Old Fashioned Ingredients
- 1 sugar cube
- 3 dashes Bitters -- Angostura bitters
- club soda
- 2 ounces whiskey -- rye whisky
- old-fashioned glass
Instructions:
Place
the sugar cube (or 1/2 teaspoon loose sugar) in an Old-Fashioned glass.
Wet it down with 2 or 3 dashes of Angostura bitters and a short splash
of water or club soda. Crush the sugar with a wooden muddler, chopstick,
strong spoon, lipstick, cartridge case, whatever. Rotate the glass so
that the sugar grains and bitters give it a lining. Add a large ice
cube. Pour in the rye (or bourbon). Serve with a stirring rod.
The Wondrich Take:
Sadly
neglected these days, the Old-Fashioned is the ur-cocktail. Originally
-- in 1806, at least, which is good enough for us -- a "cock tail" was a
morning drink (ah, America!) made up of a little water, a little sugar,
a lot of liquor, and a couple splashes of bitters. Freeze the water,
make it with whiskey, and you have an Old-Fashioned. And a mighty fine
drink it is: strong, square-jawed, with just enough civilization to keep
you from hollerin' like a mountain-jack.
The
now customary fruit garnish -- all those orange slices, cherries,
pineapple sticks and whatnot -- is, according to Jack Townsend, former
head of the Bartenders Union of New York, Local 15, A.F.L., an example
of the indignities that so many American cocktails had visited upon them
under Prohibition. Anything to hide the taste of the liquor. A special
no-no is the common practice of muddling the fruit with the sugar before
pouring in the hooch. This turns a noble drink into a sickly, sweet,
gooey mess.
Finally, the great debate: rye or bourbon? North or
South, East or West, Kentucky Colonel or New York Knickerbocker? Since
you can make a fine-tasting drink by subjecting almost any of the manly
liquors -- brandy, rum, gin, Irish whiskey (but not Scotch, which is too
manly) -- to this process, it doesn't really matter. But we like rye,
if we can find it, or Canadian Club, if we can't. (CC has a lot of rye
in it.) Cheap bourbon's already sweet enough, and good bourbon doesn't
need any help going down.
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