Friday, December 18, 2009

Do Svidaniya

December 16, 2009

Svedka vodka
mint
kumquat
kumquat simple syrup
lemon juice

Muddle kumquat and mint, combine ingredients and shake. Strain (not fine-strain) into an ice-filled bucket. Garnish with a sprig of mint.

Do svidaniya (pronounced DUH svee-DAH-nee-yeh) means "until we meet again" in Russian. Why Russian? Because it's a vodka cocktail, of course. Never mind that it's made with Swedish vodka, or that we don't even carry a Russian vodka!

5 comments:

Mr. Manhattan said...

Curious: how did you make the kumquat simple (as a catering gig unexpectedly left me with lots of kumquats)?

Thanks!

Michael

The Bar said...

Hi Michael
Our pastry chef candied a bunch of kumquats and gave us the resulting syrup. I haven't worked for a few days, but I'll get back to you soon... hopefully, you still have some good fruit!

Mr. Manhattan said...

Thanks. I might be able to ferret this out myself knowing it was a side-effect of candying the fruit. I've done it with blood orange slices last year.

BTW: I'm BIG fan of exotic citrus---in fact I've been growing calamondin and chinotto at home. ;->

Michael

The Bar said...

If you've candied fruit before, go for it! The pastry chef told me that they use about a 2:1 sugar-to-water simple syrup. They simmer sliced kumquats on the lowest temp possible until the fruit is a little translucent, then cover and let it cool. Save the fruit in a little syrup, and use the rest in cocktails.

Your citrus sounds great! You don't live in SF do you? Seems like a chilly climate for good citrus.

Cheers!

Mr. Manhattan said...

I live in Oakland and have a very nice south west facing back deck. I started the citrus project last summer. The calamondin gave me one small ripe crop a few weeks ago with more on the way. (Used them in a variation of Le Chapeau, BTW.) The chinotto are ripening more slowly, which is good because I still need to figure out what I'm going to do with them, probably some kind of home made bitter/amaro. I've also got a kaffir limes from which I've made a tincture of the peels. That will undoubtedly become the basis of an aromatic bitters.

Michael