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Strawberries can be muddled or puréed and added to many drinks, and they are liquor-friendly, being compatible with, e.g., bourbon whiskey, [3] Cointreau, vodka, tequila, rum, and Champagne, [4] among other spirits and liqueurs and so on.
White Cranberry Cosmo. With nostalgic foods and drinks on the rise, the Cosmo is in the perfect place to shine again. Keeping much of the same vein as the classic, this cocktail gets a boost from ...
A vodka-based cocktail that is prepared with the addition of lemon juice, triple sec, and simple syrup. [32] Long Island iced tea Typically made with vodka, tequila, light rum, triple sec, gin, and a splash of cola, which gives the drink the same amber hue as iced tea. [33] Mai Tai
Morning glory fizz – whisky (Scotch), absinthe, lemon juice, one egg white, sugar, soda water [13] Whiskey fizz – whiskey (American blend), lemon juice, sugar, and lemon-lime soda; Vodka fizz - vodka (plain or flavored), fruit juice, and sparkling water or soda; Mojito – white rum, sugar, lime juice, soda water, and mint.
Fill a cocktail shaker halfway with ice, and fill two-thirds full with the cocktail mixture. Shake for 30 seconds and pour into martini glasses. Add a maraschino cherry and serve ice cold.
Adding lime to a Dark 'n' Stormy creates a rum buck. [1] Shanghai buck, made with light rum, and served at the Shanghai Club in the 1930s. [1] Vodka buck, also known as a Moscow mule, invented in Los Angeles, California, US, and largely responsible for the popularity of vodka in the United States from the 1940s through 1960s. [1]
Vodka, gin, baijiu, shōchū, soju, tequila, rum, whisky, brandy, and singani are examples of distilled drinks. Beer, wine, cider, sake, and huangjiu are examples of fermented drinks. Hard liquor is used in North America, and India, to distinguish distilled drinks from undistilled ones, and to suggest that undistilled are implicitly weaker.
The rickey is a highball made from gin or bourbon, lime juice, and carbonated water. Little or no sugar is added to the rickey. It was created with bourbon in Washington, D.C., at Shoomaker's bar by bartender George A. Williamson in the 1880s, purportedly in collaboration with Democratic lobbyist Colonel Joe Rickey.