Friday Happy Hour: A Barrel-Aged Manhattan

It feels like just yesterday that we featured the Manhattan, one of the world’s simplest and most perfect cocktails. But it turns out that was all the way back in May, about eight months ago. Which goes to show how quickly you can lose track of time when you have a full plate at home. Ahem and anyway. As I was saying, the Manhattan is pretty much perfect just the way it is, but there is one way you can improve on that perfection: barrel aging. It’s easier than it sounds, and plenty worth it, so give it a try. – Andrew

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OSBP-Signature-Cocktail-Recipe-Card-Barrel-Aged-Manhattan-Shauna-Lynn-Illustration

Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Barrel-Aged Manhattan

8 oz Bourbon and Rye Whiskey
4 oz Sweet Vermouth
8 Dashes Aromatic Bitters

Combine the whiskey, vermouth, and bitters in a glass bottle. Add in a barrel-aging stave (more on this later). Wait as long as you can – give it a week at least, and longer if you can stand it. When you’re ready to serve, pour out a few ounces over ice and enjoy!

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A Manhattan is a fantastic drink, oaky and spicy and richly masculine. A barrel-aged Manhattan is even better: all of those things but even more complex, adding additional woody notes and smoothing out any rough edges. A barrel-aged Manhattan is a tremendously mellow drink, with deeply rich flavors. It’s worth the wait.

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I had my first barrel-aged Manhattan at District Commons, one of our favorite DC restaurants (make sure to get the pretzel bread with beer mustard butter). This was ages ago, but I loved it so much that I’ve been meaning to make one ever since. Then Nole got me a glass decanter, the perfect size for aging a small batch of cocktails, and some barrel-aging staves for Christmas, because she’s the best. So I finally got my chance.

Like District Commons, I made mine with a blend of different bourbon and rye whiskeys – this sort of project is perfect for using up the last little bit from the bottles of whiskey in your bar (you know, so you can use them up faster and make room for new bottles). I’m a big fan of Dolin’s sweet vermouth and Fee Brothers Old Fashioned Aromatic Bitters for my Manhattans, but I recommend playing around with ingredients until you find the combination that works best for you.

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There are a couple of ways of barrel aging a cocktail. You could, if you wanted to make a lot, buy an actual barrel, like one of these from Tuthilltown Spirits. The smallest starts at a liter, so this is something of an investment – but could be totally worth it if you really love the cocktail you’re aging. A barrel of aged cocktail could also make for a fantastic gift for another cocktail enthusiast. (Just make sure to soak the barrel in water before you pour in your cocktail ingredients, or you risk having your cocktail seep our all over your counter.)

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Or, you could go the more modest, and much easier route for smaller batches: barrel-aging staves for steeping in a bottle of spirits. Tuthilltown Spirits, again, sells really handy wooden staves, fire-charred and carved to maximize surface area. Yeah, this is the sort of thing you could make yourself if you wanted, but at a few bucks a pop, I think they’re worth it.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Friday Happy Hour: Raised in a Red Barn

Nole has been working with the fine folks at Red Barn Mercantile to help curate their holiday card collection this season. Along the way, someone suggested a signature cocktail for their holiday unveiling party (more on that soon!). So here it is: the Raised in a Red Barn, and we’re pretty proud of this recipe. Give it a try and enjoy fall in a glass. – Andrew

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OSBP-Signature-Cocktail-Recipe-Card-Raised-in-a-Red-Barn-Shauna-Panczyszyn

Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Raised in a Red Barn

2 oz Bourbon
3/4 oz Sweet Vermouth
3/4 oz Lemon Juice
1-2 Ripe Figs, Washed and Halved

Muddle the figs in the bottom of a cocktail shaker (a tablespoon or two of fig jam or fig butter will do in a pinch). Fill the shaker with ice, then add the bourbon, vermouth, and lemon juice. Shake well, then strain into a chilled cocktail glass – use a sieve or a tea strainer to filter out any fig seeds or bits – and enjoy!

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This was one of the first (and one of the best!) recipes I came up with entirely on my own. It’s something like the love child of a Manhattan and a Sour, but the figs…the figs!  Those figs add a unique sweet fruitiness that rounds out the sharpness of the spirits and the tartness of the lemon juice. Plus, the whole drinks ends up with a tawny color that reminds me of nothing more than the leaves changing all around us during this glorious fall. Just make sure your figs are ripe and juicy; I recommend erring on the side of more fig to make sure the drink isn’t too tart from the lemon.

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I love this drink, but it teaches me something of a humbling lesson about cocktails. When I first made it, I didn’t have fresh figs. I had Trader Joe’s Fig Butter sitting in the fridge, unused and unloved and looking for a purpose. So, in a wild experiment, I threw it into a cocktail and… it worked. It worked!  It was great! Lesson learned: sometimes, picking random ingredients from the back of a refrigerator shelf is the best way to make an amazing drink.

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The flip side is: I have made many, many terrible drinks by experimenting this way, and have had to dump plenty of good booze down the drain because I made wildly bad calls about ingredients and flavors and ended up with completely undrinkable drinks. But the only way you’ll know what works is if you try. Happy experimenting!

Speaking of trying: have you ever tried one of our cocktail recipes? If so, tell us about it in the comments! Or Instagram it, and share it with us with via #osbpcocktails! (We’re @liquorary and @beautifulpaper)

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!

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.

Signature Cocktail Ideas: Aged Negroni by Oh So Beautiful Paper (4)

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

Friday Happy Hour: The Delbarton Burns

Nole and I are big fans of one of our Capitol Hill neighborhood restaurants: Ted’s Bulletin. Ted’s has some great food and drinks (and is very welcoming to Sophie, which just makes us like them more). One of their best drinks is the Delbarton Burns, which carefully balances a really peaty Scotch – an unusual base – with sweet and spicy notes for a subtly delicious cocktail. – Andrew

Signature Cocktail Recipe: The Delbarton Burns via Oh So Beautiful Paper (4)

Recipe Card: Delbarton Burns, Illustration by Caitlin Keegan for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Illustration by Caitlin Keegan for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Delbarton Burns

2 oz Scotch
1/2 oz Sweet Vermouth
1/2 oz Benedictine
2 Dashes Orange Bitters

Combine the Scotch, vermouth, Benedictine, and bitters with ice. (Ted’s starts with Laphroaig, a really briney, peaty Scotch, so make sure you use one with lots smoke to it.) Stir well, strain into a chilled cocktail glass, and garnish with a cherry or a lemon twist. Enjoy!

Signature Cocktail Recipe: The Delbarton Burns via Oh So Beautiful Paper (27) Signature Cocktail Recipe: The Delbarton Burns via Oh So Beautiful Paper (7)

The resulting drink is pretty neat. A peaty Scotch can, by itself, taste something like a campfire, not something everyone is looking for in a cocktail. The smokiness does shine through in the Delbarton Burns, but it’s not overwhelming at all. Instead, it’s carefully balanced with the light, sweet notes of the vermouth and the sweet herbal notes of the Benedictine, making this drink far more subtle than its ingredients would suggest. (This seems to be a reoccurring theme with Scotch cocktails.)

Signature Cocktail Recipe: The Delbarton Burns via Oh So Beautiful Paper (12)

The Delbarton Burns is, in a lot of ways, a play on the Manhattan we featured last week. Swap in Scotch for another whiskey, replace a bit of the vermouth with Benedictine, and you have a very different but still familiar drink. Like the Manhattan, the Delbarton Burns is the sort of drink that benefit from a bit of aging. Try mixing up a batch and leaving them to sit in a glass container overnight; you’ll enjoy a much mellower, superbly well-integrated drink.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper