Pisco Punch

Let’s go back in time this week to a drink that used to be one of the most popular in America: sweet, tart, and a little funky, the Pisco Punch. Pisco is that clear, fresh, and slightly funky South American Brandy we used to make the Pisco Sour a while back. Combined with the citrus and the pineapple syrup, it leaves you with a drink that’s sweet and fruity but not cloying at all. The Pisco Punch was once, as the name suggests, made in big batches and served in punch bowls. Here’s a slightly tweaked version to make one glass at a time.

Cocktail Recipe: Pisco Punch via Oh So Beautiful Paper (7)

– Andrew

Read below for the full recipe!

Pisco Punch Recipe Card, Illustration by Caitlin Keegan for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Illustration by Caitlin Keegan

Pisco Punch

2 oz Pisco
1 oz Fresh Lime Juice
1 oz Pineapple-Infused Simple Syrup

Start the night before (it’s worth the wait). Chop up a fresh pineapple into one-inch cubes, then soak the pineapple overnight in some rich simple syrup.*  The next day – you waited, right? – mix the Pisco, citrus juice (lemon is the classic, but lime works really well too), and pineapple-flavored syrup, shake with ice, and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with a chunk of pineapple and enjoy.

Cocktail Recipe: Pisco Punch via Oh So Beautiful Paper (2) Cocktail Recipe: Pisco Punch via Oh So Beautiful Paper (11)

Once upon a time, it was cheaper to ship Pisco from Peru up to California than it was to ship fancy European Brandies across the United States. Pisco and its cocktail varieties were once so cheap and wildly popular in San Francisco, that city to which America’s cocktail culture owes so much, that every bar in the city served a Pisco Punch and some served just this drink. At least until Prohibition came along and ruined everything!

Cocktail Recipe: Pisco Punch via Oh So Beautiful Paper (6)

It’s drinks like this that inspired us to start this column in the first place: drinks with a history that, when made with care and quality ingredients, are astronomically better than anything served these days made with absurdly flavored Vodkas or with names that rhyme with “Martini” but don’t actually feature gin and vermouth. America has a rich culinary and drink history that our country forgot for years but, fortunately, can start enjoying again.

*To make rich simple syrup, bring some water to a boil and then take it off the heat. Stir in sugar in a 2:1 sugar to water ratio and stir until all the sugar is melted. If the sugar isn’t melting all the way, you can put it back on the heat but only briefly. Since you’re using twice as much sugar as in regular simple syrup, taking it off the heat can keep the sugar from burning while it melts. The result is a much thicker, sweeter, and silkier syrup.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Friday Happy Hour: The Pisco Sour

In keeping with last week’s drink, here’s another fantastic Latin American cocktail, this one from South America’s cuisine capital, Peru: the Pisco Sour.  The Pisco Sour is sweet and tart, like a Sour should be, with a complexly herbal aroma from the bitters, but should showcase the Pisco: fruity and vegetal, like fresh grass, smooth but with a citrusy finish.  This drink incorporates raw egg white, and that’s not for everyone.  You can make a Pisco Sour without the egg, and it will still be a tasty Sour.  But a true Pisco Sour with the egg is silky and rich, with a gorgeous head of foam that you’d miss out on.

Read below for the full recipe!

Pisco Sour

2 oz Pisco
3/4 oz Lime Juice
3/4 oz Simple Syrup
1 Egg White (you can probably get by with 1/2 per drink)
Angostura Bitters

Combine the Pisco (a clear Peruvian or Chilean grape Brandy), juice, syrup, and egg white in a shaker with a flat top (that is, a Boston or Parisian Shaker).  Add one or two big ice cubes.  Cocktail Kingdom sells a tray for making 2 inch cubes that are perfect for many cocktails like this.  Shake hard – the idea is to use the ice cubes as a piston to give this drink its great froth.  Strain well, making sure to shake out all the froth.  Top with the bitters and, if you’re feeling artistic, use a toothpick to draw a shape or pattern in the froth, then enjoy!

 

Peru’s grape and Pisco industries, introduced by the Spanish at least by the 16th century, are centered around the fertile river valleys that make life possible along the country’s desert coast, towns like Ica and, of course, Pisco.  Pisco is distilled from the first pressing of grapes and aged only in non-reactive vessels, such as glass or the more traditional botijas – giant clay pots – which leaves the spirit clear but mellow.  Americans began drinking lots of Pisco in the 1850s, when it was easy to import the spirit to Gold Rush California (a hot bed of cocktail innovation).  It largely disappeared from the U.S. during Prohibition, but was reintroduced after Victor Morris, an American bartender living in Peru, invented the Pisco Sour around 1920; the drink eventually made its way back here.  A good thing it did!

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper