The English Picnic

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I’ve been a bit hesitant to post much in the way of recipes or drink ideas I have that will find their way on to the menu at Beaker & Flask. The thought process being, I was not really bartending anywhere where my drinks were being featured and well, I’m not really concerned so much about receiving the credit as much as not looking like a copycat should someone use something I may have posted. I’m generally quite open about giving away recipes and I think it’s the proper way to go about it. Things have changed recently, though, and now that I’m in charge of the cocktail list at Clyde Common, I feel I can post about some things I’ve been working on.
I’ve had the words “watermelon” and “quinine” written in my notebook for a while now, with the desire to pair these two flavors together. It’s not really watermelon season here in the Northwest just yet (we get amazing melons out of Hermiston, OR), but with the recent 4th of July holiday and the sublime Oregon summer weather we have been enjoying, I felt the time was right to experiment with this idea.
My idea was to go as neutral as possible with the spirit and just see how the two flavors worked together so I chose vodka as my base. I cut up a baby watermelon and infused it in 100 proof vodka for about four days. I then strained the vodka and took the left over melon and combined it with a cut up fresh melon, a few pinches of salt and fresh cracked pepper and pureed the whole mess in my blender. I started making my own tonic water a few years ago, which is basically a syrup that I combine with soda water to make the tonic, so I used this to get the quinine flavor in the drink.

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The basic recipe is as follows:

2 oz. watermelon vodka
1/2 oz. tonic syrup
1 oz. watermelon puree
build over ice and top with soda water. Turn it over into a metal shaker and then serve in your favorite rocks glass.

The combination of flavors was exactly what I’d hoped for, refreshing and clean, and honestly a better use for the tonic than a standard G & T. I’ve put this drink on the menu at Clyde Common and called it The English Picnic. Upon further review, I tried out the drink using a blanco tequila instead of the watermelon vodka and I think I like this version better. Which is great, because then I don’t have to infuse the spirit at all. I have a bunch of the flavored vodka so I’ll run with that for now, but I think I’ll be changing it over to the tequila version as soon as that is gone. If you are interested in my tonic recipe, I’ll post that below. It’s actually very easy to make and it beats the hell out of commercial tonic waters.

Tonic Recipe #5
4 cups water
3 cups unrefined pure cane sugar
6 tablespoons powdered citric acid
3 tablespoons quinine (cinchona bark)
3 limes
3 stalks of lemongrass (chopped)
1/2 cup juniper berries

Boil the sugar and water to dissolve, making a syrup, reduce heat
zest the limes in to the syrup
squeeze the limes and add the juice to the syrup
add the lemongrass
grind up the juniper berries and add
add the acid and the quinine, stir and then turn up the heat and bring it all to a rolling boil and then reduce heat and simmer for about half an hour.
Then I’ll strain the mixture into a large jar to get out the large particles. Put the jar in the fridge overnight and then gently pour off the syrup. The mass of quinine should sit pretty solidly in the bottom of the jar. There you have it. Just combine about 2 oz. of gin with 1 oz. of syrup over ice, squeeze in a fresh lime wedge and top with soda.
I have done many variations on this recipe, some work, some don’t. You can add other spices to create different tonics that work well with other liquors.

2 Responses to “The English Picnic”

  1. Lance J. Mayhew Says:

    This my friend, is why I consider you the finest bartender in our fair state. F’ing brilliant. How am I supposed to match this?

  2. Rafe Petty Says:

    Hi there,

    This looks like a fantastic tonic recipe. I’ve been trying to track down a source for the quinine, but have been unable to locate a reputable source - nowhere that I’ve checked in the city of Chicago sells it. They all say it can be toxic, so there not up to the task.

    Can anybody help me locate an online source for the quinine/cinchona bark?

    Much appreciated!

    –Rafe

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