Homemade coffee liqueur is a great gift for the holidays, and makes for pretty tasty cocktails. We’ve spiced ours up a bit with cinnamon and clove for extra festive flavor!
Like any good thing, it does take time (3 weeks for this recipe), so get started now to be ready in time for gift giving season.
White Russian
1.5 oz Icy Strait Vodka
1 oz Coffee liqueur
Half & Half or non-dairy substitute
Pour Vodka, coffee liqueur over ice and top with half & half.
Coffee Liqueur
2 Cups Water
2 Cups Caster sugar
200g Coffee beans (we use an espresso roast!)
1 Vanilla bean, split and scraped
700 mL Vodka (we use Icy Strait, of course!)
3 Cinnamon sticks
15 Cloves
In a large jar: Combine vodka, coffee beans, vanilla, cinnamon and cloves. Allow to infuse for one week, shaking occasionally.
Strain the mixture through a sieve into a clean jar. Don’t let the coffee beans and spices go to waste, let them dry and use for decoration in little jars or bowls.
Add the sugar and water to a saucepan and stir over high heat until sugar is dissolved. When cool, add to the jar with the strained vodka.
Seal the lid tightly and store in a cool dark place for at least 2 weeks before drinking. This allows the sugar and water to blend with the vodka and spices.
Homemade mulled apple cider is a Thanksgiving staple, only made better by the addition of whiskey, and a certain way to wow your friends and family.
Our recipe is simple, classic, and tastes just as great as it smells!
Mulled Cider
*We use teaballs for the spices for easy cleanup, you can also make little sachets of spices with cheesecloth and string.*
64 oz Unfiltered apple juice
1 Teaball (2 TBSP)Whole allspice
1 Teaball (2TBSP)Whole cloves
1 Teaball (2 TBSP)Dried orange peel
3 Cardamom pods, cracked
5-6 Cinnamon sticks
In a large pot:
Bring apple juice with spices to a boil, reduce heat and simmer 20-30 minutes. Serve hot, add whiskey to taste.
Shorter darker days and snowy nights call for warming spiced cocktails. The winter sour is a perfect warmer after a day out skiing or skating, or for holiday get togethers.
Winter Sour:
1.5 oz Boatwright Bourbon
.5 oz Cranberry juice
.25 oz Raw apple cider vinegar
.5 oz 5 Spice syrup (recipe below)
1 Egg white
2 Dashes Angostura bitters
Shake all ingredients without ice for 30 seconds, then shake with ice. Strain into a rocks glass and garnish with a couple drops of Angostura bitters.
5 Spice Syrup
2 Cups Water
1 1/2 Cups Sugar
2 Cinnamon sticks
1 Teaspoon Cinnamon powder
1 Teaspoon Nutmeg powder
1 Teaspoon Clove powder
3 Cardamom pods, cracked
4 Allspice berries
Bring all ingredients to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes. When cool, transfer all to a clean bottle. Refrigerate for up to 30 days.
Toddies aren’t just for whiskey. If you’ve never tried a gin toddy, now is the time!
This herbal gin wonder breaks the typical toddy mold in the most delightful of ways. Honey+Thyme syrup gives a little extra much needed warmth that feels just right for fall and winter, and the botanicals in our 50 Fathoms Gin are just as tasty warm as they are in an icy martini.
Savory Toddy
1.5 oz 50 Fathoms Gin
.75 oz Honey + Thyme Syrup
.25 oz Lemon Juice
Combine ingredients in the mug of your choice, top with hot water.
Garnish with a lemon wedge and a sprig of thyme.
Honey + Thyme Syrup
In a saucepan, combine:
400 mL honey
400 mL water
4 teaspoons dried thyme
Bring to a boil and simmer for 2 or 3 minutes. Let cool and strain into a bottle.
The Gin Fizz: delightfully decadent, and a beautiful way to start a weekend.
The addition of egg whites are what make this classic so fluffy and lovely, don't leave them out!
Gin Fizz:
1.5 oz 50 Fathoms Gin
1 oz Simple syrup
.5 oz Lemon juice
.75 oz Egg whites
Combine ingredients in a shaker, shake without ice for 15 seconds, then with ice until cold. Strain into a rocks glass and enjoy!
Fall is upon us, with shorter days and cooler temps. Bring out your sweaters and your whiskey, fall is also hot toddy season!
Hot Toddy:
1.5 oz Boatwright Bourbon
.75 oz Honey Syrup
.25 oz Fresh Lemon Juice
Add ingredients to a mug and top with hot water. Garnish with a lemon wedge and enjoy!
Honey Syrup
Mix equal parts water and honey in a saucepan and heat until blended. Cool and bottle, store in the refrigerator for up to a month.
In the late 1800's the Sazerac cocktail was created in New Orleans, using Brandy and Peychaud's bitters. 25 years later, the drink was altered to the drink we now recognize as a classic; rye whiskey, absinthe, and bitters.
We've brought a taste of the French Quarter to Haines by using our Wrackline Rye and Green Siren Absinthe to create one very tasty Sazerac in the tasting room.
Rinse a rocks glass with absinthe first. (We use a 2 oz spray bottle so no good alcohol goes to waste)
In a mixing glass, stir:
1.5 oz Wrackline Rye
1 Dash Simple Syrup
3 Dashes Peychaud's Bitters
1 Dash Angostura Bitters
Strain into the rinsed glass, garnish with a lemon twist.
Santé!
This cocktail dates all the way back to prohibition, when gin came from a guy who knew a guy, and served in top secret speakeasies.
Nowadays, the distilling world is a different place. We use high quality ingredients, and our very legal 50 Fathoms Gin is served in bars and restaurants all over the state. You may have even had this exact cocktail in your favorite drinking establishment.