Pinto by Jason Clapham

Difford’s Guide
Discerning Drinkers (25 ratings)

Photographed in an UB Koto Old Fashioned 30cl

Ingredients:
1 14 oz Light white rum (charcoal-filtered 1-4 years old)
1 oz Heering Cherry Liqueur
12 oz Fernet Branca liqueur
14 oz Lemon juice (freshly squeezed)
1 dash Angostura Aromatic Bitters
3 drop Saline solution 4:1 (20g sea salt to 80g water)
× 1 1 serving
Read about cocktail measures and measuring

How to make:

  1. Select and pre-chill an Old-fashioned glass.
  2. Prepare garnish of lemon zest twist.
  3. SHAKE all ingredients with ice.
  4. STRAIN into ice-filled glass (preferably over a large cube or chunk of block ice).
  5. EXPRESS lemon zest twist over the cocktail and use as garnish.

Strength & taste guide:

No alcohol
Medium
Boozy
Strength 7/10
Sweet
Medium
Dry/sour
Sweet to sour 7/10

Review:

Rum-laced and bittersweet with rich cherry fruit and lemon freshness.

View readers' comments

History:

Adapted from a recipe created by Jason Edward Clapham of Clapham Cocktails in Oxford, England. Jason told us, "Devised to improve upon the far sweeter Pinto listed in Pioneers of Mixing (1934), since rum works complements Cherry Heering so well in the Ankle Breaker (a 50s concoction from Beachbum Berry's Remixed).

Nutrition:

One serving of Pinto by Jason Clapham contains 215 calories

Alcohol content:

  • 1.5 standard drinks
  • 22.93% alc./vol. (22.93° proof)
  • 20.7 grams of pure alcohol

Difford’s Guide remains free-to-use thanks to the support of the brands in green above. Values stated for alcohol and calorie content, and number of drinks an ingredient makes should be considered approximate.

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Aristoth Dariotis’ Avatar Aristoth Dariotis
10th February at 03:49
I personally much prefer this drink served on cracked ice rather than block. Your results may vary.
Simon Sedgley’s Avatar Simon Sedgley
2nd February at 04:07
Beautifully elusive and balanced...from a very unlikely (one hesitates to say 'dog's breakfasty') cabal of ingredients.
Marie-Therese Straus’ Avatar Marie-Therese Straus
1st February at 02:33
What an interesting drink! It's surprisingly dry and has a really appealing, wintry woodsmoke/woodfire note from the Fernet. The lemon juice and lemon peel add a nice freshening element. I'll definitely make this again!