Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Negroni (Franzia style)


















Negroni 

(makes 1 drink)

2 oz Gin
2 oz Campari
2 oz Sweet Vermouth
Splash of Ramazzotti (Medium-Style Amaro)
Splash of Cynar (Artichoke based liqueur) 
Orange peel

Pour all ingredients into a lowball glass and stir. 
I like them at room temperature, but if you prefer a colder version, simply pour the ingredients into a shaker and strain into your glass. 










My friends Paul & Michelle Franzia are seriously on the short list of my most favorite people to hang out with. They possess that beautifully rare combination of cultured, worldly and smart with healthy doses of humility and grace. But they maintain a few key ingredients that move them beyond the liking designation into the category of loving them. They are real, there is no pretense, and they are often wonderfully, inappropriately edgy, especially Paul!  When sitting and talking with them, I am never bored--and never censored.    

A few months ago when I conducted a blind Champagne tasting at a dinner party to start off the evening, Paul pulled me aside and tentatively asked if he could have a Negroni instead.  I lead him to my freezer where I have a shelf all for gin and vodka,  then to my bar with the other goodies. He hugged me in a way that said: "thank you for understanding." It was really funny.  So when I photographed their family a few weeks ago, Michelle had made an amazing meal and they asked if I wanted a drink. Naturally I asked for a Negroni. The way Paul makes them does not lack ceremony, but his production comes not out of pomp, but out of love.  And so here is to Paul & Michelle, who are in  Milan celebrating their 20-year Anniversary, I say to them "Cheers."  


Paul enjoying his Negroni

I also photographed Paul's brother's Family a couple of weeks ago, and I shot this of Brian's Negroni he brought on the shoot into the orchard. I love this! After the shoot with Jenn & Brian, Brian too made me a Negroni. I love my job. 










I personally discovered the Negroni in 2003, while on a work trip to Italy. We were at our hotel bar and let's just say, after a few Negronis in, there was some overly-spirited dancing.  Don't let the herbaceous goodness fool you, this is a one drink deal. 

The History:
While the drink's origins are unknown, the most widely reported account is that it was invented in FlorenceItaly in 1919, at Caffè Casoni, ex Caffè Giacosa, now called Caffè Cavalli. Count Camillo Negroni invented it by asking the bartender, Fosco Scarselli, to strengthen his favorite cocktail, the Americano, by adding gin rather than the normal soda water. The bartender also added an orange garnish rather than the typical lemon garnish of the Americano to signify that it was a different drink. After the success of the cocktail, the Negroni Family founded Negroni Distillerie in Treviso, Italy, and produced a ready-made version of the drink, sold as Antico Negroni 1919. One of the earliest reports of the drink came from Orson Welles in correspondence with the Coshocton Tribune while working in Rome on Cagliostro in 1947, where he described a new drink called the Negroni, "The bitters are excellent for your liver, the gin is bad for you. They balance each other." According to the Corsican newspaper Nice Matin Corse of 1980, Pascal Olivier Count de Negroni is among those who it is believed invented the drink.






Saturday, November 16, 2013

Bitter Bourbon Lemon



Bitter Bourbon Lemon (make 2 small drinks)

2 1/2  oz Bourbon
2-3 dashes Angostura bitters
1 oz Simple syrup
Juice of 2 lemons

Put in shaker with crushed ice, pour up in glass of choice with more crushed ice.

(for a sweeter version, add more simple syrup)

I cooked this up, or more accurately, poured this up for our FRIENDSGIVING later tonight. 

CHEERS!


Thursday, October 24, 2013

Mojo Indian Pale Ale

I have long been a fan of hoppy IPA, despite the high alcohol content, and in some instances, because of it.  If I am hankering for a beer, I will almost always order an IPA if it is on tap. They range, in my opinion, from metallic and uninteresting, to gloriously complex and varied.

The last time I was at BevMo they were having a small  Firestone tasting, in the back near the bathroom. Talk about happenstance, I was just talking about Firestone to my husband.  My friend Sherm, a chef at a Gatro-Pub in Philly, introduced me to Firestone beer on a trip she made out west. Tasting the Firestone made me fondly remember our time lounging and grilling in the backyard during Shermy's visit.  The tasting also got me in a beer state of mind.   Afterwards, I wheeled about the store, filling my basket with beers from several states, excited to try something new and get my malt and hops on.

Mojo's particular description just flat out slapped a smile on my face, knowing that some brew peeps in Boulder Colorado were at it, unknowingly, on my behalf, making interesting beer that allegedly would be a citrus dream.  And Mojo, my drinking friends, is indeed a citrus-lover's dream. Apparently, the Amarillo hops gives the beer its citrus character. I won't talk about how many fingers of head it has, because, well, I just don't think my mom would approve of such talk.

This beer is somehow summer and fall in a bottle, perfect for a fast-approaching California Halloween. It is creamy and floral and bitter and screams, charmingly, of grapefruit peel.   Several other flavors show up, like pine, that make this beer simultaneously interesting and easy drinking.

Delicious people. truly delicious.

Get this beer for Halloween, don't be scared.

American IPA
7.2%

 A little history, because that's just fun...

IPA was born out of necessity. When the British were colonizing India, the beers they sent down to their troops kept spoiling during the long sea voyage. With an extra healthy dose of hops and alcohol (40-65 IBU and 5% -7.5% ABV respectively), both having great preservative value, their problems were solved, and the world had another distinctive beer style.


CHEERS!

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

The French Pear

My friend Katina texted me from The Esquire Grill in Sacramento during her anniversary dinner. (I love this). She was raving about the French Pear she was drinking.  I put it in the mental cocktail queue for later, but decided to try it out at a girls weekend at the beach 2 weeks ago. The week before our trip, I went to 3 stores to find all of the ingredients, came home and went to work on perfecting this fresh fall goodness. I figured it would only take me a couple of attempts at most, to get the ratios right. WRONG. I ended up making the equivalent of about 10 drinks trying to get it right. There were overly sweet, overly tart, overly strong versions made.... and my husband hated every single one of them.  And, sadly,  I ended up unintentionally bombed on a Wednesday night.  Hobbies have risks I suppose.

I did make it at the beach and it was good, but not great.  Then, having the ingredients on hand,  I made it-- and tweaked the recipe-- once more at home after we got back from my birthday dinner  last week. AND... I am happy to announce that I am ready to make it for Katina and that we have a winner, worthy of blogging.

The French Pear 

(makes 2 martini sized drinks)

4 oz Grey Goose La Poire

4 oz St. Germain Elderflower Liqueur

2 oz Pear Nectar

Juice of 2 limes

2 oz Simple Syrup

shake in shaker with ice, serve up with a lime wheel



Thursday, August 22, 2013

Peach-Basil Summer Drinking


I have been doing a lot of interesting traveling and drinking this summer, but I was in locations where I couldn't seem to sign in to my blog, so here we go with some summer libations catch-up!

PEACH BASIL!

Peach-Basil Popsicles with New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc


My sister's friend Susie started a gourmet Popsicle business and she is wildly successful at her local farmer's market in Huntsville, Alabama. One day we stopped by her house to purchase some to try and viola, my love affair with this fruit & herb combination was born. I thought that we should booze up the Popsicle, naturally, so we dropped it in a glass of New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc.  These wines are notoriously grassy and I presumed that the herb notes in the Popsicle might compliment the grassy notes in the wine.  It worked beautifully. We even threw in a few large basil leaves in the glass later, and, well, it turned out to be summer goodness in a glass. We carefully nibbled the melting Popsicle, and as they melted we let them and then drank the peach-basil laced wine. It was balmy & hot out on my sister's back patio so this proved to be a much-needed summer treat for the overheated ladies that we were.

After I came home I experimented with making the Popsicles so here is the recipe:

Peach-Basil Popsicles
4 large peaches
juice of 1 lemon
1/4 cup fresh orange juice
1/4 - 1/2 cup sugar (depending on the sweetness of your peaches)
1/4 cup torn basil leaves

cut peaches in small chunks, put 1 cup of the peaches in a glass bowl & the rest in a food processor, add remaining ingredients to the food processor and blend until smooth. Add peach puree to the bowl of small peach chunks & stir.  spoon mixture into Popsicle molds or small Dixie cups. Freeze for one hour then add sticks or plastic handles from Popsicle molds, resume freezing.  When ready to serve, let sit out for a few minutes so the Popsicle will release more easily.













Lillet with Peaches and Basil 
a few days after we had this, I saw a recipe in Food & Wine magazine for peaches & basil with Lillet. (pronounced luh-LAY) I have long loved this all too often un-discovered darling of the French Aperitif category. Lillet is so interesting with notes of orange and has this hard to explain herbaceous elegance. It is one of the most beautiful things you can drink on a hot day over ice with just a fresh orange garnish.

So, I went for it. I do prefer Lillet in the aforementioned way, but it was fun to try this. Simply cut up fresh peaches, add a chiffonade of basil in a cold glass and pour chilled Lillet on top. I think I would like to try to transform this idea into a sorbet and maybe serve as a pallet cleanser at a summer dinner party in between courses. Just thinking out loud here....


























PEACHES & BASIL IN NZ SB
My mom & I wanted the flavor, but hadn't attempted the popsicles, so we just cut up peaches and basil and poured the wine on top. It was in fact complex and delicious, but it lacked the slushly element of the popsicle that had so beautifully melted into the wine, and we eventually ended up with basil leaves in our teeth.  Ah, the perils of experimentation.....   :) However, you could puree peaches, basil and lemon juice, chill, and then put a few tablespoons of the mixture in the bottom of a glass ?













CHEERS!

 my peach tree finally gave me big, luscious peaches this year, so thankful.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Lemon-Mint Watermelon Cooler




























At a summer party last month, my drink-savvy friend CJ brought this spiked watermelon.  It created quite the hen gaggle at the bar. Then we discovered that she was taking the run off from the watermelon and adding tonic and making a cocktail.  This was "limited" and the hen gaggle morphed more into a friendly cat fight over who was getting this alcoholic, summer in-in-a-glass goodness.  Post-party, I asked her to send me the recipe and she forwarded along the food and wine link. I couldn't make this fast enough. I modified the recipe, adding more liquid than called for and adding simple syrup to create more "run off" for cocktails.

1st Step:
Make the Lemon-Minted Vodka

in a 750ml bottle put a spring of fresh mint (I used peppermint but spearmint would work as well)
in a small bowl add 3/4 cup fresh squeezed lemon juice and 1/2 cup sugar, stir until it dissolves.
pour lemon sugar mixture into bottle over peppermint and fill the rest up with vodka. Let the bottle sit for 2 days like I did, or overnight or for several hours, depending on your time frame.

























2nd Step:
Spike the watermelon

Cut a medium-sized, seedless watermelon into chunks and put into a large bowl, preferably the flatter the better for more contact.  Pour vodka mixture over watermelon chunks and add the finely grated zest of 2 limes, 3/4 cup of citrus vodka, and 1 1/2 cups simple syrup. Add freshly chopped mint and mix into the watermelon. Let sit for several hours stirring occasionally.










Lemon-Mint Watermelon Cooler:
 (makes 1 drink)

4 oz (1/2 cup) Watermelon run off juice
4 oz Simply Limeaide (sold in the cold section)
juice of 1 lime
4 oz Tonic Water

put ice in glass or mason jar,
add ingredients in order, 
stir, add a few watermelon chunks

Skinny Version:
Substitute Simply Limeaide with Minute Maid lemonade 15 (also sold in cold section)
use diet tonic
 


CHEERS & HAPPY SUMMER!

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Buona Vita

Buona Vita


Buona Vita

makes 1 drink

1 oz Beefeater (or your favorite) Gin
1 oz Campari
1 oz St. Germain Elderflower liquer
5 oz Fresh White Grapefruit Juice

Put in cocktail shaker filled with ice and shake vigurously, this cocktail needs to be really cold

You could also serve it on the rocks


This drink comes from a menu that I "retrieved" at The Palace Hotel Bar in San Fransisco on one very memorable girl's night--"the after party."    This hotel, a Beaux Arts gem in historic downtown SF, was built in 1875 and is a stunning place to have a cocktail after dinner. The Buona Vita is a delicious drink and, really, who doesn't want to sip on a cocktail that means: "The Good Life" in Italian?

CHEERS!

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