First use of awesome vintage Collins glasses: a Christmas gift from The Partner! |
Personal Preferences: A tasty tipp that everyone will like to get the evening rolling; a multiple rounder
Style of Drink: Buck, Collins, Fizz, or Long Drink
Spirit of Choice: Something out of the ordinary
Last Drink: Hotel Nacional Special
Each year we have two large parties of 50 guests or more. A swank Winter Solstice party alternates years with a Mardi Gras bacchanal while each year we celebrate Pride. They're fun. We love the frenetic activity the week before. The menu planning, the prep, the cooking, the baking, the decorating. When the parties themselves unfold, we love having friends in our home, watching and listening to them enjoy themselves. But when you throw a party that size you don't even get a chance to see everyone, never mind visit with anyone. So we've decided that throughout 2013 we'd have a number of smaller, more casual dinner parties to enjoy the company of our friends as well as entertain. In this way we could also properly warm the new kitchen.
Our first such evening was last night. Just 4 friends to enjoy a dinner of homemade chicken pot pies, twice-baked mashed potatoes (topped with cheddar cheese & whipped cream!), and roasted broccoli and cauliflower. The Partner made a devastating crème brûlée for dessert. The perfect comfort meal for a kitchen warming on a windy, 20-degree Chicago night. So I needed a cocktail to kick this evening off well. Initially, I was looking at rather classic-sounding bevs. But not everyone would be into brown liquors. Then I came across the Morango Fizz. It couldn't have been more perfect given my PDT Interview parameters. And what it lacked in seasonality, it more than made up for in it's less-than-ordinary ingredients. To boot, its base liquor would be a nice homage, given my friend, M., would be one of our guests for the evening! It would bring a little warm weather sunshine into our mid-winter evening.
All agreed, this should be a feature on the roof this summer. The Morango Fizz is bright & sparkling. A summer sipper that goes down easier with each pull. What's nice is that it's sweet and refreshing without being cloying. It's pink lemonade-like hue is appealing without being pepto-y. All-in-all, a delightful tipple that's as fun to make as it is to sip.
Morango Fizz
2 oz. strawberry-infused cachaça*
3/4 oz. lemon juice
3/4 oz. simple syrup
1 egg white
Dry shake ingredients, then shake with ice and strain into chilled fizz glass. Top with 1 oz. club soda. No garnish.
*: Cachaça can be hard enough to find in the traditional variety, depending on what your liquor store carries. So don't waste time trying to find strawberry-infused. Better to make your own. A good infusion takes anywhere from 12-hours to 3 days. I had about 8 hours before our guests arrived, so here's a "quick" infusion:
- Remove the stems from a pint of fresh strawberries and do a medium-fine dice.
- Put the berries in a large non-reactive bowl.
- Pour a full bottle of cachaça over them, give a stir, and let stand at room temperature.
- Stir once or twice an hour while infusing.
- After 8-12 hours, strain fruit from the booze and decant.
I was curious as to what this concoction would yield. Cachaça is a strong liquor. So I was amazed to notice throughout the day how the mixture slowly transformed from its sharp, alcoholic sting to a softer, lighter berry infusion. At this time interval, the finished effect was a pleasant balance of a softer cachaça and a light essence of strawberry. Nothing like the current trend of heavy-handed flavoring of rums & vodkas. And that's a good thing.
Love the new look of the blog - very nice! And those glasses in this post are sweet :)
ReplyDeleteThanks! ...and those glasses are straight from 1974 -- complete with a brass wire carrier with a wooden handle! Love it :-)
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