The recently discovered Leap-Year Cocktail has become a popular drink at our house.  My wife describes it as a "Sidecar for grownups."  Given our new practice of substituting Punt e Mes for sweet vermouth in as many recipes as possible, the Leap-Year became an obvious target.
We did a side-by-side comparison.  The one with Punt e Mes is on the left, the one with sweet vermouth on the right.  The first obvious difference is the color, the Punt e Mes bringing more red to the party.  The Punt e Mes also supplies the raisiny flavor we first experienced in a Manhattan, providing dimension which is absent with sweet vermouth.
Alas, I've found other Leap-Year recipes using Punt e Mes so I don't get to rename the drink.  Even so, we've come up with a pet name for this variation.  My initial thought was a Leap-and-a-Half.  Punt e mes, you see, means 1.5 in Piedmont Italian.  My wife asked what leap is in Italian: salto according to Google Translate.  Naturally, everything sounds better in Italian.  So, Salto e Mes, it is.
There's still the matter of a garnish.  Harry Craddock's original recipe calls for a lemon twist.  Why not a cherry?  A quick side story...
Cherry Battle: Luxardo vs. Homemade Candied Sour
The harmony between Luxardo cherries and the ingredients of a Manhattan is downright luxuriant so neither of us was expecting to prefer the homemade ones.  The sourness of the latter is nice, though, and it would certainly be worth finding a more appropriate cocktail pairing for them.  My wife feels the sour cherries might be nice before drinking the Manhattan, a garnish aperitif, if you will.  It would seem the consumption of our favorite cocktail is taking on ritualistic aspects at our house.
I believe I'm alright with this.
Winner and Still Champion: Luxardo
Nosing their way into the Manhattan drinking ritual: homemade candied sour cherries
Full disclosure, I wrote the cherry battle chronicle before our Leap-Year experiment.  I am pleased to say we have now found a happy mixological home for the new cherries.  They work beautifully in a Salto e Mes. 
So, our home recipe for a Leap-Year Cocktail, affectionately known as a Salto e Mes:
2 oz. gin
1/2 oz. Grand Marnier
1/2 oz. Punt e Mes
1/4 oz. lemon juice
1 homemade candied sour cherry for garnish
Shake, strain and serve.

 
Thanks for this recipe for the cocktail.
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure!
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