MAYDAY MARTINI
2 measures vodka
1
measure lemon juice
1
measure cinnamon syrup
“It’s
May 1st. Isn’t that a holiday or something?” a co-worker asked me
today. “It’s May Day,” I replied. “But it beats me what that is.”
When I
came home, I chose to enlightened myself with a little May Day research while drinking
a MAYDAY MARTINI. I found out that May Day is an ancient European celebration
of the beginning of sunlight and fertility after the dark days of winter. You are
suppose to gather, laugh, play, dance around a maypole, and, of course, drink.
During your own personal celebration, you might not want to drink a MAYDAY
MARTINI. Because I also found out that it sucks.
But
that may be my own fault. To make the MAYDAY MARTINI correctly, you need
cinnamon syrup. I went to my fanciest grocery store and they did not carry
cinnamon syrup. I forged ahead anyways. I put vodka, lemon juice, and cinnamon
sticks and ground cinnamon into a shaker. I filled the shaker with ice cubes,
before shaking and straining the
weird-looking liquid into a chilled cocktail glass. The recipe also recommends
a strawberry garnish. Hubby thought the MAYDAY MARTINI was awful and tasted
like medicine. I thought it was borderline awful and actually drank half my
glass, but that was all. The cinnamon flavor was very strong and using the syrup
may have made a huge difference if you can find it.
Mayday is also what pilots say when their
plane is going down. It comes from a French term for “come and help me” and you
are suppose to say it three times in a row when in distress. I therefore think
this cocktail should have been called the MAYDAY, MAYDAY, MAYDAY MARTINI.
Drink Up^
Cocktail Connie
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