Thanks to eBay, Amazon, AbeBooks, and COAS - my local used
bookstore, I have a collection of 90+ books related to Drink, ranging from Willie
Schmidts' 1892 treatise The Flowing Bowl
to recent works such as To Have And Have
Another by Phillip Greene.
Here in southern New Mexico, drinking is largely Bud, in its
various forms, and margaritas. Hardly more interesting, probably less so, than
in the 60's when I frequented the Kentucky Club and Freds' Rainbow Bar in
Juarez, Mexico. At least the drinks were cheap, the Mexican beer good, and the
50 cent sandwiches at Freds' took care of the munchies. The pursuit of engaging
bar books, and mixing mostly forgotten drinks from the past, is a nice way to
add something special to an ordinary day and an opportunity to share thoughts,
and drinks with you.
Of special interest, is the section labeled “Regiment-Mischungen”
(Regimental Mixtures). Comprised of 23 pages listing regimental “mixtures,” there
are 181 drinks alone for infantry regiments.
Every possible organization seems to be mentioned. Do you fancy yourself
in a tchapka sipping the traditional drink of the 3rd Prussian Uhlans,
or have just finished your model railroad layout and want to celebrate your
success with the drink the Eisenbahner (railway men) toasted with? Lexikon
Der Getranke has the answer.
While, in my opinion, a great book, there are a couple of
burrs under the saddle. The units of measure can be odd, and some of the
ingredients have disappeared or are difficult to obtain.
The measures in this book may drive you to drink, or perhaps
to a modern English cocktail book that will not have you grinding your teeth.
The recipes vary from the simple ratio measurements still used today, to the
more esoteric measures of an era long past.
Like many vintage tomes dedicated to mixology, German books seem to be
notoriously poor in defining the unit volume of a measure. When asked to add a
Likörglas, or Portweinglas, how much liquor do you use? Today, you cannot even get
oenophiles to agree on the size, or shape, of a port glass.
Apparently, these measures were once more precise than
simply grabbing a small, or not so small, glass. In the Handbuch
Der Krankenphlege (Handbook for the Sickroom), 1904, and other references, I have found some
measures used in cocktail books of the day, along with their corresponding
volumes. The measures below may be helpful to those of us easily confused and
confounded.
Vintage
German-English Measurement Equivalents
|
||||
Measure
|
Volume
|
Measure
|
Volume
|
|
Likörglas
(liqueur glass)
|
30ml
|
Limonadenglas (Lemonade glass)
|
220ml
|
|
Portweinglas
(Port wine glass)
|
40ml
|
Flasche
(bottle or flask)
|
30ml – 1 L.
Content dependent
|
|
Moccatasse (Demitasse cup)
|
50ml
|
schuß
|
a splash, or dash
|
|
Weinglas
(Wine glass)
|
125ml
|
Essloeffel or Eβlöffel or EL
|
15ml
(about 1 level Tbsp)
|
|
mittlere
Tasse (Medium cup)
|
150ml
|
Kinderlöffel
(Childs spoon)
|
10ml
|
|
gewöhnliche
Tasse
(Ordinary cup)
|
200ml
|
Teelöffel or Teeloeffel
or Teel. or T
|
5ml
(about 1 level tsp)
|
|
Wasserglas
(Water glass)
|
0.4l
|
Messerspitze
(Knife tip)
|
1/8 tsp or 1 pinch
|
|
Portionstasse (Serving cup)
|
0.3l
|
Many, if not all, of the liquors and other ingredients are
still available, or have modern analogs, that will make a passable drink. The problem lies in figuring out what the odd
ingredient is so that you can make an appropriate substitute. Fortunately, we
have the internet and appreciate the fact that all, that is truthful and worth
knowing, is there.
Need to top a glass with Sauerbrunn? Easy. Sauerbrunn is a naturally carbonated mineral
water from the Tyrol. Do you live
somewhere, as I do, where choice of mineral water is bottled tap water or
Perrier & S. Pelligrino? Quietly
slip in your favorite carbonated mineral water.
The bubbles don’t care how they got there and you can choose the one most
agreeable to your palate.
Stuck on Stoughton’s?
Those bitters have been off the market since Hector was a pup. San Francisco Bitters makes something that is
alledgely close. There are all sorts of
recipes for Stoughton’s out there purporting to be correct, some in books of
the time, though nobody living is old enough to remember the original. The quick solution is to simply grab your
Angostura or Peychaud’s. You will have
just brought a dusty antique to the 21st century. These suggestions are heresy to some cocktail
cognecenti but, as a layman of potable potions and a back-sliding Baptist, I have
done far worse.
Having made it this far, it would be abject cruelty to close
this blog without offering a tasty drink. Being summer, a "cooler"
seems most appropriate. From Lexikon,
the Luftshiff, or Airship.
Luftshiff
In a lemonade (8oz.) glass, add some fresh peppermint
leaves, the juice of 1/4 lemon, and 1
1/2 oz. Rye whiskey. Add ice to half full and fill with ginger ale. Garnish with fruit and peppermint leaves. Note: I find the drink improved if,
after adding lemon and rye, you muddle the mint leaves. The first drink goes
down quickly, plan on a second. Sehr gut!
No comments:
Post a Comment