密歇根新闻广播 苹果桂皮饮品的制作方法(在线收听) |
The copper mug was on the mixing table, but I knew Tammy Coxen with Tammy's Tastings was probably not going to be mixing a Moscow mule. She was about to throw me a curve. A Moscow mule's main spirit is vodka. Tammy doesn't use a lot of vodka (although she did in this last episode you can hear here). This time she decided to use another spirit she doesn't drink much: flavored spirits. Rusted Crow distillery from Dearborn has one that I really, really like, Tammy said. It's called Ginger Devil. It's a cinnamon whiskey. We've seen bartenders steep spices in whiskey, but generally speaking, a lot of flavored spirits just add the same kind of hot cinnamon (or other flavor) syrup you might buy at the grocery. Rusted Crow is doing it differently. It's doing what some mixologists do except on a much bigger scale. The distiller is adding three different kinds of cinnamon, ginger root, graham crackers, lemon peel, orange peel, and cloves and letting it steep for a while. It gets strained out, and the spiced whiskey is aged. When I took my first sip, I was like, oh, they're doing something really refined here, Tammy said. Rusted Crow says Ginger Devil pairs well with apple cider and ginger beer. That seemed to suggest a Moscow Mule variant. Tammy has also been watching another Michigan company named Black Ink Bitters. She thought the company's Smoked Apple Chicory Bitters would be perfect for this drink. Apple Cinnamon Mule 2 oz Ginger Devil (spiced whiskey from Rusted Crow) 1 oz apple cider 1/2 oz lemon juice 8 drops Smoked Apple Chicory Bitters from Black Ink Bitters (feel free to substitute Angostura or omit) 3 oz ginger beer |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/mxgxwgb/520777.html |