This weekend we went to Boulibar, a new-ish restaurant in San Francisco’s Ferry Building. On the whole it was expensive and nothing special, but I enjoyed their take on a French 75, which substitutes Cognac for Gin and with the addition of a dash of pomegranate concentrate. They topped the cocktail with Cremant, a sub-region of dry French sparkling wine and (often more affordable) cousin of Champagne.
Cognac not only makes a better spirit base in terms of flavor (gin/lemon French 75s can get a bit tart for my palate), the original French 75 made in the 1920s was conceived of using Cognac. Arnaud’s, the famous New Orleans drinking destination, also uses Cognac in their French 75.
We recreated the cocktail at home using Merlet, which has a vanilla and caramel base but also some intriguing earthy notes. The pomegranate concentrate was made using Pom. The Pom was first put on the stove to reduce for around 10 minutes on low heat and 1:1 Pom to Sugar concentrate was made. Aim for a thin maple syrup consistency.
Cocktail Glass or Champagne flute
I've experimented with infusing a few spirits, but I find it plays incredibly well with…
A few years back we visited Boston's Eastern Standard bar and wrote about our experience.…
Coffee liqueuer, Amaro Nonino, sweet vermouth, aged aquavit, and cognac
Sylvia received a handful of samples when she visited Big Market, an incredible whisky shop…
The Sovereign is a sub-brand of the venerable Hunter Liang. I think they originally set…
the highlight of the last Negroni Week was Wildhawk's Breakfast Negroni cocktail. The star ingredient…
This website uses cookies.