From Death & Company via Epicuriuos. “This is a tiki drink disguised as an old-fashioned, so it’s no surprise that it comes from Brian Miller, Death & Co’s resident scalawag and expert on all things Polynesian. One night a waitress asked Brian to make something stirred and boozy, so he took one of tiki’s core principles—blending several base spirits to create a new flavor profile—and applied it to whiskey and brandy. It was another breakthrough moment for the bar, and these days it’s not unusual to find two or more base spirits in our drinks.”
Chill a large Old Fashioned glass with ice and water
Combine all ingredients, except the garnish, in a mixing glass with ice. Stir to chill
Strain into chilled glass over a large ice cube
Garnish with citrus twists
Cheers!
Manhattan Au Poivre
A steak dinner often suggests a robust red wine. Instead, what about a cocktail that makes you want to have a bite of steak? The goal when pairing cocktails with food is to craft a drink that makes one want a bite of the food with each sip of the drink. This is exactly what we have with our Manhattan au Poivre! It’s basic Manhattan using bourbon. We split the vermouth with the rich and fruity Cocchi Vermouth di Torino and the bittersweet Punt e Mes which we infused with coffee. For the “au Poivre,” we use freshly cracked black peppercorns and finish the cocktail with black garlic salt. The black garlic salt brings a touch of salinity and savory background. The result is a rich and complex cocktail that cries out to be savored with a steak. The nose is bourbon, orange, fruit and Holiday spice. The taste is savory with candied fruit, orange, cherry, cranberry and hints of coffee and black pepper. The finish is smooth and savory.
The Manhattan au Poivre
Please note the directions regarding the black peppercorns and black garlic salt.
Ingredients:
1.5 oz. Your Favorite Bourbon
3/8 oz. Cocchi Vermouth di Torino
3/8 oz. Coffee infused Punt e Mes (see below)
1 barspoon Grand Marnier
3-4 cracked black peppercorns
1 pinch Black Garlic Salt (see note below)
Brandied Cherry for garnish
Orange peel for garnish
Directions:
Chill a cocktail glass with ice and water
Coarsely crack the black peppercorns and drop them into the bottom of your mixing glass. Be careful not to grind the peppercorns so that they don’t pass through your strainer into the drink.
Add the bourbon to the mixing glass and let sit 10-15 minutes. You can do this step ahead of time to easily make several cocktails.
Add the vermouth, Punt e Mes and Grand Marnier to the mixing glass.
Add ice to the mixing glass then the pinch of black garlic salt. Immediately stir until chilled and double strain into your chilled cocktail glass.
Drop in the brandied cherry and express the orange peel over the drink. Float the orange peel.
Cheers!
Coffee Infused Punt e Mes
This will vary based on your choice of coffee. I suggest you try it first with 250ml.
250 ml Punt e Mes
30 gm cracked whole coffee beans
Combine Punt e Mes and coffee in a lidded jar. Let it sit at room temperature for 30 minutes, shaking a few times.
Double strain and enjoy.
Flavored Salts
Prior to using any flavored salt in cocktails I suggest you empty the container of salt into a fine mesh strainer over a sink. Bang the strainer with you other hand to sift out any small bits that could pass through your strainer into your cocktail.
Coffee Pecan Old Fashioned
This Old Fashioned is best described as a bite of pecan pie, a taste of coffee, a nibble of dark chocolate, and a sip of fine bourbon. Always a hit at the events and pop-ups we’ve done, it is one of my personal favorites. Simple to make, you can easily adjust the sweet/bitter balance. I prefer a high rye bourbon with this cocktail, but you should use your favorite.
The flavor profile of Doc Elliott’s Mixology™ Coffee Pecan Bitters is bitterness and spiced coffee on the front, soon followed by pecan with notes of dark chocolate as the bitterness rapidly fades. The finish is coffee, pecan, and chocolate. For this reason, we use agave, which is fructose, bringing sweet to the beginning then quickly fading, making it the perfect complement to our Coffee Pecan Bitters in our Coffee Pecan Old Fashioned,
Ingredients:
2 oz. Bourbon
5-6 Dashes Doc Elliott’s Coffee Pecan Bitters
1/2 – 1 barspoon Agave Nectar – to Taste
Orange peal for garnish
Directions:
Chill a single Old Fashioned glass with ice and water
Combine all of the ingredients, except the garnish, in a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill
Strain into chilled glass with fresh ice
Express the orange peel over the drink and float the peel
Cheers!
Plymouth Old Fashioned
I really like bitters forward old fashioneds. To me, bitters bring flavor and spice that you aren’t going to find elsewhere. One way to get a lot of bitters into a cocktail without making it, well, too bitter, is to make a syrup with bitters as all or part of the liquid. For this drink I have chosen Applejack, brown sugar and black walnut bitters to use in the syrup. It is then combined with calvados, bourbon and rum.
This is a big drink in size, strength and flavor. The taste of apple blends with the vanilla and spice from the rum and the combined smoky notes of the rum and bourbon. The black walnut bitters really stand out. I initially used Fees Brothers Aztec Chocolate Bitters, but I think that Angostura Bitters with the Fees Brothers Black Walnut Bitters and Orange Bitters is better.
You can easily lighten up this drink by substituting Cruzan Dark Aged Rum for the Zaya and/or Russell’s 10 year old Bourbon for the Basil Hayden’s.
Here is the recipe:
1 oz. Calvados
1 oz. Aged rum such as Zaya 12 Year Old
1 oz. Aged bourbon such as Basil Hayden’s
1 oz. Black Walnut Syrup (See below)
1 bar spoon honey syrup (1 part honey dissolved in 1 part water)
2 dashes Fees Brothers Black Walnut Bitters
2 dashes Fees Brothers Orange Bitters
2 dashes Fees Brothers Aztec Bitters or Angostura Bitters
Thick orange peel for garnish
Stir all ingredients, except the garnish, in a mixing glass with ice.
Strain into a chilled old fashioned glass with fresh ice – preferably a single large cube or sphere
Express the orange oils over the drink and float the peel.
Black Walnut Syrup
1/2 cup brown sugar
2 oz. Applejack
1 oz. Fees Brothers Black Walnut Bitters
In a small sauce pan over medium heat, dissolve the sugar in the liquid, stirring frequently. Or you can put all of the ingredients in a blender and run on high for a few minutes.
Allow to cool
It will keep longer if you filter it through a metal coffee filter to remove any undissolved sugar crystals.
Will keep in the refrigerator for a few weeks
Cheers!
John Dandy
Bourbon goes with many things, but apples, cinnamon and chocolate top my pairings list. For the bourbon in this cocktail, I used Ranger Creek’s .36 Texas Straight Bourbon Whiskey which gently nips but doesn’t bite. It brings the flavors of vanilla, cinnamon and a touch of oak. If you choose a different bourbon, I suggest something that isn’t overly smooth. I used Bigallet China-China Amer as a modifier. Alone, this liqueur tastes of bitter orange, citrus, and cherries with an earthy, root touch similar to cola, (think bourbon and coke). I added the bitters for complexity and to introduce chocolate, additional cinnamon and a bit of dried fruit from the fig bitters.
John Dandy
The nose of this Manhattan-esque cocktail is bright orange, fruit, vanilla and cinnamon. The initial flavors are apple, vanilla with a touch of oak, followed by chocolate, dried fruit and a bit of spice. The earthy tone comes late and the finish is fruit, spice, cinnamon and vanilla. As noted below, don’t get this cocktail too sweet.
1 oz. Bourbon
1 oz. Laird’s Applejack
1/4 oz. Bigallet China-China Amer
1-2 dashes 2:1 Demerara simple syrup – depending on the sweetness of your maraschino cherries
1 dash Fees Brothers Aztec Chocolate Bitters
1 dash Brooklyn Hemispherical Black Mission Fig Bitters
Orange peel for garnish
Maraschino cherry for garnish
Chill a coup or other stemmed cocktail glass with ice and water
Combine all of the ingredients except the garnishes in a mixing glass with ice
Stir to chill and strain into chilled glass
Express orange peel and discard
Add cherry
Cheers!
Why You Should be Barrel Aging at Home
Barrel aging at home is fairly simple, not ridiculously expensive and seriously worth doing. The in’s and out’s of getting started are covered in our Barrel Aged Cocktails page. While simply barrel aging cocktails is reason enough to get started, the real magic occurs when you age something in a barrel previously used for a different cocktail or spirit. For instance, tequila aged in a barrel previously used to age sherry, bourbon, Manhattans and gin. Or White Whiskey aged, first in a new charred barrel, then aged further after Negroni’s and a Martini. Each of these take on flavors far beyond those found in a charred barrel alone. Thus, the fun!
Here are some examples of what we’ve been putting in our barrels.
We used Hudson White Whiskey to flavor a new, charred oak barrel. It went in, first for 1 month, then back into the barrel for 2-3 week stents between Negroni’s. A Martini also spent some time in that barrel as well. The Whiskey came out with a nice color. The nose is caramel, vanilla, clove, herbal with a touch of corn whiskey. The flavor is slightly sweet corn whiskey with the oak, caramel, vanilla and herbs. There is a background of gin with a touch of bitterness on the finish. We used it to make an excellent Boulivardier:
Boulivardier with Negroni Aged White Whiskey
1 oz. Negroni Aged White Whiskey
1 oz. Dolen Sweet Vermouth
1 oz. Campari
Fat orange peel for garnish
Chill an old fashioned glass with ice and water
Combine all ingredients, except the garnish, in a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill
Strain into chilled old fashioned over fresh, large ice
Express orange peel over drink and float the peel
Barrel Aged Sherry
We used Lustau East India Solera Sherry to flavor a second new, charred oak barrel. The barrel was then used to age Bourbon Manhattans. These were aged alternating with the Sherry 3 or 4 times. The barrel was then used to age bourbon, a Tequila Manhattan and gin. The sherry revisited the barrel for 2 – 3 weeks between each cocktail or spirit. The sherry has a bit of color added. The nose is sherry with vanilla, clove and a bit of caramel. The flavor is dried fruits: current, apple, apricot and raisin. I have used it in a number of cocktails that call for sherry. It imparts a slightly mellow flavor along with the sherry you’d expect. Here is our Sherry’d Manhattan:
Manhattan 2.0 with Manhattan/Bourbon/Tequila Barrel Aged Sherry
For the the bourbon in this cocktail, we tried Basil Hayden and Belle Mead. Both were excellent. The bourbon brings flavors of maple, tobacco, smoke and vanilla. This blends well with the rich, earthy Carpano Antica’s tastes of herbs, spice and slight bitterness. The aged sherry intermingles with the Italian Vermouth, smoothing the bitterness and adding to the richness. Here is the recipe:
Manhattan 2.0
1 1/2 oz. Bourbon
3/4 oz. Carpano Antica
1/4 oz. Manhattan/Bourbon/Tequila Barrel Aged Sherry
1/8 tsp. Grand Marnier
1 dash Angostura Orange Bitters
Garnish: Luxardo Maraschino Cherries and an orange peel
Chill a cocktail glass with ice and water
Add the ingredients, except the garnish, to a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill
Strain into the chilled cocktail glass
Add the cherries, (or place them on a pick), and express the orange peel over the drink and discard.
Sherry Cask Aged Bourbon
This is one of my favorites. The Sherry Cask Aged Bourbon alone makes barrel aging at home worth while! I used Russel’s 10 yr Old Bourbon. For an aged bourbon, Russel’s has a lot of spice. Aging in a Sherry Cask which had previously been used to age Manhattans mellowed the spice. There are significant flavors from the charred oak barrel: oak, clove, vanilla, and caramel. You can also taste the sherry along with dried fruit, possibly from the Manhattans.
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Manhattan 3.0 with Sherry Cask Aged Bourbon
This cocktail is similar in concept to a barrel aged Manhattan cocktail. However, since the bourbon has taken on flavors from the Sherry barrel while the vermouth was not exposed to the barrel or allowed to oxidize, the flavor is significantly different. As noted above, the Sherry Cask Aged Bourbon brings flavors from the charred oak barrel: oak, clove, vanilla, and caramel with a touch of aged Sherry. The unaged Carpano Antica maintains its rich flavors of fruit and almonds with spice and a slight bitterness on the finish. Together, they create a fabulous cocktail.
2 oz. Sherry Cask Aged Bourbon
1 1/2 oz. Italian Vermouth (sweet)
1 tsp Grand Marnier
1 – 2 dashes Angostura Orange Bitters
Orange peel and Maraschino cherries for garnish
Chill a cocktail glass with ice and water.
Stir to combine all ingredients, sans cherries, in a mixing glass with ice.
Strain into chilled cocktail glass, express the orange peel and garnish with the cherries
Negroni/Whiskey Barrel Aged Tequila
I used Milagro Plata Tequila and aged it for 2 weeks. The barrel was the one described above with Hudson’s White Whiskey alternating with Negroni and a one time Gin Martini. With this aging, I had placed the aged White Whiskey in the barrel just prior to the Tequila. I suspect that the flavor profile might be significantly different if the Tequila had followed a Negroni instead. In the 2 week time, the Tequila took on a little color and a lot of flavor. I was aiming for a primary Tequila flavor with background barrel notes. I was not trying to create Repasado from Plata. After the 2 weeks, the flavor of charred oak was fairly prominent but it was still Tequila and it had picked up vanilla and clove from the oak and spice from the whiskey/Negroni. There was also some dried fruit and herbs from the Negroni. After a few weeks in the bottle, the charred oak flavor diminished some while the rest of the flavors remained.
Whiskey/Negroni Barrel Aged Tequila Manhattan
In our standard Tequila Manhattan, I use Lillet Rouge instead of vermouth. This cocktail calls for a much lighter touch so Dolin Sweet Vermouth fits nicely. Sticking with the Tequila theme, I used Agavero Orange Liqueur as the sweetener. It has a nice orange flavor and is a little sweeter than Grand Marnier. If you need to substitute, use more Grand Marnier or add a dash of simple syrup. I wanted to keep the “Manhattan” flavors as much as possible so I went with Bitter Truth’s Jerry Thomas Own Decanter Bitters. The maraschino cherry brings the last touch of sweetness while the bitters up the complexity.
1 1/2 oz. Whiskey/Negroni Barrel Aged Tequila
1/2 oz. Dolin Sweet Vermouth
1/4 oz. Agavero Orange Liqueur
4 drops Bitter Truth’s Jerry Thomas Own Decanter Bitters sub Angostura
Maraschino cherry
Chill a cocktail glass with ice and water
Combine all ingedients but the garnish in a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill
Strain into chilled cocktail glass and garnish with the cherry.
Sherry Barrel Aged Gin
The most distinctive thing about gin is the fresh, herbal flavor. This is true whether you prefer a heavy juniper London Dry or one of the New American Styles. In my use, barrel aging any gin cocktail flattens those herbal notes. They are still there, but the bright, fresh aspect is gone. What is added by the barrel aging process depends almost entirely on what was previously in the barrel and how long the gin is aged. The process works very well for a Negroni – not so much for any type of Martini.
I have seen Sherry Aged Gin on the market, so I wanted to try this with my Sherry barrel. I chose Ford’s Gin, one of my favorite London Dry’s. The barrel had been used to age Sherry, several Manhattans, including a Tequila Manhattan and bourbon. The Sherry went back into the barrel between each Manhattan and before and after the bourbon. So, it had last been used for Sherry just prior to the Gin. Of note, this barrel was reaching the end of its life. Ultimately, you extract all of the flavors – just like a tea bag. After the Gin, I put the Sherry back in the barrel for 4 weeks, then followed it with Bourbon. The Bourbon required 8-10 weeks to achieve the flavors that previously had taken only 4 weeks. After that, the barrel was done!
The Gin was aged for 4 weeks. What came out was straw colored. As noted earlier, the Gin looses some of the brightness of the botanicals but gains a touch of charred oak, a bit of bitterness, clove, cinnamon, dried fruit herbs from the vermouth in the Manhattans along with a bit of spice from the Bourbon. There is a definite touch of Sherry. All in all, aging the Ford’s Gin in the Sherry/Manhattan/Bourbon Barrel was one of our best outcomes. Definitely worthy of a repeat!
Sherry Barrel Aged Gin Wet Martini
I wanted to enhance all of the flavors of the aged Gin and you’ll notice that this goes very light on the sweet vermouth. With so little sweetener, the bitterness of the charred oak comes through. The overall nose is Gin with a touch of oak. Flavors are London Dry Gin with a flattening of the herbal notes and a bittersweet background of Sherry/Charred Oak. The barrels previous Manhattan occupants add some dried fruit, herbs and spice. I tried this with and without expressing a lemon peel, but couldn’t decide which I liked better. So, I’ll leave the garnish to you!
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1 1/2 Sherry Barrel Aged Gin
1/4 oz. Dolin Sweet Vermouth
4 drops Regan’s Orange Bitters
Lemon peel for garnish – optional
Chill a cocktail glass with ice and water
Combine all ingredients in a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill
Strain into chilled cocktail glass
Garnish with the lemon peel if using
Well, these are some of my ideas for barrel aging. In reality, and part of the adventure, is that none of these will be 100% reproducible! I highly recommend that you try this at home. The barrels are not expensive and the outcomes are definitively worth the little effort involved. The process will require you to frequently sample some tasty cocktails and spirits as they age. It’s a tough job…
Cheers!
Mixology Monday CI – Orange Juice
This month’s theme for Mixology Monday is Orange Juice, brought to us from the host of MxMo 101, DJ Hawaiian Shirt of the Spirited Remix blog. And, not just “Orange,” but Orange Juice. I think this month’s challenge is great because we love OJ! The first drink I thought of is the Potted Parrot, and second is a cocktail I created a few years ago that, in addition to OJ, has Wild Turkey 101. Somehow that number 101 seems appropriate as well! I wanted to contribute something original but I’ll get back to that in a minute. The first drink is:
Wild Turkey in Heat
This cocktail is a bourbon and orange sour with the almond sweetness of the orgeat and the kick of habanero. The name originated during a family ski trip to Steamboat Springs a number of years ago. We always ate dinner at the Tugboat Saloon on our first night and, so, cold and tired, I spotted a bottle of Wild Turkey behind the bar. I asked the waitress if they had Wild Turkey 101. She replied, “Yes.” To which I said, “I’ll have that neat.” She then repeated my order, “A Wild Turkey neat.” Now, from the other end of the table, with great incredulity, our teenage daughter asked: “What’s a Wild Turkey in Heat?”
a dash of 2:1 simple syrup or ¼ oz. regular simple syrup
2 dashes Bittermans Habanero Shrub
Chill a Double Old Fashioned glass with ice and water
Add all ingredients to shaker and shake with ice
Add unstrained to chilled Double Old Fashioned
L’Orange Indulgence
This is our cocktail especially concocted for MxMo CI. I don’t often create desert drinks but I began by imagining the flavors of a chocolate covered, orange rum ball to be savored accompanied by a cup of coffee. Here is the formula for this sweet orange indulgence:
Ingredients
2 oz. Premium white rum
4 oz. Fresh orange juice
1/2 oz. Creme de Cacao – white
1/2 oz. Licor 43
Coffee foam – see below (This drink does require a whipped cream maker. If you don’t have one, you really should get one, for this drink and others!)
Directions
Chill a fancy cocktail glass with ice and water
Combine rum, OJ, Creme de Cacao and Liquor 43 in a shaker with ice and shake to chill
Strain into chilled cocktail glass
Float foam over the drink and serve
For the Coffee Foam
Ingredients
3 egg whites, 9 Tbl or 4 ½ oz. pasteurized egg whites (see note)
3 oz. Tia Maria
2 oz. orange juice double strained
1 dash Regans Orange Bitters
Directions
Lightly whip egg whites – be fairly aggressive if using fresh
Add all ingredients to whipped cream charger
Secure top and shake a few times to further break up the egg whites and combine ingredients.
Double charge with N2O, shaking 4-5 times between charges. Over shaking can cause ingredients to clump and clog charger.
Chill for at least 1 hour before use.
Keeps a few days refrigerated.
Note: Pasteurized egg whites work best – the plain variety, not the yellow dyed brand. The fresh egg whites will not keep as long and they can make a foam that clumps. If you use fresh egg whites, beat them pretty well to break up the protein strands.
And last but not least, the Potted Parrot. I like this Tiki drink and we usually include it as a choice for our guests when we break out the little umbrellas!
This has become one of my favorite sours. If we have a bottle of red wine open, it’s the first cocktail I consider. The egg white makes a velvety mouth feel and the large ice cube in the shaker creates a nice texture. Use a full bodied, fruity wine such as Merlot.
1 1/2 oz. Russel’s 10 Year Old Reserve Bourbon
1 oz. Fresh lemon juice
1/2 oz. Simple syrup
1 Egg white
1/4 – 1/2 oz. Red wine
Lemon peel for garnish
Add bourbon, lemon juice, simple syrup and the egg white to a shaker and shake, without ice, for 30 seconds to break up the egg white.
Add 3 regular ice cubes plus one large cube * to the shaker and shake for 10-15 seconds until well chilled.
Double strain into a chilled coup
Using the back of your bar spoon, float the wine on the drink.
Express the lemon oils from the peel over the drink and discard the peel.
* Use a 1 1/2 – 2 inch cube plus 3 regular cubes or you can just use all regular cubes.
Cheers!
Belle Meade Sour
I like my whiskey sours 1:1 bourbon and lemon sour. For the lemon sour, I prefer 2:1 lemon to simple syrup. I also like the mouth feel of egg white.
1 1/2 oz. Belle Meade Bourbon
1 oz. Fresh lemon juice
1/2 oz. Simple syrup
1 large egg white (can use 3 Tbl. pasteurized egg whites but it will not be the same)
Add all ingredients, in order to a shaker and shake for 30 sec without ice to emulsify the egg white.
Add 3 regular sized ice cubes plus one large cube (1 1/2 – 2 inches)* to the shaker and shake to chill 10 – 15 sec.
Double strain into a chilled coup and serve
* using a large ice cube creates a silky finish that complements the egg white. You can omit this and use regular ice but you should get a large ice cube tray!
Cheers!
MxMo Manhattan
We have two offerings for this Month’s Mixology Monday, “I’ll take Manhattan!” This one, from our fearless MxMo leader, Frederic of the CocktailVirgin blog, challenges us to revisit the classic cocktail.
Mixology Monday
Our first submission is the Manhattan 2.0 – a “Modern” version of the Manhattan with the added nuance of Sherry. For the second, we jump ahead to an article we are preparing to publish on barrel aging cocktails at home.
Manhattan 2.0
For the the bourbon in this cocktail, we tried Basil Hayden and Belle Mead. Both were excellent. The bourbon brings flavors of maple, tobacco, smoke and vanilla. This blends well with the rich, earthy Carpano Antica’s tastes of herbs, spice and slight bitterness. Tasting this without knowing the ingredients, one could easily miss the sherry. It intermingles with the Italian Vermouth, smoothing the bitterness and adding to the richness. Here is the recipe:
1 1/2 oz. Bourbon
3/4 oz. Carpano Antica
1/4 oz. Sherry
1/8 tsp. Grand Marnier
1 dash Angostura Orange Bitters
Garnish: Luxardo Maraschino Cherries and an orange peel
Chill a cocktail glass with ice and water
Add the ingredients, except the garnish, to a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill
Strain into the chilled cocktail glass
Add the cherries, (or place them on a pick), and express the orange peel over the drink and discard.
Sherry Cask Aged Manhattan
This cocktail comes from our look into barrel aging cocktails at home, which we will publish soon. We started with a new charred white oak, 1 liter cask, which was then seasoned by aging Lustau East India Solera Sherry for 4 weeks. As an aside, the Sherry came out very nice and is great in the Manhattan 2.0! The barrel was then used to age the cocktail. The small cask allows a larger surface to liquid ratio than will a bigger barrel. The larger the barrel, the longer will be the aging time.
Barrel aging a Manhattan is awesome! The charred oak adds an expected slight oakiness and smoke flavor while the Sherry brings the slightest touch of sweetness. The overall effect is a richness and depth of flavors that are melded together in a way that you’re not going to achieve any other way.
Here is the recipe for a 1 liter barrel:
For the Barrel:
1 new, 1 liter charred oak barrel with stand which has been filled with water for 24 hours
1 bottle Lustau East India Solera Sherry
Drain and rinse the barrel
Secure the tap
Fill the barrel with the Sherry and seal the bung.
Place the barrel on its stand and set aside on a water proof shallow container, such as a plastic container lid
Turn the barrel 1/4 turn each week
After 4 weeks, drain the sherry through a fine mesh strainer and store, refrigerated, in its original bottle.
Rinse the barrel and refill immediately with a cocktail – do not allow the barrel to dry out.
For the Manhattan:
20 oz. Bourbon
10 oz. Carpano Antica Italian Vermouth
1 3/4 tsp Grand Marnier
1 3/4 tsp Regans Orange Bitters
Rinse the sherry aged barrel with water
Combine all ingredients in a 1 qt. pitcher
Carefully pour ingredients into the cask
Set the cocktail filled cask on a plastic lid or other flat, liquid proof surface (the barrel will leak).
Turn the barrel 1/4 turn each week
Taste the cocktail at least weekly until you think it’s ready – about 4 weeks
When the cocktail is ready, carefully pour it from the barrel through a fine mesh strainer into a 1 quart pitcher.
Decant into a seal-able glass bottle
Store your cocktail at room temperature.
To serve:
Chill a cocktail glass with ice and water
Pour 2 1/4 oz. Sherry Cask Aged Manhattan into a mixing glass with ice and stir to chill
Strain into the chilled cocktail glass
Garnish with premium maraschino cherries and an orange peel
Not ready to commit to a barrel? You can approximate the same aged cocktail effect using a small bottle and a charred barrel stave, available here. It will lack the richness and depth of flavor of barrel aging, but it will be close.
The bottle holds 12 oz. The recipe is then:
7 oz. Bourbon
3 1/2 oz. Carpano Antica Italian Vermouth
1/2 tsp Grand Marnier
1/2 tsp Regans Orange Bitters
Combine the ingredients in the bottle and add the barrel stave