Tag: Summer

Chocolate Lemonade

Summer’s over here so I wanted to relay a success on the mixology front.  My cocktail posts get the fewest reads but, nevertheless, I have a duty to share this information with the world.

This is a simple recipe:

Juice of One Lemon

Equal Parts Creme de Cacao (white, preferably)

Pour over rocks in highball glass and top with soda water

To my great surprise, this is quite a pleasant drink.  In each sip, the more pungent lemon hits first, then you taste the chocolate as an afternote, and the two tastes merge quite well.

That being said, this is definitely a “weird” drink with a lot going on outside the recipe.  The most important is to make sure that you don’t use a “weak” lemon with little sourness.  Just taste the inside of the rind after you juice it to make sure it’s as sour as expected.

The other is that creme de cacao formulations vary quite a bit.  I use the DeKuyper’s White Creme de Cacao, which is 48 proof and pretty balanced between chocolate taste and sweetness.  I prefer and encourage in others a taste for less sweet lemonade, but if you want something closer to the typical store-bought sweetness you might want to add a little simple syrup.  48 proof also means that each glass is about a quarter to half of a standard drink, something like a low-alcohol beer at most.  You might want to test this recipe out with whatever specific brand of creme de cacao you’re using to make sure it tastes right before producing it en masse — I think the drink, while simple, requires a pretty narrow range of sweet:sour:chocolate to be palatable.

Mint Julep Idiosyncrasy

It’s hot, and you don’t like to drink the chilled rice-based swill that passes for “beer”.  What do?  Perhaps the mint julep…is right for you.

Mint julep recipes are highly variable, but have several things in common: mint, sugar, bourbon, and ice.  The IBA recipe:

6 cL Bourbon whiskey

4 mint leaves

1 teaspoon powdered sugar

2 teaspoons water

In a highball glass gently muddle the mint, sugar and water. Fill the glass with cracked ice, add Bourbon and stir well until the glass is well frosted. Garnish with a mint sprig.

Aside from the fact that this is a triple-strong drink — which may or may not be what you want — it’s light on the mint.  I’m not sold on powdered sugar either.  By the way, in this and other julep recipes it’s assumed that the highball glass is metal, hence the “until frosted” direction.  Don’t wait for glass glasses to frost.  Silver straw optional.

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