Squashed Frog #3

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Consider the type of cocktail, the flavors, the need for ice, and the overall aesthetic. Size, shape, and thickness of the glass also play a role in enhancing the drinking experience.

Squashed Frog #31for Drinking Age Adultsauthentic Squashed Frog #3 cocktail recipePT5M

Squashed Frog #3


  • Creme De Menthe 3 cl
  • Pernod Absinthe 3 cl
  • Blackcurrant Cordial - dash(es)
  • Ginger Ale - -


Any Glass of your Choice


Squashed Frog #3

squashed frog #3 is a popular Gin cocktail containing a combinations of Creme De Menthe,Pernod Absinthe,Blackcurrant Cordial,Ginger Ale .Served using Any Glass of your Choice



Squashed Frog #3 Ingredients


Creme De Menthe,Pernod Absinthe,Blackcurrant Cordial,Ginger Ale,


Squashed Frog #3 Recipe


Pour the Pernod and the creme de menthe in together over ice. Pour in the ginger ale to virtually the top of the glass. Gently pour the blackcurrnet cordial down the side of the glass so it sits at the bottom, giving two layers.

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  • Creme De Menthe

    Creme de Menthe is the French for mint cream. It is a sweet mint flavoured alcoholic beverage. Made with Corsican mint leaves, steeped in grain alcohol for several weeks and then filtered and sweetened to create the liqueur.

    There are two variations of creme de menthe, white and green, green Creme de Menthe is coloured green by adding mint leaves to the mint extract, otherwise both are similar in taste and flavour.

    Note: If a bottle of Creme de Menthe is hard to come by, or not in a mood to buy a liqueur, substitute the Creme de Menthe Liqueur with a Creme de Menthe Syrup and Vodka.

  • Pernod Absinthe

    Absinthe is an anise flavoured spirit derived from several plants including grand wormwood. green anise and fennel ,along with other medicinal and culinary herbs. Absinthe is Swiss in origin, and was created in the late 18th Century, it rose to tremendous popularity in the late 19th and early 20th Century among Parisian artists and writers, and became associated with the Bohemian culture and notoriety.

    Earnest Hemmingway, James Joyce, Charles Baudelaire, Toulouse-Lautrec, Pablo Picasso, Vincent Van Gogh, Oscar Wilde, Edgar Allan Poe, Lord Byron to name a few celebrated auteurs and thinkers who were Absinthe aficionados and it's needless to say their association took Absinthe to an unprecedented popularity and notoriety at the same time. It also has the reputation of being a psychoactive drug and hallucinogen, although these claims don't have any scientific evidence, resulting in Absinthe ban in USA and Europe for a long period.

    Absinthes are of two types, distilled and cold mixed. Distilled Absinthe used a technique similar to Gin where the distillation removes the undesired herbal bitter influences while producing the clear spirit with the desired complexity and aroma retained in it.

    Cold mixed Absinthe is produced using the inexpensive process of blending flavouring essencs and artificial colouring in commercial alcohol, just as flavoured Vodka is produced by infusion, it is this Cold Mixed Absinthe that can reach as high as 90% ABV. Beware that due to the lack of Absinthe regulations in many countries. producers falsify advertising claims like, referring to their product as "distilled".

  • Ginger Ale

    Ginger Ale is a non-alcoholic carbonated soft drink with a distinct ginger flavour. it is drank on its own and as a mixer. There are two types of Ginger Ale, the classic Golden developed by Irish Doctor Thomas Joseph Cantrell, and the dry pale style with milder flavours. by John McLaughlin of Canada.

    Traditional Ginger Ale is fermented using ginger, yeast (or ginger bug), water, sugar and other flavourings. Sugar is added to speed up fermentation since Ginger's sugar content is lower than needed for fermentation. In classic Ginger Ale the carbonation is not artificial but comes from the fermentation of sugar by yeast into ethanol and carbon dioxide.

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