This is John Apodaca with Daddy-O's Martinis. There are many stories of how, when, where and why the Martini came into being and some will fight tooth an nail to defend one particular version. One account is that famous barman Jerry Thomas of the San Francisco's Occidental hotel mixed it for a gold miner on this way to the nearby town of Martinez in 1887 and called it the Martinez. Another story is that is was invented in the town of Martinez CA around the same time by bartender Richelieu. We here that it was invented by Martini di Arma di Traggi a bartender at New Yorks Knickerbocker Hotel. Even the British claim fame to it stating it was named after the Martini and Henry rifle used by the Brithish army from 1871 - 1891. The world may really never know the true story but why waist time trying to figure it out and not have a drink.
The current Martini that's being served is a far cry from the original concoction that bartenders in the 1880s were serving. Early recipes called for Old Tom Gin which tends to be a sweeter spirit, rather than dryer versions. The older ingredients also where a one to one ratio of gin to vermouth along with syrup, maraschino or orange curacao and a some dashes of lemon. By the 1900s the drink was becoming well established and sweeteners were omitted and replaced by dry gin, vermouth and bitters.
The drink was popularized by over the years even during world wars one and two, prohibition and even Franklin Roosevelt drank it in the White House with some olive juice to celebrate the repeal of the 18th amendment. In the movie series the Thin man with William Powell and Myrna Loy they brought class and sophistication to the cocktail with scenes with the two at hight society cocktail parties and the character Nick showing the bartenders how to shake the drink to the tempo of certain music. The 1950s brought on the famous three martini lunches for business man even an add in the New York Times for a sales manager stated, " Intangible experience, must be able to move effectively at top management level and understand Big Business problems. Should be able to handle twelve martinis. At the same time the martini became dryer with less vermouth and by the 1960s vodka was introduced with the James Bond series along with product placement of Smirnoff as the new standard and at times the bartender would only look at the vermouth.
Since the revival of classic cocktails and a few eager bartenders that desire craftsmanship over the mediocre the Martini has made a comeback they way it used to be made, wetter with more vermouth shaken inside it and served with ice chips. I personally prefer it made 1 1 /2 oz of top shelf gin, and 3/4 oz of dry vermouth with a dash of orange bitters. Try it at home or it home and tell me how you like it.
Cheers,
John Apodaca
Classic Martini
1 1/2 oz of Bombay Sapphire gin
3/4 oz of dry vermouth
1 dash of orange bitters (Regan's or Fee Bros)
Shake all ingredients together very hard for about 30 seconds and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with olives.
All corporate bartenders take note: this is the TRUE MARTINI! Note that it is made with gin, and contains no added sugar. I can guarantee that 99.9% of what you are calling martinis are not martinis at all. If you have just made a concoction with vodka and a flavored syrup, then it is a VODKA MARTINI (and I use that term loosely) which is an entirely different thing.
ReplyDelete