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Five Simple 3-Ingredient Cocktails to Know

7/25/2023

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PictureThe M22
In culinary school, many classical curricula teach students to become fluent in preparing what are called the "Mother Sauces." In French cuisine, these are the five sauces that can pretty much be used as the foundation for any sauce you may want to create in the kitchen. (For reference, the five Mother Sauces are Bechamel, Veloute (white stock), Espagnole (brown stock), Hollandaise, and Tomate.)

Just as in French cuisine, there are several basic "families" of cocktails that form the core foundation of just about any drink you might want to create at your bar. By most accounts, there are 12 different "families" in mixology: Buck/Mule, Cobbler, Cocktail, Crusta, Fizz, Flip, Rickey, Sling, Smash, Sour, Swizzle, and Toddy. Although some of these categories remain barely known (when's the last time you had a Crusta?) a few—like the Mother Sauces—provide the basic roadmap for creating an infinite number of cocktail variations.

For the purposes of this article, let's not worry about "families," but rather let's look at the basic structure of some of the most popular cocktail styles on menus today. Let's look at the Manhattan, the Negroni, The Mule, The Martini, and The Cosmo. These drinks are a good place to start if you want to know five basic formulas for five diverse styles of cocktail. And the great thing is that each of them only requires three main ingredients (plus a garnish or two if you're so inclined).

The Basic Manhattan
A classic Manhattan cocktail is whiskey, sweet vermouth, and bitters:  
  • 2 ounces whiskey
  • 1 ounce sweet vermouth
  • 2 dashes Angostura bitters. 
A Manhattan is traditionally stirred over ice, strained, and served up in a coupe, rocks, or martini glass. The most common garnish for this is a cherry of one sort or another. 

If you're not a big whiskey fan (or if you just want to play) you can try the M22, which is the less-sweet aquavit hack for a Manhattan. Again, only three main ingredients: 
  • 2 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • 1/2 ounce dry vermouth
  • 1/2 ounce sweet vermouth
  • Dashes of Angostura bitters, optional
Stir ingredients on ice, strain, and serve in a cocktail glass. Garnish with a cherry (we like to add a splash of the cherry liquid or a dash of Luxardo Sangue Morlacco to punch up the fruit).

The Basic Negroni
The classic negroni is a simple 3-part cocktail: 
  • 1 part gin
  • 1 part sweet vermouth
  • 1 part Campari

The ingredients are combined in a rocks glass with ice, stirred to chill, and garnished (usually with an orange peel).

The Batch hack—the Batchroni—simply substitutes Batch 22 for the gin. The aquavit provides an herbal and floral component similar to the gin, but does it with different herbs and floral notes.

The Batchroni is:
1 ounce Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
1 ounce sweet vermouth
1 ounce Campari

Combine the ingredients in a rocks glass with ice and stir. Garnish with an orange peel or wheel. If you want a more elegant look, you can shake the ingredients over ice and strain into a martini glass.

The Basic Martini
Technically, a martini is not even a 3-ingredient cocktail. You can chill some vodka, gin, or aquavit and pour it into a martini glass with a garnish and call it a martini. You can also shake any of the above with a dash or a good amount of vermouth, strain it into a cocktail glass, and have a martini.
 

One of our favorite martinis is the Batch Dirty Martini, which is a 3-ingredient cocktail only because we use two types of vermouth:

Dirty Martini
  • 3 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • 1/2 ounce sweet vermouth
  • 1/2 ounce dry vermouth
  • Add any amount of olive brine and/or olive bitters to taste
Combine ingredients in a shaker with ice, shake, and strain into a martini glass. Garnish with olives and a lemon twist, if desired.

The Basic Cosmo
Okay, the basic Cosmo is really a four-ingredient cocktail, if you count the lime juice in the traditional recipe, but the Batch hack requires only a squeeze of fresh lime to your taste. The classic Cosmo is:
  • 1 ounce vodka
  • 1 ounce cranberry juice
  • 1/2 ounce Cointreau
  • 1/2 ounce lime juice

Combine ingredients in a shaker with ice, shake to chill, and strain into a martini glass. Garnish with lime wheel.
 

The Batch Cosmo
Here, we substitute Batch 22 for vodka, we use pomegranate juice instead of cranberry, and we use Triple Sec instead of Cointreau (though using Cointreau or cranberry with this is perfectly delicious). 
  • 2 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • 1 ounce pomegranate juice
  • 1/2 Triple Sec
  •  Squeeze of fresh lime juice to your taste​
Combine all ingredients in a shaker with ice. Shake to chill, strain into a coupe or martini glass. Garnish with orange peel or lime wheel.

PictureThe Basic Mule
The Basic Mule
A Mule (also called a Buck) is basically a cocktail made with ginger ale or ginger beer (the ginger gives it a "kick," hence the name). The basic Mule, most often made with vodka, is a simple 3-part creation:
  • 1 1/2 ounces of vodka
  • 1/4 ounce lime juice
  • 4 ounces ginger beer
Combine the vodka and lime in copper mug or highball glass with ice, stir to combine. Add the ginger beer and stir gently to combine. Garnish with lime wedge.
 

The Batch Happy Mule is a simple variation on the classic formula:
  • 2 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • 1/4 fresh lime juice
  • 4 ounces ginger beer
  • Dash of Angostura bitters, if desired
Combine the non-carbonated ingredients in a cocktail glass or mug with ice. Stir to combine. Add the ginger beer and stir gently. Garnish with lime wedge or wheel.
​

If you commit these simple formulas to memory, you'll have the basic knowledge you need to create all kinds of fun and interesting variations. You can do a Mule with tequila or gin instead of vodka or aquavit. You can try making a Cosmo with cherry juice or even mango, passionfruit, or blueberry. You can do a Manhattan with all kinds of aged brown spirits. Once you understand the basics, you're free to let your creativity and passions go wild. Enjoy!


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World's Most Iconic Bars, Part 2

7/18/2023

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American Bar at The Savoy Hotel

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The now-iconic Savoy Hotel in London was a glittering showpiece from the moment it opened its doors in 1889. The genius behind the hotel was theatrical impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte, who brought his unique flair for the theater to the ambience and service at the Savoy.

An essential part of the Savoy experience was the wonderful American Bar that became both a showpiece and a major draw for the hotel. Helmed by the legendary barman Harry Craddock, who gained worldwide notoriety for his cocktail creations in the 1920s and 1930s, the American Bar was a hive of activity for writers, artists, performers, and politicians from all over the world. Craddock, however, was not the first talented cocktail wizard to grace the bar at the Savoy. That title belonged to a woman named Ada Coleman, who headed the bar from 1903 to 1925.
 

“Coley,” as she was known to her regulars, served her inspired drinks to just about everybody who was anybody, including Mark Twain, Diamond Jim Brady and the Prince of Wales. Her signature Hanky Panky (credited as the first drink invented at the Savoy) is her most-famous cocktail; it's a fabulous mixture featuring equal parts gin and sweet vermouth. You can find the recipe at the end of this article.

Barman Harry Craddock was an avid collector of cocktail recipes. In 1930, at the request of the Savoy, he compiled The Savoy Cocktail Book, which was a collection of more than 2,000 recipes that Craddock amassed from his years as a bartender. 93 years later, The Savoy Cocktail Book is still in print and is still considered to be one of the most important cocktail books of the 20th century.

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Stylish and au courant, The Savoy hosted all kinds of society's most glamourous and fashionable notables in the 1920s and 1930s, from royalty to Hollywood movie stars, to rock stars and politicians. One of the establishment's first guests was world-famous French actress Sarah Bernhardt, who was delighted to find her old friend August Escoffier heading up the hotel's kitchen. Escoffier was perhaps France's most famous and influential chef at the time. His culinary techniques are still being taught in cooking schools all over the world.

The Prince of Wales was a regular guest at the Savoy, as were mega-stars Al Jolson, Cary Grant, John Wayne, Frank Sinatra, Ava Gardner, Bob Hope, and Marilyn Monroe. Contemporary music legends—Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, the Beatles, Rihanna, Duran Duran, and Taylor Swift, to name a few—have also spent a good deal of time at London's most chic address.

The Savoy was one of the first hotels—and The American Bar was one of the first bars—to highlight the importance and appeal of a theatrical and well curated space for socializing. The "Roaring Twenties" ushered in a time of great social and cultural change around the world, especially in Europe (the U.S. was suffering in the restrictive yoke of Prohibition from 1920 to 1933) and the Savoy was a setting that embodied that change. 

Hanky Panky

Ada Coleman created this cocktail for Sir Charles Hawtrey, a celebrated actor who was a frequent visitor to the bar. As the story goes, he asked for a drink with a punch. Coleman served him this bracing concoction, leading him to exclaim “By Jove! That is the real hanky-panky!” The name stuck.

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 ounces gin
  • ​1 1/2 ounces sweet vermouth
  • 2 dashes Fernet-Branca
  • Garnish: orange twist​​

Directions

Combine the gin, sweet vermouth and Fernet-Branca in a mixing glass with ice and stir until well-chilled. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with an orange twist.

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Here's to the Martini

7/11/2023

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So, here's the great thing about the martini: It can be as simple or as complicated as you want it to be. Heck, for many people, a gin or vodka martini is a chilled glass with—well—gin or vodka in it. Maybe you drop a little vermouth in there. Or maybe an olive or a cocktail onion. Let's face it, a cocktail can't get much simpler than that.

Recently, all kinds of martini variations have become a hot trend in the cocktail world. There's a Parmesan martini. There's the ubiquitous Espresso Martini. There's even a Parmesan-Espresso Martini! Martinis work with all kinds of fruits—tropical, citrus, or stone—and they can be sweet, savory, or spicy.  No matter what kind of cocktail you like to drink, chances are there's some variation of a martini that will work for you.

Here are five martini variations that will get you thinking about all the different directions you can go with your creative martini recipes. All of them substitute aquavit (Batch 22 New American Aquavit is best!) for some amount of gin or vodka. Two are simple variations on the classic (The Vesper Martini and the Dirty Martini), another is a sweet and citrus-forward sipper (The Lemondrop Martini), another is an earthy and herbal variation (The Sagetini), and the fifth is a crowd-pleasing, dessert-friendly riff on the popular Espresso Martini. 

Vesper Martini
In the classic Bond movie, Casino Royale, 007 (Daniel Craig) introduced audiences to the now iconic Vesper Martini, named for love interest and double-agent, Vesper Lynd (Eva Green). The traditional version of this martini is notable for two reasons: It combines vodka and gin and substitutes Lillet for vermouth. In our version, we add another substitution: Batch for the vodka and rebalance with the gin.
​
  • 1.5 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • 1 ounce gin
  • ⅓ Lillet Blanc or Cocchi Americano

Directions
Combine all ingredients in a shaker filled with ice and shake vigorously for 15 seconds
Strain into a chilled coupe or martini glass
​Garnish with a large, thin lemon peel.


Classic Dirty Batch Martini
If you're a simple martini lover, this aquavit cocktail recipe is sure to satisfy. It works well with just the olive bitters, but also shines with the addition of olive brine (we love the Olive Twist olives and juice from Tillen Farms), so make it as dirty as you like! Lots of folks also like to split the vermouth differently between dry and sweet, according to their taste.

  • 3 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • .5 ounces dry vermouth
  • .5 ounces sweet vermouth
  • 2  dashes, olive bitters
  • Olive brine to taste

Directions
Shake all ingredients over ice

Strain into a martini glass
Garnish with olives or a cornichon

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The Stockholm Lemondrop Martini

(Created by Starlite, San Diego, CA)
This special martini was created especially for Downtime Cocktails and debuted at our San Diego launch party in June of 2022. The talented bartenders at Starlite found just the right balance of aquavit flavor and lemon with this delicious and addictive cocktail.


  • 2 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • .75 ounce fresh-squeezed lemon juice
  • .75 ounce simple syrup
  • .5 ounce aquafaba (liquid from a can of chick peas)

Directions
Combine all ingredients in a shaker with ice
Shake and strain into a martini glass
Garnish with a lemon peel twist

SageTini
This martini is the most ambitious in the group, but the results are well worth the extra effort. Start by infusing 22 grams of dried shiitakes in 300 ml of Batch 22. [Heat Batch to just below a simmer, add shiitakes, and turn off heat. Let stand for a minimum 1 hour.] You'll wind up with a wonderfully complex and earthy aquavit that is both herbal and highly aromatic. Make a fresh sage simple syrup by dissolving 10 ounces agave (by weight) in 100ml of water with 1/3 cup chopped sage. Allow to cool.

To assemble the martini:
Muddle 2 strips of fresh lemon peel with 3-5 fresh sage leaves in a shaker. Then combine:
​
  • 1.5 ounces Porcini Batch 22
  • .25 ounce gin
  • 1 ounce lemon juice (fresh)
  • .5 ounce sage simple syrup
  • .75 ounce aquafaba (liquid from a can of chick peas)

Directions
Dry shake ingredients for 10 seconds
Add ice to shaker and shake another 15 seconds
Strain into a chilled coupe glass and garnish with sage leaves

Aquavit Espresso Martini
This variation of the super popular Espresso Martini substitutes aquavit for vodka. Scandinavians have known for a long time that aquavit and coffee marry beautifully together, in fact they often just add aquavit straight to their coffee. 
​
  • 2 ounces Batch 22 Classic Gold aquavit
  • 1/2 ounce coffee liqueur (Kahlúa is best)
  • 1 ounce espresso, freshly brewed (or cold brew concentrate)
  • 1 tablespoon French vanilla ice cream (softened)
  • Garnish: coffee beans

Directions
Combine all ingredients in a shaker filled with ice and shake until well chilled
Strain into a chilled cocktail glass
​Garnish with 3 coffee beans

What's going to be your first martini creation?

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Remembering Alan

7/3/2023

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If you're familiar with our story and the origins of Batch 22, you know that Matthew's dad, Alan, played a pivotal role in the birth of our spirit. It was at Alan's urging that Matthew first started to experiment with making aquavit at home in his kitchen in Burbank, California. The original thought was to attempt to re-create the amazing spirit they had tasted together on a movie set in Eastern Europe decades before.
​

Thanks to Alan's encouragement (Matthew sometimes referred to it as "hocking me to do it") a delicious prototype emerged from the Los Angeles test kitchen. Alan was among the very first people ever to taste the earliest iterations of what would become Batch 22, and it was with his encouragement and moral support that Matthew pursued further development with his best buddies Marc and Bruce.

When the perfect formulation was finally reached (yes, the 22nd round of Mason jars crowding up a countertop) the trio realized that there could be only one name for their uniquely delicious concoction: "Batch 22" was not only a literal description, it also offered a special "tip of the cap" to the man who played Yossarian in the movie "Catch 22"—the man who planted the idea of homemade aquavit in Matthew's head.

Alan passed away on Thursday, June 29, at his home in Southern California. He was not only a loving father to Matthew (and brothers Adam and Tony), he was also a wonderful friend and cheerleader for Batch 22. We'll always be grateful to him for his kind words of encouragement and for igniting that spark of creativity that led to us to something truly wonderful. Thank you, Alan. We'll miss you.

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