A smoothie that tastes like sunset and joy 🌈 Why choose one color when you can have them all? 🍓🥝🍍 Layered, vibrant, happy — just like summer.
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A smoothie that tastes like sunset and joy 🌈 Why choose one color when you can have them all? 🍓🥝🍍 Layered, vibrant, happy — just like summer.
I ACTUALLY GOT A TEQUILA SUNRISE TO WORK #tequila #tequilasunrise #layereddrinks #alcohol #cocktails https://www.instagram.com/p/CCW_bucnIYp/?igshid=3yeysf0x55nk
Try the layered White Russian. It’s a striking departure from the standard or classic version. It really let’s the Vodka and kahlua come through. #layereddrinks #whiterussian #classiccocktails https://www.instagram.com/p/BuuBSz5AWcl/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=kfuliw26y76q
Chocolate Tier Cake
Just like a baker makes a tier cake, this cocktail is layered with a distinct flavor on each floor. You can really see the definition between these layers here because of a technique I perfected; pouring each ingredient down the back of a measuring spoon handle while the spoon rests in the bottom of the glass.
I again had to change the order in which the spirits are poured because I used half and half. I'm sure that the heavy cream that the recipe calls for will work whether floated on top or nestled in the middle because it is fatty and hot brandy will rise over it or lay beneath it. But I wanted to use dark creme de cacao and use the cream layer to help contrast two brown spirits.
See the recipe here.
Angel’s Kiss / Angel’s Delight
I got these lovely cordial glasses and have been using them to make these pretty drinks known as Pousse-Cafe. These drinks are very difficult to pour without having the layers mix, especially with certain liqueurs.That has required me to adjust the positioning of layers because the specific weights of liqueurs are different than those in the original recipe. Getting them out of order causes them to flip their positions and mix. This post is a two-for-one because these drinks are both "Angel" drinks and Pousse-Cafe, which puts them on the same page of the New York Bartender's Guide. First the Angel's Kiss (left). It begins with white creme de cacao. But sloe gin, which follows is lighter than even fatty half-and-half, it has to come third. Sloe gin is a blend of sloeberry liqueur and gin, so it tends to break up by the weight of its ingredients. You'll see it blend down into the cream and up into the brandy in the tall glass. So the recipes that follow take this into account.
See both recipes here.
Pousse-Cafe
This is the penultimate Pousse-Cafe recipe as listed in the New York Bartender's guide circa 1997. You have to be really patient with layering six ingredients, and you need a good Pousse-Cafe glass. Most narrow cordial or dessert wine glasses will work. I was not patient, nor were my ingredients standard to 1997 liqueurs. My triple sec is way stronger than the budget triple sec that has a lot of sugar. As such, it absorbed some of the green creme de menthe above it and became green. Also, my creme de cacao was very close in sweetness to the grenadine and became orange. Now that I think about it, dark creme de cacao would have been better for visuals. But what worked was the creme de menthe, the cream and brandy. And look, there's a clear stripe below the center that is the Luxardo maraschino liqueur refusing to budge. For all this effort, it is a strange drink with no unifying flavor. Pousse-Cafe are all cocktails that have the failing of being all about the look and the skill--a pretty dessert drink--but they don't have the drinker's taste in cocktail in mine. Rather you are supposed to drink coffee and sip off each layer at a time to flavor each sip of coffee. Pousse-Cafe was a thing of the 1890s that re-appeared again in the 1990s as the bar scene came up with outlandish and bad tasting drinks for several years before dying down again until the late 2000s.
See the recipe on my website.
Angel’s Tit
A glance at the name, and you know that this rich cocktail belongs to the series of "breast"drinks like the Slippery Nipple and the Bosom Caresser. Take a look at the drink itself, and you see it is one of those layered drinks known as Pousse Cafe. It is designed to look like a nipple on the bottom with a creamy breast above it. Difficulty with the specific weights of each liquor may determine the exact order you can put the ingredients. The recipe, though is mostly accurate in that it calls for white creme de cacao first because it is heavier, maraschino liqueur next because it is more alcoholic and less sugary, and half-and-half last because it is fatty and floats on top. My maraschino liqueur is clear, so it is indistinguishable from white creme de cacao. I combined the creme de cacao with grenadine to make it visible and to give more of a nipple impression for the bottom of the glass. (Now that I think of it, the maraschino cherry is probably intended to be the tip of the breast, so put it in the bottom of the glass, or do as I did with the grenadine and creme de cacao.)
See the recipe on my website.
It’s the Duck fart Shot. Right here for the tasting! Watch and see how easy it is to layer these with a super easy trick! 🤩 http://www.mantitlement.com/recipes/duck-fart-shot/ . . . . #buzzfeast #feedfeed #cocktails #cocktail #shots #boozy #boozytalk #homebartenders #cocktailoftheday #liquorgram #thirstythursday #mixology #spirit #thirsty #drinkstagram #cocktailhour #happyhour #kahlua #baileys #irishcream #whiskey #whisky #layereddrinks #dranks #alaska #recipevideo #videoinstagram