Freezer Martini

Difford’s Guide
Discerning Drinkers (6 ratings)

Serve in a Bottle

Ingredients:
2.08 oz Hayman's London Dry Gin
0.42 oz Strucchi Dry Vermouth
23 oz Chilled water
2 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 a Bottle.
  2. Prepare garnish of skewered chilled Fragata Green Olive &/or lemon zest twist for each individual serve.
  3. Use the serve number selector (below the ingredients) to set the number of serves you want in your pre-batch. (x7 serves is recommended as this will fill a standard bottle – see below for x7 volumes and weights).
  4. POUR all ingredients into a clean, resealable 70cl or 75cl bottle.
  5. Seal the bottle and turn/shake to ensure the integration of ingredients.
  6. Place bottle, along with serving glasses, in a freezer for three hours. (Beware, your cocktail is likely to freeze if left for extended periods.)
  7. For each individual serve, POUR 90ml/30oz directly from the frozen bottle into the frozen glasses.
  8. Garnish each cocktail with a skewered olive &/or lemon zest twist.

Allergens:

Recipe contains the following allergens:

Strength & taste guide:

No alcohol
Medium
Boozy
Strength 9/10
Sweet
Medium
Dry/sour
Sweet to sour 8/10

Review:

This easy-to-measure recipe produces a 5:1 ratio Dry Martini with a dilution that suits being served icy cold serve. Be sure to chill your olives or, as Dale DeGroff once said to me, "You'll have a heat bomb".

If preparing x7 serves (as recommended to fill a standard bottle)
To measure your ingredients by weight (rather than volume):
1. Place a clean bottle with a funnel in the neck on your scales and then zero the scales.
2. Carefully pour each successive ingredient into the bottle until you reach the cumulative weight shown after that ingredient:

438 ml London dry gin [ 404g ]
87.5 ml Dry vermouth [ 492g ]
140 ml Chilled water [ 632g ]
14 drops Saline solution

View readers' comments

History:

Regular Martini Drinkers have their own preferred ratio of gin (or vodka) to vermouth, but the one thing that Martini Drinkers agree upon is the need for this cocktail to be cold. Very cold. Hence, it's not surprising that a bartender decided that it would be beneficial to use a freezer to properly chill the glass and ingredients. We'll never know who was the very first person to use a freezer in the preparation of a Martini, but as far as I'm aware, Giuseppe Cipriani is the first to stipulate this in print.

Giuseppe Cipriani was mixing Martinis at the Hotel Europa in Venice before he opened his Harry's Bar nearby in 1931. When Cipriani started to place his Martinis, glasses and all, in a freezer as part of his preferred method of service is unknown but he describes this in his 1987 book L'angolo dell'Harry's Bar, published seven years before Salvatore Calabrese made his "Direct Martini" for Stanton Delaplane at Dukes bar. While successive Dukes bartenders have continued to hero and become most identified with this style of Martini service, frozen Martinis were certainly being served by Giuseppe Cipriani many years earlier.

Aperitifs are essential to the success of a gathering; they help break the ice and almost eliminate shyness. However, be careful about who will be drinking them: don't offer a too strong aperitif to friends who are not used to drinking, but also not a too light one to those who, besides being your friends, are also friends of the glass.

The martini, for example, is strong. I would do it like this. First, take a bottle of good English gin and a bottle of dry Italian white wine and put them in the refrigerator in the morning. About an hour before the guests arrive, pour a part of the wine and five parts of gin into a pitcher filled halfway with ice. Stir a little but not too much and pour into 60-gram glasses. Put the filled glasses in the freezer until the guests arrive.

Giuseppe Cipriani, L'angolo dell'Harry's Bar, 1978

Nutrition:

One serving of Freezer Martini contains 152 calories

Alcohol content:

  • 1.5 standard drinks
  • 21.66% alc./vol. (21.66° proof)
  • 20.6 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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John Hinojos’ Avatar John Hinojos
19th May at 00:57
This is outstanding. Have been wanting to try for ages, but always forget the time needed to make this cocktail. Well worth the planning. Very gin and herbal forward. Will definitely have this again.
DabblesMoose’s Avatar DabblesMoose
11th November 2024 at 18:38
Hi, the suggested vermouth is out of stock. What do you recommend as an alternative please?
Simon Difford’s Avatar Simon Difford
11th November 2024 at 19:54
Our first shipment of Strucchi is due this month. If you can’t wait, Noilly Prat is a classic choice.
Cocktailpixie   ’s Avatar Cocktailpixie
7th September 2024 at 07:13
I think you need to recheck the weights given as they don't make sense
Simon Difford’s Avatar Simon Difford
8th September 2024 at 19:00
Apologies! I've just made 3 times and averaged the weights to arrive at the above. As you correctly say, 140ml water weighs 140g.
Simon Difford’s Avatar Simon Difford
7th September 2024 at 08:33
Are you allowing for variance in specific gravities of each ingredient?