The Sour

After a brief interruption, we’re returning to our back-to-basics series we started with The Cocktail and The Martini. This week’s drink is the Sour – possibly the biggest and most versatile family of cocktails out there. Every Sidecar, every White Lady, every Pisco Sour is a variation on the simple, delicious theme of spirits, sugar, citrus and ice. Figure out the right balance for just one, and you’re on your way to mastering them all.– Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Sour

2 Parts Spirits
1 Part Citrus Juice
1 Part Sugar

Combine everything with lots of ice. Shake and strain into a chilled cocktail glass and enjoy.

This recipe is a suggestion, not a rule. Spirits, citrus, sweetener, and, most importantly, the ratios are all up for grabs. You can pick any spirit you like and match it with a citrus. Rum pairs so perfectly with lime and whiskey with lemon that you’d think those fruits were created for the special purpose of tarting up your liquor, but those are guidelines: think whiskey and grapefruit juice for a Brown Derby. Gin seems to love any citrus you can throw at it. The only real rule here is: the fresher the citrus juice, the better your cocktail will taste.

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Above, I listed sugar as the Sour’s sweetener, but that’s another suggestion. You can sweeten a Sour with actual sugar – preferably super-fine – or simple syrup, which blends more easily. Or a liqueur, as with the Sidecar or the Margarita or the Aviation or the unfortunately named Corpse Reviver #2. Or another syrup, like grenadine, as with the Jack Rose. You’ve got options.

Ok, so: you’ve got your spirits and your fresh citrus and your sweetener of choice. All that’s left is figuring out your preferred ratios. This is critical! Too much citrus and you could have a nearly undrinkable tart mess. Too much sweetener and you have a candy-saccharine disaster. There’s no magic solution, and the best ratio is the one that tastes best to you. My ratio above might be too sweet or too tart for you. David Embury’s mid-century classic The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks suggests a ratio of 2 parts spirits to just 1/2 part sour and 1/8 sweet – which means my grandparents were drinking Sours that were tarter than I could stand. But maybe you would love it. Experiment until you find what you love.

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Your ratio will also depend in part on your sweetener. Agave syrup, perfect for tequila and mezcal sours, is enormously sweet and can be used sparingly. A liqueur like Cointreau will be drier, while grenadine will carry a bit of tartness of its own. Your ratio will also depend on your spirit. A sweeter spirit, like a brandy or a bourbon, might need a bit less sugar. Or maybe you have a particularly quality spirit – maybe a single malt whiskey you want to showcase – for which you’d lower both the citrus and sweetener to half an ounce each or less.

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Ok, all that said, here’s my favorite (as seen in Nole’s beautiful photos): the Daiquiri. 2 oz rum (aged or clear) with 1 oz lime juice (freshly squeezed) and 1 oz simple syrup. Shaken with ice and strained. Simple. Perfection.

Don’t forget to let us know if you try any of our recipes. And if you do make one at home, you can use #osbphappyhour to share photos of these (or your own creations) on Instagram.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Best of 2013: Cocktails

It’s Friday – which means time for an end of the week Happy Hour! We’ve had so much fun coming up with cocktail recipes to share with you every week, from seasonally-inspired recipes to classic cocktails that you can enjoy year round. Here are a few of our favorite recipes from 2013!

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The Love Letter with Hibiscus-Infused Gin, Lemon Juice, and Grenadine

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Pisco Punch with Pisco, Lime Juice, and Pineapple-Infused Simple Syrup

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Peach Margarita with Tequila, Peach Liqueur, Lemon and Lime Juice, and Simple Syrup

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Sunset Mai Tai with Rum, Lime Juice, Triple Sec, Velvet Falernum, Orgeat Syrup, Grenadine, Angostura Bitters, and Mint

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The Summer Rose with Gin, Lemon Juice, Lavender Simple Syrup, and Blueberries

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The Mai Pen Rai with Batavia Arrak, St-Germain, Lemongrass Simple Syrup, Mint, and Soda Water

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Left Bank Cider with Dry Sherry, White Port, St-Germain, Apple Cider, and Lemon Juice

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Raised in a Red Barn with Bourbon, Sweet Vermouth, Lemon Juice, and Figs

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Winter Cobbler with Bourbon, Dry Sherry, Cranberries, and Citrus

More cocktail recipes right here!

Friday Happy Hour: Fall Harvest Punch

A couple of weekends ago, we helped throw a party for a couple of dear friends. The signature drink? A Punch, of course. We’ve featured a few Punches over the years: the Vanilla Punch, the Puritan’s Punch, the Pisco Punch, and – just over a month ago – the Spice Islands Punch.  One thing all of these drinks have in common is their size: they’re all single glass drinks. But Punch – real Punch – doesn’t belong in a single glass. It belongs in a bowl, or a drink dispenser, or something else big. Punch is, at its heart, a communal drink, something you can only drink with lots of friends. So here’s our first take on a real, genuine, authentic Punch the way it was meant to be: big, shared, delicious. – Andrew

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OSBP-Signature-Cocktail-Recipe-Card-Fall-Harvest-Punch-Shauna-Lynn-Illustration

Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Fall Harvest Punch

1/2 Bottle (375 ml or just over 1 1/2 cups) Aged Rum
1/2 Bottle (375 ml or just over 1 1/2 cups) Cachaca or Batavia Arrack
6 oz Simple Syrup
3 Lemons and 2 Limes

Peel the lemons thinly, with a sharp knife or a vegetable peeler, avoiding any of the bitter white pith.  Muddle the lemon peels with the simple syrup. We used about 4 oz Saffron Simple Syrup and 2 oz Rose Simple Syrup from Royal Rose, to give the Punch its spice, one of the basic components of any true Punch.* Let the peels and sugar sit for at least thirty minutes, but an hour or more is better. Remove the peels with a slotted spoon. Those lemon peels have a lot of flavor left in them, so don’t be afraid to really press all that sugar and oil out of them.

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Making the Oleo-Sacrum / Sherbet!

What you have left is the oleo-sacrum, dog-latin for “sugar-oil.” The sugar will have absorbed the fragrant oils of the lemon peel, leaving you with a citrusy sugar syrup. Juice the lemons and limes. Save the pulp and seeds in a sieve or strainer. Pour 12 oz boiling water over the citrus remnants to extract the last bit of citrus. Combine this with the oleo-sacrum and citrus juice. This is your sherbet. Combine the sherbet with the aged rum and the Cachaca. This is your punch base. Once you’re ready to serve, add about three cups of cold water and another three cups of ice to the base right before you’re ready to serve. This should give your Punch the right amount of dilution, but this is really a matter of taste. If your Punch is too strong, add more water. Otherwise, add less ice – or just leave it be.

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The full punch in action at the party! Photo by Jessica Del Vecchio

Garnishes for true Punches are optional, but we went all-out with ours. We threw in the lemon peels, plus whole cloves, cinnamon sticks, and freshly grated nutmeg (remember: it’s either fresh nutmeg, or nothing at all).

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The result should be a Punch that’s a bit smooth, from the aged rum, a bit funky, from the Cachaca, and plenty sweet and citrusy and warmly spicy from all that lemon peel a citrus juice and spiced simple syrup. A punch like this is a lot like a Sour, but the citrus oils from the lemon peel add a depth to the drink that a typical rum sour lacks. There are lots of flavors running around in every glass of this Punch, but they all work together nicely to give you something that’s not quite smooth, but plenty harmonious.

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This recipe serves…a lot. We made this Punch for a party of about thirty or forty people and had plenty left over. It made for a great social drink, because every time someone needed to refill their tiny glass (and all Punch should be sipped from tiny glasses requiring frequent refills), they had to cluster around the Punch bowl. Plus, having a bottle left over worked out really nicely, because a Punch ages very well. So even though it’s a bit of work, consider making an authentically classic Punch for your next party.

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*There’s a legend that the word “Punch” derives from the Persian panj, meaning “five.” That is, the five ingredients of any Punch: spirits, sugar, citrus, water, and spice. Most traditional punches rely on some grated nutmeg or, more commonly, no spice at all. But the best Punches should involve rich warm spices, and one of the easiest ways is to use simple syrups from a place like Royal Rose or Morris Kitchen, which will let you easily incorporate lots of complex flavors into your Punch.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

How to Stock a Home Bar

Don’t let the title of this post fool you: there’s really no one way to stock a bar, and every bar is going to be an eternal work in progress, always changing as you drink and replace. Every bar starts somewhere. Ours began with a bottle of bourbon, and took years before it reached a point where I felt comfortable calling it “well-stocked.” So here’s an overview of how we stocked our home bar, through lots of trial and errors and many delicious drinks. Just remember, these are all general guidelines, based on our own preferences and experiences; there’s no bar authority that will deduct points if you prefer to do things differently. And a full bar is expensive, so there’s no harm in taking your time or keeping it modest.

How to Stock a Home Bar by Oh So Beautiful Paper

Before we get going, here are some principles:

1. Every bar is different.  You should stock yours the way you will be drinking, not based on how someone else thinks you should stock your bar.  Do you like to host cocktail parties? Have a big bar. Like to explore obscure, complex pre-Prohibition cocktails? Have a diverse bar. Occasional drinker? Keep it small. You get the idea.

2. A bar is never really fully complete. There are simply too many spirits out there, too many distilleries and too many varieties, too many mixers, to ever really be finished. So resist the urge to have one of everything. I use a one-in, one-out rule to keep our house from being overrun and our wallets emptied.

3. Don’t be afraid to try new things and experiment. It’s ok to have favorites, but as bottles are emptied and need replacing, consider trying a new distillery, a new variety, or even a totally different spirit.

4. Finally, you can make an amazing variety of delicious drinks with a fairly small handful of spirits and mixers. If you start out (or stay) small, don’t worry about missing out. It’s easy to fall down the rabbit hole of trying every obscure liqueur, but then you run the risk of a bar stocked with nothing but random bottles that you’ll never finish drinking, instead of focusing on some basic but delicious cocktails.

Ok, onto our bar.

How to Stock a Home Bar: Essential Spirits by Oh So Beautiful Paper

First, what I consider essential spirits for our home bar:

I like to have at least a couple varieties of Whiskey around, usually a sweeter Bourbon and a spicier Rye on hand at all times. Bulleit is one of my favorite distillers around for both. Maker’s Mark is also one of the best bourbons out there, and Old Overholt makes a great and surprisingly cheap rye.  I also love having a bottle of Scotch whiskey on hand, but for some reason I find it difficult to keep one around for long….

Oh So Beautiful Paper Signature Cocktail Recipe: The Lavender Ghost

Lavender Ghost

I always keep at least one English Dry Gin on hand, and at least one more gin, either a softer Old Tom Gin or a malty Genever. Plymouth and Hendrick’s are two of our favorite dry gins. Bols makes my favorite Genever, though I confess that I have only tried a few, and most are not exported to the United States.

I like to always have on hand at least two kinds of Rum. The first is a smooth Plantation-style aged rum. St. Lucia’s Chairman’s Reserve and Nicaragua’s Flor de Caña are two of my favorite, affordable rums, and Gosling’s Black Seal is essential for anyone making a Dark and Stormy. The second is a funky, pirate-style rum, like a Brazilian Cachaça or a Rhum Agricole, but I’m just beginning to explore different distillers here.

Oh So Beautiful Paper Signature Cocktail Recipe: Dark & Stormy

Dark & Stormy

I like to keep at least one Tequila and usually two on hand at all times: a smoother aged Reposado or Añejo Tequila and a smokey Mezcal.  I confess not to know much about Mexican distillers of these spirits, but I do know to look for 100% Agave spirits only.

I always have at least one bottle of Brandy on hand.  Every once in a while I’ll splurge on a fancy bottle of French Cognac, but most of the time I stock either a much cheaper American-distilled brandy or, even better, an Apple Brandy or, more properly, an Apple Eau de Vie. Literally “water of life,” an Eau de Vie is a brandy made from fruit other than grapes, like apricots or pears. I’m a big fan of Oregon’s Clear Creek Apple Brandy or a sharper, wilder French Calvados.

Next, what I consider to be essential accompaniments to these spirits:

Liqueurs: The one liqueur that I consider absolutely essential to have around is a good Triple Sec, a bitter orange liqueur, because of its enormous versatility. Our personal favorite is Cointreau. For many of the classic, pre-Prohibition cocktails I love, I also like to make sure we always have a Maraschino liqueur, like Luxardo’s, and for some of the more interesting drinks out there, I like to make sure we have a French herbal liqueur like Benedictine or Chartreuse, and an Italian amaro, like the fiercely bitter Campari or the sweeter, orange-flavored Aperol. And, while it’s easy to get overwhelmed by the enormous diversity of liqueurs available to you, we always make sure to keep on hand a bottle of Nole’s favorite, St-Germain.

Oh So Beautiful Paper Signature Cocktail Recipe: The Sazerac

Sazerac

Bitters: The most basic home bar can probably get away with a single bottle of bitters, either Angostura or Orange bitters, like the spicy Regan’s Orange Bitters. I like to have both, plus a bottle of Peychaud’s , essential for lots of classic cocktails, like the Sazerac, on hand all the time. Bitters are a must-have, like salt and pepper, the essential seasonings of cocktails: they add flavors of their own and they enhance or highlight flavors from other ingredients.

Vermouth: We keep a bottle of Sweet Vermouth and a bottle of Dry Vermouth – also known as, respectively, Red or Italian Vermouth and White or French Vermouth. Vermouth is a fortified wine, flavored with a variety of herbs and botanicals, and is critical for basic drinks like the Manhattan and the Martini. I’m an unabashed fan of Dolin Vermouth.

Mixers: I try to keep on hand lots of fresh citrus fruit for juicing and zesting, along with soda and tonic water and ginger beer. As for the latter, I’m a big fan of Fever Tree, which purports to use high quality natural ingredients.

Got all that? Good. Here are some things to consider once you have your basics down:

Absinthe isn’t for everyone, and while I think it’s an essential, I’m including it down here because of its hard-to-love licorice flavor. Absinthe is necessary for many classic drinks like the aforementioned Sazerac, and really helps improve many others, but you can probably live without a bottle and still make lots of great cocktails. Consider an Absinthe Verte, like Leopold Brothers, that goes easier on the anise.

Once you have a solid set of basic spirits, consider having on hand some of the more obscure: a Scandinavian Akavit (or Aquavit), like gin but flavored with rye and cardamom instead of juniper. Or a funky South American Pisco brandy. Or variations on some of the basics: a mellow Canadian Club  or Irish Whiskey, a smooth Wheated Bourbon whiskey, or a complex Aged Old Tom Gin. Just don’t overpay for a bottle of unaged White Whiskey, which is essentially a bottle of Moonshine, and should not cost the $40 or more that distillers have discovered they can charge.

Go wild with your bitters.  Two of my favorites, neither of which is essential but which are fun to have around, are a bottle of Fee Brothers Black Walnut Bitters and a bottle of Bitter Truth Chocolate Bitters.  As part of our broader drinking renaissance, there has been an explosion in bitters diversity in the last few years, so you’ll never run out of options.

Experiment with your liqueurs, but go a little less wild.  Bitters bottles are small and cheap and easy to collect; liqueurs are bigger and can often be pretty expensive, and you run the risk of overwhelming your bar with very specific flavors that you only use occasionally. Don’t get me wrong: there are many great liqueurs out there, and some – like Creme de Violette – are essential to some fantastic old drinks.

Once you have mastered Vermouth consider some of the more advanced fortified apertif wines, like Cocchi Americano or Punt e Mes.

Whew! Still reading? Good! Two final thoughts:

  • Even though this post has gotten ridiculously long, I have almost certainly forgotten something.  Like I said, every bar is a work in progress, and there’s no wrong way to stock one.
  • One thing you might have noticed missing: Vodka.  I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: no vodka in our bar!  To be sold as vodka, by U.S. law, a spirit must be flavorless and odorless. In other words, vodka provides alcohol – to get you drunk – without any of the flavors that make other spirits a culinary experience, not just a drinking experience. Just as I would refuse a tasteless, odorless steak, I won’t stock vodka.

And there you have it! That’s how I stock our home bar. For everyone who hasn’t started: get shopping! For everyone who has, tell us how you stock yours!

Backyard Cocktail Party Recipes

For the first time since moving to DC, Nole and I have a backyard – and you can believe we’re doing our best to take advantage of it this summer. This means grilling, and outdoor parties, eating under the stars… and cocktails! Here are some St-Germain cocktails we’ve whipped up (along with our very first mocktail) for just such a party, perfect for making in big batches for your guests, but still light enough to enjoy next to the grill without leaving you too lightheaded in the heat.

Summer Cocktail Series: Backyard Cocktail Party Recipes (2)

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St-Germain Sangria

One Bottle Dry White Wine
3 oz St-Germain
3 oz Pisco Brandy
2 oz Lemon Juice
2 oz Honey Syrup
Berries and Grapes

Combine the wine, St-Germain, Pisco, lemon juice, honey syrup (equal parts honey and water heated until the honey melts), and chopped berries and grapes in a pitcher. Let everything sit for a few hours or overnight to let the flavors meld. Pour over lots of ice and enjoy!

Recipe Card: St-Germain Sangria, Illustration by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: Sangria is ridiculously easy to make and so delicious that I’ll never understand why I don’t make it more often. This St-Germain Sangria is no exception. St-Germain’s floral notes and sweetness make it a great complement for a white wine-based Sangria. It’s light and sweet, with just a bit of edge from the oakiness of the wine and funkiness of the Pisco. It only comes in party-friendly pitchers. Oh, and – despite being made from white wine – it turns a great pink color from all that fruit that will probably delight some guests at your party.

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Summer Cocktail Series: Backyard Cocktail Party Recipes (5) Summer Cocktail Series: Backyard Cocktail Party Recipes (1)

St-Germain Shandy

2 oz St-Germain
2 oz Lemon Juice
Wheat Beer

Combine the St Germain and lemon juice in a glass filled with ice. Top with the wheat beer (we used my personal favorite, Bavaria’s Paulaner Hefeweissbier, but any other wheat beer or even a lager or a pilsner would work too), give everything a good stir, and enjoy!

Recipe Card: St-Germain Shandy, Illustration by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Traditionally, a shandy is equal parts beer and a soft drink; the Germans are fond of a shandy that matches beer with sparkling lemon soda. Our shandy is a play on this classic, combining the wheat beer’s delicate notes of fruit and spice and citrus with a punch of lemony sourness, balanced by the St-Germain’s sweet fruitiness. It’s a substantial but still light, enormously refreshing, and easy to make in big batches or one at a time.

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Summer Cocktail Series: Backyard Cocktail Party Recipes (7) Summer Cocktail Series: Backyard Cocktail Party Recipes (6)

Blueberry Mint Shrub Soda

2 oz Blueberry Mint Shrub Syrup*
Soda Water

To make the shrub syrup, combine one cup of muddled blueberries, one cup of sugar, and one cup of raspberry vinegar. Let the mixture sit for 2-3 days, agitating occasionally. (Alternatively, for a much faster process, combine everything in a sauce pan and heat gently, stirring frequently, for 20-30 minutes.) Strain the mixture well through a fine sieve or strainer to filter out the solids.

Take a handful of mint, add a few ounces of the syrup, and muddle gently, pressing but not shredding the leaves. Remove the leaves, squeezing out as much of the syrup and mint oils as possible. Add the minty syrup back to the rest of the shrub. To serve, combine the shrub syrup with the soda water over lots of ice and enjoy!

Recipe Card: Blueberry Mint Shrub Spritzer, Illustration by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This is our very first mocktail, and it’s a good one – full of fresh fruit and mint flavor, sweet but with a kick from the vinegar, and enormously refreshing thanks to all that soda water and ice. Shrubs like this one can just as easily be made into a cocktail or a soda like this one. It’s easy to make in a big pitcher and handy to have around for both your non-drinking guests or to sip in between other drinks (you know, to stay hydrated).

All illustrations by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Calligraphy Cocktail Menu Cards: Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This post is brought to you in collaboration with St-Germain. All content, photos, recipes, and words are our own. Thank you for supporting the sponsors that help make Oh So Beautiful Paper possible!