Author Notes
A Southern staple: good bourbon mingles with spicy ginger beer, a hit of lemon and mint, and a homemade, blood-building nettle simple syrup with an unexpected complexity. —Beth Kirby | {local milk}
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Ingredients
- Nettle Sorghum Syrup
-
1 cup
water
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3/4 cup
sugar
-
1/4 cup
sorghum syrup
-
2 cups
stinging nettles
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juice of half a lemon
- Southern Spell
-
1.5 ounces
good bourbon, like Bulleit
-
1.5 tablespoons
fresh squeezed lemon juice
-
1.5 tablespoons
nettle sorghum syrup
-
good ginger beer
-
a handful of mint leaves
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3 tablespoons sugar
-
cooked nettle leaves, for garnish
Directions
- Nettle Sorghum Syrup
-
To make the simple syrup, combine the water, sugar, and sorghum syrup in a saucepan. Heat over medium-high, stirring frequently, until all the sugar is dissolved. When the mixture comes to a boil, remove from the heat and dump in the nettle leaves (be careful to not touch them -- they will sting you when they're uncooked).
-
Let the mixture steep for at least half an hour. Sometimes I refrigerate mine and let it steep over night for maximum nettle flavor and health benefits. When the syrup’s finished steeping, strain it into a clean bottle, add the juice of half a lemon, and store in the fridge. Use the syrup within a couple of months.
- Southern Spell
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Combine the sugar and mint using a mortar and pestle or a food processor. Dip a high ball glass or a mason jar in lemon juice, then dip it into the mint sugar. Fill the glass with ice.
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In a cocktail shaker, combine the bourbon, lemon juice, and simple syrup with ice. Shake throughly and pour over ice.
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Top with a nice, spicy ginger beer and garnish with a (cooked) nettle leaf.
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