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The shaken Martini is mentioned twice in the first Bond film Dr. No (1962). When Bond has presumably ordered a drink from room service to his hotel room, it is mixed by a waiter, who says "one medium dry vodka martini mixed like you said, sir, but not stirred." (A slice of lime was in the bottom of the glass.) Later, Dr.
In Ian Fleming's Casino Royale, the first of his works to feature James Bond, Bond orders a dry martini in a "deep champagne goblet" but then changes his order and gives the barman a recipe. The dialogue is: [1] Just a moment. Three measures of Gordon's, one of vodka, half a measure of Kina Lillet.
James Bond, as the straw that stirs the drink (a vodka martini shaken not stirred, naturally). ... Roger Moore’s 007 teams up with Bouquet to exact vengeance, which involves scaling a seemingly ...
Bond's preferred drink is a vodka martini, which he asks to be "shaken, not stirred". This instruction quickly became another catchphrase. It was honoured by the AFI as the 90th most-memorable cinema quotation. [181] In order to distance his version of Bond from Sean Connery's, Roger Moore did not order a martini. [185]
A vodka martini is a cocktail made with vodka and vermouth, a variation of a martini. A vodka martini is made by combining vodka, dry vermouth and ice in a cocktail shaker or mixing glass. The ingredients are chilled, either by stirring or shaking, then strained and served "straight up" (without ice) in a chilled cocktail glass.
A maximalist martini is a dangerous gamble, but this take on a vesper—which combines gin, vodka, and three fortified wines—manages to maintain the drink's minimalism while simultaneously ...