summer – Fifty Pounds Gin. https://fiftypoundsgin.london A strikingly SMOOTH SMALL BATCH distilled classic London Dry Gin Mon, 17 Aug 2020 15:59:20 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 The Best Cocktails for Keeping Cool this Summer https://fiftypoundsgin.london/blog/the-best-cocktails-for-keeping-cool-this-summer/ https://fiftypoundsgin.london/blog/the-best-cocktails-for-keeping-cool-this-summer/#respond Tue, 07 Jul 2020 11:42:29 +0000 https://fiftypoundsgin.london/?p=60529

Summer cocktails

 

Summer is the perfect time for cocktails. We’re off work, the holidays are stretching out in front of us, and we can finally relax with something long and cool.

These gin cocktails make the perfect summer serve – whether you’re at home, by the pool or picnicking in the park – they’ll leave you feeling refreshed in more ways than one!

Cheers!

 

 

Tom Collins

Tom Collins

A Tom Collins is one of the classic long gin cocktails but there’s a lot of controversy around its origins, with numerous people laying claim to the invention. Apparently, the earliest record for Tom Collins was written by Jerry Thomas, the father of American mixology, in 1876.

Ingredients

2oz gin

¾ oz simple syrup

¾ oz lemon juice

Soda water

Steps

  1. Fill a Collins glass with ice and keep it in the freezer.
  2. Pour in gin, lemon juice, and simple syrup in a cocktail shaker.
  3. Add ice and shake until well-chilled.
  4. Strain into the chilled Collins glass.

 

 

Negroni Swizzle

Negroni Swizzle

‘Swizzling’ is a way to chill the drinks by twirling a swizzle stick between your palms. Try this swizzled cocktail overflowing with ice to cool you off this summer.

Ingredients

1 oz gin

1 oz Campari

1 oz sweet vermouth

1 oz soda water

Steps

  1. Fill a highball glass with crushed ice.
  2. Add gin, Campari, and sweet vermouth.
  3. Swizzle with a bar spoon until your glass frosts up.
  4. Add the soda water.
  5. Garnish with a piece of orange or twist.

 

 

Takumi’s Aviation

Takumi’s Aviation

The Aviation is usually purple, made with Creme de Violette. However, when Takumi Watanabe, a Japanese bartender at The Sailing Bar, did not have the Creme de Violette on hand, he made do by using Parfait D’Amour which gives it a distinctive blue colour.

Ingredients

½ oz gin

½ oz maraschino liqueur

1 bar spoon parfait d’amour

⅓ oz fresh lemon juice

Steps

  1. Combine all the ingredients into your cocktail shaker
  2. Shake with ice
  3. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass
  4. Garnish with a twist of lemon

 

 

Cucumber and gin cocktail

Cucumber and Gin Cocktail

This cocktail is a riff on the cucumber cooler, but takes it to the next level by using cucumber juice instead of the diced cucumber. The result is a refreshing green cocktail – the Incredible Hulk in a glass!

Ingredients

1 unpeeled cucumber

1 lime, cut into quarters.

2 oz gin

3 oz cucumber juice

1 tsp sugar

Mint leaves

Soda water

Ice

Steps

  1. Cut up the cucumber and pulse in a food processor.
  2. Strain using a cheesecloth or coffee filter.
  3. Fill a tumbler with ice.
  4. Using a peeler, cut a long strip of cucumber and arrange it to the side of the tumbler.
  5. Muddle half a lime, 2 mint leaves, and 1 tsp sugar
  6. Add the gin and cucumber juice into the muddling glass.
  7. Add ice and shake vigorously.
  8. Drop 2 quarter slices of the lime into the tumbler.
  9. Strain the cocktail mixture into the tumbler.
  10. Top with soda water

 

 

 

Gin Gin Mule

Gin Gin Mule

A modern classic, the gin-gin mule was created by Audrey Saunders of New York City’s Pegu Club. While it’s often thought of as a Moscow Mule with gin, it also has a bit of mojito influence. Either way, you look at it, it’s incredibly easy to make and a fabulous drink you’re sure to love.

As the name indicates, there are two “gins” in this recipe. The first is gin—as in the botanical liquor we know and love for everything from the martini to the gin and tonic. The second is ginger beer, that snappy soda that makes the Moscow mule a truly great drink. When you muddle in a little lime, syrup, and mint, the drink’s flavour has a refreshing contrast.

Ingredients

8 mint leaves

3/4 oz lime juice (fresh)

1 oz simple syrup

1 1/2 oz gin

4 to 5 oz ginger beer (enough to fill)

Garnish: mint sprig

Steps

  1. In a cocktail shaker, add the mint leaves, lime juice, and simple syrup. Muddle well to release the essence of the herbs.
  2. Add gin and fill the shaker with ice
  3. Shake well
  4. Strain into a highball glass filled with fresh ice
  5. Top up with ginger beer
  6. Add a sprig of mint to garnish

 

Singapore Sling

Singapore Sling

A holiday classic, everything about a Singapore Sling screams lounging on a beach or propping up a pool-side bar. It’s also one of those cocktails that bartenders like to put their own twist on, so you’ll see variations everywhere you go. If you want to make this version even more special, you can use Cointreau instead of triple sec.

Ingredients

2 oz gin

½ oz triple sec

¾ oz Cherry Heering liqueur

½ oz Benedictine DOM Liqueur

½ oz lime juice

½ oz grenadine

3 oz pineapple juice

2 dash Angostura bitters

Cherry, pineapple wedge and cocktail umbrella for garnish

Steps

  1. Pour all the ingredients into a cocktail shaker.
  2. Strain into a tall glass full of ice.
  3. Garnish with a cherry and a pineapple wedge skewered together with a cocktail umbrella

 

Recipes provided by Advanced Mixology

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Keeping it light…. https://fiftypoundsgin.london/blog/keeping-it-light/ https://fiftypoundsgin.london/blog/keeping-it-light/#respond Fri, 20 Jul 2018 12:40:05 +0000 https://fiftypoundsgin.london/?p=59605 It’s summer, where everyone starts talking about “beach diets” and “bikini bodies”.  Yeah, that’s not really our thing.  We side more with those who argue you don’t need to look like a model to go to the beach or “got a body and a bikini?  Congratulations, that’s a bikini body.”

Saying that though… while we’d never advocate gin as one of your five a day, or as being the healthy alternative to water – there are laws against that sort of thing plus, you know, we’d be lying – having the occasional gin-based drink isn’t a reason to beat yourself up for falling off the diet wagon.  We’re not even going to quote the Latvian study that suggests that juniper can up your metabolic rate because, well, that seems a little too good to be true.

But, the fact remains that, a shot of gin is around the 90-100 calorie mark.  Compare that to a cocktail like a Mojito – or anything involving sugar syrup, a splash of Coke or other overly sweet mixers – where the calorie content is touching 300 per drink, and you’re already ahead of the game.

That, of course, is for a straight up shot, which is probably not the greatest way forward.  But, look at it another way: that does mean you could have a couple of Gimlets or Martinis and not have deviated massively from any diet you’ve imposed upon yourself.  And if you want to talk “clean” drinks, then in the case of Fifty Pounds, the spirit has been distilled four times for our trademark smoothness, which makes it a pretty pure experience as far as alcoholic beverages are concerned.

Low Calorie drinks: gin & tonic

Add a tonic and you’re going to roughly double the calorie content.  You’re still probably beating the cocktail drinker’s intake, but you can improve upon that.  If the aforementioned Gimlet and Martini don’t appeal, switching out to diet tonic will improve the calorie count dramatically.  You can also add something that’s genuinely a “five a day” item as garnish.  Cucumber is increasingly popular, or perhaps an orange wedge instead of the classic lemon/lime slice?  Pink grapefruit segments also work well and here’s a tip: they freeze brilliantly, so can double as garnish AND an ice cube.

Alternatively, gin and soda? Or gin and a splash of juice?  Again beware the sugar content but a little hint of light cranberry juice or orange juice might make it a little more palatable and lengthen the experience.   The same applies to low-calorie lemonades, of course, and we’d probably plump for the traditional/cloudy varieties just for that extra lemony kick.

Gin & Tonic: low calorie cocktail
Gin & Tonic: low calorie cocktail

One of the big downfalls of drinking while dieting is the snacking. If you feel the munchies developing, try and ignore the crisps, and head for the olives. If you must have nuts, perhaps go for a small handful of almonds rather than the big bag of dry roasted: you can always argue they have a good GI figure. Check out the baked crisp options too.

And if you still feel the need for balance, the Fifty Pounds bottle is pretty heavy and makes a fine dumbbell…

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