Marmish wrote:Plymouth or Hendricks
Kennyz wrote:I don't get much juniper in my life, so when I drink gin, that's what I want to taste.
DMChicago wrote:BTW, the new menu is very good as well.
eatchicago wrote:I like Plymouth on the rocks because I like the taste, but more likely because I spent a good portion of my teenage years reading Travis McGee novels.
Best,
Michael
bjackson wrote:I'm going to try infusing some gin with pineapple and basil soon. My plan is to let the pineapple infuse for 9 days, and then add basil in for the last 3 days.
What gin would you use to infuse with? I almost want to do Hendrick's because it's nice and soft and I don't want juniper to overpower the flavor here, but that's a bit expensive. I noticed Toby of VTH fame recommended infusing Plymouth with Pineapple (and Campari) for The Riviera, so that's a contendor as well (although expensive on its own right for infusing).
What would you use? I'm not opposed to spending money, I just don't want to ruin a perfectly good gin with my experiment.
bjackson wrote:I'm going to try infusing some gin with pineapple and basil soon. My plan is to let the pineapple infuse for 9 days, and then add basil in for the last 3 days.
What gin would you use to infuse with? I almost want to do Hendrick's because it's nice and soft and I don't want juniper to overpower the flavor here, but that's a bit expensive. I noticed Toby of VTH fame recommended infusing Plymouth with Pineapple (and Campari) for The Riviera, so that's a contendor as well (although expensive on its own right for infusing).
What would you use? I'm not opposed to spending money, I just don't want to ruin a perfectly good gin with my experiment.
headcase wrote:bjackson wrote:I'm going to try infusing some gin with pineapple and basil soon. My plan is to let the pineapple infuse for 9 days, and then add basil in for the last 3 days.
What gin would you use to infuse with? I almost want to do Hendrick's because it's nice and soft and I don't want juniper to overpower the flavor here, but that's a bit expensive. I noticed Toby of VTH fame recommended infusing Plymouth with Pineapple (and Campari) for The Riviera, so that's a contendor as well (although expensive on its own right for infusing).
What would you use? I'm not opposed to spending money, I just don't want to ruin a perfectly good gin with my experiment.
Why start with a base of gin? Why not start with a vodka base, get the flavor that you want into it, and then use it as a mixer in Gin. Vodka can be had cheap, the lack of flavor in it makes it a better vessel for adding flavors to, and you won't have to worry about ruining a perfectly good gin.
SSDD
toria wrote:Some guy did a bunch of gin reviews and here is the link.
http://www.slashfood.com/search/?q=gin& ... rchsubmit=