Sherry Cobbler

Spring is here! Which means moving away from winter drinks – heavy dark drinks or hot toddies or sparkling bubblies – into spring cocktails. This is a time for lighter, crispy drinks with more fresh fruit to fit the changing season. And there’s really none more perfect for spring than the Sherry Cobbler, one of America’s most venerable (but forgotten) low-proof cocktails. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Sherry Cobbler

2 oz Dry Sherry
1/2 oz Dry Curaçao
1 tsp Demerara Syrup
Fresh Berries and Orange

Toss a handful of fresh berries and a slice of orange into a cocktail shaker and muddle them together. (We used blueberries and a Cara Cara orange, which really does live up to its hype.) Add the sherry, curaçao, and syrup, then fill the shaker two-thirds full with ice. Shake and fine strain into a glass filled with fresh crushed ice. Garnish with more fresh fruit and enjoy!

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The result is a sweet, fresh, lightly mellow drink that’s  also full of fresh fruit. I can think of no better way to get your Vitamin C…

That “fine strain” part is important here. That means using a strainer spoon with an extra-fine coil, like the Koriko strainer, or pouring through a tea strainer held above your glass. Otherwise, you’re going to end up with a lot of fruit pulp in your glass and a thick, gloppy drink. The Demerara syrup is easy: it’s just equal parts Turbinado or raw sugar and water, melted together over low heat. It’s a much darker and richer simple syrup than you’d get from white table sugar. The original recipe used fine powdered sugar, but I think this adds more robust and complex flavor.

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You’ll want to use a drier sherry and Amontillado really is best here. Sweeter sherries will end up too cloying from the added sugar while more savory sherries – Fino or Palo Cortado and the like – can be a bit too pungent. Amontillado is dry and robust enough to stand up to the sugar but also has a mellow nuttiness that matches well with the fruit.

Ok, so the dry curaçao is definitely not original to the drink, which dates all the way back to the early 1800s and consisted just of sherry, sugar, and fruit. But dry curaçao is a period-appropriate ingredient, an orange liqueur without as much sweetness as modern triple secs, that has recently been resurrected after disappearing for years. It can add a layer of of complexity to what would otherwise be a pretty simple and straightforward drink like the sherry cobbler. (It also makes a fantastic addition to Tiki drinks.) Feel free to discard it from the recipe. Or, better yet, make one with and one without and then you’ll have two sherry cobblers to test…

There’s a line from a letter to the editor of The Southern Literary Messenger from 1839 (!) that has stuck with me since I read it a few years ago: the writer, from Baltimore, calls the sherry cobbler “the greatest ‘liquorary’ invention of the day.” That’s a pretty awesome endorsement. (It’s also where I got the name for our Etsy shop and Instagram feed, so I’m doubly-indebted to that anonymous poet.)

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Happy Weekend!

Happy Friday everyone! Despite some weird weather today, we’ve had the most beautiful spring weather here in DC – and I suddenly feel like a huge weight has been lifted from my shoulders! I’m so ready for spring you guys. Sunshine and flowers? Yes please! But in the meantime…

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Photo by Brit McDaniel / Paper & Clay via Instagram

…a few links for your weekend!

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

Check back this afternoon for this week’s cocktail recipe! Have a wonderful weekend, and I’ll see you back here on Monday! xoxo

Etsy Wholesale + NSS!

The 2015 National Stationery Show is officially just two months away, and I couldn’t be more excited! The week of the National Stationery Show is one of my favorite weeks of the entire year. The stationery industry is such a wonderful and supportive community, I look forward to seeing everyone all year long – and to meeting new exhibitors!

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Sea & Lake

Last year, the National Stationery Show introduced a section for new and emerging designers called #fresh. Etsy Wholesale supported more than 60 Etsy Wholesale designers at the 2014 National Stationery Show – including many of the exhibitors in the #fresh section – with a robust marketing program. I’m so excited to help spread the word that Etsy Wholesale is building on last year’s momentum with a dedicated Etsy Wholesale section within #fresh at this year’s National Stationery Show in May! This new section will showcase a selection of Etsy Wholesale designers in the stationery, gift, and lifestyle categories.

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The Flair Exchange

Etsy Wholesale is currently looking for a few more Etsy sellers who want their own booth within the Etsy Wholesale section of #fresh. Each exhibitor will have their own booth within a consolidated, Etsy Wholesale-branded area that will include an Etsy Wholesale information booth with a buyer application area – and a showcase wall at the front of the section with products curated by me!

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Meeschmosh

This is such a wonderful opportunity for any Etsy Wholesale sellers looking to make their products available to a wider wholesale audience! You’ll be in an area with great foot traffic and in such fantastic company with other Etsy Wholesale designers. But you only have a couple more weeks to sign up – so email Etsy Wholesale by March 27 to lock in your booth!

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Liddabits

And if you’re an Etsy Wholesale designer already exhibiting at the show – don’t worry! Etsy Wholesale will also continue to support Etsy Wholesale designers exhibiting across the show floor with marketing to tie everything together. Just email [email protected] to let them know that you’d like to be part of the marketing program along with your booth number!

I hope to see you at the National Stationery Show in May!

Sheebani + Devin’s The Darjeeling Limited-Inspired Wedding Invitations

These screen printed wedding invitations from Reshma of Marigold Paper are so bright and fun – and with a color palette inspired by The Darjeeling Limited! Reshma combined illustrations inspired by traditional Indian wood block stamps with modern typography for this festive fusion wedding. Love!

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From Reshma: This wedding invitation suite was designed for my friend, Sheebani Patel, and her then-soon-to-be husband, Devin Sikes. The theme and color palette (red, blue, orange, green and yellow) for their wedding was the film The Darjeeling Limited by Wes Anderson. With this being a fusion wedding, the invitation needed to blend the design sensibilities of India and America. This was achieved with three custom illustrations of a paisley, elephant and a sunflower (the groom is originally from Kansas), which were inspired by traditional Indian wood block stamps.

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These illustrations were then combined with modern typography and bold colors and used on the event invitation and RSVP cards. All the pieces were then housed in a sleeve, which was placed in a red mailing envelope with recipient address labels.

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Each piece of this suite was screen printed on Colorplan paper by Mama’s Sauce. The event cards were screen printed in 1-color on the front and back, and the RSVP card is screen printed in 1-color on the front. The blue sleeve was custom die cut and 1-color screen printed with an illustrated border, the names of the couple, location and date of the wedding. The RSVP envelope and mailing envelope were also screen printed in 1-color.

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Thanks Reshma!

Design: Marigold Paper

Screen Printing: Mama’s Sauce

Check out the Designer Rolodex for more tal­ented wed­ding invi­ta­tion design­ers and the real invi­ta­tions gallery for more wedding invitation ideas!

Photo Credits: Natalie Seeboth Photography