7 Cocktails to Make with High-Proof Liquor
Photos by Herminio Torres except Serious Sazerac
High-proof liquor isn’t just for people who want to get super drunk, super fast anymore. With distilleries releasing carefully made small batches of high-proof whiskey, gin, and other spirits, high-proof liquor has become popular with serious sippers in both bars and at home. Cocktail drinkers love it because you can add more ingredients to a cocktail that’s made with high-proof liquor while still keeping it potent, while many of those who prefer their liquor straight feel that the character of the spirit shines through better when it’s less diluted. The names of many such spirits that you’ll find at the liquor store, such as “cask strength,” “barrel strength,” or “barrel proof,” imply exactly what they are—strong drinks that are taken straight from the barrel, with little to no water added.
But high-proof liquor is far from a fad. In fact, high-proof gin is called “navy strength” thanks to its historical roots. Dating back to the eighteenth century, navy strength gin was used by sailors in the British Royal Navy to fight scurvy (primarily by drinking gimlets). The Brits decreed that it needed to be 114 proof (57 percent alcohol by volume) to be truly effective (and, perhaps, for the sailors to get as fucked up as they wanted to be).
Here are seven cocktails that showcase high-proof liquor from my book with Dylan March, Dangerous Cocktails: Adventurous Recipes for Serious Drinkers.
Trust Fund
I call this drink the “Trust Fund” because it’s a high-rolling version of a classic drink called the Boulevardier—which is an old-school term for a wealthy socialite who would stroll down the boulevards of Paris. Drink a few of these before you crash a party full of rich kids and you’ll have the guts to smile at the bouncer as you strut on by.
Ingredients:
1½ ounces cask-strength rye
¾ ounce sweet vermouth
¾ ounce Campari
Orange peel garnish
Directions: Stir with ice until cold and blended. Strain into double rocks glass with ice. Garnish with orange peel.
Serious Sazerac
This serious cocktail is a high-proof version of the Sazerac, the oldest cocktail that’s still served in bars today. Like the ancient spirits it’s comprised of, it was originally medicine—developed at a New Orleans apothecary in the 1840s by none other than Mr. Peychaud himself, Antoine Amedie, who also created the famous bitters. Like the original, this version rinses the glass with absinthe, giving it a bigger aroma and more medicinal properties.
Ingredients:
4 dashes absinthe
1½ ounces cask-strength rye
1½ ounces cognac
½ ounce simple syrup
4 dashes Peychaud’s bitters
2 dashes Angostura bitters
Lemon peel garnish
Directions: Add absinthe to double rocks glass and rotate to rinse glass with absinthe. Stir remaining ingredients with ice until cold and blended. Strain into glass. Garnish with lemon peel.