Before I even asked Jim Romdall from Vessel if he’d let me rip off a couple of his recipes for this month-long blog frenzy, I knew whatever drinks he prepared would have some ingredient guaranteed to freak out about 90 percent of the drinking public. I mean, look at the facts: the man’s Twitter handle is @ardbegfloat, he entered a cocktail in a vodka contest that mixed the obnoxiously toothpaste-esque 42 Below Feijoa with (if my fuzzy memory serves) green Chartreuse and Bowmore (and actually made a pretty interesting drink out of it), and who’s been known to deploy both absinthe and Caol Ila in a gin-based cocktail.
Jim’s also a good sport and even after I told him that these drinks were to be featured on a blog, and not in print or anything real or sexy like that, he still played along. And while I was a little disappointed that no Islay malts made their way into the mix — really, I was fully prepared to exit Vessel smelling like my coat was on fire — Jim did indeed go there with the buckets-of-knuckles ingredients, preparing both drinks with Fernet Branca, and one of them with white dog.
Here’s where he went:
Industry Sour
- 1 1/2 ounces cognac
- 3/4 ounce Fernet Branca
- 3/4 ounce lemon juice
- 1/2 ounce lime juice
- 1/4 ounce agave nectar
- 1 egg white
- Angostura bitters, for garnish
Combine everything except the bitters in a cocktail shaker. Dry shake for a good 10 seconds to work up the egg white, then add ice and go at it again. Strain into chilled cocktail glass; drip Angostura atop the foam and swirl it into pretty pictures if that’s what you like to do with your time.
Jim actually prepared this for me using Calvados, which was an interesting detour but as he said and I agree after trying the drink again at home, you really want the soft, fruity richness of grape brandy for a platform upon which the Fernet and the citrus can play.
Speaking of the Fernet: as anybody who’s ever mixed a drink with it knows, putting Fernet Branca in a cocktail shaker with other ingredients can be the rough equivalent of feeding crystal meth to a pit bull and putting it in a room full of bunnies: the results are bloody, messy and frighteningly savage. There are a few things that can partially defang Fernet, though; one, as I’ve mentioned, is a whopping dose of vermouth, but others include egg white, which helps soften and spread out the bitter impact, and citrus — well, the citrus is like distracting the tweaking dog by hitting it with a pillow while the surviving rabbits run for cover: it doesn’t so much soften the Fernet’s bite as much as it provides another aspect of the drink that keeps the liqueur from fully dominating. Anyway, as might be expected, this is a big, bold, gnarly drink, but still pretty appealing if you’re into big, bold, gnarly things.
Vessel is right next to the 5th Avenue Theatre, and right now, as the holidays approach, the theater is featuring A Christmas Story: The Musical, based on the “you’ll put your eye out†movie from the 1980s. In case you’ve somehow missed catching the movie during the holiday-season heavy rotation it’s enjoyed on television over the past quarter century, there’s a key scene near the end involving a Christmas turkey and a pack of the neighbor’s dogs. Always one to support the next-door theater as well as to celebrate bad behavior on the part of animals, Jim created the next drink in their honor.
Bumpass Hound
- 2 ounces rye whiskey (he used Pikesville)
- 1/2 ounce unaged (or minimally aged) rye whiskey
- 1/4 ounce Fernet Branca
- 1/4 ounce simple syrup
- 1 dash Angostura bitters
- –orange twist, for garnish
Put ingredients in a mixing glass and yadda yadda if you’ve been to this blog before you know what to do. Up, cocktail glass, orange twist.
Jim initially tried this with an ounce of Headlong White Dog from the Woodinville Whiskey Co., which is made using a rye-free bourbon mashbill, and the new spirit was just too soft and sweet for this drink, so he started over with Wasmund’s Rye Spirit, cutting the dose back to 1/2 ounce compensate for the potency of this cask-strength raw whiskey (Jim says he’ll be using Corsair Wry Moon should this drink go into the regular rotation). If you’re playing along at home and don’t have any of these spirits, another (still somewhat obscure and kinda pricey) option is to use Old Potrero 18th Century Style Whiskey, which is all rye, cask strength and very lightly aged.
Now this is something. The drink is basically a Toronto Cocktail with additional gaminess provided by the young whiskey. I have to confess to a bit of white-dog fatigue; sure, it’s interesting stuff, but I rarely find myself actually wanting it in my glass. But in this drink, the young whiskey really plays a good role: it takes the potency of flavor that’s so engaging in a Toronto, and adds another dimension, giving the drink a new identity. The young rye also lends support to the base of aged rye, waking up the whiskey’s flavor, and in the process it erects an obstacle to keep the Fernet from stealing the show.
Anyway, thanks to Jim Romdall for playing along with my little blog project. Go see him at Vessel and buy a bunch of drinks.
I made the Industry Sour tonight and enjoyed it very much (and made the Prospector for my Fernet-phobic wife, who liked her drink as well). Thanks for doing the 60/30!
As a long time reader/lurker, I’m very excited about 60/30 … 30/30 was great, so if you have to finish up the blog, it’s great to go out with a bang! I’ll certainly miss it for sentimental reasons, since it’s probably the first cocktail blog that truly engaged me at the time I was first building my liquor cabinet into the monstrosity it is today.
And with respect to you, sir, I will attempt to comment on as many of the 60 as I can from this point forward …
Remember how it tasted when you brushed your teeth first thing in the morning and then took a drink of orange juice for breakfast? Imagine if you drank straight lemon/lime juice instead of orange juice. That’s what the Industry Sour tastes like. I could see it driving bartenders out of their profession.
On the other hand, the Bumpass Hound is exactly the kind of utterly delicious classy cocktails this blog (mostly – the majority of the aberrations have been audacious attempts along the lines of the Ind. Sour) specializes in. I made mine with Old Potrero (only 90 proof), but it and the Pikesville were still sufficient to tame the Fernet for a rich flavor melange.
[…] drinks from a few folks around town who are doing wonderful things. I’ve already mentioned Jim Romdall and his take-no-prisoners approach to mixology; here’s a drink (a not incredibly recent one, […]
[…] Fernet Cocktails are always a scary proposition. I’m not sure either one is really bound to match the Fernet Flip, but the Cocktail Chronicles does an excellent job of discussing the best ways to use Fernet in a drink. The biggest thing I’ve found is that Fernet actually works exquisitely well as a bitters substitute. The overpowering herbaceous bitter qualities actually round out a cocktail well and offer nice hints of more pleasing mint qualities. The two drinks here were created by Jim Romdall. […]