The Ramos Gin Fizz

Lots of classic cocktails feel old fashioned but still familiar to a modern palate: the Manhattan, the Martini, the Mint Julep. But sometimes you encounter a drink that’s so archaic, so different from anything you’re familiar with that it feels like a relic from an entirely different age. The Ramos Gin Fizz is just such a drink: unusual to taste, with an odd set of ingredients, that’s almost performance art to make. Weird but delicious. And perfect for brunch. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Ramos Gin Fizz

2 oz Dry Gin
1 oz Heavy Cream
1/2 oz Lemon Juice
1/2 oz Lime Juice
1 oz Simple Syrup
2-3 Dashes Orange Blossom Water
1 Egg White
Club Soda

Combine all the ingredients except the club soda in an empty cocktail shaker and shake for at least two minutes and longer if possible. Add ice and shake again for another two minutes or longer if possible. Strain into a chilled highball glass and top with club soda. Rinse the inside of the shaker with a splash of club soda and add to the glass. Drop in a straw and enjoy!

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The invention of Henry Ramos, the Ramos Gin Fizz (also known as a New Orleans Fizz) dates back to 1888 and comes, somewhat unsurprisingly, from the birthplace of so many amazing drinks, New Orleans. It shows its age: it’s fussy and a bit odd and requires so much work to make that it really could have only come from a time when labor was cheap (and people were in less of a hurry). All that shaking is necessary to emulsify the heavy cream and citrus. Mixing dairy and acid normally causes the dairy to curdle but lots of shaking can blend the two and give you a custardy texture. Ramos employed teams of bartenders to shake his fizzes in relays for twelve minutes a piece. I doubt anyone these days has the time or the arm strength to manage a full twelve minutes, but you really need to shake this one for as long as you can. So: the perfect drink for shaking with a friend.

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The Ramos Gin Fizz is an odd duck: creamy and fizzy at the same time, tart and sweet and floral too. You really can’t substitute the orange blossom water – the byproduct of distilling orange blossoms for their essential oils to make perfume – with anything else orange. You can find it online or at Middle Eastern grocers; ask at your local Lebanese restaurant if you can’t fine it nearby. The original recipe calls for just two teaspoons of superfine sugar, but I find this version is a bit too sour, so I bumped up the sweetness a bit. Despite that cream – and you really need to use cream here th– e Ramos never feels heavy, thanks to the light floral notes of the orange blossoms and the bubbly club soda.

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A Fizz is properly served without ice, with the understanding that you’ll drink it fast enough that it won’t warm up before you’re done. That goes doubly for the Ramos Fizz, because –unless you’ve shaken it for the full twelve minutes – that citrus is eventually going to start curdling the cream in the gorgeously thick and white foam on top of your drink. You don’t want this. Trust me.

(Don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, where we’ve been posting our experiments before they make their way onto this column!)

Glassware by Liquorary 

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Blackberry Paloma

Spring is fully here, and with it: brunch season. We’re going to spend the month celebrating the greatest of all meals, starting with an earthy but effervescent Blackberry Paloma. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Blackberry Paloma

1 1/2 oz Reposado Tequila
1 oz Lime Juice
1/4 oz Agave Syrup
4-5 Blackberries
Grapefruit Soda

Combine the tequila, lime juice, and agave syrup (rich simple syrup will do in a pinch) with the blackberries in the bottom of a shaker. Muddle the blackberries, then fill the shaker two-thirds full with large square ice cubes. Shake well and double-strain (using a tea strainer or a strainer spoon with a tight coil) into a chilled flute. Top with grapefruit soda and enjoy!

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The Paloma – which means dove in Spanish – is a popular Mexican tequila cocktail. With its earthy agave, tart lime, and sweet, fizzy grapefruit flavors, it’s also a perfect brunch drink, light and airy and flavorful. (We’re big fans of using Izze Sparkling Grapefruit Juice in place of soda here.) Blackberries lend this drink a sweet seasonal fruitiness and a gorgeous magenta color.

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I suspect we’ll be spending a lot of time with fizzy drinks this month – there’s just something about brunch and sparkling cocktails that makes sense.

(Don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, where we’ve been posting our experiments before they make their way onto this column!)

Glassware by Liquorary 

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Singapore Sling

Gin sometimes gets pigeonholed into Martinis and Gin & Tonics, but it’s actually a very versatile spirit. It even finds its way into the occasional Tiki drink. This is one of the oldest and the best, and probably one of the most abused recipes, the Singapore Sling. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Singapore Sling

1 oz Dry Gin
1 oz Benedictine
1 oz Cherry Liqueur
1 oz Lime Juice
1/2 oz Passion Fruit Juice
1 barspoon Dry Curacao
2 dashes Peychaud’s Bitters

1 splash Soda Water

Fill a highball glass with ice, then add all of your ingredients. Give everything a stir, drop in a straw, and enjoy. A garnish of tropical fruit is optional.

The Singapore Sling has a murky origin in the late 19th Century in southeast Asia but eventually came to be associated with the Raffles Hotel in (of course) Singapore in the 1910s. Near as anyone can tell, the original recipe called for equal measures of dry gin, Benedictine, Cherry Heering liqueur, and lime juice. That version definitely stands out as unusual to a modern palate, and the Benedictine and cherry liqueur can make it feel a bit medicinal. But it’s actually pretty good just as it is.

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Unfortunately, that simple and solid recipe has been twisted and warped over time. Order a Singapore Sling at two different bars and you’re likely to find three different recipes. I’ve seen orange liqueur, pineapple juice, and grenadine, all of which are fine additions to this recipe, but also sour mix and other unnecessary, artificial ingredients. I’ve heard that you can get Singapore Slings on tap at the Raffles, but they won’t actually include most of the original ingredients.

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So I updated the recipe a bit to plant it more squarely in the modern realm of Tiki drinks without changing the character of the drink. Start with a dry gin, like Plymouth, herbaceous Benedictine, and a quality cherry liqueur–we like Haus Alpenz Orchard Cherry liqueur. Lime, the fresher the better, is essential, and passion fruit juice adds a zippy, citrusy punch. Dry curacao is one of those ingredients that I never thought of as particularly Tiki, but it very solidly is–citrusy but in a really exotic way. The Peychaud’s bitters help bind all those other ingredients together into a complex drink, layered with spicy and herbal and sweetly citrusy flavors, that’s way more than the sum of its parts.

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There’s a lot going on in this drink, which can seem a bit intimidating to people just starting to build a home bar. But it’s actually quite easy to make once you have your ingredients, and really just the gin, Benedictine, and cherry liqueur are critical spirits. Once you have those and some fresh citrus, you can make a great Singapore Sling – and all you have to do is pour your ingredients straight into the glass and stir. Easy!

(Don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, where we’ve been posting our experiments before they make their way onto this column!)

Glassware by Liquorary – these flamingo glasses are available right here!

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Peak Bloom

Among all the attractions Washington, DC offers, one of the briefest but most glorious are the annual spring cherry blossoms. A gift from Japan at the turn of the last century, the product of decades of lobbying by writer and geographer Eliza Scidmore, DC is crawling with cherry blossom trees. For a vanishingly short time each spring, they bloom and then quickly loose their petals in clouds of pink flower confetti that fall with every breeze. Did I say it was glorious? (If you do visit for the cherry blossoms, skip the crowded Tidal Basin and visit some of the quieter groves, like the one in Capitol Hill’s Congressional Cemetery or Georgetown’s Dumbarton Oaks.) Nole asked for a cocktail this week to celebrate the flowers, so here’s a light and air (and pink) gin sour that tries to capture some of their spirit. – Andrew

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The Peak Bloom Cherry Blossom Cocktail Recipe Card by Shauna Lynn Illustration for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Peak Bloom

2 oz American Gin
1 oz Lemon
1 oz Cherry Blossom Honey Syrup
1 tbsp Strawberry Preserves
Splash of Soda Water (Optional)

Combine the gin, lemon, syrup, and preserves in a cocktail shaker and add three or four big square ice cubes. Shake well and fine strain (pouring through a tea strainer or using a strainer spoon with a tightly coil) into a chilled cocktail glass.

The Peak Bloom Cocktail Recipe with Cherry Blossom Syrup and Str

We talked about American gins, in contrast to drier English-style gins, last week when we wrote about our updated Gin Rickey. Emphasizing other botanicals alongside juniper, a new American-style gin lends this drink a softer profile. We used Heritage Distillery’s Soft Gin for our Peak Bloom.

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The cherry blossom syrup – made in Japan from honey and cherry blossom extract, which we included in another cherry blossom themed drink a couple years ago – lends this drink a subtle floral flavor. And those preserves do a couple of nice things: they add a bit of earthy sweetness that leaves this drink on the sweeter side, and the pectin in the preserves helps thicken this drink up a bit in the same way that a little egg white might, too.

The Peak Bloom Cocktail Recipe with Cherry Blossom Syrup and Str

The Peak Bloom doesn’t need a splash of soda water, but a few effervescent bubbles can be a nice addition here. But the drink will go flat fast – just like the cherry blossoms lose their petals – so you might find yourself drinking it down quickly.

(Don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, where we’ve been posting our experiments before they make their way onto this column!)

Glassware by Liquorary

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Basil-Mint Mojito

Nole and I had some basil-mint syrup left over from those boozy snow cones we just made. That stuff is seriously good, so I did the natural thing and put it in a different cocktail. This one is, unsurprisingly, also really good: the Basil-Mint Mojito. There’s still some time left in summer, so go knock yourself out. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Basil-Mint Mojito

2 oz Silver Rum

1 oz Lime Juice

1 oz Basil-Mint Syrup

Soda Water

To make the basil-mint syrup: combine a cup of fresh basil leaves and a cup of fresh mint leaves. Blanch them in boiling water for 15 seconds, then use a slotted spoon to transfer the leaves to a bowl of ice water to cool. Combine a cup of water and a cup of white sugar in a saucepan and heat gently, stirring frequently, until the sugar is melted. Combine the leaves and simple syrup in a blender and puree the leaves. Strain the mixture well. The basil-mint syrup will keep in the refrigerator for a week or two. Basil-Mint-Mojito-Cocktail-Recipe-OSBP-6 To make the Mojito: combine the rum, lime juice, and basil-mint syrup in a highball glass filled with crushed ice. Top with chilled soda water and garnish with fresh mint leaves. Enjoy!

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So here’s the deal: it’s nearly impossible to beat a Mojito made with muddled mint and fresh lime. But that same Mojito is a lot of work, with all that muddling and building in the glass, and you’re probably not going to have fresh ingredients for a Mojito every time you want one. So having an herb syrup like this on hand lets you cheat a little and capture those same flavors without all the same work. It’s also much easier to make more than one Mojito like this. Making a round of Mojitos for a party’s worth of guests is a mountain that none of us want to climb. But scaling this recipe up and making a pitcher of Mojitos is easily within reach.

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Plus, look at that gorgeous green color. It’s a lot of fun to pour a drink with such ridiculously vibrant color and know that it doesn’t come from a factory. Photos by Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper