We’ve all seen that little brown bottle on the bottom shelf of the liquor store. You know the one: it has a slightly oversized label that extends over the fat part of the bottle. There is probably a bottle in your home bar right now. You bought it years ago to put in a particular drink that you didn’t like and you haven’t opened it since. So there it sits, in cocktail purgatory. You don’t know why you keep it; it doesn’t know why it has to sit there unused. I’m here to tell you that a functional relationship between you and bitters can be salvaged.
To start, there are two different varieties of bitters: cocktail bitters and digestive bitters. Digestive bitters can be consumed straight and can be served in measurable quantities. Examples of digestive bitters are Campari, Chartreuse, Benedictine, and Absinthe. For the sake of brevity (and perhaps laziness), we will only be covering cocktail bitters, (specifically aromatic bitters) in this post.
Cocktail bitters are made by soaking herbs and spices in alcohol, which extracts and concentrates the flavors of the ingredients. With that in mind, there are a variety of recipes that correspond to today’s market offerings of bitters. The bottle with the oversized label is Angostura bitters, probably the best known and most recognizable type of bitters. It’s also the easiest to find. The Old Fashioned is an example of a cocktail that utilizes Angostura.
Old Fashioned
1 sugar cube
1 tsp water
2 dashes Angostura bitters
2 oz rye or bourbon whiskey
Muddle sugar, water, and bitters together until the sugar is mostly dissolved. Fill glass with ice and then add the whiskey. Garnish with a twist of orange peel and a cherry.
Another example of an aromatic bitter similar to Angostura is Peychaud’s Bitters. Peychaud’s is the vital component in the Sazerac, which I covered in an earlier post about The Monarch. Other examples of aromatic bitters include Fee Brother’s and Scrappy’s.
There are tons of other types of cocktail bitters beside aromatic, from lime to chocolate to apple to lavender. I will make an entirely separate post that deals with exotic bitters.
Do you have a bottle of bitters in your bar? What’s your favorite drink that contains bitters? Comments are always appreciated, and questions can be directed to @rebellionwhisky.
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