Hello and happy Summer Friday to you all. I feel like I’ve been in a rut recently and overlooking some of the great resources I have in my cocktail library. In an effort to rectify that, I went looking in a rarely used, but fantastic resource in the Bartender Manual by Jim Meehan. I’ve used this before but nowhere near as often as I should. This this is like a textbook. I would expect this to be required reading in a bartending class.
While flipping through looking for another Lillet cocktail, I came across the White Lady, which is a sour with a gin base. Not like the gin sour I made previously, this one actually contains the egg white I omitted before. I’m curious to see how it plays.
2 oz. Beefeater gin (I used New Amsterdam)
1 oz. Lemon juice
.75 oz. Cointreau
1 Egg white
Garnish: None
Dry shake, then shake with ice and fine strain into a chilled egg coupe
I get a faint hint of lemon and gin on the nose, along with a little more intense citrus, no doubt from the Cointreau. Meehan mentions in the recipe that “egg white cocktails tend to have a musty aroma”, and he suggests a twist of lemon or orange peel as a garnish to add a nice touch and mask the must. I honestly didn’t get much of a musty aroma on this one. However, the addition of a citrus peel would be welcome here, just from an aesthetic standpoint. A little orange or yellow pop on top of the drink would really make it stand out I think.
The sip is quite nice. It starts off gin forward, mixed with the fresh lemon juice. The citrus and the gin really balance each other out well here. Neither the strong juniper flavors or the sour lemon can really dominate. The Cointreau is also able to make its presence knows, which is a little bit of a surprise. I can taste a little hint of the orange undertones it brings to the flavor profile, which brightens up the overall flavor just a bit.
The mouth feel is very light. The egg white does not provide much of a coating, nor does it help leave flavors behind on your palate once you’re finished with the sip. This is what I mean when I mentioned it was not what I expected. Usually (at least the ones that I’ve made) egg based drinks tend to be heavier and coat the palate and leave behind the flavors you just had. Not in this case. I think the 3.75 total ounces of liquid must do some black magic fuckery to the egg white, where it only provides texture, but keeps it light, and does not allow it to linger.
I would absolutely make this one again. I’d say serve this one as a liquid dessert after a not so heavy meal.
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[…] Mrs. Sharkbait sent me this link and asked if I’ve made a White Lady before. Unfortunately I already have, but kept on reading the article anyway. As I got further, I discovered that this particular […]
This sounds right up my alley. Will have to pick up some Cointreau and give it a try
So you’re saying we should all try a White Lady?
Specifically, a White Lady who, according to Sharkbait, doesn’t believe in lingering:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4gMy3y5foQ
I think she’d prefer a rum drink.
Looks like Request Line broke out early today!
Canadian drinking checklist
https://twitter.com/KevinBrauch/status/1400171015108542465
Way better than Klassic Kentucky Kocktails
Not something you’d expect to see on a kids’ menu at a Canadian IHOP, but here we are.
ME: “I’d like a Classic Canadian Cocktail, please.”
BARTENDER: “How about a Manhattan?”
ME: “How is that Canadian?”
BARTENDER: “It’s just a bottle of Molson.”
ME: “Naw . . . how about a Planters Punch?”
BARTENDER: “Excellent choice sir. It’s served Canadian style, by a house slave dressed in tux, tails, and white gloves.”
ME: “Is that also just a bottle of Molson served by you?”
BARTENDER: “Yes sir it is.”
I just can nae fathom egg whites in a cocktail. This is nigh alchemy.
/went to bed at 6p last night which I am totes sure is normal behavioUr
Hmmmm. That is kinda weird that the mouthfeel is light and doesn’t coat the tongue too much.
I would’ve thought that the acid from the lemon would denature the proteins in the egg whites, and make them cling to surfaces more.
That must be it. Whiskey sours I’ve had generally act in the same way the White Lady does, but even they leave something behind.
Beef is blinding me with science!