A cocktail is a style of mixed drink. Originally
a mixture of distilled spirits, sugar, water, and bitters, the word has
gradually come to mean almost any mixed drink containing alcohol.
A cocktail today usually contains one or more
types of liquor and one or more mixers, such as bitters, fruit juice,
fruit, soda, ice, sugar, honey, milk, cream, or herbs.
2010s take on the history of cocktails through to cocktails
today...
The first "cocktail party" ever thrown
was allegedly by Mrs. Julius S. Walsh Jr. of St. Louis, Missouri, in May
1917. Mrs. Walsh invited 50 guests to her mansion at noon on a Sunday.
The party lasted one hour, until lunch was served at 1pm.
In 1862 the first publication of a bartenders'
guide which included cocktail recipes was: how to Mix Drinks; or, The
Bon Vivant's Companion, by "Professor" Jerry Thomas. In addition
to listings of recipes for Punches, Sours, Slings, Cobblers, Shrubs, Toddies,
Flips, and a variety of other types of mixed drinks were 10 recipes for
drinks referred to as "Cocktails". A key ingredient which differentiated
"cocktails" from other drinks in this compendium was the use
of bitters as an ingredient, although it is not used in many modern cocktail
recipes.
The sale of alcoholic beverages was illegal in
the U.S during Prohibition (1920–1933), when cocktails were still
consumed illegally in establishments known as speakeasies…There
was a shift from whiskey to gin, which doesn't require aging and is therefore
easier to produce illicitly.
Cocktails Today
The current trend for many cocktail bars
is to have a very contemporary and unique cocktail list, often with reference
to cocktails from the past. Diversity is important with new takes on old
cocktails or unique creations, cocktails have taken on many new forms.
Most cocktail bartenders can make a range of traditional or standard cocktails
and are pushing the boundaries of drink consumption to new heights every
season using molecular mixology on seasonally updated cocktail lists in
niche cocktail bars around the world.
Flair bartending came and went from as is it was
regarded as overly showy and time wasting and tended to leave you at the
bar waiting for a drink. Though for special bars and events flair bartenders
still have their place due to their ability to perform high paced engaging
acts using mostly general bar equipment whilst making drinks with fire
and other amazing elements. Sweet, creamy or blended cocktails have also
fallen out of fashion in the top notch cocktail bars but remain a favourite
to cocktail novices and resort bars.
Cocktails can be found almost any where from drinks
at home with friends to large corporate events with Cosmopolitans on arrival!
Surely its time that you tried something different to an ice cold beer
or glass of sauvignon blanc, grab a bottle of vodka or 2, some limes and
juices and see what you come up with.
Where to start?
An old cocktail adage is: 1 part sour, 2 parts sweet, 3 parts strong and
4 parts weak. So if you relate that to a cosmopolitan:
1 Part sour – Lime Juice
2 parts sweet – Cointreau or triple sec
3 parts strong – Vodka
4 parts weak – Cranberry Juice
Use this as a guide to making your own drinks,
research recipes and go out and taste traditional and contemporary cocktails.
Each one you drink will educate your palate giving you aspirations to
be a true cocktail connoisseur and to one day have an Old Fashioned in
a bar once frequented by Ernest Hemingway whilst he travel the world in
search of inspiration.

Click here for
traditional, current standard and contemporary cocktail recipes.
The following excerpt from Wikipedia goes over
some traditional suggestions for making cocktails that still relate to
some modern cocktails today.
From Wikipedia
The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks is a classic
cocktail book by David A. Embury, first published in 1948. The book is
noteworthy for its witty, highly opinionated and conversational tone,
as well as its categorization of cocktails into two main types: aromatic
and sour; its categorization of ingredients into three categories: the
base, modifying agents, and special flavorings and coloring agents; and
its 1:2:8 ratio (1 part sweet, 2 parts sour, 8 parts base) for sour type
cocktails.
Embury basic principles for fashioning a quality
cocktail:
• It should be made from good-quality, high-proof liquors.
• It should whet rather than dull the appetite. Thus, it should
never be sweet or syrupy, or contain too much fruit juice, egg or cream.
• It should be dry, with sufficient alcoholic flavor, yet smooth
and pleasing to the palate.
• It should be pleasing to the eye.
• It should be well-iced.
Embury stresses frequently that the drink will
never be any better than the quality of the cheapest ingredient in it,
and hence he proselytizes constantly for the highest quality spirits,
liqueurs, cordials, and modifiers (fresh squeezed lemons, etc.) He also
repeatedly stresses that a cocktail, in the classic sense (a before-dinner
drink) should have no more than the slightest touch of sweetness to it,
and deplores the use of drinks like the Brandy Alexander as pre-prandial
cocktails, as they dull rather than sharpen the appetite. He does not
denigrate sweet drinks per se, pointing out that they are excellent after
dinner or mid-afternoon drinks "in place of a half-pound of chocolate
cookies", but they are anathema as a "cocktail" before
a large meal.
Embury makes it very clear that he thinks the
idea that a drink must be made according to one exact recipe preposterous,
and that the final arbiter is always your taste. He suggests trying different
ratios, finding the one that is most pleasing to you.
Once one understands the basic components of each
type of drink, new cocktails can be created by substituting a different
base or modifying agent or by adding a special flavoring or coloring agent.
A daiquiri, for example, is nothing more than a whiskey sour with rum
substituted for whiskey as the base and lime juice substituted for lemon
juice as a modifying agent.
Click here
for traditional, current standard and contemporary cocktail recipes.
Three of Embury's Six basic drinks
Martini
• 7 parts English gin
• 1 part French (dry) vermouth
Stir with ice, strain into a cocktail glass, twist lemon peel over the
top and serve garnished with an olive, preferably one stuffed with any
kind of nut.
Old Fashioned
• 12 parts American whiskey
• 1 part simple syrup
• 1-3 dashes Angostura bitters to each drink
In an old-fashioned glass, add bitters to simple syrup and stir. Add about
1 ounce of whiskey and stir again. Add two cubes of cracked, but not crushed,
ice and top off with the rest of the whiskey. Twist lemon peel over the
top and serve garnished with the lemon peel and a maraschino cherry.
Daiquiri
• 8 parts white Cuban rum
• 2 parts lime juice
• 1 part simple syrup
Shake with lots of finely crushed ice and strain well into a chilled cocktail
glass.

Click here for traditional, current
standard and contemporary cocktail recipes.