Make Mine (Wild Turkey) Manhattan
Unlike a good beer or wine, a cocktail is made on the spot and so reflects the skill and personality of the maker in a way not possible with a beverage simply poured from a bottle. A Manhattan is an excellent cocktail, with much more flavor than the standard martini and much more potential to activate the palate in preparation for dinner.
I prefer to use Wild Turkey (in part because I’m amused by the cognitive dissonance of putting such a rustically named bourbon in a drink named after America’s most urbane urban area). Being Anglo-Italian, I also dig the fact that this drink was allegedly popularized by Jenny Churchill (Winston’s mum) and uses sweet Vermouth, an Italian liquor.
My personal recipe is still evolving but is currently 3:1 bourbon to sweet Vermouth, healthy dash of bitters, maraschino cherry (with stem) in a martini glass rimmed with lemon. Like a well-made catsup, a Manhattan demonstrates “amplitude,” a conjunction of flavors that hits many taste sensors and builds exponentially into one perfectly balanced taste. It’s sweet, bitter, and sour, and so it makes the tongue come alive in a way few other drinks are capable of achieving.
Before ordering a Wild Turkey Manhattan in a bar, I make sure the bartender will be using bitters – sometimes they leave out this ingredient, and that is very wrong; better not to have the drink at all than to have it without Angostura’s. I would never insult the bartender by asking if s/he uses maraschino syrup instead of sweet Vermouth, but such abominations are not uncommon. Unlike martinis, which are simply kissed with dry Vermouth, the Manhattan needs a fair quantity of sweet Vermouth to be complete (this is especially true, I believe, if you use the spicier rye rather than bourbon, which would be the preference of purists).
On a more subtle note – and here I do differ from purists – I think it important to stir the drink, rather than shake it. When the bourbon is shaken with ice, it seems to insult the bourbon, resulting in a murkier beverage, less pleasing to the eye and tongue.
David “Nothing If Not All Amerikan” Hammond
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins