Orangenblüten-Träumerei: Ein Marmeladen-Gin-Traum

Orangenblüten-Träumerei: Ein Marmeladen-Gin-Traum

(Orange Blossom Reverie: A Marmalade Gin Dream)

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Portionen
2
Portionsgröße
1 coupe (180 ml)
Vorbereitungszeit
10 Minuten
Gesamtzeit
10 Minuten
Orangenblüten-Träumerei: Ein Marmeladen-Gin-Traum Orangenblüten-Träumerei: Ein Marmeladen-Gin-Traum Orangenblüten-Träumerei: Ein Marmeladen-Gin-Traum Orangenblüten-Träumerei: Ein Marmeladen-Gin-Traum
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Oktober 07, 2025

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Nährwerte

  • Portionen: 2
  • Portionsgröße: 1 coupe (180 ml)
  • Calories: 178 kcal
  • Carbohydrates: 0 g
  • Protein: 0.4 g
  • Fat: 0 g
  • Fiber: 0.2 g
  • Sugar: 10 g
  • Sodium: 3 mg
  • Cholesterol: 0 mg
  • Calcium: 14 mg
  • Iron: 0.2 mg

Anweisungen

  • 1 - Chill the Glassware:
    Place two coupe glasses in the freezer or fill with ice water to chill while you build the drink.
  • 2 - Dissolve the marmalade:
    In a cocktail shaker, add orange juice, lemon juice, and marmalade. Stir with a bar spoon until the marmalade loosens and nearly dissolves.
  • 3 - Build the Cocktail:
    Add gin, orange blossom water, and, if using, dry vermouth and orange bitters to the shaker. Add egg white or aquafaba if a foamy texture is desired.
  • 4 - Dry shake for texture:
    Seal the shaker and shake vigorously without ice for 10–15 seconds to aerate and emulsify the egg white or aquafaba. Skip if not using foam.
  • 5 - Shake with Ice:
    Add ice cubes to the shaker and shake hard for 10–12 seconds until well-chilled and the marmalade is fully integrated.
  • 6 - Strain and Serve:
    Discard ice from coupes. Fine-strain the cocktail evenly into the chilled glasses to catch any marmalade rind and ice shards.
  • 7 - Garnish and Finish:
    Express an orange twist over each drink, rim the glass, then drop it in. Top with an edible flower for a fragrant, visual flourish.

Mehr über: Orangenblüten-Träumerei: Ein Marmeladen-Gin-Traum

Perfumed gin cocktail marrying British marmalade and citrus with delicate orange blossom, optional silky foam, and a bright, elegant finish—springtime in a coupe for two.

Orange Blossom Reverie: Story, Craft, and Serving Notes

Orange Blossom Reverie is a bright, floral gin cocktail that celebrates a uniquely British alchemy: the marriage of juniper and marmalade. Imagine the first warm day of spring in an English garden, citrus trees in bloom, and the subtle perfume of orange blossoms drifting through the air. This drink captures that moment in a glass. It leans on London dry gin for structure, uses fresh orange juice for luminous sweetness, and folds in Seville orange marmalade to add a quietly bitter backbone and a velvety body. A whisper of orange blossom water lifts everything with a heady, Mediterranean fragrance, while an optional egg white (or aquafaba) can turn the texture into a silk-satin dream.

Why marmalade? Beyond its British heritage—popularized in the UK since the 18th century—marmalade contributes more than sugar. Seville oranges bring complex, pithy bitterness, exactly the sort of nuance that gin’s botanicals adore. When shaken, a fine-cut marmalade dissolves enough to sweeten and round the palate, while tiny citrus oils and tender rind flecks (caught by fine-straining) leave behind a polished, cohesive sip. It’s a shortcut to a crafted syrup with a sense of place.

The name nods to the classic “Orange Blossom,” historically a Prohibition-era drink often combining gin and orange juice. This modern interpretation keeps the soul of that pairing but reimagines it for contemporary palates. A few drops of orange blossom water are the key—use a light hand. The goal is a veil of perfume, never a perfumery. Start with the specified amount and adjust by a drop if your blossom water is particularly potent. Because blossom waters vary by brand, restraint is wise.

Technique matters. A brief dry shake with egg white creates an elegant cap of foam, which carries aroma to the nose and softens the marmalade’s edges. If you prefer a plant-based option, aquafaba (the liquid from chickpeas) foams beautifully and has a neutral flavor. Shaking hard with fresh, solid ice ensures the marmalade integrates fully and the drink emerges cold and crystalline. Always fine-strain to keep the texture seamless.

Flavor profile: Expect a first impression of blossoms and bright citrus on the nose. The opening sip is brisk and juicy, moving into juniper, angelica, and coriander from the gin. Mid-palate, marmalade adds a tea-like bitterness and mellow sweetness, and a faint herbal line from optional dry vermouth or bitters threads through the finish. The aftertaste is clean, floral, and gently zesty.

Serving suggestions and variations:

  • No-foam version: Simply skip the egg white/aquafaba and the dry shake. The drink will present leaner and more sparkling in character.
  • Vermouth whisper: Add dry vermouth for herbal lift and a drier finish; try 10–20 ml depending on your gin.
  • Zero-proof mocktail: Replace gin with a quality alcohol-free botanical spirit. Balance sweetness by reducing marmalade slightly or adding a dash of tonic for bite.
  • Spritz lengthening: Top with 30–45 ml chilled soda water after straining for a breezier garden-party serve. Stir gently to preserve any foam.
  • Tea-kissed: Swap the marmalade for 15 ml Earl Grey honey syrup (1:1 honey to hot Earl Grey). This adds tannin and bergamot to echo the orange blossom.

Pro tips:

  • Glass prep: Cold glassware keeps the floral top-notes pristine. A warm glass can overwhelm the aroma with alcohol vapors.
  • Blossom control: If you overshoot the blossom water, rescue the drink with a small squeeze of lemon and a little extra gin to rebalance.
  • Marmalade choice: Fine-cut Seville marmalade dissolves fastest. If using thick-cut, stir longer with the citrus before adding spirits.
  • Aroma finishing: Expressing an orange twist over the surface is not optional—it paints the drink with fresh oils that harmonize with the blossom.

Cultural note: This cocktail is a conversation between British pantry staples and Mediterranean fragrance traditions. Orange blossom water, long prized from North Africa to the Levant for pastries, syrups, and teas, meets the British love of gin and preserves. In Orange Blossom Reverie, those worlds coalesce into a poised, modern classic—refined enough for a wedding toast, yet simple enough to shake at home on a sunny afternoon.

Personal thoughts: I love how this drink balances memory and innovation. It tastes familiar—the comfort of orange and the cleanliness of gin—yet the blossom note makes it feel like a discovery. If you measure lightly and shake decisively, you’ll be rewarded with a cocktail that feels as lyrical as its name suggests.

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