Saturday, March 23, 2013

The Amigo, or the Rand Paul

Tea Partier Rand Paul has come out of the closet on immigration reform! But looking at his effusive remarks in this Washington Post article about how he "lived, worked, played and grew up alongside Latinos" working shoulder-to-shoulder as a teenager "alongside immigrants mowing lawns and putting in landscaping around businesses," one could hardly be surprised at this sudden coming out. Ay Guero! He's practically an immigrant himself! This might be Rand's own "Ich bin ein berliner!" moment, save it being more like Soy un inmigrante!  But hey, this makes total sense.  With more above-board taxpayers it's easier for radical Tea Partiers to hold their hardline ideological stances on taxes. 

This week's homemade concoction is The Amigo, or the Rand Paul, made completely with ingredients from south of both the Mason Dixon & the Gadsden Purchase. It's gonna sound a bit shocking, but oddly enough the mix of silver tequila & some honey bourbon kinda works. Thank goodness. After all, it wouldn't be a true homage to Rand Paul without Kentucky's native spirit.  That said, the effect of the drink as you sip is much the same as the Tea Party itself.  On the surface, it sounds good.  The initial pulls are palatable enough.  Still, like the Tea Party, there's something that doesn't sit quite right the more time you spend with it.  And like US immigration policy, with some minor tweaking, it could be quite good.




The Amigo, or the Rand Paul
2 oz. silver tequila*
1 oz. honey bourbon
1/2 bar spoonful agave nectar
4-8 dashes grapefruit bitters
1 good squeeze of fresh lime juice

Fill a bar glass with lots ice.  Add the ingredients and stir well with a bar spoon.  Adjust the lime juice to taste.

*:  I imagine the use of aƱejo might make for a smoother tipple.  But the silver adds a smokey touch and keeps the hue of the beverage from looking too mestizaje.

1 comment:

  1. oh boy! that looks like a stiff one ... I'd need it to have a conversation with Rand Paul I'm sure. My post last week on religion and faith was not an easy one. Sometimes it is hard to write without offending people - and better just not to say it at all. And sometimes it just needs to be said because it could all be so simple if people just had more tolerance for one another. I love when people feel the need to say "I'm just like you" when the need to say it seems to mean just the opposite. We don't all need to be the same - how boring would that be? But I also do not see the need to stick us all in to nice neat little 'square holes.' and you can take that any way you like. :O

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