Proportions matter a lot in mixing drinks.  Of the culinary arts, mixing drinks is most like baking in this regard.  When ingredients are measured in ounces, a dash or two of something can either make or overwhelm a drink. The first modern Martinis were made with equal parts of dry gin and dry vermouth (hence: the Dry Martini).  Over time, people began drinking Martinis with less and less vermouth until the vermouth has become an afterthought.  Some recipes today call for a vermouth wash or a spray – or, as Winston Churchill was said to have done, a glance in the direction of France.  This is a tragedy!  These drinks are basically a cup of gin with maybe a hint of vermouth.  I don’t even want to call this a mixed drink.  So here’s a fun way to serve a drink and to explore the role of proportions in cocktails: the Martini Slider.
Read below for the full recipe!
Martini Sliders
For your first slider:
1 oz Dry Gin
2 Tsp Dry Vermouth
1 Dash Orange or Lemon Bitters
Stir with some ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Â With fresh ice, repeat these steps with:
3/4 oz Gin
1/4 oz Vermouth
1 Dash Bitters
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And again, for your third slider:
1/2 oz Gin
1/2 oz Vermouth
1 Dash Bitters
Twist a lemon piece of lemon peel over your sliders and enjoy.
The first slider is closest to the typical Martini served these days. Â It will be very, very dry, dominated by the gin’s juniper and other botanicals, with a real booziness. Â The second should still be dry, boozy, and gin-forward, but you should start to see the effects of the vermouth in smoothing out the sharpness of the gin and adding complexity. Â The third should tell you why the Martini is called the King of Cocktails: smooth, crisp, complexly botanical, with hints of citrus and a mouthwatering tang from the vermouth.
If you want to get fancy, try making a fourth slider just as you would the Dry Martini, with equal parts gin and vermouth, and add a teaspoon of Cointreau or Luxardo Maraschino liqueur. Â The ancestors of the Dry Martini were much sweeter than the drink is today, so this should give you hint of what those were like and show you how just a bit of sweetness can transform a Martini.
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You can make drink sliders by playing around with proportions of pretty much any drink, but I find vermouth drinks like the Martini and the Manhattan (and their venerable ancestor, the Martinez, which I’ll explore soon) really highlight the importance of slight differences in ingredients. Â A word of caution: each of these sliders is a mini-drink that doesn’t seem like much, but drinking a row of sliders (especially if you make all four) can pack a real punch. Â Drink carefully!
Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper