Sharkbait’s Cocktail of the Week: Hitting The Turf

Happy Friday! I don’t know what it is recently, but in the last few days my inbox has been flooded with martini and martini spinoff recipes. Is spring officially martini drinking season? Or is this BIG MARTINI flexing it’s influence and trying to push their concoctions onto the cocktail drinking world? Whatever the reason, it worked and I have a martini variant on offer this week.

I’ve done martinis (and their twists – no pun intended) in the past before, and wanted to keep experimenting, and add more simple drinks to the repertoire. So this week I picked the Turf Club Cocktail from the Waldorf Astoria Bar Book by Frank Ciafa.

I’ve made a modified version of this from the Gentleman’s Companion (side note, I really need to go back to that book, its fantastic), but I was lacking in absinthe at the time, and the proportions are skewed more towards a traditional martini in the original, so I figured I would, nay; should make the original:

Turf Club

2 oz. gin (Plymouth or London Dry – I used Gordon’s London Dry)
.75 oz. dry vermouth
.25 oz. maraschino liqueur
2 dashes absinthe
2 dashes orange bitters
Lemon twist for garnish

Add the gin, dry vermouth, maraschino, absinthe, and bitters into a mixing glass with ice and stir until well-chilled. Strain into a chilled coupe glass. Garnish with a lemon twist.

Up front, I get a lot of maraschino liqueur on the nose. Also, I definitely get hints of lemon from the twist as well as the little squeeze of the peel that released a little bit of oils on top of the drink.

The sip is very smooth, cold and excellent. I get very pronounced gin flavors, but not alcohol intensity (if that makes sense). The juniper notes play very nicely with the maraschino liqueur. The liqueur lets the natural flavors of the dry gin through, while the gin takes away a good amount of the sweetness the maraschino and it creates a wonderfully balanced flavor palate. What I really was afraid of, was the addition of the absinthe. I haven’t exactly had the best of luck with absinthe in the past, but I think I nailed it here. The recipe called for 2 dashes, and I took that to mean 4 – 5 eye droplets of frozen absinthe and that seems to do the trick. I can pick it up later in the sip, more towards the back half and a little palate linger after I finish, but it isn’t too overpowering. Which is good since too much absinthe would absolutely ruin this drink. The vermouth gets kinda lost, but I suspect it’s purpose is more to act as a sort of filler, but that is doing it an extreme injustice. This is a twist on a dry martini and a clutch ingredient is dry vermouth, so you can’t exactly omit it without fundamentally changing the bones of this drink. I would also recommend finishing this before it starts to warm up. It’s much better super cold, like any good martini is.

I liked this a lot, it’s dry, flavorful, strong but not overpowering. I’ll definitely be making this drink again. Especially when I want to (pardon the pun) mix it up from a traditional martini.

(Banner image courtesy Matthew Tetrault Photography)

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Sharkbait
Sharkbait has not actually been bitten by a shark, but has told people in bars that he was for free drinks. Married to a Giants fan, he enjoys whisk(e)y, cooking, the Rangers, and the Patriots.
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BeefReeferLives

Eagles fans are taking note.

“R. Charleroi S.C. supporters are facing strict punishment for an incident that occurred during a match with Standard de Liège on 14 April, RTL Info reports. Charleroi fans allegedly threw dead rats painted in Standard’s colours towards opposing fans. Standard has launched a complaint with the Belgian Pro League.”

https://www.brusselstimes.com/sports/460877/charleroi-fans-face-travel-ban-after-throwing-dead-rats

Gumbygirl

Gross!

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Alex_Demote

Ayy! This was a go to for me in my mid 20s when I had a large amount of gin and absinthe left in my bar while trying to downsize it. I googled what drinks contain both and ended up drinking quite a few of these. I used grenadine instead of maraschino because I am a filthy, filthy boy, and I certainly didn’t put just a dash of absinthe, it was closer to an oz

BrettFavresColonoscopy

Better than shaking it up, amirite?

/shows self out
//comes back in to finish the cocktail
///breaks shit on the way back out

blaxabbath

These recipes, i wish they had a deeper dive into garnish. Lemons are just wrapping up season here (boxes of citrus just on the curbsides all over my neighborhood) so they pretty sweet on the peel. I notice the lemon season because wife bakes with them.

Whiskey drinks and their cherry garnishes are forgiving but gin… come on. What happened to simple recipes and just use the best ingredients? We spend all this time balancing the flavors and textures of poisons and then go, ‘and just to top it off, head down to El Super and toss in an arbitrary portion of the only solid in the recipe.

/ similar with ‘season with salt and pepper as desired’.

Last edited 1 year ago by blaxabbath
BrettFavresColonoscopy

THIS GUY BLAXABBATH I CALL HIM LEADING REPUBLICANS BECAUSE HE’S ANGRY WHENEVER WE’RE TALKING ABOUT FRUITY THINGS

ballsofsteelandfury

I completely agree on the “salt and pepper” thing.

WHY THE FUCK DOES EVERYTHING HAVE TO HAVE PEPPER IN IT!!!!??????

blaxabbath
Rikki-Tikki-Deadly

He wouldn’t be the first president involved with an accidental bombing…

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WCS

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Gumbygirl

Whoopsie! If they are admitting this happened, it’s WAY worse than they are saying. Two injured? Probably 10 dead. At least. Fuck the Russians.

Rikki-Tikki-Deadly

I’m a bit surprised that the vermouth gets lost, considering how much of it the recipe calls for. I’m going to give this one a try, possibly tonight.