New Orleans Sazerac

Why do we clink glasses and toast before drinking?

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Banging of wooden mugs or metal bowls of liquor is a medieval custom of spilling each others drink into the others mug, to make sure that no one tried to spike the other's drink with poison, sailors did it, guests in a tavern would do it too.
The host of a meal would drink from the bottle for the guests first and then all would clink glasses to ensure the host didn't spike their drink. The level of trust was absolutely measly back in the days, but with time the custom became a cheerful custom of showing trust, honesty and a toast to good health.

New Orleans Sazerac1for Drinking Age Adultsauthentic New Orleans Sazerac cocktail recipePT5M

New Orleans Sazerac

Very Strong ABV ( above 30% ), Potent and intense.
*Note that dilution and other factors like type and temperature of ice are not considered in this upfront calculation.

Bourbon Whiskey, Pernod Licorice Liqueur, and Angostura Bitters go well with New Orleans-style dishes like jambalaya

Bourbon, herbal, bittersweet


  • Bourbon Whiskey 0.75 cl
  • Pernod Licorice Liqueur 6 cl
  • Angostura Bitters 1 dash
  • Sugar 1 tsp
  • Lemon Peel 1 twist


Any Glass of your Choice


New Orleans Sazerac
new orleans sazerac is a popular Bourbon cocktail containing a combinations of Bourbon Whiskey,Pernod Licorice Liqueur,Angostura Bitters,Sugar,Lemon Peel .Served using Any Glass of your Choice
Travel back in time with this vintage cocktail recipe. Originally made with French brandy, the Sazerac came of age in the late 1800s at the Sazerac Coffee House in New Orleans. In 1870, the phylloxera epidemic devastated French vineyards, making brandy hard to get. So bartenders switched to rye whiskey, creating the version we know today. Make one the old-fashioned way by muddling a sugar cube with bitters and water to create a syrup. Add just a small splash of liquorice-flavored Pernod. Then coat the inside of the glass with a `wash` of absinthe (Herbsaint) before discarding the rest. This adds subtle herbal complexity. Next, fill the glass with ice and the whiskey mixture. Finish with a spritz of lemon oils from twisted peel. Sip this historic drink slowly and imagine yourself in a 19th century New Orleans saloon sipping cocktails with scoundrels and jazz men.


New Orleans Sazerac Ingredients


Bourbon Whiskey,Pernod Licorice Liqueur,Angostura Bitters,Sugar,Lemon Peel,


New Orleans Sazerac Recipe


Place a sugar cube into an old-fashioned glass, and saturate with angostura bitters. Add ice cubes, pour in liquors, and add a twist of lemon peel. Fill with water, stir well, and serve.

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  • Bourbon Whiskey

    American's don't need to be lectured on Bourbon, but still, let's put it in record like all other spirits. A Bourbon in American spirit is a barrel-aged distilled liquor made primarily from corn. The name might have been derived from the French Bourbon dynasty, or from Bourbon County in Kentucky, or Bourbon Street in New Orleans, both named after the French Dynasty.

    Technically, most whiskey made in America are legally classified as Bourbon, although Bourbon is in spirit a Southern Whiskey with special connection to Kentucky. Note than although Tennessee Whiskey is classified as Bourbon, Tennessee distilleries do not prefer their whiskey to be unique and referred to as Tennessee Whiskey only.

    Distilling came to Kentucky in the late 18rth Century with the Scots, Scot-Irish and other settlers including English, Welsh, German and French, and they brought with them their distilling techniques and ageing processes in charred oak barrels. The charring is what gives the Bourbon the brownish colour and distinctive taste.

    To be a legal Bourbon, a whiskey has to meet the following criteria

        Produced in the United States and Territories (Puerto Rico) and the District of Columbia
        Made from a grain mixture that is at least 51% corn
        Aged in new, charred oak containers
        Distilled to no more than 160 (U.S.) proof (80% alcohol by volume)
        Entered into the container for aging at no more than 125 proof (62.5% alcohol by volume)
        Bottled (like other whiskeys) at 80 proof or more (40% alcohol by volume)


    Tennessee Whiskey meets all the requirements too, but they prefer keeping it distinct.

  • Pernod Licorice Liqueur

    Pernod Anise is an anise flavoured liqueur invented in France in 1920, after Absinthe was banned in 1915. Pernod is made from distillates of star anise and fennel blended with distillates of 14 herbs including chamomile, coriander and veronica.

    Note that Pernod is positioned somewhere in between Anisette and Pastis, since it has Liquorice but it has less Liquorice influence than Pastis.

  • Angostura Bitters

    Angostura Bitters is a concentrated bitters based on gentian, herbs and spices, from the House of Angostura in Trinadad and Tobago. Note that the Angostura Bitters from the House of Angostura do not contain Angostura bark.
    However, Angostura Bitters or Angobitter offered by other brands like Riemerschmid and Hemmeler, contain angostura bark, possibly to justify using the word "Angostura" in their names.

  • Sugar

    Brown Sugar is a sucrose sugar with a distinctive brown colour from the presence of molasses, it is a partially refined or unrefined sugar containing sugar crystals and residual molasses giving it a distinctive taste and flavour of crystallised molasses or toffee. The taste of dark brown sugar is described as a caramel taste with a deep molasses flavour.
    Brown sugar is used in cocktails where a caramel candy or toffee flavour is expected.

    Caster Sugar is finely ground granulated sugar. It is not as fine a powdered confectioners' sugar and has a little grit to it. It is somewhere between confectioners' sugar and granulated sugar, and melts in mouth with a mild spicy feel to the tongue

    Vanilla Sugar is the regular granulated sugar infused with vanilla flavour, by using vanilla pods and seeds to flavour the sugar. A home made alternative is to use vanilla sticks or pods in a jar of sugar and leave it sealed for 4 weeks to allow the vanilla flavour to infuse. Or to use granulated sugar and vanilla extract and blend in a mixer, although this ends up in powdered sugar.

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