Pendennis Club Mint Julep

PENDENNIS CLUB MINT JULEP
By a well-known member of the club, Louisville, Ky.

From The Blue Grass Cook Book (Applewood Books, 2007)

Ingredients

  1. Fine, straight, old Kentucky Bourbon whisky--blended whiskies do not give good results.
  2. An abundant supply of freshly cut sprigs of mint--preferably young shoots--no portion of which has been bruised.
  3. Dry, cracked flint ice. A glass will answer the purpose, but a silver mug is preferable. At this club, silver cups are kept on ice. A syrup of sugar and water is also kept on hand

Steps

  1. The silver cup is first filled with the ice, and then the desired quantity of fine whisky poured in and thoroughly shaken with a spoon or shaker until a heavy frost forms on the mug.
  2. The desired amount of syrup is then poured in and stirred enough to be mixed.
  3. The mint is then carefully placed in the mugs with the stems barely sticking in the ice and the tops projecting 2 inches above the top of the cup.
  4. Straws are then placed in the cup, reaching from the bottom to about 1 inch above the top, and the sooner one sticks one's nose in the mint and begins drinking through the straws the better.
  5. There is no flavor of mint, merely the odor.
  6. Any stinting in quality or quantity materially affects the result.

No-personal-image Karen is an editor at Applewood Books, publishers of America's living past.


Comments

No-personal-image

veganboy: Yes. Sounds so soft and yet so strong in reality. Perhaps I will start calling people Mint Juleps if they are nonthreatening on the outside but tough on the inside.

comment left Nov 18, 2007

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Pinckney: Well, okay. Don't bet heavily while imbibing these things. They are wonderful, but nothing more than several ounces of bourbon or scotch and some sugar with a little water from the ice... What a great drink, though.

comment left Nov 18, 2007

No-personal-image

veganboy: Excellent! Thanks Pinckney. I think I will make some Mint Julep's for tonight's poker game now.

comment left Nov 18, 2007

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Pinckney: I always made it with two parts sugar to one part water... stir to disolve and then boil for a minute or two and pour into container. It keeps for weeks refrigerated. I envy you the experience

comment left Nov 18, 2007

No-personal-image

veganboy: Ah. This reminds me that I'm out of bourbon.

So how does one make the syrup? That's the only part of the recipe that I don't understand.

comment left Nov 17, 2007

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Pinckney: A good recipe for sure. I have seen somewhere - and I am sure this is heretical - that the drink was originally made with scotch whiskey. I have made it that way and it is pretty good. Rye makes a nice Julip, too. Still, It's sort of like mixing vodka with chocolate liquer, serving it in a stemed glass and calling it a Chocolate Martini.

comment left Oct 31, 2007

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Prep time: 20 minutes
Cooking time: 10 minutes
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