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Daisy Cocktail | A Classic Circa 1866 |

Daisy Cocktail

While we all are enjoying a little social distancing, why not a classic cocktail from the 60’s, the 1860’s, the Daisy.  In classic fashion, spirit, orange and sour.  A daisy can be made with any base spirit, Vodka, Gin, Rum, Whiskey, Brandy.  Don’t mix them, just pick the one you like, seriously that’s how they used to do it.  This is a Tito’s Vodka version, while vodka is very common now, a Daisy would not have been made with this spirit in 1866, it would have been a flavorful gin, such as Bols Genever, or Old Tom, or a funky rum like Havana Club.  But we have 160 ish years of learning, why not use a Texas vodka like Tito’s, pour what you want, it’s your isolation!  Cointreau is another non traditional add,  Curacao would be the traditional and excellent in this cocktail

Demerara syrup is just raw sugar syrup.  A simple syrup will work, but a darker sugar imparts more flavor. 

Here is a cut and paste for your party menu:

Original Daisy

Titio’s Handmade Vodka. Cointreau. Lemon. Demarara.  

Daisy Cocktail

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By Rick Britt Serves: 1 Cocktail
Prep Time: 2 minutes

A classic from over 150 years ago.

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 ounces of a Base Spirit, Vodka, Gin, Rum, Whiskey, Brandy...
  • 1 teaspoon of Demerara Sugar Syrup
  • 1/2 ounce Fresh Lemon Juice
  • 1/2 ounce Cointreau
  • Sparkling Water

Instructions

1

Shake all over ice well.

2

Strain into a Nick and Nora glass.

3

Add four ice cubes.

4

Fill remainder with sparkling water stir three times.

5

No garnish.

Notes

Demerara syrup is just a 50/50 raw sugar syrup.  A simple syrup will work, but a darker sugar imparts more flavor. 

Try our other cocktails 

Knickerbocker | A Classic From the 1800’s |

Holly Berry | Delicious Spring Time Cocktail

Really great cocktails are about balance, skill, and quality.  If you think about it that is parable for life, and certainly for cooking.  About 6 months ago my beautiful wife, daughter, and I went to Manhattan, and ended up at a high-end bar called “Death & Co”.   I fell in love, this was cocktail heaven.  My wife purchased their second recipe book for me called the “Cocktail Codex: Fundamentals, Formulas, Evolutions” when we got home.  I learned I knew almost nothing about making a fantastic cocktail.  The great news is it is not very hard to make great ones.  I just needed an honest guide and practice.  One caveat about this book; it is written by skilled bartenders for skilled bartenders.  They have ingredients we mere mortals may never make, but it is very informative.

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2 Comments

  • Reply
    How Many Oz
    29th March 2021 at 11:06 am

    love the teaspoon thrown in the measurements for no reason whatsoever.

    • Reply
      Rick Britt
      29th March 2021 at 4:18 pm

      A tsp is 1/6 of an ounce. I simply don’t have that measure on my jigger. 1/4 oz maybe works but it will be marginally sweeter. I just use my bar spoon. But one ” heavy bar spoon” is even harder to convey. Let us know what you decide, always willing to update!

    Leave a Reply to Rick Britt Cancel reply