Bridal Club Magazine
Signature International Cocktails
Nothing says holiday quite like the
sun, the beach and a pretty little drink with an umbrella poking
out of it. Cocktails have been mixed, drunk and thoroughly enjoyed
since the 18th century, and over the years thousands of new
concoctions have been created. Today, the art of cocktail making is
taken rather seriously and it's known as mixology. Get into the
spirit with these signature drinks from around the world.
Piña Colada (Puerto
Rico)
It's impossible to order this drink
without breaking into the song "If you like Piña Colada". This is
undeniably a holiday drink and if you're in Puerto Rico, all the
better, as it was declared the country's national drink in 1978.
You'll be happy to know that there's even a national Piña Colada
day on the 10th July. Its origin is as cloudy as the cocktail, with
three different barmen all claiming ownership of the drink. Here it
is in all its deliciousness:
- 30ml white rum
- 30ml cream of coconut
- 90ml fresh pineapple juice
Mix all the ingredients in a blender, with half a cup of crushed
ice. Pour it into a chilled hurricane glass and garnish with a
slice of pineapple and/or a maraschino cherry.
Singapore Sling
(Singapore)
The year was 1915, the city was
Singapore, and the man responsible for creating this signature
drink was Ngiam Tong Boon. He was a bartender working at the Long
Bar at the Raffles Hotel and he originally called it the Gin Sling.
The name evolved, and so did the drink, but it's still recognisable
by its distinctive foamy top. It's time to get into the swing with
a Singapore Sling:
- 30ml Gin
- 15ml Cherry brandy
- 7.5ml Cointreau
- 7.5ml Benedictine
- 120ml fresh pineapple juice
- 10ml Grenadine
- Dash of Angostura bitters
- Soda water
Shake all the ingredients, except the soda, and then strain over
ice in a highball glass. Top up with soda water and garnish with a
slice of orange and a cherry.
Caipirinha
(Brazil)
Brazil is famous for football, the
samba, Gisele Bündchen and Caipirinhas! This sweet but refreshing
drink is the country's national cocktail, and it's served
everywhere from restaurants to vendors on the beach. It originated
in 1918 in São Paulo province and it translates roughly to "country
bumpkin". Get your dancing shoes on with these festive
ingredients:
- 50ml cachaça
- 2 tsp sugar
- Half a lime, quartered
Muddle the lime wedges and the sugar in the bottom of an old
fashioned glass, until the sugar is well mixed. Add crushed ice and
cachaça, and then stir. You can garnish it with a slice of lime and
then it's ready to be served.
Bellini (Italy)
Just like the country, one of Italy's
most popular drinks has a romantic history. It was created in the
1930s by Giuseppe Cipriani, the founder of Harry's Bar in Venice.
Its unique pink colour reminded Cipriani of a painting by the 15th
century Renaissance painter, Giovanni Bellini, and so the drink -
and the name - was born. This artful invention contains:
- 100ml Prosecco sparkling wine
- 50ml fresh white peach puree
Pour the peach puree into a chilled champagne flute, add the
sparkling wine and then stir gently and serve.
Pisco Sour (Peru and
Chile)
Peru and Chile might be neighbours,
but there's no love lost when it comes to ownership of this South
American favourite. According to cocktail historians, the first
Pisco Sour was made by American bartender Victor Vaughen Morris, at
Morris' Bar in Lima during the 1920s. While Chile disputes this,
Peru has created a national holiday in its honour, on the first
Saturday in February. Feel the disco power of Pisco Sour:
- 50ml Peruvian pisco
- 50ml lime juice
- 25ml sugar syrup
- 1 egg white
- Angostura bitters
Combine all the ingredients in a cocktail shaker and add ice. Shake
for half a minute, strain into an old fashioned glass and add a few
splashes of bitters as a garnish on top of the froth.
Manhattan (New
York)
The exact origin of this wholly New
York drink is unknown, but it's been around since the 1880s. There
are many claims to it, but one of the most popular is that Dr Ian
Marshall created it at a banquet held in honour of presidential
candidate Samuel J Tilden, at the famous Manhattan Club. All hail
the "King of Cocktails":
- 15ml bourbon or rye whiskey
- 20ml sweet vermouth
- Dash of Angostura bitters
Add the ingredients and ice cubes into a mixing glass and stir
well. Strain into a cocktail glass and use a Maraschino cherry and
a twist of orange peel for decoration.
Pimm's Cup
(London)
This quintessentially British drink
dates way back to the 1840s. It's believed that James Pimm, who
owned a London oyster bar, invented it to help his patrons digest
their meal. Here is the fruit salad of the cocktail world:
- 200ml Pimm's No 1
- Lemonade or ginger ale
- 1 orange, sliced crosswise
- 1 apple, cored and sliced
- Half a lemon, sliced crosswise
- 4 strawberries, quartered
- Cucumber cut into wedges
- Handful of mint and extra for garnish
Pimm's is a drink that's meant to be shared with your mates, in the
garden, on a summer afternoon. So, grab a pitcher and add the
Pimm's No 1, your fruit and mint, and then stir. Top up with
lemonade or ginger ale and chill. Take 4 or 5 Collins glasses, half
fill them with ice and add two cucumber wedges to each glass. Pour
in the Pimm's mixture, making sure you get fruit into each, top
with a sprig of mint and then summer in a glass is served.
Mojito (Cuba)
This classic Caribbean cocktail has
been enjoyed since the 16th century, and, if you listen to bar
talk, it's claimed that it's in fact the world's oldest cocktail.
It's a bit hard to imagine sailors drinking mint, but it was said
to disguise the harsh taste of the local rum. It's Cuba's national
cocktail and is one of the most popular summer drinks around the
globe. If it floats your boat, give it a try:
- 50ml white rum
- 10 fresh mint leaves
- Half a lime, quartered
- 2 tsp sugar
- Soda water
Muddle the mint, limes and sugar until you smell the herb, and then
pour into a cocktail shaker with the rum, and shake for 30 seconds.
Pour into a Collins glass filled with ice, top with soda and then
stir. Garnish with mint leaves and a lime wedge.
Kir Royale
(France)
This iconic French cocktail originated
in Burgundy in the 1940s and was created by Félix Kir. The original
cocktail Kir, was made from local peasant white wine, but when the
French upper class discovered this delicious drink, they decided it
needed some highbrow treatment. They substituted the wine for
champagne and named it Kir Royale. Live the high life by
drinking:
- 90ml champagne
- 10ml crème de cassis
Add the crème de cassis to the bottom of a chilled champagne flute,
and then top up with champagne. You can add a few raspberries or
garnish with a lemon twist.
Black Russian
(Brussels)
You'd be forgiven
for thinking that this is a Russian drink - it's not! It's believed
that it was first poured at the bar of the Hotel Metropole in
Brussels in 1949, and the name comes from the black colour of the
coffee liqueur and the association of vodka with Russia. Embrace
your dark side:
- 50ml vodka
- 20ml coffee liqueur
Pour the vodka into an old fashioned glass filled with ice cubes.
Add coffee liqueur, stir gently and then enjoy.
This is by no means a complete list of cocktails, but rather just a
little sample to get you planning your next holiday. It's also an
excellent opportunity to get some inspiration if you want a
signature drink at your wedding. Whether you say cheers, prost,
santé or bottoms up, the language of cocktails is universal.