Yes, yes, it's a spirituous drink without fruit juices that best shows its crystalline beauty when stirred rather than shaken. However, it's the one Martini...
So, Simon: this idea of the last gin added automatically makes it “preferred”, but that’s not right, surely. I have at least a dozen different gins (all without fruit flavours!) and use them for different drinks. No single gin is preferred over any other in general. I would suggest you let the user decide what the “preferred” dry gin is (or none!) rather than automatically assuming that it’s the most recently-added one.
Oh, dear! I had assumed that the clever website selected the best brand in my cupboard for each recipe. Now I shall have to try every one again with each brand of gin.
We're working on an upgrade which, if you have multiple products within one category such as gin, will allow you to select the preferred one for each particular cocktail. Please bear with us in the meantime as just one part of a bigger upgrade of our functionality.
For James Bond birthday, decided to make a version of the Vesper that a friend makes. It is 1 part vodka, 1 part gin, 1/2 part Luxardo Bitter Bianco. Shaken. Served with lemon twist. It has a slightly different taste of the traditional Vesper, but very, very good.
Having one of these and staying with the book version of 3:1:1/2 Gordons / Ketel / Tempus Fugit Kina L'aero d'Or to aim as close to the original as possible
Shaken of course
I do my own "Vesper in Absinthia" by pouring the once-made Vesper into a chilled, absinthe-rinsed glass. I like the body that the vodka somehow adds in the Vesper, I just like the absinthe favor, and I am ever the punster, here on Vesper (& Ian Fleming) no longer being with us, plus the "in absentia" phrase frequently being applied both to trials and awards.
Happy Birthday Mr Fleming. To quote “Well, I like to do some things the old-fashioned way.” So I will be toasting messers Fleming and Bond with the original 3-1-0.5 including Lillet Blanc. Shaken of course!
is the choice of celery gin deliberate? You don't comment on it. I wondered whether it was especially well matched to the vesper over say rutte normal gin?
Now I understand why it says Plymouth gin on mine. But thinking about it, Plymouth would make a very good Vesper, Cocchi Americano being basically a sweet bianco. Must try it.
I use Rutte Dry Gin in this cocktail, not Rutte Celery. If you are seeing Celery Gin in this recipe it is because your Celery Gin is the last gin you added to Your Ingredients so our clever database thinks this is your preferred gin.
I'll be making one of these later in honour of the original screen James Bond. "Do you expect me to talk?" "No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die." I am going traditional proportions of 3:1:0.5 but the 0.5 is Cocchi Americano. And yes, shaken, not stirred!