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Steve
June 21, 2021
The article in The Balance, and Columbian Repository is not a definitive definition of every cocktail, but it became the definitive definition of the Old Fashioned cocktail. There is more to the story. Over the next 75 years, people kept tweaking the cocktail, hanging ornaments on it. The “old-fashioned cocktail” appeared by name in print in The Chicago Tribune in 1880, and it was a reference to the original, the “Old Fashioned” cocktail. A cocktail made in the original, old fashioned way; Spirits, Sugar, Water, Bitters. The true roots.
An exampleof how cocktails are more than this is the "Improved" cocktail. In 1876, an updated edition of Jerry Thomas’ Bar-Tender’s Guide included an appendix with “Improved” versions of the long-standard brandy, whiskey and gin Old Fashioned cocktail recipes (spirit, sugar, bitters and ice or water), adding other ingredients, such as maraschino liqueur and absinthe. This class of cocktails was known as “Improved Cocktails.” It never took off as a full-fledged cocktail category. But it did birth an era of experimentation and nomenclature in the late 19th century, and subtle variations on a theme would prompt a bartender to note the changes, often with new names. There were lots of variations—like using brandy instead of gin in a mix of lemon and Cointreau—but new names were spawned; nobody calls the ‘Sidecar’ the ‘Improved White Lady.’
An exampleof how cocktails are more than this is the "Improved" cocktail. In 1876, an updated edition of Jerry Thomas’ Bar-Tender’s Guide included an appendix with “Improved” versions of the long-standard brandy, whiskey and gin Old Fashioned cocktail recipes (spirit, sugar, bitters and ice or water), adding other ingredients, such as maraschino liqueur and absinthe. This class of cocktails was known as “Improved Cocktails.” It never took off as a full-fledged cocktail category. But it did birth an era of experimentation and nomenclature in the late 19th century, and subtle variations on a theme would prompt a bartender to note the changes, often with new names. There were lots of variations—like using brandy instead of gin in a mix of lemon and Cointreau—but new names were spawned; nobody calls the ‘Sidecar’ the ‘Improved White Lady.’
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