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Coup de Roulis cocktail

This rosy coup holds a drink from Cocktails de Paris, a book of cocktail recipes from Paris, published in 1929. (Itโ€™s available to download* for free here.) I was attracted to it because it called for Cherry Rocher, a French liqueur produced by a distillery that was founded in 1704 and is still making it today. Coup de roulis translates to โ€œstrong blow,โ€ referring toโ€ฆ

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Pegu Club

Invented in Burma, at a British club called the Pegu Club, this tropically-tinged cocktail found its way into the Savoy Cocktail Book. Itโ€™s pleasantly tangy and fruit-forward. The ingredients come together in the glass, resulting in a savvy cocktail with gentle citrus notes. One sip and youโ€™ll understand why itโ€™s still a cocktail classic!

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French Manhattan

Someone told me that โ€œcocktailsโ€ is one of the most used search terms right now on the internet. Sometimes I feel like Iโ€™m in the right place at the right time. Other times, I feel as if things might go the other way. Right now, I feel a little bit of both. When my planned book tour was nearing the start date, the news cycleโ€ฆ

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The White Lady cocktail

I sometimes joke that if I ever wrote a book devoted entirely to cocktails, itโ€™d be called โ€œBrown Drinks, Upโ€ because I tend to order whiskey-based cocktails when I go out, and prefer those on the bitter end of the spectrum, to boot. My favorite trend in the cocktail world is to put a little picture of the type of glass next to the cocktailโ€ฆ

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