When getting ready to pour myself a Scotch-and-ginger
recently, I grabbed hold of a tumbler which has cocktail measurements on the
side. We have a set of four of these – one each for gin, rum, vodka and whiskey
(I’ll let the Irish-American variant of the spelling pass); they’re square-shaped
and each side has the measurements for a different cocktail marked on it. Out
of curiosity, I had a look at the ones for the whiskey glass and found that one
of the cocktails listed, the cablegram, wasn’t far off what I was planning to
drink anyway. So, naturally, I opted to go the extra mile and turn my
spirit-plus-mixer into a cocktail.
I’d not come across a cablegram before, it not being
featured in our Vintage Cocktails
book. It consists of whisky – over three fluid ounces of whisky if we’re going by the
measuring-line on the glass, which we might as well do in the absence of any
other instructions – mixed with a teaspoon of sugar and the juice of half a lemon,
plus ice, topped with ginger ale. If three fluid ounces of whisky seems like quite a bit, I should point out that that is because it is; for reference purposes, a standard pub measurement of whisky (or any other spirit for that matter) in this country is 25 millilitres, which converts into less than one fluid ounce.
To all intents and purposes, it’s a whisky
sour with ginger ale. On second thoughts, make that a pretty stiff whisky sour with ginger ale, for over three fluid ounces is a lot more whisky than I would usually put in a glass! But most enjoyable.
1 comment:
This is very tempting, perhaps you should double the amount of spirit when entering the "Happy Hour"
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