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Friday Night Cocktails: Tequila Sunrise

I’ve always wanted to try making this colourful cocktail. Its history is just as colourful, originating in the 1930’s at the Arizona Biltmore resort (with rather different ingredients giving the layered “sunrise effect) but made popular in the 1970’s. Two bartenders at the Trident in Sausalito, California, Bobby Lozoff and Billy Rice, are credited with inventing the drink in its current form. At the start of the Rolling Stones’ 1972 tour Mick Jagger was at a party there and ordered a margarita, but it was suggested that he tried a tequila sunrise instead. He loved it and soon the rest of the band and their entourage were drinking it too. They asked for it everywhere they went on what became known as the “Cocaine and Tequila Sunrise Tour”. The drink shot to fame and The Eagles even recorded a song titled “Tequila Sunrise” on their Desperado album. At one point the recipe appeared on the labels of Jose Cuervo tequila.

The sunrise colours result from the use of different density liquids. The red comes from grenadine, a heavy pomegranate syrup which sinks to the bottom of the glass of the glass.Tequila sunrise,tequila,cocktails,friday night cocktails,he lighter tequila and orange juice float above the red layer until mixed.

Here’s how I made it, using the following ingredients:

  • 1 measure tequila
  • 3 measures orange juice (you can use freshly squeezed if you like, but mine was from a carton)
  • 2 tablespoons grenadine
  • ice
  • orange slice and cherry to garnish.

Normally you would use a highball glass but I used a gin balloon. Half fill the glass with ice and add the tequila and orange.

Stir well until the outside of the glass feels really cold and the liquid is well chilled.

Very carefully pour the grenadine from the spoon down the side of the glass and watch it sink to the bottom

Add the garnish to the edge of the glass and it’s done!

You should mix together before drinking (although the “sunrise” is lost).

The grenadine sweetens it a lot and some recipes add lime juice to sharpen the flavour. the alcohol can be diluted by adding more orange juice or concentrated by adding triple sec (eg Cointreau).

It’s certainly easy to make and spectacular to look at but I have to say it’s not my favourite cocktail – I found it very sweet – somehow tequila seems to work better with sharper flavours like the lime in a margarita. It would make the perfect drink for a 70s party though, with lots of Stones and Eagles music of course!

Always drink responsibly.

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Friday Night Cocktails: Strawberry Daiquiri

A few weeks ago we spend a very enjoyable evening sipping cocktails at Tigerlily in Edinburgh and it crossed my mind that I should make my occasional foray into cocktail making more of a regular occurrence. Friday night cocktails have become a highlight of the week since then.

Last week it was cocktails for two as Daughter was staying over. Scottish strawberries are in season at the moment and I had some in the fridge so the strawberry daiquiri seemed like a good choice. Its a fruity, refreshing but potent mix of strawberries, white rum and lime juice, perfect for summer evenings.

The original daiquiri (without the strawberries) is named after an iron mine and beach in Cuba, where an American mining engineer, Jennings Cox, is said to have invented it. When the mine was purchased by US congressman William A Chanler in 1902, he introduced the drink to New York. The Daiquiri has similarities with 18th Century British sailors’ grog, which combined the rum ration with lime, rich in vitamin C to prevent scurvy, and sugar.

A mixologist once told me that a good cocktail should include strong and weak, sweet and sour elements. This gets its alcoholic strength from the rum, diluted with fruit and fruit juice. Lime provides the sour element, sweetened with strawberries and added sugar.

Ingredients (to serve one)

A handfuls of strawberries (4-5 large ones plus another for garnish)

2 tsp white sugar (more if you prefer a sweeter mix)

1.5 oz white rum

1oz lime juice

Method

Blend all the ingredients then add to a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake until chilled, then strain (to remove seeds) into a martini glass. Garnish with a strawberry.

I didn’t strain the strawberry seeds out, but that doesn’t affect the taste!

Delicious and very summery!

Always drink responsibly

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Cocktail Time

A couple of weeks back, K and I had another trip to Edinburgh. We were celebrating 40 years since we first got together. We took the train and checked into our favourite hotel, Tigerlily, where we got upgraded to a beautiful suite – this has happened before, but it’s always a lovely surprise. We had booked a table in the restaurant, but made time for a cocktail before dinner.

Tigerlily has always served great cocktails so trying some is part of the fun of staying there. In fact if I post a photo of a cocktail on Facebook with the question “Where am I?” all my friends immediately guess correctly. In the years we’ve been going there we’ve always enjoyed sitting up at the bar so we can watch the bar staff prepare the drinks. Of course sometimes it’s pure theatre. They don’t indulge in cocktail shaker juggling here, but bending a piece of orange peel next to a lighter flame so the oil sprays out, ignites and flares: that can look pretty spectacular.

For my pre-dinner drink I chose my favourite cocktail – a classic Cosmopolitan. If you’ve never tried one it’s a fruity sweet/sour combination of vodka, triple sec, cranberry and lime – I love it.

After dinner we were back for more. This time I opted for Pixie Dust, a combination of raspberry and rhubarb gin, wild strawberry, lemon juice and egg white. K had a cocktail too.

He’s a whisky man and sampled a Black Sesame Old Fashioned, served over ice, in this case one huge block of it

Next, Lemon Drizzle Flora Dora: a long drink comprising lemon drizzle gin, lime, ginger and raspberry.

My final drink of the night was the Frozen Raspberry Charlie Chaplin, a gorgeous slushy mix of raspberry gin, apricot, raspberry and lemon.

The following evening we found a little Mexican restaurant and I was still in cocktail mood so it had to be a frozen margarita. I got to thinking that I should get the cocktail shaker out at home, Friday night cocktails anyone?

What’s your favourite cocktail?