Serve with a short stir rod or Old-Fashioned spoon. Decorate with a maraschino cherry on a spear. Add a twist of lemon and drop peel in the glass. Fill glass to within about 3/8" of top with whisky and stir again. Add 2 large cubes of ice, cracked but not crushed. Stir with a spoon to blend the bitters with the syrup. OLD-FASHIONED DE LUXE Pour into each glass 1 to 2 teaspoonfuls simple syrup and add 1 to 3 dashes of Angostura. This can be achieved in a mixing glass and then strained over fresh ice in the glass but I prefer to stir directly in the serving glass, gradually adding more ice as I stir. The stirring action is essential to attaining the correct dilution. However, correct society, good manners and leading bartenders dictate that an Old-Fashioned should be stirred, and stirred, and stirred some more. Stir in the glass or in a mixing glassīack in 1862, Jerry Thomas called for a Whiskey Cocktail to be shaken and if you're a lover of Fruit Salads (see above) then you may as well shake your Old-Fashioned. As Crosby Gaige wrote in 1944, "Serious-minded persons omit fruit salad from Old-Fashioneds." However, an Old-Fashioned in not complete without an orange zest twist with some also liking an additional lemon zest twist, but that would seem to be heading back to fruit salad territory.Ĥ. The practise probably originated during Prohibition as a means of disguising rough spirits and thankfully never caught on in England. orange and lemon segments, and often a maraschino cherry or two, are regularly muddled into Old-Fashioned cocktails. Embury writes in his seminal The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks, "You can make perfect Old-Fashionds only using sugar syrup" adding "sugar syrup makes a smoother, better drink." Use a 2:1 (70 brix) sugar sugar, ideally made from unrefined Demerara or muscovado sugar, or a combination of this and white caster sugar. All that time and effort to make syrup when pre-made sugar syrup could instead be simply poured in. It's easier (and better) to make Old-Fashioneds with sugar syrup but traditionalists like to use sugar cubes placed in the base of the glass, dampened with aromatic bitters, and usually a splash of water, and is then pulverised and stirred into a syrup with a muddler. (When you shake a bottle of straight rye it should hold a foam for a good few seconds or I consider it too weak for my Old-fashioneds.) and 1 shot straight rye whiskey at 50% alc./vol. In my Old-Fashioned, I like to use a combination of 1½ shot bourbon at 45% alc./vol. Bourbon makes a mellow, slightly sweeter drink, while rye adds more spice and kick.īe aware of the alcoholic strength of your whiskey. Consequently, some traditionalists insist an Old-Fashioned should be made with rye, but bourbon is equally correct and the choice of whiskey should be entirely up to the personal taste of the drinker. In those days that "whiskey" would probably have been rye whiskey with bourbon developing in the decades after prohibition. Jerry Thomas inclusion of the Whiskey Cocktail in his 1862 The Bar-Tender's Guide, the world's first cocktail book, calls for a "wine-glass of whiskey". This has resulted in six different methods/ingredients being used: The Old-Fashioned is just that, a very old and established cocktail, but over many decades this vintage classic has changed name (it was originally the Whisky Cocktail) and has evolved with both the methods deployed to make it and its ingredients influenced by bartending fashions. Whether you're savoring the peaty richness of scotch or enjoying the sweet spiciness of bourbon, both are perfect for sipping and sharing with good company.Traditionally made with bourbon or rye whiskey, lightly sweetened with sugar and aromatised with bitters this most classic of vintage cocktails is served over ice in a heavy bottomed tumbler named after the drink and garnished with an orange zest twist. Bourbon follows the same general aging process but must spend at least two years in new, charred oak casks, which gives it a signature caramel and vanilla taste. Scotch is aged for a minimum of three years, and often much longer, in oak casks that have been previously used for spirits such as sherry, bourbon, or port. The two spirits also differ in their aging period. Conversely, the latter is often associated with America's frontier spirit - boldly flavored, with a smoother, sweeter taste and slightly spicy bite. The former is often viewed as the more mature option, with an often (but not always) gentle, peaty character that can only be produced from the Scottish highlands. Scotch is a barely-based beverage made exclusively in Scotland, while bourbon is strictly an American creation with a mash bill of at least 51% corn. Both spirits are aged in oak barrels and have a rich, earthy flavor but diverge in their production process.
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