Category Archives: Cocktails

Devil’s Barrel cocktail

The Caesar is the most well-known Canadian cocktail, but there are many more made-in-Canada drinks — featuring local spirits, and created by the country’s top bartenders — waiting to be discovered, imbibed and ordered again and again. To help you navigate the country’s liquid landscape, food writer Victoria Walsh and her husband Scott McCallum have written a handy book called A Field Guide to Canadian Cocktails (Penguin Random House, 214 pages, $24.95).

A Field Guide to Canadian Cocktails.

A Field Guide to Canadian Cocktails.

It’s a mouth-watering collection of cocktail recipes from across Canada that includes a B.C. cherry-flavoured Ogopogo Sour, the delicious A Bit of Northern Hospitality from Calgary’s Proof, and even a St. John’s Sling.

I went paging through the book looking for a tipple with whisky and lemon (two ingredients I have on hand), and settled on the Devil’s Barrel cocktail, created by Christopher Cho of Ayden Kitchen and Bar in Saskatoon (he previously worked a stint at Charcut and also helped create the cocktail menu at Charbar). I didn’t have a couple of the ingredients called for, so made substitutions (see recipe, below).

The drink is bitter at first sip, from the Aperol and grapefruit bitters, but it’s tempered by the nice round flavour of apple, and just a touch of honey. My husband was hoping for something more whisky-forward, but agreed that it grew on him as the large ice cube wept water and diluted the bitter bite. If you’re adventurous with your drinks, it’s a curious winter sip that’s a citrusy departure from the usual suspects.

The Devil's Barrel is strong, tart and bitter. Not a starter cocktail.

The Devil’s Barrel is strong, tart and bitter. Not a starter cocktail.

Devil’s Barrel

  • 1 oz Forty Creek Barrel Select Whisky (I used Alberta Premium)
  • 3/4 oz Aperol
  • 1/2 oz calvados (I used Crown Royal Regal Apple)
  • 1/4 oz honey syrup (equal parts honey and water)
  • 1/4 oz fresh lemon juice
  • 2 dashes grapefruit bitters
  • Ice
  • 1 grapefruit peel strip

Method: Pour all ingredients except ice and grapefruit peel into a cocktail shaker. Add a handful of ice cubes and shake. Double strain into an old-fashioned glass with a large ice cube. Spritz drink with oils from the grapefruit peel, and rub on the outside rim of the glass, then add as a garnish.

— Recipe by Christopher Cho, Ayden Kitchen and Bar, Saskatoon

Blue Lagoon: the cocktail

Never heard of a Blue Lagoon cocktail? You’re not alone. For those readers who were tweens or teens in 1980, those two words together will most likely conjure images of Blue Lagoon, the movie, in which a ship-wrecked Brooke Shields and Christopher Atkins get hot and heavy beside a very blue lagoon.

Remember this movie? Evidently it inspired a tropical cocktail of the same name.

Remember this movie? Evidently it inspired a cocktail of the same name.

Evidently, this cheesy 80s island love story inspired a tropical 80s cocktail of the same name, the Blue Lagoon. It’s a member of the cocktail genre I call “blue cocktails,” that includes the Blue Hawaiian, the Blue Margarita and the Blue Monday. All of these drinks are coloured blue by Blue Curacao, which is actually an orange-flavoured liqueur that’s been dyed blue. (When cocktails veered toward sweet and fruity in the 70s and 80s, blue curaçao showed up for the party.)

I’ve been hearing for a while that 80s cocktails are making a comeback. Bartenders are taking Amaretto sours and pina coladas and margaritas and making them better (usually that means less sweet, and with fresh juices or housemade syrups instead of sour mix). This is a good thing. But I kind of thought blue drinks would be overlooked because of their neon colour. So, when I saw that the Bourbon Room was featuring not only an 80s selection but a blue cocktail on said menu, I couldn’t resist.

So. Very. Pretty.

Blue Lagoon cocktail at the Bourbon Room. So. Very. Pretty.

Bartender Fern Zevnik has taken some liberties with the Blue Lagoon (using bourbon instead of vodka, for one), but the result is something that’s balanced, delicious and beautifully blue. Go ahead and dive in!

Blue Lagoon

  • 2 oz Buffalo Trace bourbon
  • 1 oz Giffard Blue Curacao
  • 3/4 oz housemade mead syrup (or use honey simple syrup)
  • 3/4 oz fresh lemon juice

Method: Combine ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake, then strain into a chilled coupe glass.

— Recipe courtesy Fern Zevnik

New year, new booze

It’s a new year, which means it’s time to mix it up when it comes to the spirits in your glass. Boutique and established distillers are busy creating new brands and new blends, and there’s no better time to resolve to drink better than January.

Here are four new-to-me spirits that are will help you elevate your cocktail game in 2016.

Crown Royal Northern Harvest Rye

Yes, Canada can make great whisky! Crown Royal out of Gimli, Man. has a winner in this rye, named the 2016 Whisky of the Year.

Yes, Canada can make great whisky! Crown Royal out of Gimli, Man. has a winner in this rye, named the 2016 Whisky of the Year.

By now you’ve probably heard about the Canadian rye blend that’s been named 2016 Whisky of the Year by Jim Murray, whisky aficionado and author of the Whisky Bible. Crown Royal has a winner in its Northern Harvest Rye, a smooth, approachable rye whose spiciness is softened by the warmth of cinnamon and cloves. It’s lovely to sip on its own, or mix into a cocktail such as the Penicillin. But the best part may be the price: it retails for about $33. I’ve written about it in more detail for my Spirited Calgary column, running in the Calgary Herald this Saturday.

Rocado Tequila Reposado

An elegant bottle of tequila whose contents are smooth and delicious.

An elegant bottle of tequila whose contents are smooth and delicious.

Tequila is exploding right now, with tons of new entrants into the market. Along comes Rocado — a reposado in a beautiful but rather non-functional bottle — the result of a collaboration between the Mexican tequila family of Rodolfo Gonzalez and the wine and brandy family of Miguel Torres. Rocado smells of honeyed agave, and travels easily across the palate with a hint of citrus. I wouldn’t necessarily sip it on its own, but it’s fantastic in a margarita. It goes for $125 for a 700 mL bottle.

Gilpin’s Westmorland Extra Dry Gin

Gilpin's is a handcrafted, small-batch gin that tastes great in a rage of gin cocktails.

Gilpin’s is a small-batch gin that tastes great in a rage of gin cocktails.

The fragrances of citrus and juniper waft gently from a bottle of Gilpin’s Extra Dry Gin, voted the World’s Best Gin at the World Gin Awards. This small-batch gin incorporates juniper, lime peel, lemon peel, sage, bitter orange, coriander seed and angelica root botanicals, to create a balanced, super-dry gin that tastes great in a G&T or Live Basil Gimlet. It retails for about $60.

Sonoma Rye Whiskey

Don't let Sonoma Rye Whiskey's 98 proof label dissuade you. This 100 per cent rye whiskey is sweet, spicy and scrumptious.

Don’t let Sonoma Rye Whiskey’s 98 proof label dissuade you. This 100 per cent rye whiskey is sweet, spicy and scrumptious.

Sonoma County Distilling, a grain-to-glass distiller in California, has created a lovely 100 per cent rye whiskey. It’s made from 80 per cent Canadian unmalted rye grain, and 20 per cent malted rye from the UK, and then aged in new charred American oak barrels. It smells like an oak barrel warehouse, in fact (that is to say somewhat earthen and musty, in a good way), which belies a high alcohol content that floats between 48 and 49 per cent. This means Sonoma Rye Whiskey is hot on the palate, but that heat is in the background as the predominant taste is sweet like caramel with hints of vanilla and cinnamon, and lots of rye spiciness. It’s fantastic in a Manhattan and costs $91.