cocktail recipes from the Please Don't Tell speakeasy in New York City. The app has some really cool features that play havoc with my need to collect all things. In addition to an inventory feature to track the contents of your home bar, it also matches your inventory to the included recipes and tells you (1) how many cocktails you can currently make, (2) how many cocktails you could make if you purchased just one or two more ingredients, and (3) what bottle you should buy next to have the greatest impact on (1) and (2). Super helpful and, for a person like me, also super evil. Having apps like these is like having a little, boozed-up devil sitting on my shoulder, whispering into my ear.

"You really need to buy a bottle of Gürztraminer. Otherwise, you will never know what the 'Idle Hands' cocktail tastes like."


"You can only make 97 of the 400 cocktails I could show you. If you buy a bottle of Fernet-Branca, you could make a smooth 100."


"100 is only 25% of my known cocktails." 


"..." 


"Oh. And you need more board games..." 


One would think it is insanity to buy a new bottle of liquor for just one cocktail, but I have done it. Multiple times. I recently visited a liquor store with a friend, and I walked out with a bottle of Cynar (an Italian digestif I wanted to use in an "Heirloom" cocktail, though I am still trying to source a bottle of Aftel Anise Hyssop Essence). He mocked me a bit and suggested I was the only person to buy a bottle of Cynar from that store in years, which may have been accurate (it was a pretty dusty bottle). But, I just smiled back and assured him this bottle was important. And maybe it will be, someday. For now, it sits unopened at the back of my bar, getting dustier.

This kind of behavior has resulted in a liquor cabinet I am proud of, but also a growing number of bottles accumulating a similar amount of dust. They will last, so that's not a problem, but I still feel the need to occasionally seek out new cocktails to give the MVPs of my bar a little break and shine some light on the less-celebrated players. That is the genesis of this week's cocktail:

The Drink:  South Slope

Ingredients Used:
  • Plymouth Gin - 0.75 oz
  • Aperol - 0.75 oz
  • Lillet Blanc - 0.75 oz
  • Pierre Ferrand Ancient Formula Orange Curaçao - 0.5 oz
  • Lemon Juice - 0.5 oz
Recipe Courtesy of:   Michael Madrusan, Summer 2007 (PDT Cocktails Companion App)

This cocktail, conceived by Michael Madrusan (founder of PDT and Milk and Honey in New York) while living in Brooklyn, looked like a great way to explore two little-used ingredients in my bar--Aperol and Lillet Blanc.

Of the two, Lillet Blanc gets a lot more use in my house. But "a lot more use" than Aperol is still not very much use. A fortified wine similar to vermouth but much sweeter and with more pronounced flavor, it is an ingredient in one of my favorite cocktails: the "Corpse Reviver No. 2." If you've heard of Lillet, you're probably a James Bond fan. In the book Casino Royale, he ordered a modified martini that contained gin, vodka, and Lillet, and the resulting cocktail (dubbed a "Vesper" after his lover, Vesper Lynd) experienced a surge in popularity after the film version of Casino Royale was released in 2006. Like vermouth, Lillet is available in both white (blanc) and red (rouge) varieties, and this week's cocktail uses the white version.

Any time I'm able to use Lillet in a cocktail, I am happy to do so. I like what it brings to cocktails, but I'm even more motivated by the fact that it expires much more quickly than distilled spirits. It is fortified, but it is still wine, and it needs to be used relatively quickly after opening. Without a doubt, sherries and wines are the most annoying bottles to try to keep stocked in a home bar. 
This is a group of bottles that just screams "TASTY."
I've had a tougher time getting much use out of Aperol. Bright orange and appealing in color, it is part of a family of Italian apéritifs (which is French--I don't know why it isn't an "aperitivo," if it's Italian) that are quite bitter and very strong in character. Designed to stimulate the appetite before a meal, apéritifs are low in alcohol content, but they are still used in small amounts in cocktails due to their intense flavor. Campari is another, more bitter, example of an Italian apéritif, and it is called for much more often than Aperol, in my experience. 

Nonetheless, I picked up a bottle of Aperol quite some time ago for a particular cocktail, and I hadn't used it since, so I was very happy to use it in something new. 


The Prep:

No real trick to mixing this one. Simply pour each of the ingredients into a cocktail shaker, add ice, then shake it up. Alternatively, given the very small amount of lemon juice, I don't think anyone would blink if you preferred to stir your South Slope instead of shaking it. I don't recall if I've mentioned it before, but the accepted rule of thumb is that clear drinks should be stirred, and opaque drinks (especially those with fruit juices) should be shaken. Stirring mainly keeps the mixture from getting frothy, which is less desired in clear cocktails. 

Let's be honest, though. No one really cares that much, probably, unless your cocktail is one that absolutely needs shaking (something with egg white or lots of fruit juice, for example). Even James Bond is out there shaking the crap out of clear martinis, though we should acknowledge that, if you actually have a license to kill people, bartenders probably don't give you any lip when you offend their sensibilities. 

After a good shaking, pour the contents into a chilled coupe and garnish with a lemon twist. 
A little bit bubbly on top, because it is shaken, not stirred. <cue theme song>
The Verdict:

First off, I just have to say I love the color of this cocktail. With summer on the way, the bright orange screams warm weather and begs you to find out what it tastes like. 

For fun, compare to one of my failed cocktails from February, the "Purple" Rain:


Hideous.
So, the good news is I can achieve colorful cocktails when necessary. 

As for taste, the South Slope is a great little drink. With substantial amounts of citrus in the ingredient list (including Aperol, which is flavored with orange peels), it is probably no surprise that the primary takeaway from this drink is its orange flavor. I used Plymouth Gin because it is a great, dry gin with orange notes right up front, and it married very will with the curaçao, lemon, and bitter Aperol. Behind the blossoming orange, the juniper from the gin adds just the right amount of floral to the mix, and the finish is pretty nice. 

If I had one complaint, it would be that the curaçao was a little too heavy. With all of the orange going on, I wanted the gin to be a little more pronounced. I will be tempted to reduce the curaçao to a 1/4 oz next time, though that would probably also require the Aperol to be reduced to keep its bitterness in check. Ultimately, I'm just nitpicking here. I liked the drink, and it was the first cocktail my wife enjoyed that involved a bitter aperitif.  

By the way, I am introducing a rating scale with this blog post. I tend to enjoy most of the cocktails I try, so I think it may be difficult for readers to tell which cocktails really knock my socks off. It's pretty clear when I don't like something, but I fear the good-to-great cocktails may just get lost in a jumble if I don't have an at-a-glance rating system. While such ratings may be of limited utility in many ways, I think they capture the intangibles I am not likely to touch on in the text. 

That said, I give the South Slope a solid...

Rating:  

3.5 out of 5