We won't and can't do the egg white thing...all of our eggs come from our own free-rangers. Undeterred, we substituted a good 10 dashes of Fee Foam and went with 50 rather than our normal 30 vigorous shakes, ending up with a lovely 2cm high 'souffle' above the glass rim. No sweat, but I guess we missed out on the 'mouth-feel'. btw make the final pour as close to the edge of the glass as you can and you won't create a sink-hole (don't they seem to be opening up everywhere these days?) in the middle of the glass.
An unbelievably delicious and smooth drink. Difford’s specs are perfect (however I use heavy/double cream instead of single cream). The original method is rather over-complicated. Definitely just a show for the times. I reverse dry shook it, then topped with soda till the glass edge. Let it sit for 1 min. Then top with more soda slowly and it makes a beautiful soufflé.
I got 2/3rd of the way making a Ramos tonight after my final shaking (I dry shake last, after a 40~g ice-fully-melted shake), only to realize I was out of soda water. There's no going back - so browsing my fridge for anything carbonated, I picked a can of Fever Tree Ginger Beer. And know what? Not bad! Makes sense it would taste alright - kind of a cross between a Gin Gin Mule, minus the mint? Maybe I'll use ginger syrup or muddle a touch of ginger next time? Salvaged all my shaking at least!
I have now twice added 10 ml of Triple sec and I think this drink gets even better. I have even tried the original at a world top-50 bar! I know it is a sacrilege to alter a classic drink like this. But the lemon/lime/orange water/vanilla-mix just loves triple sec in my opinion.
It's simple and delicious. It's a lot of shaking but it's worth it. I did find judging how much soda water to add a bit awkward as I didn't know how much volume I'd get when pouring both into a glass.