Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Movie Cocktails

Here's a couple of cocktails from the movies. The first is the White Russian, Jeff Bridges' favorite drink in "The Big Lebowski". Check it out:

1 fluid ounce coffee flavored liqueur
1 fluid ounce vodka
1/2 cup cream or milk






Preparation:

In a mixing glass, combine the coffee flavored liqueur, vodka and cream or milk. Pour over ice in a highball glass.

Here's another: The Vesper Martini--after James Bond's martini in Casino Royale. Bond names the drink after his partner and love interest (and double agent) Vesper Lynde.

3 oz Tanqueray gin
1 oz 100-proof Stolichnaya vodka
1/2 oz Lillet Blanc
1/8 teaspoon (or less) quinine powder or 2 dashes of bitters

Preparation

Stir w/ cracked ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass and twist a large swatch of thin-cut lemon peel over the top.

And another: Not a cocktail from a movie, but named after a movie star. This is a good one for kids--you can make it for kids or order it in a restaurant or bar if the kids are there. I'm talking, of course, about the Shirley Temple.

3 oz lemon-lime soda
3 oz Ginger ale
1 dash grenadine
maraschino cherry for garnish




Preparation:

Pour the lemon-lime soda and ginger ale into a collins glass with ice cubes.
Add a dash of grenadine.
Stir.
Garnish with the cherry.

Okay? All right. I hope you guys enjoy that one--until next time, SEE YA

Monday, May 30, 2011

Memorial Day, Brunch, Mimosas, Bradley Liquors

It's a beautiful Memorial Day down at the shore. Bradley Liquors carries Skinnygirl Margarita, Land Shark Lager, Heinekin, and other beers, tequilas, and white wines to enjoy it with. Try pairing one of our crisp Pinot Grigios with coal fired brick oven pizza from Del Pontes Coal Fired Pizza around the corner.

If you check out the Bradley Liquors Twitter Feed or the Bradley Liquors Facebook Page you'll see a recipe for mimosas. Bradley Liquors also carries both Cointreau AND Grand Marnier--as well as other orange liqueurs, just the thing to give a mimosa a little kick! Hope everybody enjoys their day, and it would be good to see you down at the store at 618 Main Street in Bradley Beach. Click on the link for a map!

'Til then, remember our troops, and remember the opportunities we have in this country. SEE YA!

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Sangria, Sangria, Oooooh, Baby Baby...

Sangria is essentially a kind of Portuguese or Spanish punch made from wine, fruit, sweetener, and usually some sort of mild spirit or liqueur such as Triple sec or Chambord. It is usually made with a non acidic, cheap, young red wine. When it's made with white wine it is called Sangria blanc. Sangria blanc is especially popular on the Jersey Shore.

Here at Bradley Liquors, we make and sell our own Sangrias from white wine and fruit. Stop in and grab a bottle--we sell a couple of sizes and they are very popular. We here at Bradley Liquors take pride in the Sangria we sell.

Sangria is the classic summer drink in Spain and Portugal; bars, pubs, and restaurants in Ibiza and Cadiz are famous for it--they serve it in one liter pitchers and tourists and locals quaff it by the bucketload.

If you'd like to try to make your own Sangria, there are a couple of recipes on the Bradley Liquors Facebook Page or subscribe directly to the Bradley Liquors Twitter Feed where there are all kinds of recipes--from nonalcoholic coolers and mocktails to punches to sangrias to traditional and modern and ultramodern cocktails. Check it out!

Also, while you are on the Bradley Liquors facebook why not "Like" it? Just click on the link in this blog post and click "Like" at the top of the page to the right of the page title.

Until then, take care, SEE YA!

Monday, May 23, 2011

Lager and Lagering...

Most American beer is a type of beer called a lager. Budweiser, the best selling brand outside of the US, Sam Adams, Coors, Busch--these brands are all lagers. Natty Ice is a pale lager that has actually undergone filtering (or more properly, distillation) by freezing.

So what is lager? Lagered beer is essentially beer fermented at a low temperature with a bottom fermenting yeast, sometimes close to the temperature at which the liquid freezes. Since 1953, it has been possible to do this very quickly, although true lagereing for a home brewer takes quite some time--upwards of six or eight months. It's not unusual for a home brewer to start on next summer's stock of lager in September or October.

It's worth noting that the continuous brewing process used by most large American brewers to speed up the process comes at a considerable loss of flavor--there is a reason Sam Adams Lager costs $9.50 a six and Natural Ice can be had for under $6. Sam Adams lager is borderline microbrewed--it doesn't use continuous brewing, and it takes longer and is more labor intensive to make.

Hey, if you get a chance, check out Bradley Liquors on Facebook or Bradley Liquors Drink Recipe Twitter Feed! Drop by, "Like" us on Facebook, give us some feedback! We'd love to hear from you.

'Til next time, SEE YA!

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Looooooong Drinks and Short, Short Drinks


Today we are going to talk about the difference between a long drink and a short drink. A long drink is basically a drink meant for sipping--or more simply, a drink with the liquor mostly diluted with other things. An example of a long drink would be a tequila sunrise. Another would be a Mai Tai. Long drinks are good for sipping on a summer afternoon and are typically served in tall highball glasses.






This is an example of a short drink--a B-52, to be precise, and a very well made one. A short drink is a drink that is mostly liquor and is meant to be drunk quickly. Short drinks are for partying hard; long drinks are for relaxing.








Hope that clears up the distinction. Stop by the store! We'd love to see you! We are located at 618 Main Street in Bradley Beach, 07720. Until then, take care, SEE YA!

Monday, May 16, 2011

Well, its another rainy, early Spring day. Can we get some sunshine around here? Sunshine, warm spring days...well, we had some good days last week, but the weekends and early weekdays seem to be rain, rain, rain.

So to help you forget about the rain, I've added some great margarita recipes to this blog. Did you know margaritas go great with pizza? It's a good way to spend a rainy spring Monday: sipping margaritas and eating pizza from Pizza On Main, my personal favorite in Bradley Beach, or Vic's Pizza, that most famous of Bradley pizzerias and Italian "red gravy" type eateries--and a damned good one too!

We've go three recipes: The first is a basic Key West Margarita; the second is a Chocolate Margarita, for you romantically inclined ladies, and the third is an interesting recipe using carrot juice from a juicer or a health food store: A Carrot Margarita. Check 'em out, let us know if you like 'em!

Key West Margarita

1 1/2 oz tequila
1 oz melon liqueur
1 oz Pina colada mix
1/2 oz lime juice (or substitute 1/2oz Margarita Texas Mix)
1/2 oz orange juice
1 dash grenadine
1/2 cup crushed ice



Mix all in blender. Blend at slow speed until smooth and pour into a glass.

Chocolate Margarita

1 1/2 oz tequila (any kind)
1 oz Godiva liquor
2 tablespoon chocolate syrup
3/4 oz cream or half and half
2 oz orange juice
1/2 oz lime juice (or substitute: 1/2 oz Margarita Texas Mix)
Stirrings Cocoa Rimmer
Ice

Rim the glass with the cocoa rimmer. Combine all ingredients in a shaker full of ice and pour into a glass.

Carrot Margarita

3oz blanco or reposado tequila
3oz carrot juice
1oz margarita mix or fresh lime juice (recommended: Margarita Texas Mix)
1 1/2 oz orange liqueur
ice cubes





Combine all ingredients and serve on the rocks.

Okay? Okay. I hope you enjoy these recipes, and I hope it's sunny on Memorial Day weekend--barbecues, the flea market on the Boardwalk, and sunny, warm weather. 'Til next time, stay cool, SEE YA!

Saturday, May 14, 2011

If You Like Pina Colada (And Getting Caught In The Rain)

Well, today is a rainy day in the early spring. It's supposed to rain throughout the day, and a huge superstorm is supposed to cause very rainy/thunderstormy conditions into next week.

So today, we're going to learn to mix a cocktail that has nothing to do with rain, to kind of take our minds off the weather. This drink is best sipped on a tropical beach, with peaceful, clear blue water, white sand, and beautiful senors and senoritas (whichever strikes your fancy) all around.

This is called a pina colada. And in case you didn't notice, the title of this post is taken from a song by a songwriter called Rupert Holmes called Escape. (extra points if you know the name of the album it appeared on). Here's a YouTube link to the tune:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntnt6PeQqGQ

So crank up the tunes, dig the blender out of the cabinet, and mix up some tropical sun on a rainy day in May.

3 oz light rum
3 tbsp coconut cream
3 tbspcrushed pineapples
pineapple juice

Put all ingredients into an electric blender with 2 cups of crushed ice. Blend at a high speed for a short length of time. Strain into a collins glass and serve with a straw.

That's a perfect Pina Colada. I hope you are enjoying today; there were plenty of garage sales on LaReine Avenue in Bradley Beach this morning; I hope everyone did okay--out with the old, made a few bucks to get some of the new. Life is good. 'Til next time, SEE YA!

Monday, May 9, 2011

Spring is in the air...gimlets, mojitos, Corona OH MY!

Well, spring is in the air. It's finally arrived; it's finally here. I thought it might be a good idea to celebrate Spring with some good spring drinks--for sipping at lunchtime on a Friday or relaxing on the patio on a Saturday afternoon.

The first is a vodka gimlet. It's very simple to make:

You need;

One lime
1.5 oz Grey Goose vodka (you can use anything, but the drink is best with something nice)
1 oz Rose's lime juice

Shake vodka with lime juice and ice. Cut lime into quarters; rub rim of cocktail glass with lime. Strain drink into glass and garnish with lime wedge. Take a sip and thank the good Lord, who, in His infinite wisdom allowed His creations to enjoy such beneficent potions.

Another good one is the classic El Cubano, the Mojito.

1.25 oz rum or spiced rum
mint leaves
1 tbsp sugar
.5 oz lime juice
2 oz soda

Place mint leaves in bottom of glass. Add crushed ice, rum, sugar, and lime juice, and muddle (this means use the spoon to crush up the mint leaves against the glass and mix the drink--the goal is to get the mint leaves broken up so they flavor the drink). Add soda water and garnish with mint leaves.

And of course, Corona beer. After a hard day mowing the lawn, there's nothing like kicking back on the patio in the shade with an icy cold Corona Extra. This beer is meant to be served with a lime wedge in the neck of the bottle, so you drink the beer with the lime infused into it.

Barbecues are also great for Corona, a pig roast, ribs--open pit barbecues on a private beach and a 30 pack with lime--nothing like it. Nothing at all. Or pregame on the train before a Jimmy Buffett show at the Garden or the Pru. Oh, you didn't know? You can drink alcohol from your private stock on NJT trains. Some people have been known to fill a paint bucket with ice and beer before Devils and Yankees games.

And of course, Bradley Liquors is right across the street from the Bradley Beach train station. Beat that for convenience!

Dig it baby. Coolin' like a fool....'til next time, SEE YA!


Friday, May 6, 2011

Five More Complex Cocktails...

I promised that I'd give you five cocktails that were still quick and basic, but less quick than the ones in the last post. Some of these are frat-party favorites; pretty much any bartender should be able to make these, whether it's at a country club or a local pub that mostly does beer and very few mixed drinks.

We carry everything necessary to make the drinks in these recipes in our store; stop down if you need supplies. Our friendly proprietor will be happy to give you a few pointers on the proper way to do things.

First up is a Harvey Wallbanger. This one is a frat party favorite since the 1960s. It's actually considered a "classic" frathouse drink.

3/4 oz vodka
1 1/2 oz orange juice
1/4 oz Galliano
orange slice for garnish
maraschino cherry for garnish

Pour the vodka and orange juice into a collins glass with ice cubes.
Add the Galliano.
Garnish with the orange slice and maraschino cherry.

Here's another good one--great for the summer Friday evenings, when you don't want a high alcohol content due to the heat, you just want to relax, take the edge off, and quench your thirst from the day. It's called a Fuzzy Navel.

Ingredients:

1 1/2 oz peach schnapps
orange juice to fill

Pour the peach schnapps into an highball glass filled with ice cubes.
Top with orange juice.
Stir well.

This next one is NOT for light drinking; it's for a hard night out with the boys.

Kamikaze

1 1/2 oz vodka
1 oz lime juice
1 oz triple sec
lime wedge for garnish

Pour the ingredients into a shaker with ice cubes.
Shake well.
Strain into a chilled cocktail glass.
Garnish with the lime wedge.

You want to be careful with the Kamikaze; it can put the hurt on you.

Now, I'm going to say a word about that classic of all classic cocktails, the Martini. A martini is gin and vermouth and an olive. After that, it's all you.

When you go to a cocktail lounge and ask for a martini, bartenders will usually ask you how you take it, because a Martini is like a wallet or a purse--it's individual to you, it fits you, it suits you. Some people say that a Martini is neat gin in a martini glass with an olive; other people like more vermouth; still others like the olive rubbed around the rim of the glass. The Martini is YOUR martini.

This recipe is just a starting point. The "atomizer" called for can be replaced with a small restaurant style spray bottle--if you are local to Bradley Beach NJ or the Jersey Shore area, you can get a spray bottle at Johnson's Restaurant Supply at the corner of Rte. 33 and Memorial Drive--near the railroad tracks near the intersection of Rte.33 and Rte. 71 (Main Street).

2 1/2 oz gin
1/2 oz dry vermouth
1 green olive or lemon twist for garnish

Pour the gin into a mixing glass filled with ice cubes.
Stir for 30 seconds.
Spray-atomize vermouth into a martini glass--one or two sprays should be enough. Just coat the glass.
Strain into a chilled cocktail glass.
Garnish with the olive or lemon twist.

This next one is actually a beer mixed drink. It's a Black and Tan. I think of a Black and Tan as the classic Bass Guinness, but really any Pale Ale like Sierra Nevada or Boulevard will do.

Ingredients:

8 oz Guinness Stout
8 oz Bass Ale

Pour the pale ale into a pint glass.
Float the Guinness on top to fill the glass, by pouring it over a bar spoon (or Black and Tan spoon) over the pale ale.

All right? All right. Those are the basics. See you next time, and remember, take it easy, easy, and if you can't take it easy, easy, take it easy as you can...SEE YA!

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

5 Basic, Quick, Simple Cocktails

Okay, so you've stocked your bar. You've invited some friends over for drinks and appetizers. Now what? What do you serve them?

Optimally, you'd want to know a little bit about each person and what their preferred spirit (and pretty much everyone who drinks has one) is. Some people are gin drinkers and some people are dyed in the wool whiskey drinkers. Some people will only touch Irish whiskey--and of those, some will only drink Jameson's and some only Bushmills (and a few people who prefer the subtlety of Tullamore Dew).

Likewise some people are tequila drinkers, and some prefer rum--and of rum drinkers, some prefer straight Bacardi and some prefer it mixed with coconut, a la Captain Morgan or Malibu rum. And then there are the ones who are beer only (or wine only) and who don't touch distilled spirits at all.

It takes all kinds, and like all get togethers, you want to know your guests and their food and drink preferences.

For instance, a good gin and tonic will almost always please a gin drinker. It's the basic gin highball. Here's a good recipe:

2 oz gin
5 oz tonic water
1 lime wedge

Pour the gin and the tonic water into a highball glass almost filled with ice cubes. Stir well. Garnish with the lime wedge.

For the vodka drinker, a vodka and ginger (also called a Vodka chiller)

1 oz. Vodka, Ginger Ale to fill
Garnish with a lime wedge.

For rum drinkers, especially nowadays, there's the ever enticing Cuba Libre, which is a fancy way of saying, "rum and coke, garnished with lime"

Cuba Libre

1 oz. Rum, Cola to fill
Garnish with a lime wedge.

For tequila drinkers, the Margarita, especially appropriate given the upcoming Cinco de Mayo celebrations.

Dale Degroff's Margarita Recipe

1½ oz Tequila
1 oz Cointreau
¾ oz Lime Juice
¼-½ Simple Syrup

Run with ice through a blender to make a slush. Pour into margarita glasses prepared as follows: Dip rim of glasses into lemon juice, then salt. Garnish with lime.

And for the whiskey drinkers among us:

Seven and Seven

1 oz. Whiskey (Seagram's 7-Crown)
Lemon-Lime Soda (7-Up)to fil

Some of us prefer New Jersey and some of us prefer...Kentucky! For the latter group here is a recipe for a bourbon and branch:

Bourbon and Branch

1 oz. Bourbon Whiskey
bottled water to fill

The "branch" in a bourbon and branch is the bottled water. Branch is a Texan term for bottled water intended to be mixed with alcohol.

Garnish with a lemon twist.

And the brandy drinkers sometimes drink Brandy Alexanders. This tipple allegedly "goes down like a milkshake." I would not know. But it seems like it might.

Brandy Alexander

1 1/2 ounces Brandy
1 ounce White Creme de Cacao
1 ounce Heavy Cream

In a shaker half-filled with ice cubes, combine the brandy, creme de cacao, and cream. Shake well. Strain into a cocktail glass and garnish with the nutmeg.

So those are some basic cocktails and highballs for pretty much every spirit I named that you'd want to stock a home bar with.

Next up, we'll get into some more complex cocktails that require a bit of prep such as the Collins which require easily made Collins mix. After that, a few basic mocktails or nonalcoholic cocktails. 'Til next time...

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Basic Spirits to Stock a Home Bar

Hi everybody! Wow. What a day. It's a fine day to mow your lawn, sit out, drowse in the sun, and kick back in front of the tube to with a cold beer and nachos and cheese to watch the Yanks or the Mets. It's just a fine, beautiful, heck of a Spring day--one of the days it seems like God himself created for us to rejoice and be glad in.

Today we're going to look at a few basic spirits you might want to stock a home bar with. You can make pretty much all the basic drinks that people might want with these five plus the other mixers we've already spoken about. Although on our Twitter feed we often tweet more complex drinks, most people you'll serve from a home bar won't want more than a gin and tonic or a Bloody Mary or a Jack and Coke. People simply don't expect to be drinking very complex drinks in a private home.

The first one here is brandy. This photo is actually a bottle of Cognac, which is simply brandy made in the French town of Cognac. The name brandy comes from the Dutch, brandevin which literally means "burnt wine". There was a time when the Dutch controlled international shipping in the wine business, and their secret for shipping huge quantities of wine was to distill it and then add water when it got to its destination.

The story goes that someone finally tasted the distilled ("burnt") wine and declared that it would be sinful to add water. Thus, distilled wine became a popular drink: brandy.



Vodka is simply a distilled neutral grain spirit. In Poland they make it by infusing boiling water with potatoes or beets, fermenting the resulting sugary water, and then distilling it. You can actually make vodka with pretty much any fruit or vegetable--most "bathtub" moonshine in the US is not strictly whiskey, it's vodka. You just boil some water with potatoes or beets or whatever carbohydrate (sugar) laden fruit or vegetable you have, ferment the mixture with yeast, and then distill the resulting fermented mixture.

Moving on...gin.


Gin is vodka with juniper berry flavoring. It's infused with juniper berries and often other botanicals--citrus peel and what have you. The more expensive the gin, usually, the more complex and subtle the flavors. That's why Bombay Sapphire is more expensive than Seagrams--Bombay Sapphire has a more complex taste profile.

Gin, incidentally is sometimes called "mother's ruin" because it was believed back in the day that juniper berries could cause women to miscarry children. (The name "gin" comes from the word "juniper".) If someone is living a debauched life, they are sometimes said to be living on "gin lane".



Tequila--a regular, good solid brand in the photo. Made of the fermented pulp of the agave cactus from Mexico.

I'm told that barring Florida, in the Midwest and the Deep South, men do not share the Jersey Shore's predilection for drinking tequila. It's thought to be a bit feminine.

I disagree--I think tequila is a very manly drink. Just drink it in a tequila sunrise or as a tequila cruda (lick it, slam it, suck it).
Another drink that has also become very popular during the recent tequila craze is agave wine--tequila is distilled agave pulp; agave wine is simply fermented and much lower in alcohol content. Another related drink is pulque which is the fermented sap of the maguey plant--pulque is the traditional drink with chocolate ants.


Whiskey. Distilled beer. In the case of Jack Daniels, made from a "sour" mash--a mash that has already been used to produce beer once and hence is "sour".

Jack Daniels is a very high quality whiskey; Jack is often mixed with Coke (Jack and Coke) or with club soda (whiskey and soda)







The last thing you'd need to stock a home bar is rum. Rum is made from distilled sugarcane--usually distilled molasses. English sailors who sailed to Jamaica and Hispaniola and the sugarcane plantations would often suffer from scurvy--a terrible disease brought on by not having enough vitamin C in one's diet.

However, these sailors learned that they could prevent scurvy by drinking the juice of lemons or limes, or sucking on lemons or limes. But raw lemon and lime is quite sour. Since the sailors were in an area where sugarcane and molasses was plentiful, someone came up with the idea to distill molasses and mix it with lemon or lime juice, creating a refreshing sweet and sour alcoholic drink that would (in theory) prevent scurvy. What more could you want out of a cocktail?

In any case, those are the "big six". Everything else is extra and optional--some would say that even the tequila is extra and optional, but I strongly disagree. But those plus the mixers I already went over--tonic water, bitters, and simple syrup, plus dry vermouth and fruit juices--lemon or lime and orange and cranberry and grapefruit and possibly pineapple--and Coca Cola or Pepsi and club soda and grenadine is basically all you need to stock a home bar and make any drink or cocktail that any guest is likely to want in a home situation.

See you next time for some basic cocktail recipes that everyone should know--five oldies and five more modern, for making at home or ordering in bars. 'Til next time, enjoy the day!