Description
This trusty old favorite is easy to make badly. The key is to remember that the essence of the drink is a balance of home-sweet-homey orange, zippy bitters and orange oil, and good virile whiskey. I tried this with bourbon (usually Maker's Mark) but found it sweet. That's a common problem with this drink (the most common problem, really) an over-sweet unchallenging soft-drink with a fruit salad, no different in principle from a "ladies drink". That kind of old-fashioned reminds me of the harmlessly cheery and meaningless decor at a retirement home.
How to restore the Old-Fashioned to what it should be - all the best things you remember about your grandparents without being reminded of those relentlessly optimistic and soulless walls?
The solution is to back off the fruit salad but keep the flavors by muddling the peel for flavor without diluting everything with orange juice, reduce the sugar, and balance the Bourbon with rye for added complexity and spiciness. Note: this might work well with a drier Bourbon like Knob Creek and no rye, but all this research takes it toll on your humble researcher; I simply could not drink any more Old-Fashioneds and still record the results of my researches!
How to restore the Old-Fashioned to what it should be - all the best things you remember about your grandparents without being reminded of those relentlessly optimistic and soulless walls?
The solution is to back off the fruit salad but keep the flavors by muddling the peel for flavor without diluting everything with orange juice, reduce the sugar, and balance the Bourbon with rye for added complexity and spiciness. Note: this might work well with a drier Bourbon like Knob Creek and no rye, but all this research takes it toll on your humble researcher; I simply could not drink any more Old-Fashioneds and still record the results of my researches!