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13 cocktails with less alcohol, for now when you need to take it a bit easier…

Olivier Baroni

Even if you belong to the human species that doesn’t have one Dry January If you do, it may still be advisable to take it a bit easier. Weird, so…alcoholic. Think about it: in the run-up to Christmas with all the Christmas aperitifs, people drank perhaps a little more often than usual and probably a little more than usual. And then there were the holidays. And the Christmas holidays. And then New Year’s Eve… okay. Just take it easy.

If you want to treat yourself to a drink on a nice Friday evening, we have good news for you: there is a whole class of cocktails with a slightly lower alcohol content.

The latter is because they are not based on spirits (which have an alcohol content of 40 percent or more), as is usually the case with cocktails, but on vermouth or liqueurs (which are around 18 to 25 percent). And if you think that Hugo, Aperol Spritz and Co. may be too ‘summery’ for the current temperatures – then there is also good news: there are certainly drinks that are perfect for the cold January. Here is a selection:

A two-ingredient cocktail recipe is always a good idea, and this 19th-century classic is an especially elegant option.

4cl Fino sherry
4 cl red vermouth
orange peel
Add sherry and vermouth to a cocktail shaker filled with ice cubes and stir well for 30-45 seconds. Pour the mixture into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with a slice of orange peel.

This Victorian classic – one of the oldest cocktails ever – was created in the US in the early 19th century. He gained international fame in 1843 when Charles Dickens mentioned him in his novel “Martin Chuzzlewit”.

8cl Amontillado Dry Sherry
1 cl sugar syrup
1 slice of orange, halved
Place the sherry, syrup and 1 slice of orange in a cocktail shaker filled with ice cubes and shake very vigorously to crush the orange slightly. (Note: If a sweeter sherry is used, the amount of sugar syrup will be reduced).
Strain it into a highball glass filled with freshly crushed ice. Garnish with the other half of the orange slice.

This Portuguese classic is as easy to prepare as the name suggests.

6 cl dry white port
Tonic water
Orange wedge
Pour port wine into a highball or rocks glass filled with ice cubes, top up with tonic water and stir gently. Garnish with an orange segment.

It is believed that this drink was created on the occasion of the coronation of King Edward VII of England in 1902. It was first mentioned in 1930 in Harry Craddock’s “The Savoy Cocktail Book”, and a short time later in AS Crockett’s “The Old Waldorf-Astoria Bar Book”. Despite being featured in two of the world’s most famous cocktail books, it remained an insider tip.

6 cl dry vermouth
3cl Fino sherry
2 dashes of maraschino
3 dashes of orange bitters
Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker filled with ice cubes and stir well for 30-45 seconds. Pour the mixture into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with a piece of lemon peel.

Speaking of “Coronation”… but let’s not be fooled! This elegant drink has no British roots, but was first mixed in Philadelphia in the 1930s and named after the inventor’s wife.

4 cl dry vermouth
2cl Benedictine
2 cl freshly squeezed lime juice
Pre-cool the cocktail glass with ice cubes or (if your freezer compartment is large enough) in the freezer. Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker filled with ice cubes, shake vigorously and strain into the cocktail glass.

Pickles is more than just the taste, but rather a type of cocktail that usually contains a spirit, citrus, a little sweetness and usually also proteins. Prominent representatives of this category include classics such as the Sidecar, Daiquiri or Whiskey Sour – but also this modern classic in which the spirit has been replaced by Campari.

Leaves from 1 small sprig of rosemary
4 cl Monin honey syrup
3cl Campari
5 cl freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 egg white
1 small sprig of rosemary, for garnish
Place the rosemary leaves and honey syrup in a shaker and puree a little. Add Campari, lemon juice and egg white and shake vigorously for 15 seconds (without ice). Fill the shaker with ice cubes and shake vigorously again until the drink is ice cold. Double strain into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with a small sprig of rosemary.

Dry sherry has been wrongly forgotten as a cocktail ingredient. This 19th century aperitif offers complex flavors that remain digestible and enjoyable.

4 cl dry sherry
4 cl dry vermouth
1 shot of Angostura bitters
1 dash of orange bitters
Lemon peel
Pre-cool the cocktail glass with ice (or immediately in the refrigerator compartment). Add sherry, vermouth, Angostura and orange bitters to a cocktail shaker filled with ice cubes and stir well for 30-45 seconds. Pour the mixture into the cocktail glass and garnish with a piece of lemon peel.

This original version of the Negroni was invented in the 1860s by Gaspare Campari, inventor of the bitter liqueur of the same name. The Americano was a long time ago Milan-Turin known because Campari comes from Milan and Punté Mes, the originally used red vermouth, comes from Turin.

3cl Campari
3 cl red vermouth
some soda water
orange peel
Place Campari and vermouth in a highball glass filled with ice cubes, pour soda water over it and stir gently. Spray with a piece of orange peel and add to the drink.

Fans of a White Negroni can enjoy this variation of the Americano. The French gentian liqueur Suze is used here and the red vermouth is replaced by white.

3 cl Suze
3 cl white vermouth
mineral water
Grapefruit peel
Add Suze and Vermouth to a highball glass filled with ice cubes, pour soda water over it and stir gently. Sprinkle with a piece of grapefruit peel and add to the drink.

Today, the best-known Negroni variant, the Sbagliato, actually originated from a mistake when Mirka Stocchetto used spumante instead of gin at the Milanese bar Basso in 1972. Since then, the ‘valse’ has enjoyed great popularity as a light, sparkling summer drink.

3cl Vermouth Rosso
3cl Campari
Prosecco, Franciacorta or good spumante
Orange wedge (or orange peel)
Pour vermouth and Campari into a whiskey glass filled with ice cubes. Top up with sparkling wine and stir gently. Garnish with an orange segment.

Which brings us to the drinks that treat themselves to a sparkling wine as an accompaniment! Perhaps a bit unexpected here, but the rustic alpine amaro of the Stelvio Pass goes perfectly with a spritz.

9cl Prosecco
6cl Braulio
some mineral water
Lemon peel
Rosemary sprig
Pour Prosecco and Braulio into a large wine glass filled with ice cubes and top up with mineral water. Stir gently. Garnish with a piece of lemon peel and a sprig of rosemary.

You guessed it: an Aperol Spritz for the winter.

4cl Aperol
6 cl freshly squeezed mandarin or clementine juice
8cl Prosecco
Pour Aperol and tangerine juice into a pot-bellied wine or spritz glass with plenty of ice. Top up with Prosecco.

Oh, and before you know it it will already be February… and soon the 14th. Here we have a suitable drink for the Valentine’s tête-à-tête: a champagne cocktail, but with a dash of Campari.

1 sugar cube
1 dash of Angostura bitters
Champagne
3cl Campari
Place a sugar cube in a champagne flute and sprinkle liberally with Angostura. The glass – carefully! – Top up with champagne, leaving enough room to finish with the Campari.

Olivier Baroni

Source: Watson

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