The Jasmine

The Jasmine

The Jasmine

The Jasmine

Ingredients

  • Condiments

    • 3/4 oz Lemon juice, Fresh Squeezed
  • Beer, Wine & Liquor

    • 1/4 oz Campari
    • 1/4 oz Cointreau
    • 1 1/2 oz Gin

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Description

[Photograph: Vicky Wasik] Dont let the color fool you. With its gentle pink hue, the Jasmine may look as prissy and cute as a Hello Kitty armband, and its unassuming appearance and sprightly color has no doubt appealed to many drinkers of the once-ubiquitous Cosmo. But unlike that candy-colored alcopop, the Jasmine is all business, its alluring tint supplied not by the Cosmopolitans innocuous red cranberry juice but by the intensely garnet Campari, an Italian aperitif famous for its powerful bitter flavor and its racy advertising campaigns. As anyone who has sampled it will attest, Campari is an acquired taste--some drinkers love its complex bitterness in a Negroni or an Americano, while others are put off by its assertive flavor. Consider the Jasmine a bridge drink: Campari lovers often find this a welcome addition to their cocktail list, while those averse to Camparis flavor find that its intensity is nicely tempered, and that the Jasmine tastes more like grapefruit juice than the dark red amaro. Created at the Townhouse Bar & Grill in Emeryville, California in the mid-1990s by Paul Harrington (author of Cocktail: The Drinks Bible for the 21st Century), the Jasmine is a modern classic, and a great introduction to Campari for those trying it for the first (or the fifth) time.

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 ounces gin
  • 3/4 ounce fresh-squeezed lemon juice
  • 1/4 ounce Campari
  • 1/4 ounce Cointreau

Directions

  • 1. Pour ingredients into a cocktail shaker, fill with ice and shake well for 10 seconds. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass; garnish with a lemon twist.
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Title:

The Jasmine Recipe

Descrition:

Don't let the color fool you. With its gentle pink hue, the Jasmine may look as prissy and cute as a Hello Kitty armband, and its unassuming appearance and sprightly color has no doubt appealed to many drinkers of the once-ubiquitous Cosmo. But unlike that candy-colored alcopop, the Jasmine is all business, its alluring tint supplied not by the Cosmopolitan's innocuous red cranberry juice but by the intensely garnet Campari, an Italian aperitif famous for its powerful bitter flavor.

The Jasmine

  • Condiments

    • 3/4 oz Lemon juice, Fresh Squeezed
  • Beer, Wine & Liquor

    • 1/4 oz Campari
    • 1/4 oz Cointreau
    • 1 1/2 oz Gin

The first person this recipe

seriouseats.com

seriouseats.com

222 1

Found on seriouseats.com

Serious Eats

The Jasmine Recipe

Don't let the color fool you. With its gentle pink hue, the Jasmine may look as prissy and cute as a Hello Kitty armband, and its unassuming appearance and sprightly color has no doubt appealed to many drinkers of the once-ubiquitous Cosmo. But unlike that candy-colored alcopop, the Jasmine is all business, its alluring tint supplied not by the Cosmopolitan's innocuous red cranberry juice but by the intensely garnet Campari, an Italian aperitif famous for its powerful bitter flavor.