How To Make the Best Old Fashioned

November
13
2024

How to make the best Old-Fashioned cocktail? What is the correct way to make an Old-Fashioned? Why does it matter? For someone who has been in the biz for over 22 years (behind the stick for much of that time), certified in advanced mixology, runs his own cocktail business, published cocktail author, and oversaw the cocktail program at many high-end cocktail bars and establishments, I think I have the qualifications.

Not only will I discuss the cocktail making, but also the subtle nuances that goes into perfecting this classic cocktail, like ice, sugar, whiskey, bitters, glassware, garnishments, etc… All too often I see and taste Old-Fashioneds that are prepared, mixed, and served incorrectly. Sure, there are many variations of the cocktail and depends on how you and your guests want it, but, for the most part (other than choice of whiskey), most consumers will drink it the way you serve it and not experience its potential.

After you have read through this discussion, I hope that you have the ability and confidence to mix a well-balanced, visually appealing, and tasty Old-Fashioned for yourself and guests from your home bar. It will also give you the knowledge to order confidently from your favorite, local watering hole so you receive the cocktail the way you like it. I encourage you to experiment with different types of whiskey and other brown spirits and ice/ice molds to find YOUR best Old-Fashioned.

A little history behind the cocktail

The Old-Fashioned is considered the oldest American cocktail. The word cocktail wasn’t even in the vernacular until 1806, which at the time described a drink of spirits, sugar, water, and bitters. By the late 1800s, bartenders were evolving. Credit is given to a bartender at the Pendennis Club in Kentucky for creating the official Old-Fashioned in 1880, which he introduced to New York at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel bar. During Prohibition, bartenders muddled orange and cherry into the cocktail, reportedly to mask the poor-quality alcohol’s harsh taste.

Therefore, the Old-Fashioned is considered the grandfather of all cocktails. Simple yet complex, subtle yet bold, it’s easy to see why the classic three-ingredient elixir remains so revered by bartenders and cocktail connoisseurs. It is so admired by bartenders that it is often the first cocktail they diligently master. What appears to be a simple drink of whiskey, sugar, and bitters is actually a complex, art form dependent on the right ingredients and the method of mixing them.

Ordering an Old-Fashioned at a bar will usually earn you an approving nod (except in those cases where barkeeps have no idea where to start), but it’s also the perfect cocktail to master at home. Though it’s relatively easy to concoct, it’s just as easy to mess it up.

Dark and boozy, a little sweet and a little bitter. In cocktail lore, is there another whiskey drink more historic and satisfying than the Old-Fashioned? The cocktail defies nostalgic title, and while it certainly went through less-than-ideal incarnations over the years. Luckily, the Old-Fashioned is one of the few cocktails that has never gone out of style and has been embraced by more women today than it ever has. If done right, whiskey cocktails have become more approachable for women.

The Old Fashioned is a cocktail of evolution. What we do know is that by the time cocktail books began appearing in the late 19th century, what we would call an Old-Fashioned today was often under the title of “Whiskey Cocktail”.

Reach for a quality whiskey

An Old Fashioned is essentially a vehicle for enjoying your favorite whiskey, so choose wisely. No need to break the bank but choose at least a midrange or call whiskey. Tradition calls for rye whiskey, but many people prefer bourbon. There is a plethora of different styled bourbons and whiskeys, like wheated bourbons, four-grain bourbons, single barrel bourbons, small batch bourbons, Irish whiskey, scotch whisky on the market today so give them a sip to find your style. There is also the age of the whiskey and the vessel it was aged in to consider (see below). I have served brandy or Cognac Old-Fashioneds over the years but is rare. It really comes down to individual preference.

Your choice of whiskey is the most important ingredient. it dictates the flavor profile and how well it mixes with the other flavors. A good rule of thumb is that heavier whiskeys, like bourbon, will make the cocktail taste a little on the sweeter side, while lighter whiskeys, like rye, will be more refreshing, but drier, and taste slightly spicy. I will list my favorite whiskey and bourbon to use for my Old-Fashioned recipe at the end of this post.

The only other ingredients the cocktail requires are bitters and sugar that work together to enhance the spirit with a subtle sweetness. Over the years, the cocktail has evolved to sometimes include sweet vermouth, orange slice, cherry, and club soda, but they are not traditional. Never add sweet vermouth – that is intended for a Manhattan.

Bourbon is my preference

The relatively heavy body of bourbon, a corn-based spirit, creates structure within the cocktail, and its natural sweetness helps counterbalance the more astringent elements of bitters. As bourbon is aged in charred new oak barrels, it tends to take on notes of vanilla and caramel, which are brought out by the addition of sugar.  They also help to reduce the perceived heat of the alcohol, in turn allowing the spirit’s nuances to come through more cleanly. There is a trend of smoked Old-Fashioneds by using a smoker kit with different flavored wood, like peach, cherry, and apple and a torch.

Don’t throw in a sugar packet

Sugar is one of the three necessary ingredients of the cocktail, so it deserves some thought. The classic way to make an Old-Fashioned start with placing a sugar cube at the bottom of the glass, adding a few dashes of aromatic bitters and a splash of water and muddling with muddler until it’s completely dissolved (like a paste). Most people use simple syrup for ease and convenience, which is fine, but the sugar cube will help break it down and make it easier to dissolve and integrate into the drink.

The sugar does make a difference. You don’t want to hide ingredients – you want everything to be present. With the Old Fashioned, it depends on what you’re using as your sugar source and how much. If you use a 1:1 (water-sugar) simple syrup, use a younger bourbon between 80 to 90 proof for lighter sugar content. If we are at 91-plus proof whiskey that has some age to it, use a thicker/heavier syrup such as 2:1 demerara sugar.

Be aware of bitters

An Old-Fashioned calls for 2-3 dashes of bitters—no more, no less—that are added to the sugar cube or simple syrup. While the amount seems small, having too many or too few dashes can dramatically change the taste of the drink. The type and quality of bitters matters too. Angostura bitters is the classic and always an excellent choice, but I prefer orange bitters for mine. I have also experimented using a variety of other bitters, like chocolate, Peychaud’s, grapefruit, and lavender.

Don’t add soda water

Besides sugar, whiskey and bitters, any other ingredients are not in an Old-Fashioned. Although orange slices, cherries and soda water are commonly seen in Old Fashioneds, this is not correct. As mentioned earlier, many believe these ingredients (not soda water) were added during Prohibition to help cover up the sting of moonshine or whiskey. The use of soda water today by bartenders is a modern thing. Use a splash of regular water to help dissolve the sugar cube instead.

Don’t muddle cherries

If you prefer your Old-Fashioned with a cherry, like a brandied or Luxardo, just make sure not to muddle it into the cocktail. This cocktail does not want a punch of cherry flavor or floating fruit. Instead, add it later as a garnish on a pick with an orange peel or just dropped in. Choose one Luxardo cherry over the bright neon maraschino cherry, which is sweet and full of chemicals. Some Old-Fashioned enthusiasts like a Luxardo cherry syrup to be added to mix.

Add an orange peel for aromatics and citrus

Of all the additions to the Old Fashioned over the years, the orange peel is the most appropriate. I personally garnish a picked orange peel, not twist (you don’t want pith). Don’t muddle or add an orange quarter or slice. Use a vegetable peeler to peel off a thin layer. Express the oil of an orange twist over the glass before picked and dropped in.

Use a large ice cube

Back in the 1800s, ice cubes were typically two inches on each side, unlike the small versions today that melt quickly. If you want to be a purist (or at the least impress your guests), keep some large square or cylinder cube molds in the freezer for that unexpected guest. The cocktail will remain chilled for a while without diluting too quickly. If you don’t have access to one large cube, then opt for 2-3 larger sized ice cubes. Be careful not to over-dilute. You should never fill the glass to the top with ice. Avoid small cubes and crushed ice.

Don’t shake it

Old Fashioneds are to be stirred, never shaken. Use a bar spoon to steadily stir the cocktail for a maximum of 30 seconds—you want to chill it without melting the ice cube down too much. Find a good rhythm of stirring several rotations and then firmly stopping with the spoon in the glass every ten or so rotations. You want to smoothly incorporate the sugar paste without agitating the cocktail too much. As you stir, press the back of the spoon firmly against the mixing glass. You don’t want to slosh the drink around as that can be detrimental to the smooth, silky texture that is the hallmark of a great Old-Fashioned.

Old Fashioned glass

Use an Old-Fashioned glass (pictured)

That’s what they were made for after all. Even you don’t have them, a large rocks glass versus a small rocks glass will suffice. A small rocks glass is preferable for a spirit ‘neat’ or ‘on the rocks’. Don’t serve an Old-Fashioned in any other type of glass.

Proper Old-Fashioned Cocktail By Michael

  • 1 sugar cube preferred or 1/2 oz demerara simple syrup
  • 2-3 dashes orange bitters (Angostura bitters is classic)
  • 1 barspoon of water to help dissolve
  • 2 oz bourbon, such as Basil Hayden’s or Horse Soldier, or rye whiskey
  • 1 large ice cube (square or cylinder). I prefer cylinder.
  • Garnish: orange peel and Luxardo cherry picked (see cover photo)

For bourbons, I prefer Buffalo Trace, Bulleit, Angel’s Envy, Basil Hayden’s, Horse Soldier, and Four Roses. For ryes, I recommend EH Taylor and Bulleit. For whiskey, try Crown Royal or Sour Mash Jack Daniels Single Barrel (sweeter).

Prep

  1. Add the sugar cube to the bottom of an Old-Fashioned glass. Add 2-3 dashes of orange bitters to the cube. Muddle using a muddler into a paste. Add barspoon of water and stir until the sugar is nearly dissolved.
  2. Add large ice cube or a few large pieces of ice. Add whiskey/bourbon and stir until well-chilled. Stir clockwise and counterclockwise alternating every 10 seconds.
  3. Express the oil of an orange twist over the glass, pick the peel with a Luxardo cherry, then drop into the glass to garnish.

Cheers,

Michael

Seasonal Spotlight: 5 Cocktails to Sip this Winter

Spiced Poached Pear Cocktail
November
11
2024

Thank you to all those who responded to the poll question on my Instagram story last week. The majority of you are interested in reading more posts about cocktails with recipes so here you go. In this post, I offer you a selection of handcrafted winter cocktails that I absolutely love. Some of them require some time and work but are so worth it. They are perfect to concoct for your holiday parties and get-togethers this fall and winter. I identified each cocktail for its base spirit and winter ingredients so if you like tequila, dark rum, whiskey, vodka, or gin and specialty syrups, there is definitely something for you!

I highly recommend batching them ahead of time, so you don’t have to worry about slaving in the kitchen while entertaining and compromising time with your guests. Each recipe is for one cocktail so simply multiply the ingredients by number of people you are serving. For homemade syrup recipes, you should have enough for more than one cocktail. I always recommend using fresh ingredients rather than store-bought unless you don’t have the time or don’t any other choice.

This spiced Winter Margarita will warm you up from the inside out, offering a touch of sweet, tart, spicy, and oaky flavor. Reposado tequila offers you a deeper, rich flavor profile for this winter cocktail due to its aging in oak and hints of vanilla and toast.

Winter Margarita

Winter Margarita (tequila)

  • 2 oz Reposado tequila, such as Patron, Milagro, or Teremana
  • 1 tsp fresh honey syrup
  • ½ oz fresh lime juice
  • 1 oz blood orange juice
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • pinch cinnamon
  • optional – rim with sugar, salt, cinnamon, or cayenne pepper or combo of several of these

Prep:

Rub a lime wedge along the rim of chilled coupe glass or large rocks glass, coat the edges, and set aside. Fill a cocktail shaker or mixing glass with ice and add tequila, honey, lime juice, blood orange juice, vanilla, and a pinch of cinnamon. Shake and strain into coupe glass filled with ice. Be careful not to disturb rim. Garnish with a blood orange slice and cinnamon stick, if desired.

Apple Fizz

Apple Fizz (Irish whiskey)

  • 1 ½ oz Double Barrel Irish Whiskey, such as Glendalough (if you can’t find double whiskey, just use another aged Irish whiskey)
  • ½ oz pear liqueur, such as Mathilde, 99 Pears, or St. George
  • ½ oz fresh lemon juice
  • ½ oz fresh honey syrup (preferable) or store bought
  • hard apple cider to top
  • garnish apple slices & grated cinnamon

Prep:

Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker, except cider. Shake well and strain into a highball glass with ice. Add the hard apple cider and garnish with apple and cinnamon.

Spiced Poached Pear (vodka)

A garnish of fresh rosemary adds an herbal note to this yummy pear cocktail, which balances the warm, spicy sweetness flavor profile. Cover photo.

  • 1 ½ oz vodka, such as Ketel One, McKenzie NY vodka, or Absolut
  • 1 oz Lillet Blanc (hard to find, if not available, use a light Sauvignon Blanc wine)
  • 2-3 oz Asian pear syrup* depending on sweetness level
  • 1 oz lemon juice
  • 2 sprigs fresh rosemary

Prep:

In cocktail shaker filled with ice, combine vodka, Lillet or Sauv Blanc, lemon juice and pear syrup. Shake vigorously and strain into up glass. Twist the rosemary sprigs a few times to release the oils and garnish.

*For the Spiced Pear Syrup:

  • 2 Asian pears chopped into 1-inch pieces (no need to peel)
  • 1 cup water
  • ½ cup Sauvignon Blanc
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 1 pod star anise
  • 1 strip lemon zest (3-inch), peeled with a vegetable peeler

Prep:

In a small saucepan combine water, wine, sugar, cinnamon, star anise and lemon zest. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat then reduce to a simmer. Add the chopped pears and cook until pears are soft, and the liquid becomes syrupy, about 30 minutes. Remove from heat and strain through a fine mesh sieve into a clean glass jar. Don’t press the pears or the syrup will become cloudy. Discard the solids and chill syrup until ready to use.

Snowbird (dark rum)

If you’re a snowbird and head down south for the winter and like your tiki drinks, this tropical flavored cocktail should satisfy your palate.

  • 1 ½ oz dark rum, such as Plantation Original Dark Rum or Myers
  • ½ oz Fernet-Branca liqueur
  • ½ oz apricot liqueur
  • ¾ oz fresh lime juice
  • ½ oz orange juice
  • ½ oz pineapple juice
  • ¾ oz simple syrup
  • 4 dashes Angostura bitters
  • garnish quarter of orange wheel and brandied cherry (optional)

Prep:

Add all ingredients into a shaker with ice and shake until well-chilled. Strain into a collins glass, tiki or copper mule mug over ice. Garnish with a quarter orange wheel and a brandied cherry.

Winter Gin & Tonic

Winter Gin & Tonic

The air is cold and crisp, but why not go with a classic, elegant, and always relevant G & T. This cocktail has a little winter spice with a balance of citrus, acidity, and warmth to round it out on your palate.

  • 1 ½ oz gin, like Bluecoat or 1911 Established New York gin
  • ¾ oz winter spice simple syrup*
  • ½ oz freshly squeezed orange juice
  • ½ oz pomegranate juice (optional)
  • fill with high quality tonic water, like Fever Tree
  • garnish orange slices, allspices, whole cloves, and sage leaves (optional)

Prep:

Add all ingredients into a mixing glass with half ice and stir well with barspoon until well-chilled and combined. Strain into a red wine glass using a julep strainer over ice. Garnish with oranges, allspices, whole cloves, and sage leaves (optional)

*For the Winter Spiced Simple Syrup:

  • 1 cup of water
  • 1 cup of sugar
  • 1 tsp of whole allspice
  • 1 tsp of whole cloves
  • 2 cinnamon sticks

Add all ingredients to a medium saucepan and simmer mixture until sugar is dissolved. Cool mixture then strain into a clean, clear bottle until use. Keep in fridge for a couple of months.

I would love your feedback on this post as well as all other posts, so feel free to comment here or social media. Enjoy!

Cheers,

Michael XOXO

5 Drinks Bartenders Love to Make

Array of Negroni Cocktails
August
3
2024

(Cover Photo courtesy of Michael Nagy)

In cocktail bars, bartenders are creating their own spin on classic cocktails. They want to keep them fresh and exciting. To fight the monotony and repetition of making drinks the same way year after year, bartenders are designing drinks using seasonal ingredients and flavors and adding their own personal twists to them. Here are some popular drinks that bartenders love to mix up and how to order them. 

Cosmopolitan

1) Cosmopolitan

A Cosmo is a martini-type cocktail that is served ‘up’ and shaken into a chilled cocktail glass or coupe. The base ingredients call for vodka/citrus vodka, orange liqueur, fresh lime juice, and cranberry juice cocktail. When it is done properly with the correct ratio of spirit, liqueur, modifier, and juice, it is a well balanced cocktail with a pink hue. To change it up, use premium or different flavored vodka, switch out the cranberry juice for a natural unsweetened cranberry juice to reduce sweetness, or use different fresh juices, like orange, grapefruit, or pomegranate. Garnish with different colorful fruit. Order  “Belvedere Cosmo, light cranberry”.

Old Fashioned

2) Old-Fashioned

An Old-Fashioned is always well stirred ‘on the rocks’. Bartenders like its versatility, which allows for much variation and creativity. It is a simple drink with minimal ingredients, but mixing one properly is paramount. With being whiskey based and spirit forward, there are many high-end whiskey options to choose from, whether it be bourbon, rye, Irish, or local whiskey. Experiment with different aromatic bitters, like chocolate, orange, or Angostura, to go along with the muddled orange, sugar cube, and Luxardo cherry garnish. Try it with a sphere or large ice cube. To make it a little sweeter, drop in a little Luxardo cherry juice. Smoked Old-Fashioned anyone? Order “Jefferson’s Ocean Bourbon Old-Fashioned”.

Sazerac

3) Sazerac

A Sazerac is a traditional Cognac-based cocktail that is served ‘up’ and stirred. Today, it is usually made with rye whiskey. There are many local rye whiskies available to suggest. Using equal parts of both cognac, rye whiskey, or brandy can produce a new twist. To make it correctly, use an absinthe rinse, sugar cube, Peychaud’s bitters, and lemon twist. Even though Peychaud’s bitters are standard, try using other aromatic bitters and different ‘up’ glassware. Bartenders love the uniqueness of its flavor and presentation. Order “Sazerac with Bulleit Rye”.

4) Negroni

Negroni (cover photo) is the signature cocktail of Italy.  It only contains three ingredients of gin, Campari, and sweet vermouth (White Negroni uses dry vermouth in place of sweet vermouth) with an orange peel served ‘up’ or ‘on the rocks’. There are many fun variations of the drink by using different gins, barrel-aged gin, addition of spices, like cardamom, and flaming the orange peel. A cool new trend is to infuse the Campari with coffee. You can swap out the sweet vermouth for dry vermouth to create a White Negroni or the gin for bourbon, which is called a Boulevardier. Order “Negroni on the rocks”.

Margarita

5) Margarita

Margarita is one of the most popular drinks in the world. It can be served ‘up’, ‘on the rocks’, or frozen with or without salt/sugar. A great Margarita is perfectly balanced between sweet and sour. Using fresh lemon sour to go along with blanco tequila, triple sec, fresh lime juice, and a lime garnish is the key. Have fun with the garnish by using different fruits and edible flowers. There are many different tequilas available, including gold, aged tequila, or flavored tequila. Some bartenders have experimented by infusing tequila with chili peppers or muddling jalapenos to make it spicy. Adding another liqueur or juice, or using different flavored salts, like chipotle can transform it. Order “Casamigos Margarita on the rocks with salt”.

Cheers,

Michael

Wine Glass

DON’T MISS A DROP

Get notified when new articles are poured

We don’t spam!