Friday Happy Hour: Aged Negroni

When Nole and I put together these cocktail posts, there’s a process: I make the cocktail the night before, she photographs it the next day, and then I get to drink it that evening. And do you know what happens in that day between making and drinking the cocktail? It gets better. A lot better. Letting a cocktail age, even for a day, produces a more mellow and better integrated drink. So here’s an aged Negroni, that simple but memorable summer cocktail.– Andrew

Signature Cocktail Ideas: Aged Negroni by Oh So Beautiful Paper (29)

Signature Cocktail Recipe Card: Aged Negroni, Illustration by Tuesday Bassen for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Illustration by Tuesday Bassen for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Negroni

1 oz Dry Gin
1 oz Campari
1 oz Sweet Vermouth

Combine everything with ice and stir. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass filled with more ice – it’s a summer cocktail, after all – and garnish with an orange twist. Enjoy!

To age our Negroni, we mixed up a batch sans ice and left it to sit in a glass jar for about a week. It’s that simple! When you’re ready to drink one, just pour over ice, stir, strain, and garnish.

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The Negroni is simple but packs a punch. One of Italy’s few native cocktails, the Negroni dates back to 1919, when Count Camillo Negroni asked the bartender at Caffè Casoni to punch up his Americano – an older, milder drink of Campari, vermouth, and club soda – with gin. The gin’s botanicals, the Campari’s bitterness, and the vermouth’s sweet herbal flavors make for a drink that is enormously flavorful but also sharply bittersweet. It’s not for everyone (Nole won’t touch them), but it’s a great drink for a hot summer afternoon.

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A freshly made Negroni is great, but if you can wait, it’s worth it. Aging a drink like the Negroni allows all of its individual flavors to merge into a drink that’s smoother, a more cohesive whole than one you down right after making. The difference can be subtle but it’s always noticeable; aging can calm many a cocktail’s riot of flavors.

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Aging works particularly well for drinks like the Negroni or Manhattan or Martinez that combine a spirit with vermouth, or drinks like last week’s Corsican that combine a spirit with liqueurs. I haven’t tried it, but I bet it would work really well with shrubs too. All you need is a little patience and a non-reactive container. I’ve seen more advanced home mixologists include wood chips with their aging cocktails, or even barrel-age their cocktails at home to impart the same rich flavors that barrel-aged spirits have. So consider playing around with some of the conditions: how long you age, what sort of container you use, that sort of thing. And report back the results of your experiments!

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

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.

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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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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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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!

A Backyard Cocktail Party with St-Germain

Today I’m thrilled to share another installment in our Summer Cocktail Series with St-Germain! From Memorial Day to Labor Day, I equate summer with lots of BBQs and grilling. Now that we have a backyard – for the first time in more than 10 years! – I couldn’t resist the idea of a backyard cocktail party. We started with a color palette of red, peach, navy, and kraft paper, mixed up some delicious cocktails with our favorite liqueur (and our first mocktail!), and threw some food on the grill. Oh, and I may have gone a bit flower crazy with this one… but I think you’ll see why in just a bit!

Backyard Summer Cocktail Party with St-Germain by Oh So Beautiful Paper

Let’s start with the best part: the invitations! Katie from Idlewild Co. created a beautiful invitation using her hand lettering and an ombre painted background. Navy envelopes with white ink calligraphy from Michele of Meant to Be Calligraphy was the perfect finishing touch.

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Michele also created a beautiful calligraphy chalkboard cocktail menu, which I accented with a baby’s breath garland.

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I’m a big fan of sending guests home with a sweet treat. We kept it simple with chocolate chip cookies in kraft paper bags, again with Michele’s beautiful calligraphy in white ink.

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Sangria is the perfect summer drink, and easy to make in large batches! I’m absolutely in love with this fruity sangria recipe – which we’ll be sharing just a bit later.

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Blueberries and mint = two quintessential summer flavors. This shrub syrup makes for a perfect mocktail when combined with soda water!

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These melon, prosciutto, and mozzarella skewers reminded me of our trip to Italy a couple years ago. So delicious. And grilled watermelon salad? Yum!

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For the floral arrangements, I combined several of my favorite flowers in small mason jars. Red and white anemones, peach zinnia, dark red dahlias, lavender, queen anne’s lace, and dusty miller leaves. I also combined several handfuls of tiny chamomile flowers more visual impact. I was in complete flower heaven!

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Full cocktail and mocktail recipes are coming up in just a bit!

Invitations: Rocket Ink

Calligraphy: Meant to Be Calligraphy

Menu cards, place cards, and favor bags: Paper Source

Party & Floral Design: Oh So Beautiful Paper

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!

Friday Happy Hour: The Pimm’s Cup

The Pimm’s Cup is a sweet and spicy and herbaceous drink, a complex cocktail with lots of flavors crashing around all at once in a way that shouldn’t really work but totally does. This drink, an import from England, is most properly a summer drink, but since English summers are on par with DC springs, go ahead and knock one back this weekend. – Andrew

Signature Cocktail Recipe: Pimm's Cup via Oh So Beautiful Paper (34)

Pimm's Cup Recipe Card Illustration by Caitlin Keegan for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Illustration by Caitlin Keegan

Pimm’s Cup

2 oz Pimm’s No 1
3/4 oz. Cointreau
3/4 oz. Fresh Lime Juice
3-4 Cucumber Slices
1 Bunch Mint
Lemonade

Combine the Pimm’s, Cointreau, and lime juice in a highball glass filled with ice. Add the cucumber slices and mint (or berries and citrus wheels or pretty much whatever else you want, this can be a real smorgasbord of a drink). Top with lemonade – in this case, the British-style carbonated lemon-lime soda type of lemonade – or some ginger beer for a richer, spicier Pimm’s Cup. Enjoy!

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Pimm’s No. 1 – invented by Englishman James Pimm back in 1823 – is essentially a gin-based cocktail in a bottle, though it’s marketed as a liqueur. Its recipe remains, to my knowledge, a trade secret, though there are all sorts of herbs, fruits, and spices involved. It has a bittersweet and very herbal flavor that makes it a great addition to cocktails but not particularly tasty on its own.

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Signature Cocktail Recipe: Pimm's Cup via Oh So Beautiful Paper (4)

Sometime after Pimm started mixing up his No. 1 Cup, some other Englishman (or Englishwoman) had the great idea of further mixing Pimm’s with some lemonade and a whole bunch of fruit and the Pimm’s Cup, England’s favorite summer cocktail, was born. There’s no one Pimm’s Cup recipe out there, and lots of permutations to play with (I borrowed this one, one of my favorites, from the Employees Only bar in NYC), so experiment!

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Friday Happy Hour: The Paloma

Tequila has something of a rough reputation in America, but it’s really undeserving of that repute. So let’s turn to Tequila’s home, Mexico, for some inspiration to soften that reputation a bit. This week’s cocktail is the Paloma, a sweet, tart, fizzy, and oh-so-refreshing drink. Try one and you’ll see why this is Mexico’s most popular Tequila cocktail. – Andrew

The Paloma Cocktail Recipe via Oh So Beautiful Paper (4)

Cocktail Recipe Card: The Paloma by Caitlin Keegan for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Illustration by Caitlin Keegan

The Paloma

2 oz Tequila
1/2 oz Fresh Lime Juice
Grapefruit Soda
Salt

Combine the Tequila, lime juice, and a pinch of salt in a highball glass. Fill with ice and top with grapefruit soda. Garnish, if at all, with a lime wedge and enjoy.

The Paloma Cocktail Recipe via Oh So Beautiful Paper (9) The Paloma Cocktail Recipe via Oh So Beautiful Paper (1)

Mexican grapefruit soda may not be the easiest ingredient to find in the States, so I like to use Izze sparkling grapefruit juice in my Palomas. The key is to use something that’s a little sweet, a little tart, and a lot fizzy; you might want to punch up the lime juice to 3/4 oz if using a sweeter soda like the Izze. The Paloma should be earthy and vegetal from the tequila, sweet and tart from the lime and soda, a touch salty, and perfect for a sweltering Mexican (or DC) summer day.

The Paloma Cocktail Recipe via Oh So Beautiful Paper (8)

La Paloma? That’s the Dove. Why’s that? No idea, and no idea who invented this fantastic drink either. This one’s story is lost, I suspect, to the blurry pages of I’ve-had-one-too-many-to-write-this-down cocktail history. And that’s ok. Because it’s just good. So go try one. It’s almost summer, right?

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper