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13 June 2006

Better cocktails through science

The New York Times reports that contemporary mixology is truly an -ology in that it's full of Big Science.
Mr. Cantu uses a grade-school science trick — baking soda plus acid equals fizz — for his Fizzing & Foaming Hurricane and a very not-grade-school trick involving a Class 4 laser, typically used for military experiments and eye surgery, according to Mr. Cantu, and a vanilla bean to “caramelaserize” a wineglass — that is, to coat it with the flavor of vanilla — before filling it with red wine and pairing the altered wine with a beef course on his restaurant's tasting menu.
This reminds me of a legend about some mixologists at Los Alamos who were fond of very dry Martinis. They strapped a bottle of vermouth to an A-bomb that was being tested in the desert. Then for weeks after the explosion, they would make a shaker of just gin and ice, pour it into a cocktail glass, open a window, reach out the window with the glass in hand for a few moments, then drop an olive into the glass an announce that the Martini had just the right amount of vermouth.

3 comments:

  1. Oh, that's an even better martini recipe than mine: pour vermouth in glass and swirl it around; pour vermouth out; add chilled Stoli and olives. Sanctuary.

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  2. Oddly, I'm a wet Martini drinker. 5-to-1 is ideal for me.

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  3. I'm a fan of Hecate's recipe (though I prefer Ketel One to Stoli), but I'm sympathetic to those who argue that the correct application of Vermouth involves passing the unopened bottle over the glass three times.

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