Classic co*cktail Recipes (2024)

Drinks

Nine time-honored co*cktails from a Manhattan to a Margarita

November 1, 2018

View as Slideshow

Classic co*cktail Recipes (1)

Classic co*cktail Recipes (2)

1of9

The Manhattan

Bourbon or rye? The original nineteenth-century version, invented at New York’s Manhattan Club, calls for spicy rye whiskey as a base, while popular post-Prohibition recipes tend to call for sweeter bourbon instead.Mike Raymond of Houston’s Cottonmouth Club and Reserve 101 suggests you split the difference with Wild Turkey 101.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Jacqueline Stofsick

Classic co*cktail Recipes (3)

2of9

The Zombie

This drink fueled the mid-twentieth-century tiki craze.“The Zombie was the Cosmopolitan of its day—the most popular, most-written-about, most-joked-about drink of the 1930s and 1940s,” says Jeff “Beachbum” Berry, a historian and expert on tiki co*cktails and culture. But the original recipe was lost for decades—until Berry decoded it.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Margaret Houston | co*cktail stirs available at Fieldshop

Classic co*cktail Recipes (4)

3of9

The Negroni

The Negroni traces its ancestry to the Americano, a nineteenth-century co*cktail that mixes Campari with sweet vermouth and club soda.In the early 1900s—or so the legend goes—a Campari-loving Florentine count named Camillo Negroni, looking for something a bit stronger, asked his bartender to swap the club soda for gin, and an enduring classic was born.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Margaret Houston

Classic co*cktail Recipes (5)

4of9

The Margarita

The Daisy is a fundamental part of the co*cktail canon, with roots stretching back to the late 1800s. It’s not so much a co*cktail as a template: You can put together any combination of spirit, citrus juice, and flavored sweetener (like orange liqueur or fruit syrup) to produce a Daisy. Back then, gin and brandy versions of the drink were all the rage. So what does this have to do with the Margarita? “Margarita” is simply Spanish for “daisy.”

>Get the recipe

Photo: Margaret Houston

Classic co*cktail Recipes (6)

5of9

The Brandy Alexander

The Brandy Alexander is a throwback to the days of dessert drinks, a category that’s gone somewhat out of favor in recent years. Chocolate liqueur and cream or half-and-half gets cut with boozy brandy, whose fruity and floral notes mix well with the other ingredients.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Jacqueline Stofsick

Classic co*cktail Recipes (7)

6of9

The Gimlet

If you were a British sailor in the late 1800s, drinking a Gimlet might have saved your life. At the time, all Royal Navy vessels carried high-proof gin or rum, of which every sailor was entitled to a daily ration, as well as lime juice, whose vitamin C content wards off scurvy. At some point (perhaps, say some stories, at the suggestion of a rear admiral named Thomas Desmond Gimlette), sailors started adding gin and a little sugar to make the lime juice go down easier, and thus, a classic co*cktail was born.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Margaret Houston

Classic co*cktail Recipes (8)

7of9

The Dark ’n Stormy

Like theGimlet, the Dark ’n Stormy is a co*cktail for which we have British sailors to thank. In the mid-1800s, English brothers James and Ambrose Gosling ran a thriving distillery in Bermuda famous for its dark-colored rum. British ships back then always carried booze for their sailors, along with ginger beer, which is an excellent remedy for seasickness. It’s only natural that someone would combine the two at some point.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Jacqueline Stofsick

Classic co*cktail Recipes (9)

8of9

The Martini

The Martini is a descendant of the Martinez, a drink made with gin and sweet vermouth that was first seen in print in 1887. Over the next few decades, the sweet vermouth turned to dry and the name changed, and by the 1910s, the Martini had established itself. In the 1950s and 1960s, the “three-Martini lunch” became a cliché, and newly popular vodka started to find its way into the drink in place of gin. Today, either is acceptable as a base spirit, and the amount of dry vermouth can range from half the drink to none at all.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Margaret Houston | Food Styling by Kim Alexander

Classic co*cktail Recipes (10)

9of9

The Boulevardier

While Prohibition was a dark time in America, Europe kept the party going. Many top bar talents migrated from the States, and Scottish-born bartender Harry McElhone documented the burst of creativity they inspired inBarflies & co*cktails, published in 1927. The book marks the first appearance of the Boulevardier, which issimply aNegronithat replaces gin with whiskey, which brings sweetness and oaky spice.

>Get the recipe

Photo: Jacqueline Stofsick

20 Slideshow

Recipes

Best Southern Soup Recipes

A roundup of classic and modern dishes to celebrate the season—from gumbo to bisque and everything in between

7 Slideshow

Food & Drink

7 Apple co*cktails That Taste Like Autumn in a Glass

Festive concoctions to sip this fall

25 Slideshow

Food & Drink

Bright Ideas: Gifts to Give This Holiday Season

Stylish, useful, and decidedly Southern, these thoughtful presents are sure to spark comfort and joy—no matter who’s on your list.

Sponsored Content

From Our Partners

Trending Stories:

Food & Drink

How Many Oysters Are in a Serving?

G&G readers have their say, and it might make you feel better about your next briny binge

Arts & Culture

A Maximalist’sWild Collection of Colorful Ozark Pottery

How the vibrant roadside vessels inspired an obsession

Travel

A Winding Trip Through Florida’s Wild Heart

Along the St. Johns river-to-sea loop, historic towns, emerald springs, and cypress wildlands reward the unhurried traveler

Classic co*cktail Recipes (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rueben Jacobs

Last Updated:

Views: 6226

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (57 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rueben Jacobs

Birthday: 1999-03-14

Address: 951 Caterina Walk, Schambergerside, CA 67667-0896

Phone: +6881806848632

Job: Internal Education Planner

Hobby: Candle making, Cabaret, Poi, Gambling, Rock climbing, Wood carving, Computer programming

Introduction: My name is Rueben Jacobs, I am a cooperative, beautiful, kind, comfortable, glamorous, open, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.