Drinks | Saveur Eat the world. Mon, 07 Aug 2023 10:12:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://www.saveur.com/uploads/2021/06/22/cropped-Saveur_FAV_CRM-1.png?auto=webp&width=32&height=32 Drinks | Saveur 32 32 Paloma https://www.saveur.com/article/recipes/paloma-cocktail-recipe/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:43:25 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-recipes-paloma-cocktail-recipe/
Paloma
Photography by Julia Gartland; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

Our take on this iconic Mexican cocktail swaps out the sugary soda for fresh lime and grapefruit juice for an extra-refreshing riff bursting with citrus flavor.

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Paloma
Photography by Julia Gartland; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

One of Mexico’s many widely known and beloved tequila drinks, the Paloma cocktail, is a refreshing summertime highball featuring lime juice and grapefruit. Grapefruit-flavored sodas like Fresca or Squirt are common ingredients, but this version swaps in fresh juice and seltzer for a more balanced sweetness and maximum citrus flavor. For this Paloma recipe, we prefer an unoaked tequila blanco (also known as silver tequila), as opposed to tequila reposado or tequila añejo, which may be barrel-aged between two months and three years. The blanco’s clean taste and herbaceous quality make a perfect base for this drink’s sweet and sunny flavors.

Yield: 1
Time: 3 minutes
  • 2 oz. tequila blanco
  • 2 tsp. fresh lime juice
  • Pinch fine salt
  • 3 oz. fresh grapefruit juice
  • 3 oz. seltzer
  • Lime slices, for garnish

Instructions

  1. To a highball or Collins glass, add the tequila, lime juice, and salt. Fill the glass with ice, add the grapefruit juice and seltzer, stir gently, garnish with lime slices, and serve.

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Bermuda Hundred https://www.saveur.com/gin-pineapple-campari-cocktail-recipe/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:34:23 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/gin-pineapple-campari-cocktail-recipe/
Bermuda Hundred Cocktail
Photography by Linda Xiao; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

The lovechild of a mai tai and a Negroni, this fruity orgeat and Campari cocktail is a sweet and summery thirst-quencher.

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Bermuda Hundred Cocktail
Photography by Linda Xiao; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

The lovechild of a mai tai and a Negroni, this fruity orgeat and Campari cocktail is a sweet and summery thirst-quencher.

Featured in:21 Cocktails for our 21st Birthday

Yield: 1
Time: 5 minutes
  • 1½ oz. gin
  • 1½ oz. pineapple juice
  • 3⁄4 oz. Campari
  • 1⁄2 oz. fresh lime juice
  • 1⁄2 oz. orgeat
  • 1 brandied cherry

Instructions

  1. Fill a rocks glass with ice. To a cocktail shaker, add the gin, pineapple juice, Campari, lime juice, orgeat, and enough ice cubes to fill the shaker about halfway. Shake well, strain into the glass, garnish with the cherry, and serve immediately.

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Strawberry-Lillet Crush https://www.saveur.com/article/recipes/strawberry-lillet-crush/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:50:28 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-recipes-strawberry-lillet-crush/
Strawberry-Lillet Crush
Photography by Linda Xiao; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

This refreshing gin cocktail with muddled berries and mint is the ultimate summertime sip.

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Strawberry-Lillet Crush
Photography by Linda Xiao; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

Muddled strawberries, fresh mint, and Lillet star in this refreshing, lightly sweet cocktail recipe, which former digital producer Michellina Jones considers the perfect drink for a muggy late summer day. She prefers using a navy strength gin (which has a minimum of 57.1% ABV) with a balanced, restrained flavor profile that won’t overwhelm the other ingredients, while ensuring the boozy flavor doesn’t get lost. Lillet refers to Bordeaux wine that’s been infused with aromatics and spices; the Blanc variety of the aperitif offers citrusy, floral notes with a dry finish. Here, the quintessential summer beverage, with its delicate sweetness, plays well with the gin and berries. Make your own syrup at home with our simple syrup recipe

Yield: 1
Time: 5 minutes
  • 6 mint leaves
  • 3 strawberries, hulled, plus more for garnish
  • ½ oz. simple syrup
  • 2 oz. any navy strength gin, such as Plymouth
  • 1 oz. Lillet Blanc
  • Crushed ice, for serving

Instructions

  1. In a cocktail shaker, lightly muddle the mint, strawberries, and simple syrup.
  2. Fill a glass with crushed ice. To the shaker, add the gin, Lillet Blanc, and enough ice cubes to fill it about halfway. Shake well, strain into the glass, garnish with strawberries, and serve immediately.

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Blueberry Pie Milkshake https://www.saveur.com/article/recipes/blueberry-pie-milkshake/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:31:35 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-recipes-blueberry-pie-milkshake/
Shake Recipe with Cherry
Photography by Murray Hall; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

This creamy shake with buttery pie crust crumbles and ribbons of fruit filling is the ultimate cooling summer treat.

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Shake Recipe with Cherry
Photography by Murray Hall; Food Styling by Jessie YuChen

There’s nothing better than blueberry pie a la mode—except, perhaps, for the blueberry pie milk shake at Hamburg Inn No. 2 in Iowa City, Iowa. It’s exactly what it sounds like: A scoop of vanilla ice cream and a hefty slice of pie go into the blender together, and out comes the ultimate dessert, a creamy shake with buttery crumbles of pie crust and ribbons of gorgeous fruit filling throughout.

This recipe first appeared in the 2013 edition of the  SAVEUR 100.

Yield: makes 1 shake
  • One 3 in.-slice blueberry pie
  • 10 oz. vanilla ice cream, softened
  • Whipped cream, for serving
  • Maraschino cherry, for serving

Instructions

  1. To a blender, add the pie and ice cream and blend until smooth. Pour into a tall glass. Garnish with whipped cream and a maraschino cherry and serve immediately.

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The Case for Grilling Your Cocktails https://www.saveur.com/grilled-cocktails/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:35:05 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/grilled-cocktails/
Grilled Fruit For Cocktails
Eric Medsker

While you’re cooking dinner over an open flame, throw some fresh produce on the fire to lend your drinks an extra dose of smoky summer flavor.

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Grilled Fruit For Cocktails
Eric Medsker

There are few things more American than grilling. And as it happens, there are few inventions more American (and ingenious) than the cocktail. So it’s only fitting that we, as headstrong and curious citizens of this great country, would think to marry the two. When juiced or muddled into the base of a drink, grilled fruits and vegetables weave in a layer of rich, smoky, summery flavor, not unlike the comforting scent of an early evening campfire.

How does one grill a cocktail, you ask? Situate anything and everything that isn’t booze, right onto the grill: whole citrus halves, sweet pineapple rounds, slices of serrano pepper, grapefruit wedges, and fat slices of stone fruit. And keep these tips in mind while grilling:

  • Make sure your grill is hot, but the coals are lightly layered and not flaming, so ingredients don’t become too charred. If using a gas grill, turn the burners down to low. Check ingredients every 30 seconds or so, until they have distinct grill marks but are not ashy.
  • Use long tongs and a heavy-duty grill glove to pick up and take off ingredients, which are smaller and trickier to handle than meat or fish.
  • Instead of muddling fruit directly into a drink, you can use it to infuse simple syrups for a more subtle flavor.
  • Using a mini-smoke box like this one from Weber, you can smoke herbs, berries, and even a cocktail glass by setting the woodchip-filled box atop your grill and letting your ingredients hang out while you flip burgers.

Grilled Pineapple Margarita

Grilled Pineapple Margarita
Photography by Eric Medsker

The margarita is essential to America’s canon of summertime drinks, and adding a grilled element makes it that much more festive. Burnished pineapple adds a rich layer of fruitiness while mezcal lends a veil of smoke and spice. Get the recipe >

Seared Apricot-Ginger Cooler

Seared Apricot Ginger Cooler
Photography by Eric Medsker

Unlike other stone fruit, apricots stay resilient when ripe and stand up to a quick sear on the grill with aplomb. Once the flesh warms through and its juices bake a bit, the apricot takes on deeper flavors that pair nicely with a spicy bourbon or rye and an equally spicy ginger beer. Get the recipe >

Smoked Lemon-Lime-Ade

Smoked Lemon-Lime-Ade
Eric Medsker

This lemonade is rendered smoky-sweet with the juice of grilled lemons and limes and toasted simple syrup, which has a mild caramel flavor that does a lot to complement the grilled fruit. Get the recipe >

Charred Chile Daiquiri

Charred Chile Daiquiri
Eric Medsker

The daiquiri is an adaptable creature, and it welcomes new companions in the form of bitters, infused simple syrups, or salty-sweet rims. This version keeps the classic’s sour formula, but adds a veil of smoky spice lent from charred serrano- and jalapeño-infused sugar syrup. Get the recipe >

Smoky Grapefruit Gin and Tonic

Smoky Grapefruit Gin and Tonic
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ERIC MEDSKER

Meant for long afternoons overlooking lakes, porches, and thick novels, gin and tonics are the balm of summer. Add a slice of salt-sprinkled grilled grapefruit, and cut the tonic with soda, and the highball grows not only more aromatically complex, but even more refreshing. Get the recipe >

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The Last Word https://www.saveur.com/article/recipes/the-last-word-cocktail/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:53:38 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-recipes-the-last-word-cocktail/
The Last Word Cocktail
Photography by Belle Morizio; Food Styling By Jessie YuChen; Prop Styling By Kim Gray; Coupe by Glasvin

Zippy and refreshing, this ‘equal-parts’ cocktail combines gin, lime juice, Chartreuse, and Maraschino liqueur to make a striking—and dead-easy—pastel-green elixir.

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The Last Word Cocktail
Photography by Belle Morizio; Food Styling By Jessie YuChen; Prop Styling By Kim Gray; Coupe by Glasvin

Equal parts gin, chartreuse, Maraschino liqueur, and fresh lime juice, The Last Word cocktail is a foolproof classic that goes down as easily as it is to make. This recipe takes well to scaling: Quadruple it for four, or for a party, make a pitcher for guests to pour over ice. It can also be adapted to individual tastes; for a less sweet result, up the gin to 1¼ ounces.

Yield: One Cocktail
  • ¾ oz. fresh lime juice
  • ¾ oz. London Dry gin, such as Beefeater
  • ¾ oz. green Chartreuse
  • ¾ oz. Maraschino liqueur, such as Luxardo
  • Lime twist or strip of lime peel, for garnish

Instructions

  1. To a shaker filled halfway with ice, add the lime juice, gin, Chartreuse, and Maraschino and shake vigorously for 30 seconds. Strain into a coupe and garnish with the lime twist.

WATCH: How to Shake a Cocktail

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White Russian https://www.saveur.com/drink/white-russian/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:35:11 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-recipes-white-russian/
White Russian
Photography by Belle Morizio; Food Styling By Jessie YuChen; Prop Styling By Kim Gray

Channel The Dude with this smooth, sweet vintage cocktail that only calls for three ingredients.

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White Russian
Photography by Belle Morizio; Food Styling By Jessie YuChen; Prop Styling By Kim Gray

This smooth and sweet vintage cocktail is a cream-based variation on the vodka and coffee liqueur libation that became known as the Black Russian in the late ’40s. Some credit the White Russian’s resurgence in popularity to 1998 cult classic The Big Lebowski, in which the lead character “The Dude” consumes little else.

Yield: 1
  • 2 oz. heavy cream
  • 1 oz. coffee liqueur, such as Kahlua
  • 1 oz. vodka

Instructions

  1. Fill a rocks glass with ice. To a cocktail shaker filled with ice, add cream, coffee liqueur, and vodka; shake vigorously and strain into the glass.

Get the recipe for Homemade Coffee Liqueur »

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Kir Royale https://www.saveur.com/article/recipes/kir-royale/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:43:35 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-recipes-kir-royale/
Kir Royale
Photography By Belle Morizio

With its sweet-tart splash of blackcurrant liqueur, there’s no reason to mess with this classic wine spritz.

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Kir Royale
Photography By Belle Morizio

Canon Félix Kir, a French Résistance hero and later mayor of Dijon, lent his name to this simple wine cocktail traditionally made with the rustic Burgundian variety called aligoté. When Champagne is used instead of white wine, the drink becomes a kir royale. Don’t be tempted to stint on the amount of crème de cassis—Burgundy’s famed blackcurrant liqueur—to yield a faint pink drink; both common and royal iterations should properly have a dark rosy hue.

Yield: 1
Time: 5 minutes
  • 6 oz. brut Champagne or other dry sparkling wine
  • ½ oz. crème de cassis
  • Fresh blackberries, for garnish

Instructions

  1. To a chilled Champagne flute, add the crème de cassis. Top with Champagne and garnish with blackberries. Serve immediately.

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Simple Syrup https://www.saveur.com/article/wine-and-drink/simple-syrup/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:41:15 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-wine-and-drink-simple-syrup/
Simple Syrup
Photography by Belle Morizio

This bartenders’ basic is the ideal sweetener for everything from cocktails to iced coffee.

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Simple Syrup
Photography by Belle Morizio

The most basic simple syrup recipe combines equal parts sugar and water to make a bartenders’ staple perfect for sweetening everything from cocktails to iced coffee and tea. An essential ingredient in many classic drinks, the neutral syrup can also be infused with herbs, spices, or other seasonings. Find a few variations from our archives here

Yield: 1⅓ cups
Time: 5 minutes
  • 1 cup sugar

Instructions

  1. In a small pot over low heat, stir together the sugar and 1 cup water. Bring to a simmer and cook, stirring frequently, until the sugar has fully dissolved, 2–4 minutes. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool to room temperature. Use simple syrup immediately or transfer to an airtight bottle or jar and store in the fridge for up to 1 month. 

*Note: This basic simple syrup recipe can be adapted to make a thicker and more concentrated “rich simple syrup” by doubling the quantity of sugar.

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Pisco Sour https://www.saveur.com/article/recipes/pisco-sour/ Wed, 12 Nov 2014 17:42:31 +0000 https://stg.saveur.com/uncategorized/pisco-sour/
Pisco Sour
Photography by Belle Morizio; Food Styling by Kat Craddock

Showcase the iconic Peruvian spirit with this fresh and frothy classic.

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Pisco Sour
Photography by Belle Morizio; Food Styling by Kat Craddock

The pisco sour was one of the first drinks to be codified during the “Golden Age of Cocktails.” In fact, the recipe emerged as a result of a confluence of factors far from the South American spirit’s birthplace. 

California boasts a history of wine and brandy production dating back to the 17th century, as well as a deep connection to South and Central American territories once controlled by the Spanish Crown. Gold Rush era San Francisco was a hotbed for cocktail culture, by virtue of the glut of unattached men looking for ways to distract themselves from their arduous work in the mining industry. While the Conquistadors invested in California wine production, spirit distillation was much less widespread; for local high rollers who wished to imbibe, high-quality options were slim. 

Pisco—a grape-based distillate whose origins are a topic of debate between Peru and Chile—was suited perfectly to the late 19th century’s emerging “fancy drinks” trend. At turns aromatic and dry, the spirit pairs nicely with various fruits and acids, and was a natural choice for the era’s elevated serves. San Francisco’s Bank Exchange and Billiard Saloon popularized pisco in the 1880s by mixing it with pineapple, lime, and syrup for the enormously popular pisco punch, inspiring imitators throughout the city. Then in the 1920s, the South American liquor garnered its international fame when Victor Vaughn Morris, an American bar owner who’d immigrated to Lima, began serving a pisco-based riff on the whisky sour.  Made luxuriously silky via the addition of egg white (like the Ramos gin fizz popularized in New Orleans shortly before), and highly aromatic courtesy of Angostura bitters, a drink this good is virtually impossible to improve upon, which explains why the recipe hasn’t changed in over a century.

Yield: 1
Time: 5 minutes
  • 2 oz. pisco
  • 1 fresh lemon juice
  • ¾ oz. simple syrup
  • 1 large egg white
  • Angostura bitters, for garnish

Instructions

  1. To a cocktail shaker, add the pisco, lemon juice, simple syrup, and egg white. Dry shake for 20 seconds to emulsify, then add the ice and shake well to chill. Strain into a chilled coupe or nick and nora and garnish with 2–3 drops of bitters in a decorative pattern. Serve immediately.

*Note: It is important to point out that Chilean pisco is generally more floral, while Peruvian versions can display more earthy and vegetal notes which I find more suitable for cocktailing. There are four broad styles of Peruvian Pisco: Puro, Aromatico, Acholado, and Mosto Verde. I prefer Acholado for its drier profile, while others may prefer the sweetness of Mosto Verde. The brands Barsol, Porton, and Macchu Pisco will all work nicely in this recipe.

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