NOTES ON EXECUTION:
Dissolve the sugar in the water, lightly press the mint leaves in the resulting syrup, add the spirits and the ice, and stir. If desired, you can add another hedge of mint to the top. And have at it with a straw.
MINT JULEP
This is Jerry Thomas’s version, which remained more or less the bartender’s standard for the rest of the century; note the absence of fancy silver cups, icicles of frost and all the other labor-intensive bells and whistles with which the drink became endowed once it passed from the bartender’s repertoire into the householder’s. The variations Thomas records include the Gin Julep, which would have been made with Hollands, and as such is surprisingly tasty (it is attested to as early as 1828); the Brandy Julep, which is a Mint Julep without all the fancy trimmings, among which some even include mint (in which case, as the
Steward & Barkeeper’s Manual
sagely observed, “It is like the play of Hamlet, with the prince left out”); the Whiskey Julep, which before the Civil War was considered rather vulgar and after was considered delicious; and the Georgia Julep, which was made with brandy and the now-extinct peach brandy (the aged eau-de-vie, not the sticky liqueur).
(USE LARGE BAR-GLASS.)
1 TABLE-SPOONFUL OF WHITE PULVERIZED SUGAR
2½TABLE-SPOONFULS OF WATER, MIX WELL WITH A SPOON
Take three or four sprigs of fresh mint, and press them well in the sugar and water, until the flavor of the mint is extracted; add one and a half wine-glass of brandy
[3 oz]
, and fill the glass with fine shaved ice, then draw out the sprigs of mint and insert them in the ice with the stems downward, so that the leaves will be above, in the shape of a bouquet; arrange berries, and small pieces of sliced orange on top in a tasty manner, dash with Jamaica rum, and sprinkle white sugar on top. Place a straw as represented in the cut, and you have a julep that is fit for an emperor.
NOTES ON INGREDIENTS:
For the
Brandy Julep
, the
Gin Julep
, and the
Whiskey Julep
, omit the fruits and dashes of rum. For a Julep “scientific style,” with “the latest New Orleans touch,” as tantalizingly described in a memorable passage in Mayne Reid’s 1856 novel
The Quadroon
, add a slice of orange and one of lemon and see below.
NOTES ON EXECUTION :
Pressing the mint renders it rather bedraggled; I prefer to discard it and use a couple of fresh sprigs at the end, rather than reinserting the pressed ones. The “scientific julep” is shaken back and forth between two glasses, mint, “ice, brandy, lemons, and all,” and then the rim of the glass it rests in is wiped with “a thin slice of pineapple . . . cut freshly from the fruit.” This has the double effect of clearing any undissolved sugar or bits of mint from the rim of the glass and leaving the fruit’s “fragrant juice to mingle its aroma with the beverage.” You can of course use a Boston shaker here, serving the drink out of the mixing glass.
PINEAPPLE JULEP
Properly, this is not a Julep at all—but as we’ve seen, neither is a Julep, strictly speaking. Whatever it is (I’d call it a Cup), it’s delightful.
(FOR A PARTY OF FIVE.)
Peel, slice and cut up a ripe pineapple into a glass bowl, add the juice of two oranges, a gill
[4 oz]
of raspberry syrup, a gill
[4 oz]
of maraschino, a gill
[4 oz]
of old gin, a bottle of sparkling Moselle, and about a pound of pure ice in shaves; mix, ornament with berries in season, and serve in flat glasses.
SOURCE: JERRY THOMAS, 1862
NOTES ON INGREDIENTS:
For the maraschino, use the liqueur, not the polymer in which “cherries” are suspended. The old gin would be a Hollands. For sparkling Moselle, substitute something sweetish and sparkling; I like a rosé champagne in this.
BRANDY, GIN, OR WHISKEY SMASH
In 1862, Jerry Thomas prefaced his section on the Smash with the simple declaration that “this beverage is simply a julep on a small plan.” This is true, as far as it goes: The Smash, also known as the Smasher and the Smash-Up (it gets its name from the way the mint was smashed up in the shaking), bears the same relation to the Julep that the Fix does to the individual Punch. It’s a quick bracer, rather than a slow-sipper; you don’t hear of Smashes coming with straws.
But Thomas’s cursory assessment of the drink leaves one with an insufficient appreciation of its importance. From its first appearance in the mid- 1840s until after the Civil War, the Smash was just about the most popular thing going. In the 1850s, at the height of the Smash’s popularity, all the “pert young men,” the Broadway dandies, San Francisco swells, and junior New Orleans
grandissimes
, seemed to spend the warm months of the year with a Smash glued to one hand and a “segar” to the other. In fact, the Smash became rather an icon of dissipation, as in the bit in
Harper’s Monthly
from 1859
The Fancy Brandy Smash (the serving glass is on the left and the mixing glass on the right). From Harry Johnson’s
New and Improved Illustrated Bartender’s Manual
, 1888. (Courtesy Ted Haigh)
about one young son of privilege’s experience in college, “where he acquired the proper proficiency in Greek, Latin, Mathematics, slang, billiards and brandy smashes.” Eventually, it was pulled back into the orbit of its parent, the Julep, and one ceased to hear much about it.
(USE SMALL BAR-GLASS.)
½ TABLE-SPOONFUL
[1 TSP]
OF WHITE SUGAR
1 TABLE-SPOONFUL
[2 TSP]
OF WATER
1 WINE-GLASS
[2 OZ]
OF BRANDY
Fill two-thirds full of shaved ice, use two sprigs of mint, the same as in the recipe for mint julep. Lay two small pieces of orange on top, and ornament with berries in season.
SOURCE: JERRY THOMAS, 1862
NOTES ON INGREDIENTS:
The sugar should be superfine. As for spirits: The Brandy Smash was by far the most popular, followed in later years by the Whiskey Smash (bourbon or rye). The Gin Smash also appears from time to time. As with the Gin Julep, Hollands is indicated.
The orange-and-berry ornamentation (which goes on at the end) is not strictly necessary, and in fact Thomas’s Whiskey Smash omits it.
NOTES ON EXECUTION:
Dissolve the sugar in the water first (or, of course, use 1 teaspoonful or so of gum), then shake. This, however, yields a drink that is less than pleasing visually, so some mixologists of the drink’s heyday preferred to stir it. I still like to shake mine, but I’ll strain it over fresh ice (cracked) and insert a new sprig of mint at the end.
IV. SANGAREE
Sangaree—the name comes from the Spanish
sangria
, which pretty much gives us the origins of the drink—is a concoction of strong wine (usually port, but also sherry and Madeira), sugar, water, and nutmeg that was drunk in Britain by gentlemen and sea-captains and in America by infants, invalids, and Indians. Now, it’s possible that I’m exaggerating a bit. When it came to infants and children, I have to concede that there were those who considered giving them Sangaree an “unreasonable and dangerous practice.” But the very fact that this condemnation, published in the
Journal of Health
in 1830, was deemed necessary speaks volumes. For invalids, at least, it was just fine—even for ones being treated for alcoholism, if
Harper’s Monthly
is to be believed (see the February 1864 issue). And for Indians, well, supplying them with the drink was positively doing them a kindness, if we can judge by the visit a delegation of important “red men of the woods” made to a cannon-foundry near Washington in 1824. After the tour, refreshments were served, “cautiously prepared in the form of sangaree, lemonade, etc.” The Indians might perhaps have preferred whiskey, the
National Journal
opined, but “this weaker sort of drink is better for [them].”
Examined chronologically, this “mild and gentlemanly foreigner,” as one Jackson-era newspaper dubbed it, might as well have been a native. While it first appeared in the English-speaking world in London in 1736, when the
Gentleman’s Magazine
noted “a new Punch made of strong Madeira wine and called Sangre,” just seven years later we find our old friend Dr. Hamilton dispatching a bowl of it—the Spanish “sangre” already corrupted to “sangaree”—in suburban Baltimore. That’s an unusually quick transatlantic crossing for a drink—unless, as is entirely possible, it was already over on this side of the pond; unless Mr. Gordon got his “Sangre” from the Caribbean, where Spaniard and Englishmen mixed with great frequency. Early evidence is lacking, but by the early 1800s Sangaree (usually based on Madeira) is a constant feature in travelers’ tales of the Caribbean. Wherever it was born, Sangaree was an American before there
were
Americans. But it never quite settled in here; never took out citizenship papers, cleared itself a patch of woods and set about putting in rows of corn. It’s indicative that there’s no “Whiskey Sangaree” in Jerry Thomas’s book. Brandy and gin, yes. But whiskey, no.
By the Civil War, Sangaree was getting a little long in the tooth. Not that it disappeared entirely, mind you; it just sort of went into a pleasant retirement. As longtime East Coast bartender Jere Sullivan recalled in 1930, “In the Author’s experience it was found principally the order of the elderly business man, after the counters were closed in the late afternoon.” But not every drink has to play the classic American go-getter, all youth and drive and swagger. The Sangaree maintains a certain Old-World courtliness that has its appeal.
PORT WINE SANGAREE
In Jerry Thomas’s day, this was by far the most common version.
(USE SMALL BAR-GLASS.)
1½ WINE-GLASS
[4 OZ]
OF PORT WINE
1 TEASPOONFUL OF SUGAR
Fill tumbler two-thirds with ice.
Shake well and grate nutmeg on top.
SOURCE: JERRY THOMAS, 1862
NOTE ON INGREDIENTS:
This is not the time to break out that crusted vintage port. Plain old ruby port of a decent quality is what you want here. Thomas also suggests a
Sherry Sangaree
, made exactly the same way. Should you give the variation a spin, adjust the amount of sugar you use according to your sherry: more for a fino or an amontillado, less for a cream or a Pedro Ximenez. Likewise, if you want to get all eighteenth century with a
Madeira Sangaree
, the dry Sercials and Verdelhos will require a bit more sugar than the sweeter Buals and Malmseys. Whatever wine you use, the
Steward & Barkeeper’s Manual
suggests 4 ounces of it rather than Thomas’s 3; a sound suggestion that should not be ignored.
One variation that had enough currency for Jerry Thomas to deem it worth mention involves replacing the imported Iberian wines with rather the more quotidian tipples, porter, or ale. The venerable
Porter Sangaree
, alias “Porteree,” was a “good and very wholesome Beverage” (as the
Boston Intelligencer
dubbed it in 1819) of English origin—wholesome enough for the
Journal of Health
to approve its administration to children. After the Civil War, one sees little of the Porteree outside of plagiaristic bartender’s guides. As late as 1906, though, its sibling the
Ale Sangaree
had enough charm for one nostalgic toper to remember it as “the finest summer preparation that ever went down a man’s throat.” He recommended that the “divine, amber-colored fluid” be made with Scotch ale, noted for its mild creaminess (in other words, avoid the heavily hopped American microbrews). The thing of it is, he wasn’t entirely wrong. While I might deny the Ale Sangaree the superlative
finest
, it’s at least worthy of the comparative
finer
—it’s a surprisingly delightful testament to the transformative power of sugar and nutmeg and there’s many a younger, sportier summer drink that could learn a thing or two from it.
As for
Brandy Sangaree
and
Gin Sangaree
, which Thomas also mentioned but pretty much nobody else did (again, discounting his plagiarists). Just make the requisite Sling, omit the nutmeg, and “dash about a teaspoonful of port wine, so that it will float on top” (there are some—and I’m one of them—who consider it a kindness to float a little port on an Ale Sangaree as well). The brandy one is particularly tasty—score one for the Professor—although it is improved by using more port and squeezing in a dollop of orange juice.
NOTES ON EXECUTION:
Dissolve the sugar in a splash of water before proceeding (if using Demerara, as I like to, you’ll have to muddle). For a Porteree or Ale Sangaree, use a pint glass and omit the ice. Nutmeg all around.