10.12.2011

Happy Accidents with Vinegar

Oh, it's me, pickle-crazy again. Remember when I pickled everything in my apartment? Remember when some pickled okra left a crazy amount of extra brine? I poured it over these to make my favorite cocktail garnish to date.


Let’s talk Gibsons for a moment. A Gibson is basically a classic gin martini, garnished with a pickled onion instead of an olive. The perk? No one ever asks if you want that Gibson made with vodka or with gin. They just KNOW. If you're asking for a cocktail garnished with a pickled onion, people generally assume you're not afraid of flavor. Vodka drinkers: I'M SORRY. I just don't get you people.


To date, a caperberry (although I realize not authentic to the recipe) has been my favorite garnish for this cocktail. Sort of falls somewhere between a cocktail onion and an olive. Here’s why this started happening: aside from a few notable exceptions (Odin’s Onions being one, but they are still a bit hard to find), the pickled cocktail onions on the market taste like a rain boot and salt. They’re awful. They don’t deserve to be in your cocktail. They don’t deserve to LOOK at your cocktail. The Gibson is so simple and perfect, it requires a hell of a garnish to stand up to it.

Here’s what I want you to do: add 2 1/4 oz. gin (I love Beefeater, but in something like this where the gin is the star, Hendrick’s would be lovely) and 3/4 oz. dry vermouth to a cocktail shaker filled with ice and STIR, babies, stir. Do not shake. Strain into a cocktail glass, and add a tomato and an onion from the following recipe. You are so welcome.

Pickled Pearl Onions and Cherry Tomatoes
Enough cherry tomatoes and peeled pearl onions to fill a pint jar
1 bay leaf
2 sprigs tarragon
8-10 pink peppercorns
1 cup cider vinegar
1 cup water
1/2 tbsp pickling salt

Put bay leaf, tarragon and peppercorns into a pint jar. Gently pack in onions and tomatoes. In a saucepan, bring to boil the vinegar, water and salt, stirring to dissolve the salt. (Or, if you made the pickled okra and have the extra brine like I did, just reheat to a boil.) Pour the hot brine over the onions and tomatoes and store in the fridge for about two weeks.

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