Saturday, May 5, 2012

The Most Bitchin' Cocktail

Sometimes I dream about cocktails in my sleep. I have been known to wake up in the middle of the night with a recipe that I just dreamed about and write it down. Trying to convince myself that it's okay to head to the liquor cabinet at 3 o'clock in the morning usually ends up with me rolling over back into dreamland. That decision is probably due to reasoning of "How can anything in your dreams taste good in real life?"

Loretta Young
I have been on a mission lately to create a new cocktail. Being tired of Bourbon, Scotch or Tequila based drinks, I wanted something that forced me out of my comfort zone. I didn't want any of those ingredients to even be considered. I opened my liquor cabinet and took out everything that wasn't whiskey, vodka, gin, Tequila or rum. I turned on the iPod, cranked up some Audioslave and went to "work". The ingredients in front of me gave me no inspiration. I got distracted a little bit until a song came on called "Revelations". The lyrics got me thinking. I wanted my new found beverage to be bitter. But, I also wanted to sweetness to it, a sexiness, if you will. To me, there isn't much else out there sexier than sweet vermouth in the alcohol world. With pleasant fruit tones, herbal notes and light residual sugar, it reminds me of vintage movies and sweethearts like Loretta Young and Ava Gardner.

Ava Gardner
After tasting different bitters, amaros and digestifs in the liquor industry Fall trade shows, I decided to give a couple of those flavors a shot (no pun intended). After a few blunders, flops and failures. I finally found some flavors that actually worked well together.

Keeping with my vintage movie starlets theme, I wanted to give my little cocktail a name. It had all the sexiness of these ladies. But, it had a slight bitterness that shined right through...kind of like Brigitte Bardot.

The Brigitte Bardot
2 oz Dolin Sweet Vermouth
1 oz Aperol

Combine the two ingredients in a shaker with ice. Stir until well chilled. Strain in a rocks glass over fresh ice. Enjoy. This cocktail just keeps on getting better and better as the ice melts.

Sexy Brigitte
  
Bitter Brigitte


Monday, March 26, 2012

Barrel o' Cocktails - The Negroni

1910 Club Cocktails ad
Aging cocktails is not a new thing. It's been around for a long time, longer than I've been breathing the air on this planet, in fact. The oldest print ad I could find mentioning barrel-aged cocktails dates back to 1910. It was the G. F. Heublein & Brother line of Club Cocktails that brought the concept to mainstream. Though the Club Cocktail line seems to be fading off into the sunset, the craft of aging cocktails is experiencing a rebirth.


The process of curing the barrel is an easy one. Fill it up with hot water and let it sit for a few days until it stops leaking. Don't worry if it takes longer than three days. It's not a defective barrel. You can speed up the process by submerging the water filled barrel in your bathtub or deep-well sink over night. Have patience.

Now that you are ready to figure out which cocktail you'd like to age, you have to take a few things into consideration. The most important topics would be freshness and safety. You'll be aging the cocktail at room temperature. With that said, you wouldn't want to drink milk that has been left out of the fridge for six weeks, right? Good. Rule number 1 will be "No Dairy Products". Rule number two will be "No Fruit Juice". The same logic applies to fruit juice, too. The third rule of thumb is that you want to stay away from carbonated drinks. They will lose their carbonation and you'll end up with a funky mess. If you're hellbent on using soda, use a soda syrup. But, refer to rule #2 when choosing your syrup.

For our example, we will be making a Negroni in a five liter barrel. A Negroni cocktail has three components: equal parts Gin, Campari and Sweet Vermouth. For our five liter barrel, you can fit 2 750ml bottles of each component comfortably. You'll have to eyeball it if you want to fill it up to the tippity-top. Or, if you want to be anal retentive like myself, the exact amount you need would be 56.3 ounces of each ingredient. Each individual barrel will hold a slightly different amount. So, don't freak out if you're short or have some left over. Also, you'll need to hang on to the empty bottles. You will need them in later steps about six weeks from now. Wash them out, soak the labels off and set them aside.

When choosing your ingredients, keep in mind that the flavor will change after spending time in the belly of your new oak friend. In addition to extracting tannins from the wood and adding some caramel and vanilla notes to your cocktail, there are some other lovely little scientific events happening. There are reactions with the alcohol and congeners in the spirit through oxidation and extraction of chemicals from the oak. How they react depends on the size and age of the barrel, how many times it was used, percentage of alcohol in the cocktail, humidity, temperature and, most importantly, the time spent in your baby barrel. The only two factors that you really should care about here are the time spent in the barrel and the alcohol percentage of your drink. The higher the level of alcohol in the barrel, the more the spirits will interact with the chemical compounds of the wood. Thus resulting in more "flavor". The harshness of the spirits within will tend to mellow as well.

The age of the final product will be totally subjective to your taste. With the Negroni, let it age at least four weeks before you sample it for the first time. To be quite honest, you can do whatever the hell you want. It's your barrel. It's just in my experience that the flavors of your cocktail go through some funky phases that might give you second thoughts about continuing on this journey. Again, have patience.

The first time you use your barrel, you'll probably want to think about bottling your cocktail right around 6 weeks if you want to halt the aging process. You're going to need to use the original booze bottles for this step. To sanitize them, throw them in the dishwasher for a cycle. That should do the trick. When you pour the cocktail back into the bottles, you might want to strain it through a couple layers of cheese cloth just to make sure you catch some of those wood particles.

The final step is simple. The only tool you need is your phone. Call me up when you're ready to drink your delicious cocktail. I'll be over in 15 minutes.

The barrels and booze can be purchased at Saugatuck Grain & Grape in Westport, CT. We have 1 liter, 2 liter, 5 liter and 10 liter barrels in stock.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

The Importance of Ingredients

Nobody actually wants to drink a crappy cocktail. Nobody says "Let's head down to that bar that serves shitty cocktails because I'm tired of drinking things that taste good." Just like food, the ingredients and their flavor profiles are uber important in the recipe you are using. If you use lamb instead of beef in your burger patty, do you think it will taste different? Of course it does. But it's still red meat. If you use Bourbon in your Manhattan cocktail do you think it will taste different than Rye? Of course it will, even if they both are a whiskey. Scotch whisky tastes totally different than Bourbon whiskey. I know I spelled whisk(e)y differently. They do, too. Don't get me started.

My question is to everyone that posts recipes on the internet, "why be so broad in your ingredients list?" If you discovered the perfect combination of specific quantities of specific spirits for your cocktail and have decided to post it on the World Wide Intertubes, let everyone know what those ingredients actually are. Give me brand names.

At some point in time I bought a terrible cocktail book or maybe someone gave it to me. I don't remember. Flipping through the book, I realized that, although the stories were well written, the cocktail recipes seems to be have written by someone who doesn't drink alcohol. They flat-out suck. To quote the recipe:

Martini
The undisputed heavyweight champion of the world

3 ounces gin
1/4 ounce dry white vermouth
Lemon peel for garnish

Place the gin and vermouth in a shaker, along with plenty of cracked ice, and shake vigorously to combine. Strain into a well-chilled martini glass. Garnish with lemon twist, or olive if your guest prefers, and serve immediately.

Now, I can nit pick here. But that's not the purpose of this post. I am disappointed with the fact that they only listed "gin" and "vermouth". Out of all the spirits on a liquor store's shelves, one brand of gin couldn't be more different than the next brand. The same goes with vermouth. A lot of white vermouths are made with the grape varietals Clairette blanche, Piquepoul, Catarratto and Trebbiano. Without getting into a lot of technical detail, wine is made and then it is aged with herbs, roots and/or bark. It's kind of the same process as gin. There are so many different variables that can change the flavor profile from vermouth to vermouth and from gin to gin. So, it bothers me that an author of a cocktail book just writes "gin" and "vermouth" in a recipe without clarifying which brands they used.

Here's your homework. Try two different brands of premium gin, say Hendrick's versus Tanquerey 10 side by side neat. Don't do a shot of them. Just pour them in separate glasses and take a sip of both, one right after the other. Give enough time in between to actually taste the first gin. Pay attention to the herbal, floral and spice notes to the first one. Then do the same with the second. Wow! Totally different, right???? Would you agree that these two gins would make two different tasting martinis? The same goes with the vermouth. Did you notice in their recipe that they didn't list the olive, "if your guest prefers" in the ingredient list?

Was that a beef burger with Swiss cheese and a pickle or was it a lamb burger with smoked Gouda and Cole slaw? Eh, they're both burgers. Who gives a shit?

I hope you do.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Scotch Tasting @ SG&G

I can't believe that we're at the end of January already. Actually, I can. I can see the date on my iMac just about every time I look at the Dock. The point is that time flies when you're crazy busy. And, that's exactly what I've been.

In the craziness that retailers like to call O.N.D. (October, November, December), I decided to set up two spirits tastings. The first one was a Bourbon tasting the week of Thanksgiving. Since that was a huge success, I wanted to set one up for Scotch the week of Christmas and Chanukah.  Most of what I decided to put on the tasting list was Single Malt Scotch. I did have one blended Scotch, MacKinlay's Rare Old Highland Malt Scotch. This is a bottle of whisky that has a little bit of history behind it.

Prior to the doors opening on the night of the tasting, Lee Strader from Whyte & Mackay stopped by unannounced with a couple of gems to taste us on. He had some sample bottles of Dalmore 40 year old ($2800), Dalmore 1974 ($1170)  and Dalmore 1981 ($999). These prices are estimated as we don't have any of these in stock at the moment. Those bottles were amazing! The 40 year old was probably the best Scotch I have ever tasted in my entire life. It was an unexpected treat right before our crazy tasting.

As with our Bourbon event, Collyer Catering provided the food to cleanse our guests' palates. Scotch smoked salmon crostini, shrimp with Scotch BBQ sauce, beef skewers with fig and whisky sauce, smokey (using an Islay Scotch) scallop spring rolls Laphroiag 10 year were on the menu for nibbles.

Our friend, Paul, at Paul Lin Media made this little video for us:
Scotch Tasting video

The tasting list:
Dalmore 12 yr
Dalmore 15 yr
Dalmore Cigar Malt
Dalmore King Alexander III
Balvenie Double wood
Balvenie 17 yr Madeira Cask
Balvenie Single Barrel
Balvenie 21 yr Portwood
Glenfiddich 15 yr
Glenfiddich 18yr
Deanston 12 yr
Tobermory 10 yr
Bruichladdich Rocks
Bruichladdich Laddie Classic Edition_01

Bruichladdich The Organic
Bruichladdich 10 yr Laddie 10
Bruichladdich Port Charlotte PC7
Bruichladdich 12 yr
Ledaig 10 yr
Bunnahabhain 12 yr
BenRiach 15 yr Dark Rum Finish
BenRiach 17 yr Pedro Ximinez Sherry Finish
Glendronach 15 yr Oloroso Cask
Glendronach 12 yr PX & Oloroso Cask
Gordon & MacPhail Mortlach 15 yr
Gordon & MacPhail Bladnoch 16 yr
Gordon & MacPhail Glen Grant 21 yr
Gordon & MacPhail Glenrothes 30 yr
Benromach Traditional
Benromach Peat Smoke
Benromach 10 yr
Ardbeg 10 yr
MacKinlay's Rare Old Highland Malt (Shackleton's)



Homemade barrel-aged Rusty Nail (cocktail)
Alvear 1927 Solera Pedro Ximinez Sherry
Alvear Asuncion Oloroso Sherry

It was a fun tasting! Since December, I've been asked many times when the next tasting will be. As of right now, our next tasting will be in May for Cinco de Mayo. That's if I don't sneak in a Cordials-Liqueur-Aperitif-Vermouth tasting before then. We'll see.

Stay updated on our Facebook page.





Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Big Bad Bourbon Tasting

It's been a while since I've posted. I know. I apologize. During my leave of absence there were rumors that I ran away, fell into a vat of Bourbon, drowned, pickled, jarred and then sent off to sea off the coast of the Orkney Islands in a Sherry cask previously used for Glendronach 1995 Pedro Ximinez Sherry Puncheon Single Malt Scotch. I don't know HOW you guys think of these things!

Truth is, I've been working my ass off here at the shop. I've been searching high and low for new spirits to bring into SG&G as well as setting up fun spirits tastings. The first of three tastings was Tuesday Nov 22nd. It was dubbed the Big Bad Bourbon Tasting. We featured 24 Bourbons and whiskeys, a homemade barrel aged Bourbon "Manhattan", an Imperial Stout from Laughing Dog Brewery that has been aged in Bourbon barrels, pretzels with a homemade Bourbon honey-maple dijon mustard and homemade Bourbon balls that were amazing! Our friends at Collyer Catering also brought some delicious rosemary flank steak skewers with spiked Bourbon reduction sauce and grilled shrimp with a Bourbon brown sugar sauce.

I didn't get a chance to take any pictures of the actual event. It was just way too busy. I think we all had a good time that night. I'm definitely looking forward to next year's Bourbon Tasting. In the meantime, keep your ears open for our Holiday Scotch tasting.
Bourbon Manhattan


Low Gap White Wheat Whiskey + Basil Hayden's 8 yr 
Jefferson's representin'!

Willet Rye + Four Roses Yellow Label

Tuthilltown Rye + Baby Bourbon

St. George Breaking & Entering Bourbon,  Jim Beam Devil's Cut and Black

Buffalo Trace, Hirsch Small Batch Reserve Vintage Bourbon 17yr

Berkshire Bourbon & Corn Whiskey

Brekenridge Colorado Bourbon

Laughing Dog "The Dogfather" Imperial Stout

The "Cool Crowd" with Four Roses Small Batch on the left

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

9/11 CT United Memorial Ride

Last Sunday marked the 10th anniversary of a shocking and unforgettable moment in all our lives. The events that transpired on September 11, 2001 shook the world. In the weeks leading up to this, the 10th anniversary, my fiance and I were glued to the television, sucked in to articles on the internet and trapped within the headlines on newspapers' front pages as if we knew nothing about 9/11/01. I think we were lost in a trance of memories of where we were, what we were doing and who we were thinking of after we heard the first plane had slammed into the World Trade Center North Tower.

Lost in news reporters' frantic scramble to get the scoop first, we were filled with rumors that the White House was attacked, we were being attacked on both coasts, Air Force One was shot down and many more that proved to be incorrect mere moments after they aired. It was a fearful day for those of us that weren't actually experiencing the horror first hand in lower Manhattan.

Of the nearly 3000 victims of the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001, Connecticut was home to 152 of those innocent people. To honor those that lost their lives that tragic day, my fiancee and I decided to hop on our Harley-Davidson and join the CT United Ride, Connecticut's largest 9/11 tribute motorcycle ride. We arrived that morning at 10AM to register and get placement in the parade. There were a few words spoken over the loud speaker by several different people, bag pipes played Amazing Grace, a broadway singer belted out the National Anthem and we all did our best to hold back the tears. The energy was so intense that morning, everybody just couldn't wait to get on their bikes and ride. The rumble of tailpipes of over 3000 motorcycles were so powerful that they shook your soul. It was intense.

As we rolled out onto the street, we were cheered on by spectators waving flags and making peace signs with two fingers. This went on the entire 60 miles of the parade. Each fire department that we passed in each town had made a gateway with their ladder trucks, that bridged a massive American flag. With sirens blaring, people cheering, motorcycles rumbling and horns honking you couldn't help the tears welling up in your eyes. This isn't "a good thing" considering we were (a) on motorcycles, (b) only feet away from other motorcycles and (c) only feet away from other riders that had tears in their eyes as well. Coulda been messy. The sense of unity, togetherness and patriotism was all very apparent as we passed families huddled together on the front lawns, some waving flags, some holding signs heralding "God Bless America." The sense of patriotism was palpable, evidenced by the thousands of people came out to watch us ride by. A few people even came up close to the side of the road to give "high-fives" to the motorcycle riders.

I could write a book on just the emotions that overwhelmed us all that day but I know you get it. So, I'll start to wrap this up.

I"ll end by saying that not only were the spectators amazed at what they were seeing, WE were amazed at what we were seeing. Every rider we talked to said that they'd never seen anything like it. If you do the math; say the average motorcycle length that attended was 7 feet long, if you lined them up tire to tire, the length of the motorcade would be roughly 4 miles long. We were told to try to keep 10 - 20 feet in between each bike. That would mean the parade could have possibly stretched to 15 miles in length. That's just crazy. It was a sight to see. If you missed it or if you would like to ride in it next year, check out the CT United Ride. They also have a Facebook page.

These are some of the pictures we took before and after the ride. The map of the route we took as well as the directions are at the end of this post.




Our 2007 Harley-Davidson FLHX Street Glide


















 










  • Motorcade from Norden Park to Rte 136
  • to Rte 33 through Westport
  • to Wilton Rte 7
  • to Rte 107 Georgetown
  • to Rte 58N Redding
  • to Rte 302 Bethel
  • to Newtown Rte 25 through Monroe
  • to Main Street Trumbull
  • to Old Town Rd
  • to Park Ave in Fairfield
  • continuing into Bridgeport and straight down to Seaside Park with Bpt's Fire Rescue 5 leading the Motorcade.