
we do our best to bring in new art for the walls every 2 months. currently we're featuring the work of a friend named Joe Anthony Brown. the night we hung his work, it was just joe and me and when we were done hanging the work, we were a bit parched.
"what'll it be?"
"dunno, something with gin."
"just something with gin, or something gin forward?"
"gin forward," came the reply.
my immediate decisions were that i wanted it to be a cocktail (spirit,sweetener,water,bitters) and that somehow it would most likely end up being a riff on a martini.
we had recently returned from the states toting not only my first bottle of yellow Chartreuse but also St. Germain elderflower liqueur. they had to be played with.
i quickly threw together 60ml Beefeater / 7.5ml Chartreuse / 7.5ml St. Germain / 2dash Peychaud's. it was ok, indicated possibilities but wasn't quite there.
replaced the beefeater with tanqueray- a step in the right direction. a firm enough step that Joe felt compelled to name this second experiment. "Salmonella" he said. as if i could ever get anyone to order a drink named Salmonella. but there it was. and as a working name it stuck.
at those ratios the drink had all the flavors i was looking for, but not only was the balance off, i also hadn't garnished yet. bumped the tanqueray to 75ml and the gin stepped into its rightful place- garnish? lemon twist.
here's where the experiment got interesting. first i twisted over the drink, the effect on the front was as expected- fragrant lemon essence nose followed by the sequence of gin/elderflower/chartreuse- but the surprise was in the finish: the lemon essence not only elongated the finish but magnified the perception of the sweetness from both liqueurs. i was convinced lemon was what i wanted (i like the way peychaud's and lemon interact), but could not have the drink finishing that sweet. solution: rim the glass with the lemon peel but do not twist over the drink.
and with that, the formula was set.
next day joe came back for the opening of his show, and i presented the reformulated drink to him with a plea to rename it, as i was rather proud of this formula and would like to have someone, anyone, be able to order it without feeling that they would be poisoned.
he tasted, recognized the improvements, and took a minute to mull the sensation.
"... how 'bout The Cheeky Rose?"
The Cheeky Rose (for Joe Anthony Brown)
75ml Tanqueray gin
7.5ml Chartreuse (yellow)
7.5ml St Germain elderflower liqueur
2 dash Peychaud's bitters
lemon peel to rim glass for garnish
add all liquid to mixing glass,
stir,
strain into chilled cocktail glass,
rim glass with lemon peel but do not twist onto drink,
serve.
photograph by Alp Esin













