cover image The Essential Cocktail: The Art of Making Perfect Drinks

The Essential Cocktail: The Art of Making Perfect Drinks

Dale Degroff, . . Clarkson Potter, $35 (271pp) ISBN 978-0-307-40573-9

Degroff (The Craft of the Cocktail ) likes to be referred to as the “King of Cocktails,” and it is hard to argue the point. During his stint as bartender at Manhattan’s Rainbow Room, he shunned packaged mixes and ushered in the use of fresh ingredients for classic drinks as well as potables of his own device. In this book, he offers 100 popular whistle-wetters and 100 variations thereof—martinis, sours, highballs and punches are all well represented. A Bloody Mary is never shaken, but rather “rolled back and forth,” while a Bloody Bull adds beef broth to the recipe and can stand up to a vigorous shake. There’s the lowly Long Island Iced Tea, mated with a variation called a Full Monte, which calls for Champagne instead of cola. And a basic Daiquiri (rum, simple syrup, lime juice) is out-boxed by Dale’s Hemingway Daiquiri, which adds Maraschino liqueur and grapefruit juice to the mix. 150 full-color photos help sweeten the deal, and historical asides provide fine fodder for party chit-chat. The Tequila Sunrise, it turns out, was created south of the border during Prohibition and included fresh lemonade and French cassis. But when the drink traveled north, inexperienced bartenders dumbed it down to today’s mix of OJ and grenadine. Where was a cocktail king when we needed one? (Oct.)