Shaken not stirred?

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swee'pea99

Squire
Reading about them in last weekend's Grauniad food supplement, it occurred to me that I've managed to pass my half-century without ever having a Martini - or even knowing what one is. Apparently it's a mixture of (mostly) gin and (some) vermouth (whatever that is). I'm intrigued, and will have to get one together in the not too distant. In the meantime, I enjoyed a relevant quote from Noel Coward:

gin.jpg
 
Try a tinto de verano (effectively a red wine shandy).

50-50 red wine and sprite topped off with a clunk of Martini, add ice cubes and a slice of lemon.

Very refreshing on a hot summer's day.
 

TVC

Guest
Try a tinto de verano (effectively a red wine shandy).

50-50 red wine and sprite topped off with a clunk of Martini, add ice cubes and a slice of lemon.

Very refreshing on a hot summer's day.
Sounds like a hen party drink to me.

I've had a few martinis, but I prefer a straight gin and tonic.
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
Reading about them in last weekend's Grauniad food supplement, it occurred to me that I've managed to pass my half-century without ever having a Martini - or even knowing what one is. Apparently it's a mixture of (mostly) gin and (some) vermouth (whatever that is).

Pop round to your local Waitrose and find a bottle labelled "Noilly Prat" and a bottle labelled "Bombay Sapphire". That's the Vermouth and the Gin. Also buy a martini glass - a conical glass on a stem.

Put the glass in the fridge and the gin in the freezer, until both are cold. If the gin freezes solid then it's too weak - you need a good 40%+ gin.

Pour a small amount of the Noilly Prat in the cold martini glass, swirl it around the glass so the whole thing is coated, then chuck it away (or else drink it - it's quite a decent drink on its own). Then pour as much gin as you fancy into the glass, and add a twist of lemon peel.

That's a martini, swirled rather than shaken or stirred.

Bombay Sapphire is one of the more neutral gins - Hendricks will give you more aromatics, Gordons is a slug of juniper and not a lot else, and the more expensive gins are more complex. You can also top with lime or an olive, or indeed other things.

Some people will claim that you can make a martini with vodka, or add fruit, or coffee. They're wrong. Some of them are decent drinks, but they're not a martini.
 

Ganymede

Veteran
Location
Rural Kent
An American I used to know would make a martini by pouring a glass of gin, then picking up the bottle of Martini and holding it next to his face. He would then lean down towards the glass and say: "Ver-Mooooooth!" (vermouth). Then he would drink the gin.

Personally I could only drink a Martini cocktail if it had a third of vermouth in it. But I would mostly avoid as they are absolutely deadly.
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
Personally I could only drink a Martini cocktail if it had a third of vermouth in it. But I would mostly avoid as they are absolutely deadly.
That's mostly the point. A very effective way to get very drunk very quickly.

I believe (though this could be urban myth) that the original martini was invented to disguise the taste of home-distilled gin in the days of prohibition.

When you ask for a martini in a bar, far too often the gin is kept warm, and it's shaken with too little ice - so the ice begins to melt and dilutes the drink. If I'm drinking martinis I want a proper 40% alcohol drink, not diluted gin.

(The only other cocktail I actively seek out is a negroni - gin, sweet martini and campari. The bitterness of the campari makes up for the diluting effect of the martini. Again, it's far too easy to pay through the nose for a lousy negroni, except in Italy. I remember one bar in Naples where my negroni was fantastic, and cheaper than Mrs W's aperol and soda.)
 
I make my own Vermouth, by blending white wines. My favourite is a blend of Sancerre, Chablis, and Pinot Grigio. Then I make ice cubes out of them ( stops the Vermouth going off). Never shake a Martini. The broken off bits of ice dull the drink, make sure the garnish fits the degree of dryness of the drink. Sweet (made with a sweet Vermouth) gets a twist of lemon zest, dry (made with dry vermouth) gets nothing, perfect (50:50 dry and sweet vermouth) gets an olive. I always discard the vermouth. I only ever have Vodka Martini. It has to be either a Grain Vodka, or cows milk Vodka.:okay:
 
That's mostly the point. A very effective way to get very drunk very quickly.

I believe (though this could be urban myth) that the original martini was invented to disguise the taste of home-distilled gin in the days of prohibition.

When you ask for a martini in a bar, far too often the gin is kept warm, and it's shaken with too little ice - so the ice begins to melt and dilutes the drink. If I'm drinking martinis I want a proper 40% alcohol drink, not diluted gin.

(The only other cocktail I actively seek out is a negroni - gin, sweet martini and campari. The bitterness of the campari makes up for the diluting effect of the martini. Again, it's far too easy to pay through the nose for a lousy negroni, except in Italy. I remember one bar in Naples where my negroni was fantastic, and cheaper than Mrs W's aperol and soda.)
At last, a p....head With class!!
 
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