Category Archives: Cocktails

Drink of the Week: Brandy Flip

Short, cool days make me crave short, strong drinks, like the Brandy Flip. It also helps that I’m researching this particular libation for my March Avenue magazine column, so I decided to make one in the name of journalistic inquiry.

The nutmeg makes a pretty and fragrant garnish on a brandy flip.

The nutmeg makes a pretty and fragrant garnish on a brandy flip.

This drink could be mistaken for eggnog, what with the booze and cream and sugar and egg. And it is rather like a single serving of nog, but it exclusively uses brandy (or even better, cognac) rather than bourbon or rum. And though some brandy flip recipes omit the egg, let’s be honest — do you really want to shake a whole egg (including the yolk!) into your cocktail without a dairy buffer? Adding cream or milk smooths out the drink.

The end result is a strong fireside sip with all the charm of eggnog, but without its baggage (mainly, the name). In a word, you’ll flip for it. (Sorry.)

I prefer cognac in my brandy flip.

I prefer cognac in my brandy flip.

Brandy Flip

  • 1-1/2 oz Remy Martin VSOP cognac
  • 1/3 oz simple syrup
  • 1/3 oz cream (I used 2% milk = fewer calories)
  • 1 fresh whole egg
  • Nutmeg ganish

Vigorously shake all ingredients with ice then double strain into a chilled martini glass. Sprinkle nutmeg on top for garnish.

Drink of the Week: Tomatini

I spent a lunch hour earlier this week at a vodka tasting with Bob Nolet, an 11th generation distiller from Holland who’s best known in Canada for producing Ketel One vodka. I know what you’re thinking: “Vodka for lunch? How Mad Men. Sign me up!” Believe me, there was a little bit of that going on — especially since I tasted three different vodkas and got halfway through a vodka cocktail before any food arrived. Plus, Nolet was accompanied by Jenner Cormier, a Ketel One spokesman/bartender who just won the World Class Canada Bartender of the Year title. He is also easy on the eyes in a Don Draper kind of way.

Over the course of the tasting Nolet and Cormier sold me on the charms of this small-batch, pot-stilled spirit and I was eager to try it at home by shaking up some fall cocktails. Intrigued by the idea of muddling a tomato (a first for me), I opted for the Tomatini, created for Ketel One by a bartender from Dubai.

A vodka drink with muddled tomato and white balsamic vinegar.

A vodka drink with muddled tomato and white balsamic vinegar.

As I measured white balsamic vinegar and vodka into my cocktail shaker I imagined that the end result would taste of boozy gazpacho, a tonic both strong and savoury. Alas, no. The recipe also calls for sugar syrup so, in combination with the vinegar and tomato (remember: it’s a fruit), my drink was too sweet for my liking and I recalled Nolet’s and Cormier’s words of caution: that cocktails from Asia and the Middle East (e.g. Dubai) are often sweeter. Doh!

I quickly dispatched the Tomatini and used the lovely Ketel One to muddle up my favourite vodka cocktail, a Dawa. But in the spirit of fall, I bring you the Tomatini (feel free to adjust the sugar and vinegar according to taste).

My attempt at the Tomatini doesn't look quite as nice, does it?

My attempt at the Tomatini doesn’t look quite as nice, does it?

Ketel One Tomatini

  • 1.5 oz Ketel One Vodka
  • 1/3 oz white balsamic vinegar
  • 1/4 oz simple syrup*
  • 1 ripe red tomato
  • Pepper Grinder

Cut the tomato into 8-10 chunks and muddle in a cocktail shaker. Add the balance of ingredients with lots of ice. Shake vigorously and strain into a martini glass. Garnish with black pepper.  

*To make simple syrup, add 2 parts of sugar and 1 part of water to a small saucepan.  (1 cup of sugar and 1/2 cup of water is a good starting point). Gently heat until it starts to boil, stirring until the sugar is completely dissolved. Cool and refrigerate. 

— Recipe created by Jimmy Barrat, Zuma Restaurant, Dubai

Drink of the Week: Mai Tai (with a side of lobster)

It’s not often I get to sample the taste of Hawaii and Nova Scotia at the same time, but the planets aligned in such a way last week. Or shall I say, Earls Restaurant Shepard Flats, the chain’s newest Calgary location, flew in a slew of Nova Scotia lobsters in advance of its annual three-day Lobster feast, and I was lucky to shell and eat one of the critters. I also got to sample from Earls’ cocktail menu, which features classics like the margarita and Moscow mule, all mixed with fresh juices and house-made syrups. I opted for the Mai Tai, a yummy, rummy number with a unique flavour thanks to its almond syrup.

Earls' Mai Tai, a tart and tropical classic cocktail, pairs nicely with shellfish.

Earls’ Mai Tai, a tart and tropical classic cocktail, pairs nicely with shellfish.

First, I love the glass. The restaurant has sourced tiki-style rocks glasses for this drink, which I think is very cool. Second, this cocktail is seriously delicious. I have always been wary of Mai Tais (perhaps I remember those too-sweet versions served at Waikiki bars during happy hour?), but I loved this drink’s simplicity: it’s just rum, triple sec and lime juice, with almond syrup that adds a distinct toasty flavour to the perfectly balanced combo of sour, sweet and strong. I managed to save some in my glass for when my 1-1/2 lb. lobster arrived.

It's a little disconcerting to dismember a whole lobster, but I got the hang of it in a hurry. Omyomyom.

It’s a little disconcerting to dismember a whole lobster, but I got the hang of it in a hurry. Omyomyom.

Earls’ “A Lobster of a Feast” takes place in Calgary October 3-5. The restaurant chain flies in thousands of live Atlantic lobster, boils them and serves them with prawns, grilled corn on the cob, fingerling potatoes and sourdough bread that’s baked in-house (ideal for dipping into the Chardonnay-butter sauce). Oh, and it only costs $25. Nice. If you miss the lobster event you can just go for the Mai Tais — they’re on the menu all year.

Mai Tai

  • 1-1/2 oz Appleton VX rum
  • 1/2 oz Triple Sec
  • 1 oz lime juice
  • 3/4 oz toasted almond syrup (or use orgeat syrup, available at the Cookbook Company in Calgary)

In a shaker combine the rum, triple sec, lime juice and toasted almond syrup. Add ice and shake vigorously to combine ingredients. Strain over fresh ice into a rocks glass. Garnish with a pineapple chunk, mint sprig and a skewered cherry. Add a straw, if desired.

— Recipe courtesy Cameron Bogue, Earls