Apr 8, 2011
Friday Cocktails: The Sherry Martini
friday-cocktails:-the-sherry-martini,sarah-bray
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Credit: Anna Stockwell
One of the world's most popular cocktails, the Martini has been made and served
in a seeming infinity of ways. Purists attest that it can't be made with anything but
a mix of gin and vermouth, but that hasn't stopped a surge of experimentation on the basic formula. Dry vermouth
imparts a slightly herbal and bitter flavor to the green flavor of gin; while it's a classic counterpoint, it's not the only fortified
wine in a mixologist's back bar. In New York City a few weeks ago, floating wine club
The Noble Rot hosted a sherry party at which Mayur
Subbarao, beverage director of the cocktail bar
Cienfuegos, introduced a Manzanilla sherry where the vermouth usually goes. This style of
fino sherry, from the coastal town of Sanlúcar de Barrameda in Jerez, is light,
briny, and bone dry — a playful substitute, tangy and crisp with a slightly salty flavor and long, nutty finish that entirely transformed my notion of what makes a martini, while still keeping a few flavor references to the classic version.
Taking Subbarao's cocktail as inspiration, we added a
bit more sherry, and swapped his orange twist for an olive, to highlight the salinity of the
Manzanilla. This might not be a purist's Martini, but it's a worthy companion,
a delicious study of its various components.
See the recipe for the Sherry Martini »
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