I saw this today on FoodTV, albeit on Semi Homemade (yikes),
To provoke, or sustain, a reverie in a bar, you have to drink English gin, especially in the form of a martini. To be frank, given the primordial role played in my life by the dry martini, I really think I ought to give it at least a page. Like all cocktails, the martini, composed essentially of gin and a few drops of Noilly Prat, seems to have been an American invention. Connoisseurs who like their martinis very dry suggest simply allowing a ray of sunlight to shine through a bottle of Noilly Prat before it hits the bottle of gin. At a certain period in America it was said that the making of a dry martini should resemble the Immaculate Conception, for, as Saint Thomas Aquinas once noted, the generative powers of the Holy Ghost pierced the virgin’s hymen 'like a ray of sunlight through a window – leaving it unbroken.'
mhill95149 wrote:Martinis are made with gin and vermouth.
sugarsnap wrote:Okay,I understand the point of the traditionalist,however,this is the era of molecular gastronomy and edible menus.there are no inhibitions and no boundaries.I made Neuskie's bacon ice cream last week and served it with hot steamy apple-sausage dumplings and syrup!!!My grandmother would question with her mid-western tongue and tell me to take that garbage out of her kitchen then call me a doctor.The point here is to have fun and eat and drink what YOU like.
So,after my spiel,my favorite martini is a recent creation:
(I can't believe it's not a martini, martini)
1 shot Modern Spirits Truffle vodka
1 shot Kamora (coffee liqueur)
2 shots milk or cream
It has a wonderful truffle ending and is very smooth.....enjoy
gleam wrote:Hell, when did people start calling a cocktail glass a martini glass?
A martini is but one of many cocktails served in a cocktail glass.
christine wrote:What are your favorite martini recipes? Serious ones or fun ones...
Matt wrote:This may have been linked elsewhere around here, but The New York Times conducted a tasting of 80 different gins for martinis. Plymouth, a personal favorite of mine, came out as the highest rated martini gin by the NYT's panel.
The New York Times wrote:Each of us is partial to the classic martini made with gin, although Audrey was sensitive to the desires of her clientele.
"You have to revisit which generation is drinking the martini," she said. "We might be classicists, but is the newer generation?"
Still, after perhaps 8 or 10 martinis, Audrey fessed up, referring at one point to "a generation lobotomized by vodka."
Indeed, gin is more of a thinking person’s spirit.
LAZ wrote:I like to taste the vermouth, so I prefer martinis on the wet side, even as much as three to one...
Bulldog_Shotgun wrote:not sure which of the gins is least airomatic(??)
but i just about lose my stomach from smelling a bottle of tanqeruay
Pie Lady wrote:I was in a workshop the other day at 405 Church in Evanston, and there was a fella talking about how a martini with chocolate or any other flavor other than vodka was not a martini. It got me thinking about some of these threads...perhaps he was an LTH'er?
Darren72 wrote:Pie Lady wrote:I was in a workshop the other day at 405 Church in Evanston, and there was a fella talking about how a martini with chocolate or any other flavor other than vodka was not a martini. It got me thinking about some of these threads...perhaps he was an LTH'er?
Gin is the traditional base spirit in a Martini, not vodka. But otherwise, yes, chocolate may lead to a great cocktail, but it wouldn't be a Martini.