Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Smoky Paloma Cocktail (Bitter Tears Ms. Piggy peppercorn bacon bitters)

Smoky Paloma with Bitter Tears Ms. Piggy peppercorn bacon bitters

Yesterday, on my first day of cocktail bitters week, I wrote about two classic bitters and their famous cocktail counterparts: Angostura bitters (and the Manhattan) and Peychaud's bitters (and the Sazerac).

In my introductory bitters post, I mentioned that bitters have made a real comeback recently, benefitting from the current renaissance in craft cocktail-making. Today's posts focus on the new wave of bitters, which finds producers experimenting with a number of creative flavors, including everybody's favorite smoky meat: bacon.

Bitter Tears Ms. Piggy peppercorn bacon bitters

Bitter Tears is based in Los Angeles and offers a line-up of six bitters flavors including the Ms. Piggy, a mix of peppercorn and bacon. Ms. Piggy isn't as intensely bitter as most of the other bitters I've tried, making it ideal for cocktails with subtler flavors. The peppercorn hits you first with these bitters, really playing with your tongue. The bacon follows and is a bit subtle, but definitely there.

Smoky Paloma Cocktail
I came up with this riff on the Paloma after chatting with Bitter Tears about their Ms. Piggy peppercorn-bacon bitters on Twitter.

1 1/2 oz. mezcal
1 1/2 oz. grapefruit juice
1/2 oz. lime juice
1 tsp. agave nectar
3 pulls of Bitter Tears Ms. Piggy peppercorn bacon bitters
2 oz. club soda

Combine mezcal, grapefruit juice, lime juice, agave nectar and bitters in a shaker with ice. Shake until mixed and chilled. Strain into a rocks glass with ice. Top with club soda.

Related Post: Cocktail Bitters: An Introduction and History

Cocktail: G&T Martini (Scrappy's Lime Bitters)

G&T Martini with Lime Bitters

If you frequently make cocktails like gin & tonic or margaritas at home, you may have notice that the price of limes is way up right now. Limes that are normally 3 or 4 to the dollar are up to $1 each in some places. Blame this season's lime shortage, the result of a bad crop due to lousy weather plus extortion by Mexican drug cartels (seriously). I've seen some Mexican restaurants go as far as to garnish their margaritas with lemon wedges. It's just wrong.

Until the shortage lifts, an interesting alternative is to use lime bitters. This would work great in a drink that needs a hint of lime. They're very similar to the bitter-citrus flavor of the oils in lime peel. (I wouldn't recommend this as a substitute for a drink that calls for a lot of lime juice, like a margarita.)
Scrappy's Bitters

Along with Bittermens, Scrappy's was one of the first companies to jump-start the latest bitters craze. Based in Seattle, their company offers eight bitters flavors (plus additional special flavors). In a great marketing move, Scrappy's has packaged four small 1/2 oz. bottles of their bitters in a bitters sample kit, a great way to experiment with bitters without committing to a large bottle. Along with lime, the bitters set I bought came with chocolate, cardamom and grapefruit.

Scrappy's Lime bitters provides a bitter, citrusy touch to this G&T Martini, a mash-up of two classic gin drinks. The Italian aperitif wine Cocchi Americano supplies the bitter quinine, an ingredient in the tonic water used for G&T. Rather than a lime wedge, I added a couple dashes of lime bitters and, because I was lucky to have one, a lime twist (you could use lemon if you must).

G&T Martini

2 oz. American or London dry gin
3/4 oz. Cocchi Americano
2 dashes Scrappy's lime bitters
Lime twist garnish (if you can get your hands on one)

Combine gin, Cocchi Americano and bitters in a cocktail mixing glass with ice. Stir until chilled and then strain into a chilled martini glass. Garnish with lime twist.

Related Post: Cocktail Bitters: An Introduction and History

Cocktail: The Gold Baron (Bittermens Burlesque Bitters)

The Gold Baron cocktail bitterness burlesque bitters

Bittermens Burlesque bitters is one of the more unusual types of  bitters I've come across. Bittermens describes it as sweet, spicy and a bit tart, which is about right. It's flavored with hibiscus, açai berry and long pepper. This one's definitely spicy and a little floral. They recommend it with Italian amari, tequila, gin or rum.

Bittermens Burlesque Bitters

The Gold Baron was created by bartender Thomas Waugh when he was at  Death + Company, a cocktail bar in New York's East Village (he's now at ZZ's Clam Bar). You too can make a large spherical ice cube with the right mold.

The Gold Baron
Recipe adapted from Thomas Waugh of Death + Company, by way of In the Cupboard

1 1/2 oz. bourbon
1/2 oz. Laird’s apple brandy
1/2 tsp. grenadine
1/2 tsp. simple syrup (see below)
1 barspoon (1 tsp.) Bittermens Burlesque bitters

Combine bourbon, apple brandy, grenadine, simple syrup and bitters in a cocktail mixing glass with ice. Stir until chilled then strain into rocks glass with one large ice cube. No garnish.

To make simple syrup: Combine 3/4 cup water and 3/4 cup sugar, either in a saucepan over the stove heated until the sugar has dissolved, or in a microwave safe bowl (a glass Pyrex measuring cup works great) microwaved on high until the sugar has dissolved. Store the remaining syrup covered in the fridge (a spoonful of vodka will help it last longer).

Related Posts:
Cocktail Bitters: An Introduction and History
Improved Tequila Cocktail (Bittermens Xocolatl Mole Bitters)

Improved Tequila Cocktail (Bittermens Xocolatl Mole Bitters)

Improved Tequila Cocktail with Bittermens Xocolatl Mole Bitters

Yesterday, in my round-up of different brands of bitters, I mentioned Bittermens, which is probably my favorite line of new bitters. I first learned about Bittermens a couple years ago from Union Market's Salt & Sundry, which carries a great selection of cocktail accessories. That day I picked up two of their shrub products, Hellfire Habanero Shrub and Orchard Street Celery Shrub (see my recent post on Greg Henry's book Savory Cocktails for a list of great cocktails with these shrubs).

The Xocolatl Mole bitters was Bittermens' first product when Avery and Janet Glasser began production in 2007. As the name implies, they were inspired by mole, the class of rich, spicy sauces from the Oaxaca region of Mexico. Tasted by itself, the spiciness really comes out. When diluted with a little club soda, the cinnamon and chocolate become more prominent. (For my own mole-inspired cocktail, see Dallas Drinks: The Nicholas, made with mezcal, sherry, chocolate and habanero shrub.)
Bittermens Xocolatl Mole Bitters
Bittermens Xocolatl Mole Bitters

Bittermens recommends using its mole bitters with dark spirits like aged tequila, dark rum or whiskey. I sampled them in the Improved Tequila Cocktail, created by Houston bartender Bobby Heugel and included among a list of recipes on the Bittermens site. This recipe also appeared in the Washington Post.

Note the use of "improved" in the name of this cocktail. That's a reference to late 19th century cocktails, which could be ordered "plain," "fancy" or "improved." David Wondrich explains the difference in Imbibe! and includes basic recipes for each using brandy, gin or whiskey. The key distinction of the "improved" cocktail is the inclusion of maraschino liqueur. A bottle of Luxardo maraschino liqueur is a great addition to any home bar (cherry heering, kirschwasser or maraschino cherry syrup are not appropriate substitutes).

Improved Tequila Cocktail
Adapted from a recipe by Bobby Heugel of Anvil Bar & Refuge

2 oz. reposado tequila
1 tsp. maraschino liqueur
2 dashes Bittermens Xocolatl Mole bitters
1 dash Angostura bitters
1 tsp. agave nectar
Lemon twist (garnish)

Combine tequila, maraschino liqueur, bitters and agave nectar in a cocktail mixing glass filled with ice. Still until well chilled (about 30 seconds), then strain into a chilled coupe or other cocktail glass. Twist the lemon peel over the drink, rub the peel along the rim of the glass and then drop it into the drink.

Related Posts: 
Cocktail Bitters: An Introduction and History
Cocktail: The Gold Baron (Bittermens Burlesque Bitters)

Monday, May 12, 2014

Cocktail Bitters: An Introduction and History

Cocktail bitters

I once read cocktail bitters described as the salt and pepper of cocktails. Just like cooks that learn to season their food for better results, bitters can add a final interesting touch to a drink that pulls it all together. Sure, you can make drinks without them, but once you start using them, you'll definitely up your cocktail game.

All this week I'm focusing on cocktail bitters, those strange little bottles you may see at the grocery or liquor store often near the tonic water, grenade and cocktail onions. If you've ever wondered where they come from and how to use them, I hope to provide some fundamentals this week. Today I'll explore the basics and history of bitters and share recipes for Manhattan cocktail, made with Angostura bitters, and the Sazerac cocktail, made with Peychaud's bitters. Tuesday, I look at drinks with modern bitters (G&T Martini, Smoky Paloma, The Gold Baron and Improved Tequila Cocktail). Thursday, I'll share how the modern cocktail renaissance allows us to experience old-fashioned cocktails in a new way (Fancy Gin Cocktail and, you guessed it, the Old-Fashioned). And Friday, I'll use bitters in a non-cocktail application (Angostura bitters chicken salad).

Origin of Cocktail Bitters

Cocktail bitters are high in alcohol but generally considered non-potable, which is why you can find them in grocery stores that don't sell liquor (like vanilla extract, for example). The New Food Lover's Companion describes bitters as "made from the distillation of aromatic herbs, barks, flowers, seeds and plants..." Sounds a bit medicinal, doesn't it? That's exactly where bitters originated.

Brad Thomas Parsons writes in Bitters (an indispensable resource for this week's series that I'll discuss at length later) that sometime during the 18th Century, bitters drinkers began mixing them with alcoholic beverages, possibly in an attempt to make them taste better. Thus began their symbiotic relationship. Through time, this combination became more alcohol and less bitters until we come to the 19th Century, the first "golden age" of American cocktails, where bitters were commonly mixed with drinks. Parsons writes that by the 1850s there were hundreds of bitters available in the U.S., many of which were still marketing questionable health claims--a practice curtailed by the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906.

Prohibition and the 20th Century

"After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all the territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited." - 18th Amendment (Section 1) to the United States Constitution, 1919.

With those words, the American art of cocktail making entered a dark period (not a completely dormant period though, hence the speakeasy). This had a deleterious effect on the bitters industry, which all but dried up. According to Parsons, only Angostura, Peychaud's and some varieties of orange bitters survived prohibition, and Angostura and Peychaud's were the only major brands available until Fee Brothers came out with orange and aromatic bitters in the 1950s.

Of course, even if there were more types of bitters available, would they have been put to good use? Consider that the latter half of the 20th Century was a time when popular cocktails were made with ingredients like excessive amounts of heavy cream, sweet and sour mix and other sickly sweet mixes.

Bitters Today

With this century's renewed interest in the craft of cocktails, bitters are back in a big way. In addition to the familiar names that are still available, some of the old-timey bitters that vanished have been brought back. In fact, in 2007 when David Wondrich published Imbibe! (another indispensable resource), he included recipes for three types of bitters that could not be purchased at the time: Jerry Thomas's bitters, Stoughton's bitters and Boker's bitters--all of which are now available (or at least as modern approximations).

Additionally, there are quite a few companies making new and interesting bitters. One of my favorites is Bittermens, a company founded by a couple (Avery and Janet Glasser) in 2007 making mole bitters that has since expanded to a full line of bitters and other extracts. Seattle-based Scrappy's is another good one, that sells their bitters in trial-size 4-packs, a great way to introduce yourself to some interesting new bitters. As you can see in the photo at the top, I amassed quite a collection of bitters researching this week's drinks and look forward to telling you all about them. If you try any of the drinks or use the bitters in a different creation, please let me know.

Measuring Bitters

Cocktail recipes use different terms when referring to adding bitters. The most common is the "dash," which is meant to be a squirt from the bottle, since many bitters bottles are designed for this, although increasingly I'm seeing bitters bottled with droppers. So how much is a dash? Kevin Liu addressed this in his book, Craft Cocktails at Home, which includes a transcript of a Twitter chat in which Parsons says a dash is 5 drops. However, Liu's analysis shows that different bitters bottles "dash" different amounts, so this isn't an exact measurement. I'll often add an extra dash, especially if the first one doesn't feel like a "full" dash. The bottom line is that it's a matter of taste, so add more or less as desired

Tasting Bitters

Despite being "non-potable," you can drink bitters. Despite their name, they aren't just bitter, more bittersweet. But they are strong. Liu also has a good discussion about this on his blog. He advocates taking them as shots, but acknowledges you can also mix them with seltzer. I tried a little of both and will discuss their flavors along with cocktails you can make with them.

Cocktail books bitters

Further Reading

To do justice to the subject of cocktail bitters, I wanted to explore their exciting present, but also their fascinating past. These are the well-researched works that were always at hand during the last couple months while I was working on this week's series:

Bitters: A Spirited History of a Classic Cure-All with Cocktails, Recipes & Formulas by Brad Thomas Parsons (2011). Parsons' book on bitters is simply phenomenal. I learned a lot while reading it, and much of what I have to say this week is influenced by this great book. If you're interested in bitters and their place in cocktail history, I definitely recommend this book. In addition to containing a lot of bitters-based cocktail recipes, both classic and modern, he also includes recipes for making bitters--something I considered trying but ultimately took a pass on. Bitters won the 2012 James Beard Book Award for beverage writing.

Imbibe!: From Absinthe Cocktail to Whiskey Smash, a Salute in Stories and Drinks to "Professor" Jerry Thomas, Pioneer of the American Bar by David Wondrich (2007). Because bitters are so closely linked to the early days of American cocktail-making, Wondrich's book also proved to be an invaluable resource for my classic bitters cocktail posts. Imbibe! focuses on Jerry Thomas, a 19th Century bartender Pete Wells once called "the father of American mixology" for his pioneering work in developing and documenting the craft of cocktail-making. Imbibe! also won a James Beard Award.

The Craft of the Cocktail by Dale DeGroff (2002). DeGroff's book is an all-around good cocktail resource that also includes a great historical discussion up-front with more breadth (it goes up to the more-or-less present) and less depth than you get in Imbibe!, which focuses on the early days of cocktails.

The PDT Cocktail Book: The Complete Bartender's Guide from the Celebrated Speakeasy by Jim Meehan (2011). I could recommend The PDT Cocktail Book as a good resource for any number of cocktail-related topics, but it's particularly suited to bitters since many of its recipes include them.

Craft Cocktails at Home by Kevin Liu (2013). I wrote about this book last year and, although I didn't refer to it much for this project, it's still a good read and includes a chapter on bitters that covers a range of interesting aspects about them, including taste and recipes.

Related Posts:
Angostura Bitters and the Manhattan Cocktail
Peychaud's Bitters and the Sazerac Cocktail

Cocktail: Manhattan (Angostura Bitters)

Manhattan cocktail

If you've encountered one bottle of bitters in your life, chances are it's this one. It's the bottle with the yellow cap and the label that's too large for the bottle. You know the one. It's called Angostura bitters, which has been around since 1824, produced by House of Angostura in Trinidad.

Angostura actually makes two bitters products--the aromatic bitters are the best-known, and when people say "Angostura bitters," they mean this one.

Angostura bitters (note the too-big label)
On its own, Angostura bitters have a marked spiciness that hits you immediately, followed by its sharp bitterness and subtle sweetness. When mixed with a little club soda and sugar, the bitterness dials down a lot and you can really taste the spice mix. Just what spices are in it no one knows (well, no one apart from a few in the company that guard the secret recipe). We do know it contains gentian root, since it says so on the bottle. We also know it does not contain the bark of the angostura tree, despite its name. I detect hints of clove and cinnamon for sure.

Angostura bitters show up in many cocktail recipes, in part because they've been around for so long, but also because their rounded spicy flavor makes them a versatile choice for many drinks. Notably, Angostura are one of the few brands of bitters to have survived Prohibition.

Several notable classic cocktails are made with Angostura bitters, including the Old Fashioned (although I'll be making it later this week with different bitters), the Champagne Cocktail and the Manhattan.

In Imbibe!, David Wondrich posits the Manhattan as the perfect middle ground between the low-impact Vermouth Cocktail and the high-octane Whiskey (or gin, or brandy) Cocktail. The exact origin of the Manhattan is unclear. Wondrich runs through several stories, some of which point to the Manhattan Club, a New York City Democratic club established in 1865. Thus, the exact date the Manhattan came about is also unknown, although it must have been sometime during the late 1870s to 1880s, as it first appeared in print in 1882. Wondrich includes recipes for three versions of the drink, the third of which, Formula #3 from 1892, is closest to what we today call the Manhattan, employing a 2:1 ratio of whiskey to vermouth plus bitters (it also has absinthe, maraschino and extra sugar).

Dale DeGroff, in The Craft of the Cocktail, called the Manhattan the "quintessential rye cocktail," although he acknowledges regional variations that prefer bourbon or brandy. The recipe below is the one from Brad Thomas Parsons' Bitters, which I like because it uses a mix of Angostura and orange bitters to give the drink both spice and a touch of orange sweetness.

Manhattan
From Bitters, Brad Thomas Parsons

2 oz. rye whiskey (may also use bourbon, but rye is classic)
1 oz. sweet vermouth (I used Dolin Rouge)
1 dash Angostura bitters
1 dash orange bitters
Lemon twist (garnish)

Combine the whiskey, sweet vermouth and bitters in a cocktail mixing glass half-filled with ice. Stir until chilled and diluted. Strain into a chilled coupe and garnish with lemon twist.

Related Post: Cocktail Bitters: An Introduction and History

Cocktail: Sazerac (Peychaud's Bitters)


They may be called for in fewer cocktails than Angostura bitters, but Peychaud's bitters have an important place in cocktail history and share very tight bond with the Sazerac cocktail.

Peychaud's bitters were created in the 1830s by New Orleans pharmacist Antoine Amédée Peychaud. Dale DeGroff cites them as the first commercially produced bitters. They became popular in New Orleans "coffeehouses" (a.k.a. "bars"), and in 1850 the Sazerac Coffee House began mixing Peychaud's bitters with its exclusive imported cognac, Sazerac de Forge et Flis. They later changed the cognac to rye whiskey (Buffalo Trace, which produces Peychaud's bitters, also makes a Sazerac Rye) and added the absinthe rinse (later replaced by Herbsaint, another Sazerac Company product, due to restrictions on absinthe in the U.S.). That coffeehouse and Peychaud's bitters were later bought by Tom Hardy, and the bitters are still distributed by the Sazerac Company, making the Sazerac not only a historic drink but a real brand-name cocktail too.

Peychaud's bitters have a sharp but less spicy taste than Angostura. Both are made with gentian root, but it lacks the same sharp spiciness and has a more floral quality. Perhaps because they're dyed red, Peychaud's bitters seems a little more "medicine-y" than Angostura bitters.  By itself, I don't find it as appealing as Angostura, although when diluted with club soda, it's not so bad. It's a lot better in a Sazerac though.


Sazerac

Traditionally, this is made with a muddled sugar cube, but to simplify and better mix the sugar into the drink, I used simple syrup. In the PDT Cocktail Book, Jim Meehan says to twist the lemon peel over the drink and discard it, although I like better Brad Thomas Parson's suggestion in Bitters to rest it on the rim of the glass.

Splash of absinthe (or Herbsaint)
1/4 oz. simple syrup (or 1 sugar cube, muddled in the glass)
2 oz. rye whiskey
4 or 5 dashes Peychaud's Bitters
Large piece of lemon peel

Add the absinthe to a chilled rocks glass, swirl to rinse the glass and dump out the excess. Combine the simple syrup (or muddled sugar cube), whiskey and bitters in a cocktail mixing glass half filled with ice. Stir until chilled and diluted and strain into the rocks glass. Squeeze the lemon peel over the drink, then rub it around the rim of the glass. Serve the drink with the peel resting on the rim of the glass.

Related Post: Cocktail Bitters: An Introduction and History