Sazerac Cocktail

From “Life on the Mississippi” by CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (alias Mark Twain), 1883
From “Life on the Mississippi” by CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (alias Mark Twain), 1883

As served at The St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, Louisiana.

A famous Southern cocktail, which has the biggest call in the market in the South and replaces our Northern Manhattan.

  • Smash lump of sugar in old fashion cocktail glass
  • Add three drops Peychaud Bitters
  • Two drops Angostura
  • One drink good rye whisky
  • Ice and strain to another ice-cold old-fashion cocktail glass with a dash of Absinthe in, then
  • Squeeze oil of lemon peel.
Beverages de Luxe, Edited by Geo. R. Washburn and Stanley Bronner, 1914

Navy Cocktail

US Navy Flying Squadron, 1898
US Navy Flying Squadron, 1898
  • Take one-half a cocktail-glass of dry gin
  • One-half a cocktail-glass of Italian Vermouth, and
  • Two dashes of orange bitters
  • Fill the mixing-glass with ice
  • Shake well and strain into a bar-glass
Louis’ Mixed Drinks by Louis Muckensturm, 1906

Princeton Cocktail

A photograph of the Princeton University Class of 1879 on the steps of the John C. Green School of Science.
A photograph of the Princeton University Class of 1879 on the steps of the John C. Green School of Science.
  • A mixing-glass half-full fine ice
  • Three dashes orange bitters
  • One and a half pony Tom gin
  • Mix
  • Strain into cocktail-glass
  • Add half a pony port wine carefully and
  • Let it settle in bottom of cocktail before serving
The Gorham Cocktail Book, 1905

Barbed Wire

Two men string barbed wire on post to create a fence, circa 1936.
Two men string barbed wire on post to create a fence, circa 1936.
  • Put three lumps of ice in the bottom of a tall, slender glass, and
  • Pour over it a wine-glass of Old Crow bourbon
  • Fill up the glass with Martinelli sweet cider
One Hundred & One Beverages by May E. Southworth, 1904

Alabazam

Criterion building with restaurant and theatre in 1873
Criterion building with restaurant and theatre in 1873

Described as one of Leo’s Specialties, bartender at the Criterion Bar in London.

  • Use tumbler.
  • One tea-spoonful of Angostura bitters
  • Two tea-spoonfuls of orange Curaçao
  • One tea-spoonful of white sugar
  • One tea-spoonful of lemon juice
  • Half a wine glass of brandy
  • Shake up well with fine ice and
  • Strain in a claret glass
American & Other Drinks by Leo Engel, 1878

In the first Sherlock Holmes story, “A Study in Scarlet,” Dr. Watson is told of his prospective roommate after he meets a friend at the Criterion, “I was standing at the Criterion Bar, when some one tapped me on the shoulder, and turning round I recognized young Stamford, who had been a dresser under me at Barts.”

Hampshire Maid

  • Use mixing glass.
  • Pony glass of claret
  • Pony glass of Rhine wine
  • Add shaved ice and
  • Shake well
  • Add 4 dashes of creme de menthe
  • Pour into thin bar glass and
  • Fill with club soda

This is one of the mild, tart drinks most favorably considered at the Hampshire Hotel, which is almost exclusively patronized by young ladies from the various seminaries of New England.

Daly’s Bartenders’ Encyclopedia by Tim Daly, 1903

Colorado Bracer

Prospectors in what was then the "Pikes Peak" region of western Kansas Territory (modern Colorado), ca. 1858.
Prospectors in what was then the “Pikes Peak” region of western Kansas Territory (modern Colorado), ca. 1858.
  • Use large bar glass.
  • One spoonful sugar
  • Juice of one Lime
  • One-half jigger Absinthe
  • One-half jigger Scotch Whiskey

Fill with ice; shake well, strain in fizz glass and fill with seltzer or imported soda.

The Hoffman House Bartenders Guide by Charles S. Mahoney, 1912