How to Turn Wine Into Cocktails
Tomorrow my cousins will be drinking beer and watching sports while my mother and father gush over the bottle of wine the neighbor brought for dinner. But all I’ll want is a cocktail.
It’s the same scene year after year. Maybe it’s the early dinner bell, but for some reason mixed drinks (sadly) never seem to be on the Thanksgiving menu.
Traditions are important: Whether it’s watching the football, your mom’s cranberry tart or your aunt’s inedible casserole. As a proud cocktailian, I see no need to ruffle anyone’s tail feathers. So this year I vow to make a new tradition.
Let’s start with that bottle of Beaujolais. (Every third Thursday in November, the French release a young, juicy red wine produced from Gamay grapes.) Instead of drinking it with turkey you can turn into a fine cocktail. As your family pulls out the cork, quietly open the liquor cabinet and get out a bottle of apple brandy, a truly historic American drink.
Casually ask if anyone has tried the spirit while burnishing the bottle. Suggest a retreat to the family room for a quick tasting. Just as the wine drinkers begin to give you the stink eye, offer to mix a cocktail with the wine and your liquor—in the name of diplomacy, of course.
Nouveau Sangaree
Created by: Jim Meehan
INGREDIENTS:
- 2 oz Beaujolais Nouveau Wine (you may substitute another red wine)
- 1.5 oz Laird’s Straight Bottled in Bond Apple Brandy
- .5 oz Plymouth Sloe Gin
- .25 oz Grade B maple syrup (you may substitute other dark maple syrup)
- 2 Dashes Angostura Bitters
Garnish: Thin apple slices and grated cinnamon
Glass: Cocktail
PREPARATION:
In a mixing glass stir all the ingredients with ice. Strain the drink into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with thin apple slices and grated cinnamon.