Chimayó Cocktail

The Chimayó cocktail was created by Arturo Jaramillo, owner of the Rancho de Chimayó restaurant in Chimayó, New Mexico in 1965, the Chimayó Cocktail is a tequila and apple cider based drink. Legend has it that Jaramillo was looking for use for the apples that are plentiful in the Chimayó valley when he stumbled onto what would soon become the signature drink of his restaurant.

Chimayó Cocktail
Cocktail
Chimayó Cocktail at Rancho de Chimayó
TypeMixed drink
Primary alcohol by volume
ServedOn the rocks; poured over ice
Standard garnishslice of unpeeled apple
Standard drinkware
Highball glass
Commonly used ingredients
PreparationPour the tequila and unfiltered apple cider into glass over ice. Add the lemon juice and creme de cassis and stir. Garnish and serve.

Preparation and serving

The Chimayó Cocktail is created by mixing 1½ oz tequila with 1 oz unfiltered apple cider, 1/4 oz fresh lemon juice and 1/4 oz creme de cassis over ice. According to Eric Felten author of How’s Your Drink? Cocktails, Culture, and the Art of Drinking the touch of casis...gives the drink a pleasant, pale purplish hue and the sweetness needed to balance the tart lemon taste.

Nomenclature

Cider in this article is used in the North American sense to mean a non-alcoholic apple product; not as used in the rest of the English-speaking world, where cider unequivocally refers to an alcoholic drink. See apple cider.

gollark: > Tell me why exactly you think someone would go to the effort of grafting and setting up a real company, only to con people... because, conning people... gets you money?
gollark: burden of proof™
gollark: Nuclear is very cool and needs to be used more.
gollark: As far as I know it's something like ~~0.5% efficiency~~ (correction: wikipedia says ~5%) and the main advantage of photosynthesis is just that it produces convenient storable chemical energy as output.
gollark: I have a fun diagram too!

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.