The southside cocktail originated in Chicago (on the southside) during or about the time of prohibition. The flavoring was invented to assist the drinker in the harsh taste of bathtub gin:d4v3 wrote:The Mai Tai was invented in Los Angeles. The Rob Roy was invented in New York. The sidecar was invented in London. Are there any "classic" cocktails associated with our fair city, or have we always been a shot and a beer kind of town?
jpschust wrote:The southside cocktail originated in Chicago (on the southside) during or about the time of prohibition.
Rene G wrote:While not a cocktail, Jeppson's Malört has real Chicago roots. A type of Scandinavian bitters, it was made in Chicago for many years and is still marketed here exclusively. Mark Brown recently wrote an interesting Sun-Times article about this cult beverage.
Rene G wrote:I'm curious to know at which Chicago bars is the Southside still commonly served? I don't drink a lot of cocktails but I've resolved to have at least one Southside this summer.
jpschust wrote:The southside cocktail originated in Chicago (on the southside) during or about the time of prohibition. The flavoring was invented to assist the drinker in the harsh taste of bathtub gin
Eric Felton wrote:How did the drink come to be the property of New York's country clubbers and the hunt-club crowd of Maryland's Baltimore County? A few years ago, NPR's "Day to Day" featured an elaborately produced and wildly improbable segment on the history of the Southside. The drink came from Chicago, the story went: Notorious South Side gangsters Joe Saltis and Frankie McErlane invented the cocktail to mask the taste of the dubious bootleg gin they were selling. Nonsense. There is no evidence that the Southside was ever served in Prohibition Chicago. And Saltis and McErlane focused on strong-arming saloons into selling their beer and their beer alone. Beyond such pesky details, the story makes no sense: Why would a drink from louche Chi-town speakeasies find its way east to be embraced by lock-jawed Locust Valleyites. One might just as well imagine the Astors inviting Big Jule over to shoot craps.
There have also been claims that the drink began at Jack and Charley's speakeasy in New York City, later the "21" Club, which is still known for its Southsides. But I suspect the drink had its origin on Long Island, at a retreat so exclusive that few people even knew it existed -- the Southside Sportsmen's Club.
LAZ wrote:In this weekend's Wall Street Journal, Eric Felton disputes this origin, crediting the cocktail to the Southside Sportsmen's Club on Long Island.
There you go. That is what I am talking about. A well known cocktail with a Chicago genesis. I guess a Pink Lady doesn't exactly embody the manly swagger of NYC's Rob Roy, but if Walter Winchell could order one without blushing, then it is good enough for me.Rene G wrote:The Pink Lady: To one jigger of Gin, add orange syrup to color, a dash of Apollinaris, and one-half a lime. Ice, stir well, and serve. Another Paul Gilbert creation, now become a standard cocktail. Said to be Walter Winchell's favorite.
billdaley wrote:I have an Oak Park reader looking to buy Cohasset Punch, preferably by the case. does anyone know if this drink was ever bottled and, if so, is it still made? . . . Any information or advice would be much appreciated. And was there really a peach in the bottle of the glass?
LAZ wrote:Chicago cocktail
Lemon slice
Powdered sugar
2 ounces brandy
1/4 teaspoon orange curacao or triple sec
Dash Angostura bitters
Cracked ice
Rub the rim of an old-fashioned glass with the lemon and dip in the powdered sugar. Stir the brandy, bitters and curacao over cracked ice. Pour into the prepared glass, garnish with the lemon and serve.
(Recipes seem somewhat divided as to whether you should strain the ice out.)
Rene G wrote:billdaley wrote:I have an Oak Park reader looking to buy Cohasset Punch, preferably by the case. does anyone know if this drink was ever bottled and, if so, is it still made? . . . Any information or advice would be much appreciated. And was there really a peach in the bottle of the glass?
Yes, Cohasset Punch used to be sold by the bottle. Here's an old ad for it from shortly after Repeal.
I don't think it's marketed any longer but it doesn't sound difficult to make. There are many recipes available on the internet. I believe Ladner's served each glass with a piece of canned peach.
LAZ wrote:Chicago cocktail
Lemon slice
Powdered sugar
2 ounces brandy
1/4 teaspoon orange curacao or triple sec
Dash Angostura bitters
Cracked ice
Rub the rim of an old-fashioned glass with the lemon and dip in the powdered sugar. Stir the brandy, bitters and curacao over cracked ice. Pour into the prepared glass, garnish with the lemon and serve.
(Recipes seem somewhat divided as to whether you should strain the ice out.)