Valentine's Day
9 Valentine's Day Cocktails We Simply Adore
Stir up these sips for someone special (yourself included).
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4 Comments
Steve
January 22, 2023
"Gin Martini" is redundant. It's like saying Pork Ham.
Steve
January 24, 2023
A Martini is a Gin and dry vermouth cocktail. If It's made with vodka, it is called a Vodka Martini, or a Vodkatini. If you go back to the 40s and that classic cocktail era, the vodka version was called a Kangaroo Kicker, often shortened to a Kangaroo. But that's not used today.
Vodka Martini is similar in how it identifies the spirit swap to the Bourbon Sidecar. A Sidecar is a Cognac/brandy cocktail. But there is a common bourbon spirit swap with it's own name.
Sometimes, the spirit swap is graced with an entirely different name (like Martini and Kangaroo). There is a Negroni. But if you swap the gin for whiskey, you get a Boulevardier.
There are a lot of folks that say Martini when they mean Vodka Martini, and all it does is create confusion. Imagine ordering a Sidecar and not specifying that what you wanted was bourbon. But that is what folks do. And it's gotten so ubiquitous that bartenders have no idea what to make if a customer orders a Martini.
BTW, James Bond is often credited with the popularity of a "Martini made with vodka." But when he himself did order this, he almost always said "Vodka Martini, shaken not stirred"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa7U9uHl0Zc
Shaken give more cooling in the same time, but clouds the drink a bit and adds ice shards for a bit until they melt. It does dilute the drink which might have been his intent.
Vodka Martini is similar in how it identifies the spirit swap to the Bourbon Sidecar. A Sidecar is a Cognac/brandy cocktail. But there is a common bourbon spirit swap with it's own name.
Sometimes, the spirit swap is graced with an entirely different name (like Martini and Kangaroo). There is a Negroni. But if you swap the gin for whiskey, you get a Boulevardier.
There are a lot of folks that say Martini when they mean Vodka Martini, and all it does is create confusion. Imagine ordering a Sidecar and not specifying that what you wanted was bourbon. But that is what folks do. And it's gotten so ubiquitous that bartenders have no idea what to make if a customer orders a Martini.
BTW, James Bond is often credited with the popularity of a "Martini made with vodka." But when he himself did order this, he almost always said "Vodka Martini, shaken not stirred"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa7U9uHl0Zc
Shaken give more cooling in the same time, but clouds the drink a bit and adds ice shards for a bit until they melt. It does dilute the drink which might have been his intent.
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