The Dead Lady
The Dead Lady
A really delightful equal-parts recipe from The Garret in NYC, presumably it’s a play on The White Lady or The Pink Lady? This is certainly the most recent of the three, and wow, it’s so great… where has it been all my life??
- 1 ½ oz mezcal
- 1 ½ oz Aperol
- 1 ½ oz John. D. Taylor's Velvet Falernum liqueur
- 1 ½ oz lime juice
I really do like Velvet Falernum. It's great in a Chartreuse Swizzle, which currently is my favorite drink:
- 1 oz pineapple juice
- ¾ oz lime juice
- 1 ½ oz green Chartreuse
- ½ oz Velvet Falernum
3 0 ReplyI love that swizzle! Too bad chartreuse is so hard to come by now. Still working through old bottles?
2 0 ReplyI'm lucky enough to live in Europe where Chartreuse is still pretty easy to get. Plenty of online shops to order from, about 45 € a bottle.
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1 ½ oz John. D. Taylor's Velvet Falernum liqueur
Well, I can't say I have the in my liquor cabinet. That's a new ingredient I haven't come across before. But I want to try this!
3 0 ReplyI hadn’t heard of it until I got a tiki cocktail book; it comes up a lot in that context! It’s a super syrupy, sweet, warm spiced liqueur. It’s really quite delicious!
3 0 ReplyTry a Corn N' Oil my other goto falernum drink.
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It's good. Herbal, citrus, and sweet. I think of it as a caribbean version of sweet red vermouth. It has a similar use in cocktails.
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One of my favorites. Doesn't it usually have a mint sprig garnish? A few drops of jalapeno bitters or a splash of Ancho Reyes really adds something.
2 0 ReplyNot sure, it might! Good suggestion on a little bit of spice, I bet that would add a great dimension!
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This looks great. It's not too sweet with the Aperol and falernum?
1 0 ReplyI found it to be pretty well balanced! Probably depends a bit on how wild your mezcal is, too. This one is pretty smoky, which helps.
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