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4 - 7 oz. - Rocks

Last Word

About The Cocktail

Originating from the Detroit Athletic Clubs of the 1920s, it disappeared from the drinking scene several decades later but not before it was mentioned in Ted Saucier’s book Bottoms Up where Murray Stenson found it and brought to bring it back to life at Seattles Zig Zag Cafe. The cocktails green tint comes from the Chartreuse, a liqueur originally intended for medicine use made from 130 different herbs and flowers made exclusively by Carthusian Monks according to a 400 year old manuscript. For the most part, these monks maintain no contact with the outside world.

Ingredients

  • ¾ oz Desgin Gin
  • ¾ oz Lime Juice
  • ¾ oz Maraschino Liquor
  • ¾ oz Green Chartreuse

Garnish

  • 1 Lime Peel

Process

  1. Combine all ingredients in tin and shake.
  2. Strain into coupe glass.
  3. You aren't supposed to garnish but we like to live on the edge.
 
8 - 10 oz. - Highball

Floradora

About The Cocktail

This cocktail is said to have originated at the Waldorf Astoria and was named after the Florodora, a fictional fragrance from the Broadway place of the same name. This was both a homage to the six starlets of Florodora that captured New Yorks imagination and to its playwright, Jimmy Davis, whose extravagant lifestyle and gambling makes for a story more fascinating then the play itself. The pseudonym, Owen Hall, for which he wrote the play under was actually a pun on ‘Owin All’ alluding to the constant financial debt that he’d accumulate.

Ingredients

  • 1 oz Desgin Gin
  • ½ oz Lime Juice
  • ½ oz Framboise Liquor
  • 1 splash Ginger Ale

Garnish

  • 1 Orange Wedge

Process

  1. Shake Gin, Lime and Framboise together then double strain into Collins glass.
  2. Add ice and top with Ginger Ale.
  3. Garnish with Orange Wedge.
 
8 - 10 oz. - Highball

Tom Collins

About The Cocktail

This refreshing cocktail emerged from the private clubs of London, arriving in New York during the 1850s and was catalogued by Jerry Thomas in his 1876 recipe. It possibly originating from the John Collins cocktail with the substitution of Tom for John occurring on Thomas’s insistence of using Old Tom Gin in his recipe. Tom never actually existed despite the great Tom Collins hoax of 1974 where people were told by their acquaintances that a man by that name had been slandering their reputation at the local bar. When this friend showed up hoping for a confrontation and asked the bartender for Tom Collins, they were instead served this bubbly cocktail.

Ingredients

  • 2 oz Desgin Gin
  • 1 oz Lemon Juice
  • ¾ oz Simple Syrup
  • 1 splash Soda Water

Garnish

  • 1 Lemon Wheel

Process

  1. Build ingredients in Collins glass.
  2. Top off with soda water.
  3. Garnish with lemon wheel
 
5 - 7 oz. - Coup

The Pretty Lady

About The Cocktail

Based on the Classic cocktail the French 75 this cocktail variation comes from our instagram follower @girlbaking. It takes the traditional lemon flavor and pumps it up for the infinitely more complex grapefruit.

Ingredients

  • 1 oz Desgin Gin
  • ½ oz Grapefruit
  • ½ oz Simple Syrup
  • 1 splash Champagne

Garnish

  • 1 Grapefruit Peel

Process

  1. Lightly shake all ingredients in tins.
  2. Pour into coup glass.
  3. Top with champagne.
  4. Garnish with Grapefruit Peel.