RITE OF SPRING
2 measures vodka
1 measure green Curacao
4 measures lemonade
Lemon rind for garnish
In honor of Earth Day and Springtime — and despite the fact
that it is 42 degrees and snow is in the forecast for tomorrow —I had to try a
RITE OF SPRING cocktail. But to make it, I first needed to find the Green Curacao
called for in the recipe. The book I got it from (750 Cocktails) said that Green Curacao would be hard to find, and it
was right. Though Blue Curacao is in every liquor store in town, the green version
was nowhere to be found.
Luckily, I talked to right person at the grocery store. She
told me that when she was a bartender, she would just put a few drops of yellow
food coloring into Blue Curacao to get Green Curacao, since yellow plus blue
equals green. Those skills you learn in Kindergarten remain useful for life. Since
Curacao is a general term for
orange-flavored liqueur made from dried oranges found on the Caribbean island
of Curacao, all variations have the same, slightly bitter, flavor. There’s orange,
blue, green and clear Curacao, but blue is the one I see most.
The beauty of the
RITE OF SPRING cocktail extends beyond its green look. To make it, just put Green
Curacao and vodka into a pitcher, fill it with ice, then stir briskly to chill.
Strain the mix into a cocktail glass half-filled with ice and top it off with
lemonade and a lemon rind, if so desired. I ended up squeezing some juice from
a fresh lemon in as well.
The RITE OF SPRING cocktail
was cool looking, but plain tasting, since neither vodka nor Curacao is very
flavorful. Still, it’s a rare green cocktail that doesn’t taste like mint or
melon. The RITE OF SPRING is beautiful in its smoothness and simplicity. It’s beautiful
as you stir it to the perfect chill, and I am fond of cocktails that are
stirred, not shaken. In the end, this cocktail is so pretty that it will make
you want to tiptoe through the tulips — with a RITE OF SPRING.
Drink Up^
Cocktail Connie
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