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  2. How to Make an Old Fashioned

    www.aol.com/old-fashioned-015420185.html

    The old fashioned is an iconic cocktail in some parts of the country. The ingredients are simple (brandy or whiskey, bitters, lemon-lime soda, orange juice, muddled cherries and sugar), but making ...

  3. Old fashioned (cocktail) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_fashioned_(cocktail)

    The differences of the old-fashioned cocktail recipes from the cocktail recipes of the late 19th Century are mainly preparation methods, the use of sugar and water in lieu of simple or gum syrup, and the absence of additional liqueurs. These old-fashioned cocktail recipes are literally for cocktails done the old-fashioned way. [3]

  4. Holiday drink recipe is 'really easy,' 'looks really good ...

    www.aol.com/news/holiday-drink-recipe-really...

    1 tablespoon simple syrup or honey 'Old Fashioned' Cocktail Recipe Is Drink Of Choice For Olympic Gold Medalist During Après-ski. ... The best gift experiences of 2024 — Coffee tasting classes ...

  5. Mai Tai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mai_Tai

    IBA official cocktail; Type: Cocktail: Base spirit: Rum; Served: shaved or crushed ice: Standard garnish: pineapple spear, mint leaves, and lime peel: Standard drinkware: Old fashioned glass: IBA specified ingredients† 30 ml amber Jamaican rum; 30 ml Martinique molasses rhum; 15 ml orange curaçao; 15 ml orgeat syrup (almond) 30 ml fresh lime ...

  6. Cocktail of the Week: The Classic Old Fashioned (for your ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2017-06-16-classic-old...

    Try this week's winning cocktail recipe (and let your "old man" give it a try too, just in time for Father's Day). We break it all down for you below, but be sure to watch the video above to ...

  7. Shrub (drink) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrub_(drink)

    The word shrub can also refer to a cocktail or soft drink that was popular during America's colonial era, made by mixing a vinegared syrup with spirits, water, or carbonated water. [1] [4] [5] The term can also be applied to the base, a sweetened vinegar-based syrup from which the cocktail is made; that syrup is also known as drinking vinegar.