The New Spain cocktail

I fell in love with sherryย the first time I went to Spain, but itโs something that slips my mind when Iโm looking for something in the drink department. And Sherry, by Talia Baiocchi hoped to change that for me, and for lots of other people with her book, which has the best subtitle ever: โThe wine worldโs best-kept secret.โ At that sums up a lot about how people see sherry.
People know about sherry, but tend to think of it as something you cook with, from a jug-like bottle, from California or elsewhere. And while there are sweet and dry sherries, in general, as Talia notes, โSherries are some of the driest wines in the world.โ Sherry is not only the wine worldโs best-kept secret, but itโs one of the worldโs best wines.
Itโs hard to understand the appeal of sherry until you go to Spain, where itโs consumed with tapas at bars. I love sherry and itโs not something thatโs common to find in France nor haveย I ever seen it served. Interestingly, the French drink port. But as a before-dinner drink, rather than after. Sherry vinegar is popular and widely available (and great for salads), although finding sherry isnโt easy. So Iโd like to raise a glass (or two) to making sherry more popular worldwide.
Sherry is a fortified wine, made from blending older sherries with newer ones. Unlike other wines, sherry isย aged in casks in bodegas, which are above-ground. A layer of flor (yeast) naturally grows on the surface, which contributes flavors and nuances to almost allย kinds of sherries.ย In order to be called sherry, it mustย be from Spain. I did a little reading and sherries made elsewhere, includingย California, canโt legally be exported to Europe, as the name is protected.
Sherry makes a seductiveย addition to cocktails because it adds an umami-like depth of flavor to them. The earthy,ย oaky notesย goes really well with spirits, such as whiskey, bourbon, mezcal, and even gin.
But I also like to drink sherry as it is, a custom thatโs particularly wonderful to do if you get a chance to visit Spain, where itโs often served right from the casks. A long cylindrical โscooperโย is dipped into the sherry cask and the venenciador swings it up and pours it into a glass, sometimes without even looking!
Note that they make look easier than it is. I tried to swipe a glass of sherry from a cask at my hostโs place in Spain when they werenโt around and made a mess all over the outside of the barrel trying to pour the sherry into my glass with that little cylinder. I canโt imagine doing it from any sort of distance.
In Sherry, Talia offers up this recipe for theย New Spain, which may very well become my cocktail for the summer. The Rosemary Gimlet was my cocktail for the winter, mostly because Romain kept insisting that I make them again and again. But I think itโs time to shake things up a little around here.
Talia gave me a super tip for making big, chunky ice cubes, the sort of fancy kind that donโt melt fast in your drink, and water it down. (Although I tend to drink fast, faster than ice melts.) You can buy ice cube trays to make those large cubes, but you can also freeze water in a loaf pan then remove it from the pan, envelop it in a clean kitchen towel, and whack it with a rolling pin. Open the towel and youโll have big chunks of ice to use in your cocktails. Nifty, huh? She did say scoring it first would make them break into cubes, but I didnโt mind the iceberg-like floaters in my New Spain cocktails.
I recently got a copy of Taliaโs newest book, Spritz: Italyโs Most Iconic Aperitivo, written with co-author Leslie Pariseau (Talia is also the editor for Punch, an award-winning website about cocktails and spirits that I recently wrote an article for), and I was wowed by a few of the spritzโs that I sampled from it. Like sherry, sheโs on a mission to give the spritz a little more pr, too.
Iโll have to admit that Iโm a bad blogger, and not in danger of winning any awards, because I didnโt get a nice shot of the cocktail glasses when they were frosty cold, and full of New Spains. Why not? Because we were too busy drinking them. However I guarantee that if you mix yourself up a few, youโll have a hard time sitting back and admiring them, too.
The New Spain
- One 1/2-inch (1cm) thick slice of fresh ginger, peeled
- 1/2 ounce agave nectar
- 3/4 ounce fresh squeezed lime juice
- 2 ounces dry sherry
- 1 ounce best-quality mezcal, such as Del Maguey Vida
- One slice of lime and nutmeg, for garnish
- Put the ginger, agave nectar, and lime juice in a cocktail shaker and muddle them together.
- Add the sherry and mezcal and fill the shaker halfway with ice. Shake for 20 seconds.
- Strain into an old-fashioned or on-the-rocks glass. Add a wheel of lime and grate a small dusting of nutmeg over the top.
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