Category Archives: 9/10

Cocktails I rate 9/10

Why the Obituario Cocktail Will Change Your Mind About Mezcal

I first tried an Obituario in early 2024 and honestly, on paper it looked like a novelty cocktail. A tequila and mezcal based drink that follows the Martini template? Simon Difford created this recipe to mark the Day of the Dead and I tried it without high hopes.

It instantly became a favourite of mine – I rated it 9+/10. I think this was also when I really started to get into cocktails with mezcal. I’d had mezcal in my home bar for ages but it hadn’t really been a go-to ingredient, it was there for the rare occasions when I found a recipe that called for it. After being blown away by this cocktail, I’ve spent the last two years actively seeking out drinks that include mezcal.

So if you’re somewhat dubious about the idea of a tequila and mezcal “martini”, don’t worry, I was too. But I really recommend you try this.

Also, fun fact: all tequila is mezcal but not all mezcal is tequila. For years I had that relationship back to front – because everyone knows tequila and mezcal was more of a fringe thing, I thought mezcal was a subset of tequila but it’s actually the other way around. Like all scotch is whisky, all cognac is brandy and all vodka is bullshit. All tequila is mezcal.

They’re both made from agave but tequila must be made from blue agave. Because mezcal can be made from a range of agave plants, you get a much wider range of flavours. Also, with tequila, the agave hearts used to produce it are steamed and with mezcal, the agave hearts are roasted. This is what gives mezcal it’s characteristic smoky flavour.

I’ll be honest, of the major spirit types, I know the least about agave spirits. I’m prepared for an enthusiast to say the ones I have aren’t great but I like them and also, they were on special which was a big part of my decision to buy them.

My tequila is 110 proof as opposed to the usual 80 proof so that’s good for kicking cocktails up a notch. My mezcal is one I’ve had before – Peleton de la Muerte which translates as Death Squad. Keen eyed viewers of my video will see there are what we usually call worms in my mezcal. They’re actually the larvae of moths that feed on the agave plant.

Purists will immediately say any of these spirits that have worms or scorpions in the bottle are rubbish and gimmicks made for tourists. This is usually right but in my defense, they come from a mezcal bottle I bought more than ten years ago and I just keep transferring them to new bottles. Which may not be the best decision I’ve ever made for my health.

One last note before the recipe – the name of the cocktail is the Obituario. This is inspired by the classic New Orleans cocktail the Obituary. In simple terms, this is a wet martini with a bit of absinthe added. So when we swap our the gin for tequila and mezcal, we rename it en Español.

To make the cocktail, in a mixing glass we add:

45ml blanco/silver tequila

15ml Mezcal

30ml dry vermouth

2.5ml absinthe

2 drops saline

If you’re a Martini lover like me you might expect this to be a much more aggressive taste but honestly, I find this to be really smooth. I’ll acknowledge if you’re a gin person agave spirits, particularly mezcal, are an acquired taste. But after trying the Obituario, tequila and mezcal moved from being fringe drinks to ingredients I actively seek out in cocktails.

Agave spirits are great to swap for other spirits, particularly vodka. If you don’t believe me, make a Cosmopolitan with tequila instead of vodka. I did an experiment with making Cosmo variant with different spirits and tequila was my favourite. Check it out.

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From The Elix Elite Cocktail Club – An Apple Pie Whisky Sour

The latest box from my cocktail kit subscription has arrived and I’ve never tasted to two key ingredients before. It’s called an Apple Pie Whiskey Sour and it’s a pretty simple variation on a standard whisky sour. The base is split between a whisky, which is called 36 South because the distillery is located right near the NSW/Victorian border, 36 degrees south of the equator, and Apple Pie Shine.

The ‘shine is made from a combination of fresh pressed apple juice blended with moonshine or new make spirit – that spirit that would become whisky if you aged it appropriately.

The tasting note for the whisky will be clear for Australians but maybe confusing for everyone else – ANZAC biscuits. That essentially means honey and toasted grain which are not surprising flavours for a whisky. The tasting notes for the Apple Pie Shine are no surprise – apples and baking spices AKA Apple Pie.

The kit also include simple syrup, dried apple garnishes and even some cinnamon sugar to sprinkle over the top.

To make the cocktail, grab a shaker and add:

30ml whisky

30ml apple pie shine

20ml sugar syrup

30ml lemon juice

Foamer (I use Wonderfoam but you can use egg white or aquafaba)

Garnish with fresh or dried apple slices and a dusting of cinnamon sugar.

The Whisky Sour was the first “serious” cocktail I really enjoyed so it’s nice to revisit it with an interesting variation. If you want to try this yourself and you don’t have the Apple Pie Shine (it’s unlikely you would) I’d recommend experimenting with apple liqueur rather than apple brandy. Combine it with cinnamon syrup rather than simple syrup to get that apple pie taste!

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The Old Fashioned Cocktail – Why it’s the King of Cocktails

The Old Fashioned Cocktail is widely regarded as the most important cocktail and for good reason. After more than 150 years of cocktail history, fashions and trends, the Old Fashioned is still front and centre in the cocktail world. It’s the epitome of perfect balance over complicated recipes and flamboyant presentation.

As my cocktail book will contain my favourite cocktail recipes, the Old Fashioned had to be front and centre. It’s my go-to cocktail a simple template of spirit, sugar bitters that gives you almost limitless scope for exploration and creativity. Even if someone was to wrongly assert that a “true” Old Fashioned has to be whisky, sugar and bitters there’s still more options than you could possibly explore in one lifetime.

Taking into account the thousands of whiskies available around the world, all the types of sugar and all the variations of bitters, you could make tens of millions of distinct whisky Old Fashioneds. Some would be only slightly different, others would be radically different.

This is what makes the Old Fashioned great to me: the template isn’t a restriction, it’s a guide to essentially limitless creativity. I’ve seen people do some quite flamboyant builds and presentation of Old Fashioned, usually involving fire or smoke. That’s fine but I’ll be keeping it relatively simple. A key question with an Old Fashioned is how are you going to add the sugar?

There are two main schools of thought with this, use sugar syrup which will integrate completely with the cocktail or start with a sugar cube or granulated sugar in the bottom of your glass. If you choose the latter method, the approach is to add a few dashes of bitters and maybe a dash of soda water and muddle this until the sugar has mostly liquefied into a paste. You add your ice, spirit and bitters to this and stir in the glass.

If you do this, the sugar won’t fully dissolve in the drink, the sweetness will vary as you work your way through the drink and there will likely still be some granulated sugar at the bottom of the drink. Some people prefer all of this – me not so much. I’m sugar syrup all the way, nit just to avoid the gritty aspect of sugar in my Old Fashioned but also because there are ways to infuse flavours into a sugar syrup that you can’t do with sugar alone.

Of course, there’s always Wisconsin style. Which is a… thing. I mean… I don’t like to be too harsh, but… why? I want you to know, I’m not angry. Just disappointed. Look, I hear the people in Wisconsin are lovely, friendly and outgoing. I just think they have bad judgement. Just because you can do something doesn’t mean you should do it. It isn’t even the muddled fruit that bothers me, I can see that being an interesting variation for an Old Fashioned.

But adding soda? FLAVOURED soda? That is no longer an Old Fashioned. I’m not saying it’s a bad drink but give it another name! A Brandy Lowball. That would be a good name. Anyway that’s a lost nomeclative battle so I won’t dwell on it.

There will a page in the book and a video dedicated to my favourite way to make sugar syrup, my spiced apple brown sugar syrup to be precise, but today is all about the Old Fashioned. I toyed with the idea of doing a complicated Old Fashioned riff but I’ve decided to go with a relatively simple whisky Old Fashioned.

But I’m gonna have a bit of fun.

The base whisky is going to be one of my favourites, Starward’s Nova single malt. This is 40% abv so I’m going to beef it up with a bit of the strongest whisky I have, a Texas single malt from Balcones that storms in at 66.7% abv. When it come to bitters, aromatic bitters are the frontrunner. Everyone knows Angostura but there are a range of aromatic bitters available from other makers. My top suggestions if you want to experiment with the bitters are orange, chocolate and walnut. And don’t be afraid to use a blend of any of these.

Enough talk, let’s make our Old Fashioned. In a mixing glass, I’m adding:

45ml Starward Nova single malt whisky

15ml Balcones cask strength single malt

10ml of my spice apple brown sugar syrup

2 dashes of aromatic bitters

And for a bit of fun, 1 dash of chocolate bitters

Add ice to the glass and stir for at least 20-25 seconds to get it nicely chilled and add a little dilution. Then strain that into a rocks glass over a big chunk of sexy clear ice. For a garnish I like to go with the classic: express some orange oil over the top, then wipe the rim with the peel and drop it in. Then add a maraschino cherry or two on a skewer.

And there we have the cocktail I’ll always come back to – the Old Fashioned. It tastes great, it’s easy to make and it opens a whole of possibilities for exploration.

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My Favourite Cocktail of 2023 (so far)

Even before I started making cocktail videos for YouTube, I made a lot of cocktails. Once I started my cocktail-focused YouTube channel I started making a LOT of cocktails. I can usually tell by looking at a cocktail recipe whether or not I’ll like it and as a rule, I don’t make cocktails unless I expect them to be at least 7 out of 10 on my rating scale. I have noticed that on average once or twice a year I discover a cocktail that’s new to me and is an instant favourite – a 9+ out of 10.

This year, my frontrunner for cocktail of the year is called L’Anniversaire (The Birthday). It was created in 2015 by Pier Schirru at Century Club in London, England and it caught my eye because it combines elements of an old fashioned and a Manhattan. The original recipe I found is as follows:

50 ml Cognac
10 ml Drambuie
5 ml Italian red bitter liqueur
20 ml Antica Formula or other well aged sweet vermouth
10 ml Raisin sugar syrup

If you watch the video I made, you’ll see I made a few substitutions:

The brandy I used isn’t technically a cognac – it’s Martell’s “Blue Swift” which is their VSOP cognac which is then finished in bourbon casks. Because of the strict laws surrounding what can be called cognac, the finishing means this can’t be marketed as cognac. But it’s really good.

Instead of Drambuie, I used a whisky and rum liqueur that I’d made myself. For the “red bitter liqueur” I used an Australian bitter citrus aperitivo from the Saint Felix Distillery. For the vermouth I used an Australian vermouth from Maidenii which had been barrel aged for 7 years. Instead of a raisin sugar syrup, I used a spiced apple brown sugar syup I’d made.

Something I didn’t realise when I was making the video is the name of the cocktail is probably taken from a Marc Chagall painting. So that’s nice.

Marc Chagall
Birthday (L’anniversaire), 1915

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