LGBT Cocktails
I should have done this a while back, but sadly old age is catching up with me and i forgot. Some time ago i decided to host a LGBT themed party, problem was i know jack squat about cocktails, and after exhausting research and the mother of all hangovers i came across the following that i would like to share...The Diva Daiquiri
The Daiquiri family of cocktails is
based around the three main ingredients of rum, lime juice and a
sweetener such as sugar. Daiquiri is also the name of a beach near
Santiago in Cuba, and the cocktail was supposedly invented about 1900 in
a bar named Venus in Santiago, about 23 miles east of an iron mine, by a
group of American mining engineers. Although stories persist that the
drink was invented when mining manager Jennings Cox ran out of gin while
entertaining American guests, the drink probably evolved naturally due
to the prevalence of lime and sugar.
Originally the drink was served in a
tall glass packed with cracked ice and remained pretty local to Cuba,
but it became truly popular in the 1940s when wartime rationing made
whisky and other drinks hard to come by. As a consequence, rum-based
drinks (once frowned upon as being the domain of sailors and
down-and-outs), also became fashionable, and the Daiquirà saw a
tremendous rise in popularity in the US.
This version combines everything that is
traditional, but includes some strawberries which will be perfect for
the divas at your gay brunch.
Ingredients:
55ml. Light Rum
1 tsp. Caster Sugar
55ml. Strawberry Schnapps
Juice of 1 Lime
Fresh or Frozen Strawberries
Ingredients:
55ml. Light Rum
1 tsp. Caster Sugar
55ml. Strawberry Schnapps
Juice of 1 Lime
Fresh or Frozen Strawberries
Preparation: Blend the ingredients and
then strain them into a chilled cocktail glass, and then garnish with a
little crushed ice and a lime wedge. Serve and enjoy.
Camp Grenada
Campari is a mild bitters-type of
aperitif, made to a secret recipe in Milan, and containing quinine,
rhubarb, ginseng, orange peels and aromatic herbs. These are combined
and macerated in a blend of distilled water and alcohol for a couple of
weeks. In Italy, they serve Campari in a frozen glass, without ice and
with a splash of soda, so that when you add the soda, you release the
flavours.
Two years on and it’s still difficult to
decide if the Campari commercial (nicknamed “The Secret”) was a step
forward or backward for the gender-queer movement. Yes - a man whom we
perceive as a woman being seduced by a woman we perceive as a man might
prompt us to question gender-related assumptions, but the commercial
concluded by plumping for heteronormativity as a means to a happy
ending.
Discuss it yourself, over this ultra-bitter cocktail recipe, developed as an antidote to the over-macho Americano.
Ingredients
25ml. Campari
50ml. Grapefruit Juice
25ml. Pineapple Juice
10ml. Grenadine
75ml. 7UP
Maraschino Cherry Garnish Lowball glass
Discuss it yourself, over this ultra-bitter cocktail recipe, developed as an antidote to the over-macho Americano.
Ingredients
25ml. Campari
50ml. Grapefruit Juice
25ml. Pineapple Juice
10ml. Grenadine
75ml. 7UP
Maraschino Cherry Garnish Lowball glass
Preparation: Simply build this marvellous drink in a cocktail shaker and shake for 10 seconds, garnish and serve
The Bubbly Bahama
Here is a drink for celebrations, one
of an almost endless amount of possibilities that fall beneath the
alluring subject heading – champagne cocktails. And if you’re having a
party or are on a budget, don’t worry about whether you’ve got real
champagne or not, because Spain’s Cava, Alsace’s Cremont and Napa’s
sparkling wine are all good for this type of cocktail, which soups up
the fizz with some turbo-charged fruit. Let's go for it.
I'm sorry about my excitement, but this
is a proper champagne cocktail - the real deal – as opposed to merely
throwing a nip of Cointreau into a glass of bubbly. This one has a
tasty, initial sweetness that rounds out the dry of the champagne with
the peach and apple playing well together. And the more of them I drink,
the more pontificating I do about the flavour.
The other thing I enjoy is the quieter
pop or "sigh" made while opening the bottle with a twist, as opposed to
letting the cork fly in a stream of spray - it is sometimes named "le
soupir amoureux" (loving whisper) – try it and enjoy the moment.
Ingredients
Half a glass of Champagne
25ml. Peach Schnapps
10ml. Apple Schnapps
Top with 7-UP
Grenadine
Lime to garnish - or maybe peach, or apple.
Rimming Sugar
A highball glass.
Half a glass of Champagne
25ml. Peach Schnapps
10ml. Apple Schnapps
Top with 7-UP
Grenadine
Lime to garnish - or maybe peach, or apple.
Rimming Sugar
A highball glass.
Preparation: Rim the highball glass with
sugar and add the ice. Pour the champagne half-way down the glass, then
pour in the apple and peach schnapps and top with 7-UP. For the final
effect, drizzle the grenadine down the edge. Serve.
The Flaming Cocksmack
This cocktail, also known as The
Flaming Pudwhacker, is a fruity pineapple creation, with peach and
banana liqueur and a generous taste of rum. There are a few good video
tutorials on the net demonstrating the manufacture of this very
important drink, hosted by characters both colourful and sanguine.
Caution is advised for anyone embarking on the preparation of any drink
in the ‘Flaming’ category of cocktails – for obvious reasons. And that’s
why this is a great way to start an evening, but never a good way to
end one.
Another pitfall is that this drink
doesn’t taste in the slightest of alcohol – it could only be described
in terms of taste as a slightly sweet, total fruit bomb. A fruit bomb on
fire, in fact.
The over-proof rum (or ‘151’) used in
this drink has an alcohol content of around 75.5%, compared to the usual
35%-40%, and so folks don’t tend to drink it outside of cocktails, such
as the B-52 and the Backdraft, both of which use the rum’s flammability
to great effect.
The flames are decorative and do not
change the flavour of the drinks noticeably, but can help achieve a good
final mix. Remember two things: Flaming cocktails are more spectacular
in dimly lit surroundings where the flames are more visible; and
drinkers should be aware that the glass may remain quite hot for a while
after the flames are extinguished, which could result in sore
fingertips!
Ingredients
25ml. Dark Rum
25ml. Banana Liqueur
5ml. Peach Schnapps
5ml. High Proof Rum (sometimes branded as ‘151’)
330ml. Pineapple Juice
A Collins glass.
25ml. Dark Rum
25ml. Banana Liqueur
5ml. Peach Schnapps
5ml. High Proof Rum (sometimes branded as ‘151’)
330ml. Pineapple Juice
A Collins glass.
Preparation: Mix all the ingredients except the 151 into an iced shaker and shake for 10 seconds. Next try layering the 151 on top, and once you’ve achieved this, ignite it. Serve alight
The Cosmo
The Cosmopolitan was invented in
North America in the 1970s and spread pretty fast. It jumped into the
league of super-cocktails however after becoming a mainstay of the show
Sex and the City, in which Carrie Bradshaw would commonly order one when
out with the gals. The film adaptation made a reference to this
popularity when Miranda asks Carrie why they have stopped drinking them,
and Carrie answers: ‘Because everyone else started.’
Ingredients
2 parts lemon vodka
1 part Triple Sec
Juice of half a lime
1 part Cranberry Juice.
Lime wedge
Slice of orange
Martini Glass
Juice of half a lime
1 part Cranberry Juice.
Lime wedge
Slice of orange
Martini Glass
Preparation: Mix the lemon vodka and
part triple sec combined with the cranberry juice and the lime juice.
Cointreau provides a cleaner taste than cheaper triple sec, and is
generally substituted in the cosmopolitan. The cranberry mainly adds
colour and should not excessively dilute the drink. Garnish with the
lime wedge. Traditionally a coin sized piece of orange should be
"flamed" across the top of the drink. This coats the drink with a slick
of citrus oil. Get the DVD box set of Sex and the City; serve.
Icewine Martini
The fact is that despite the fuss
among the experts, the only real evolution that has taken place in the
world of the martini occurred with the launch of the novel Casino Royale
in 1954 and the resultant catchphrase has become synonymous with the
most hetero of all the great film franchises: Bond. So in the name of
balance, the icewine martini, shaken or stirred, is to our intents and
purposes, the LGBT variation on this common theme.
Icewine, in case you didn’t know, is a
type of dessert wine made from grapes that have been frozen while still
on the vine. The sugars and other dissolved solids do not freeze, but
the water does, allowing a more concentrated grape juice to be pressed
from the frozen grapes, resulting in a smaller amount of more
concentrated, very sweet wine. Canada and Germany are the world’s two
greatest producers of this marvellous drink. From the cocktail, expect a
sweet up-front attack followed by the typical back-end dryness from the
alcohol. It’s got both grace and potency, a good combination I’m sure
you’ll agree.
Ingredients
1 part Icewine
2 parts Vodka
Garnish with frozen green grape
Cocktail glass
Ingredients
1 part Icewine
2 parts Vodka
Garnish with frozen green grape
Cocktail glass
Preparation: Stir the ingredients in a bar glass for 30 seconds and then strain into a chilled cocktail glass, garnish with frozen grape and serve
The Gay Russian
This is a slightly sweet cocktail
based on the original Black Russian formula, a recipe which has infinite
modern variations – including this one. The Black Russian first
appeared in 1949, in the Hotel Metropole in Brussels. Keeping things
Belgian, the Gay Russian has been launched to honour the possibility
that Elio de Rupo could be the first openly gay man to become a head of
government (Iceland has had a lesbian prime minister) if elected.
It’s fortunate that in Belgium, a
politician’s sexuality isn’t of the same interest it would be in the UK,
with few Belgians appearing fussed by the notion that a gay man is the
most likely contender to become the leader of their country. Despite the
country's rather staid and conservative image abroad, Belgium is
sexually more tolerant than most of the rest of the world and became the
second country to legalise gay marriages – so we should drink to that
straight away.
Ingredients
25ml. Vanilla Vodka (or normal vodka if you can’t find it)
25ml. Irish Cream
25ml. Milk (or Cream)
A lowball glass.
25ml. Vanilla Vodka (or normal vodka if you can’t find it)
25ml. Irish Cream
25ml. Milk (or Cream)
A lowball glass.
Preparation: Pour the vanilla vodka over ice in the lowball glass, followed by the Irish Cream. Then stir the cream or milk into the glass, with a good vigorous whisk of the hand. Serve
The Gay Pride Cocktail
This is something of an unofficial Pride drink; an internet search of the terms Pride and Cocktails tends to throw up news items concerning Lithuania’s first Pride march in Vilnius in 2010 – when a Molotov cocktail was thrown at the organiser’s building – even though it failed to ignite. But this is a bit more pleasant. And you will only have to throw bottles about the place if you're feeling abit Tom Cruisy about things...To be fair, if one were devising a Pride cocktail, you’d be ideally looking for something that offered a rainbow theme, and this doesn’t do too badly, at least up until you start mixing it. The resulting colour can be anything from pink to purple, with some murky oranges in between
Once the popping candy get going this drink really livens up though, and in a busy room full of excited celebrants, this is a major league hit – particularly because it’s fun and doesn’t get you very drunk like some cocktails we could mention.
Ingredients
1 part Apple Liqueur
1 part Blueberry Liqueur
1 part Cranberry Juice
2 parts Tropical Fruit Juice
Popping Candy
Preparation: Put the cranberry juice and the tropical juice into a tumbler. Pour the liqueurs into a shaker over ice and shake well. Pour into tumbler and add a pink umbrella, then sprinkle with pop rocks. Serve with pride.
The Pink Fairy
Once I saw a website detailing the basics of concocting the Pink Fairy, and this site included the simple tasting notes: ‘It’ll get you drunk.’ If that was all you needed to know then you’d be as well to drink the ingredients by themselves, rather than mixing them into a handsome new concoction, which would be a shame, because this guy is delicious.Cachaca by the way, is distilled from sugar cane and is the single most popular distilled drink in Brazil. Figures suggest that although around one and a half billion litres of Cachaca are produced in Brazil each year, less than 1% of that is exported, with most of that finding its way into tropical drinks.
Slightly sweet, endlessly tasty, the Pink Fairy goes down faster than… well, I’ll leave you to finish that one, but beware - you’d better remember when to stop. Still, as the start of a good evening, it can’t be beat. As well as being a Pink Fairy, the drink is also a little tart, because of the cranberry juice.
The challenge with making this drink is making the drink the right colour – pink. Years can be spent perfecting this, as you produce various hues of red, orange and purple coloured drinks, all in order to hit that elusive pink. Use the lightest colour of dark run you can find (if that’s not too weird a suggestion) and if you really want to get the colour right, then muck around with the cranberry juice, putting it in last - enough to get the tone just right.
Ingredients
110ml. Cranberry Juice
25ml. Orange Juice
10ml. Dark Rum
35ml. Cachaca
Lowball glass
Preparation: Build the drink in a cocktail shaker, with the spirits first, then the orange juice and lastly the cranberry. Then shake for 10-seconds and strain into the lowball glass. Serve.
Enjoy!
MG