Jazz Paradox Sazerac : Cocktail Classique Anglais Revisité

Jazz Paradox Sazerac : Cocktail Classique Anglais Revisité

(Jazz Paradox Sazerac: English Twisted Classic Cocktail)

(0 Avis)
Portions
1
Taille de portion
1 Old Fashioned glass (150ml)
Temps de préparation
8 Minutes
Temps de cuisson
2 Minutes
Temps total
10 Minutes
Jazz Paradox Sazerac : Cocktail Classique Anglais Revisité
Cuisines
Niveau
Votes
0
Vues de page
18
Mise à jour
juillet 03, 2025

Ingrédients

Nutrition

  • Portions: 1
  • Taille de portion: 1 Old Fashioned glass (150ml)
  • Calories: 175 kcal
  • Carbohydrates: 8 g
  • Protein: 0 g
  • Fat: 0 g
  • Fiber: 0 g
  • Sugar: 7 g
  • Sodium: 1 mg
  • Cholesterol: 0 mg
  • Calcium: 3 mg
  • Iron: 0 mg

Instructions

  • 1 - Make Earl Grey Syrup:
    Steep 2 tsp loose Earl Grey tea in 50ml boiling water for 5 minutes. Strain, then mix tea with 50g sugar until dissolved. Cool completely.
  • 2 - Prepare Glass:
    Rinse an Old Fashioned glass with absinthe, swirling to coat, then discard excess. This creates an herbal foundation.
  • 3 - Build Cocktail:
    In a mixing glass, combine whiskey, Earl Grey syrup, aromatic and orange bitters, and optional vanilla. Add ice and stir until well-chilled.
  • 4 - Serve:
    Strain into prepared glass with fresh large ice cubes. Squeeze lemon peel over top, twist, and drop in as garnish.
  • 5 - Enjoy:
    Sip while listening to jazz—allow Earl Grey notes and whiskey to mingle with herbal absinthe.

En savoir plus sur: Jazz Paradox Sazerac : Cocktail Classique Anglais Revisité

A bold, jazz-inspired twist on the Sazerac, blending British tea and classic spirits with a surprising herbal finish.

Jazz Paradox Sazerac: A Spirited English Jazz Improv in a Glass

The Jazz Paradox Sazerac isn’t just a cocktail: it’s an ode to late-night retellings, smoky jazz clubs, and the improbable blending of British and New Orleans edge. This unexpected drink begins with the classic Sazerac architecture, one of the world’s oldest cocktails, but then improvises, riffing with tea and bitters in a wholly British spirit that summarizes modern cocktail culture: international, inventive, and inherently paradoxical.

Inspiration & Origin

The original Sazerac was born in the 19th century at the Sazerac Coffee House in New Orleans and became legendary for combining rye whiskey, bitters, sugar, and absinthe. This version mines those jazzy foundations but throws in Earl Grey – the most quintessentially English of teas, its blend of black tea and bergamot almost as renowned as the British psyche itself.

Why the jazz? Jazz is about reinterpretation, improvisation, taking something known and bending it to the performer’s style. So is modern mixology. The paradox comes in pairing sharp English rye (often noted for its bold cereal-and-spice punch) with the floral citrus of bergamot in tea, then underpinning everything with absinthe’s mysterious anise lift.

Flavor Twists & Mixology Notes

This cocktail is all about surprising depth. Earl Grey tea syrup adds aromatic brightness joined by a mere drop of vanilla, intended to create the sense of buttery tonal warmth—much like the creamy crackle of an upright bass line. Absinthe, with its potent aromatics, provides a theatre-curtain backdrop for every other flavor. The double dose of bitters (aromatic and orange) bring spicy, floral counterpoint to the dance. Each sip is vibrant, paradoxical, perfected.

Tips & Notes

  • Rinse Instead of Pour: True to tradition, only a hint of absinthe coats the glass. Don’t overdo it—too much and the drink is overwhelmed; too little, and you lose the haunting herbal aroma befitting a good Sazerac.

  • Home–Steeped Syrup: Using homemade Earl Grey syrup allows you to control intensity; strong syrup yields powerfully aromatic cocktails, milder syrup lends subtlety.

  • Whiskey Choice: Seek out a quality English rye. If unavailable, opt for a mellow American rye or high-rye bourbon, but an English splash grants the drink its true sense of place and a slightly herbaceous, spicy foundation.

  • Vanilla’s Whisper: The addition of vanilla (strictly optional) isn’t externally noticeable, but gives the drink a puzzlingly creamy undertone and echoes the paradoxical, improvisational intent.

Cultural and Historical Perspective

Britain’s modern cocktail scene has, in the past decade, turned boldly experimental, gleefully eschewing very traditional lines to make drinks that honor both place and global adventure. Earl Grey, distinct in both aroma and reputation, playfully localizes the Sazerac. This pairing also highlights the historic links between British tea history and the evolving palate of global spirits; the port city of London, like New Orleans, was once awash with innovation, clandestine bars, merchants, and the influence of distant lands.

Today’s cocktail culture emphasizes drinks that deliver surprise as much as satisfaction; the Jazz Paradox Sazerac takes confident, jazz-like improvisation as its defining virtue. Whether in a cozy London speakeasy or creating it to the syncopated clatter of an at-home playlist, the paradox emerges in contrast between nostalgia and the unexpected.

Unique Aspects and Serving

This isn’t a sticky-sweet tea-based concoction or a glowering classic—It’s a drink for the curious. An aromatic performance, designed to be passed between friends who appreciate the nuances of a twisted classic. If you want to make your rendition extra-British, garnish with a slender cucumber ribbon alongside the lemon twist.

And remember: the only rule that applies is jazz’s own—make it your own. The Jazz Paradox Sazerac beckons adventurous spirit enthusiasts ready to snap their fingers and sip in style.

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