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Originally made with equal parts gin, Bénédictine and maraschino but better balanced with a tad more gin. (If making with equal parts this is a slightly...
This is another recipe that Craddock pilfered from Hugo Ensslin (unless it's first recorded somewhere else I don't know of).
Ensslin refers to 'gin' here rather than 'dry gin' - I always wonder if that means Old Tom is meant, since in other recipes he does specify 'dry gin'. Old Tom might make more sense, leaning fully into the sweet sipper vibe.
As is, with London Dry, I find this fairly nasty...
Interestingly, it was hugely improved with some Fees orange bitters, become really quite tasty.
Many thanks for the heads up. I've added reference to Ensslin above but don't have access to his 1916 edition. Do you know if it also appears in this first edition? I look forward to trying with orange bitters later.
Ensslin refers to 'gin' here rather than 'dry gin' - I always wonder if that means Old Tom is meant, since in other recipes he does specify 'dry gin'. Old Tom might make more sense, leaning fully into the sweet sipper vibe.
As is, with London Dry, I find this fairly nasty...
Interestingly, it was hugely improved with some Fees orange bitters, become really quite tasty.