What’s the reasoning behind egg whites in cocktails? Personally I can’t stand the smell and don’t think a cocktail needs a head on it, I just make my sours without. Just wondering how it came to be a thing?
@John Hinojos Yes, it's very hit or miss with aquafaba. I made a Bitter Lady (which does not call for dry shaking even) and the foam and texture were just like a fresh egg white's expected results. This drink was limp in comparison.
I can't use egg white due to health issues and do not like the texture of the aquafaba. We did buy a foaming agent (Fee Foam) from the same people who make Fee Bitters. It is a bit hard to find, but Amazon does carry. It give the foam of the drink. Not sure if it does anything for the texture.
@Garret Brough @Jo Morgan I tried this cocktail with aquafaba. Really nice taste, with the pungent dark rum coming through just a bit with beautiful sour and sweet. Unfortunately, the aquafaba just didn't do a great job in terms of frothing. Maybe it needs more shaking than an egg white?
It really improves the texture especially in cocktails that follow the sour style, still to help hide that smell since for some it is too much I do a spritz of bitters onto the foam. I would try out aquafaba since it does a similar job without that wet dog smell.