Shaker maker taker!
mardi 1 janvier 2013
Scotch Sours
Artist’s (Special) Cocktail
1/3Whisky
1/3 Sherry
1/6 Lemon Juice
1/6 Groseille Syrup
Shake well and strain into a cocktail glass.
This is the Genuine “Ink of Inspiration” imbibed at the Bal Bullier, Paris. The recipe is from the Artisits’ Club, Rue Pigalle, Paris
Savoy Cocktail Book 1930 Harry Cradock
Blimey is the Scotch Daiquiri
De Rigueur Cocktail
1/2 Whisky
1/4 Grape Fruit Juice
1/4 Honey
Cracked Ice Shake well and strain into cocktail glass.
Savoy Cocktail Book 1930 Harry Cradock 1999 ed
Los Angeles
1/2 Whisky
1/4 Lemon Juice
1 Egg
Dash Martini Sweet Vermouth
Suger to taste.
Shake and strain into cocktail glass.
1937 Café Royal United Kingdom Bartenders Guild, Café Royal Cocktail Book compiled by William J Tarling
The Los Angeles Cocktail
(4 people)
The Juice of 1 Lemon
4 Hookers Whisky
4 Teaspoonsful Sugar
1 Egg
1 Dash Italian Vermouth
Shake well and strain into cocktail glass
Savoy Cocktail Book 1930 Harry Cradock 1999 ed
Scotch Holiday Sour (Cocktail) Cherry Brandy, Lemon Juice, Scotch, Sweet Vermouth
Silent Third
Is the Scotch whisky Margarita
1/3 Cointreau
1/3 Lemon Juice
1/3 Scotch Whisky
Shake and strain.
1937 Café Royal United Kingdom Bartenders Guild, Café Royal Cocktail Book compiled by William J Tarling
The Sixty-nith Regiment
Juice of ½ Lemon
2 tablespoons gum syrup
Scotch Whisky 1 l. b. g. (5 ounces)
Irish Whisky 1 l. b. g. (5 ounces)
collections_and_creations_1934
lundi 31 décembre 2012
William Grant & Sons Ltd. - Company Profile, Information, Business Description, History, Background Information on William Grant & Sons Ltd.
Not much has changed at the Glenfiddich Distillery since the first spirit ran from the stills on Christmas Day, 1887. It is still independent; owned and run by the fifth generation of the same family. Our founder, William Grant, aspired to create "the best dram in the valley". He achieved it, and we maintain it--through a single-minded dedication to craftsmanship and quality throughout every stage of production.
History of William Grant & Sons Ltd.
William Grant & Sons Ltd. is one of the world's leading producers of Scotch whisky, ranking number four overall. Yet its flagship Glenfiddich brand is the undisputed leader in the more exclusive single-malt category, claiming nearly 40 percent of all single malt Scotch sales worldwide. While Grant's competitors include some of the world's largest diversified drinks groups, including Diageo and Seagrams, the largest part of the company's operations remain focused on its whisky production, which, in addition to Glenfiddich, include the 100-year-old The Balvenie brand of Scotch whiskey and, since 2002, Canada's Gibson's Finest blended whisky. The company also produces private label Scotch whiskies, a market which provides approximately 20 percent of the company's revenues. Despite its emphasis on whisky, Grant has diversified its portfolio somewhat at the turn of the 20th century, buying three rum brands from Diageo at the end of 2002 and launching a fourth, Sailor Jerry, in 2003, and acquiring Iceland vodka group Polstar. The company also hold a 30 percent stake in Scottish rival Highland Distillers and its Famous Grouse and Mac Callan brands. Wholly owned by the founding Grant Gordon family, William Grant & Sons remains a resolutely private company. Sales have been estimated to top £400 million ($700 million) in the early 2000s. In 2003, CEO Patrick Thomas--who had been the first CEO from outside the Grant family in the company's history--stepped down from the post, as the family once again decided to assume control of the group's operations.
Founding Scotch History in the 19th Century
Born in 1839 in Dufftown, Scotland, William Grant first went to work at the age of seven herding cattle on lands belonging to the Duke of Fife. Grant went on to apprentice as a cobbler, but instead went to work as a clerk, before becoming a bookkeeper for the Mortlach distillery. It was there that Grant learned the art of distilling, remaining in the position for some 20 years, and eventually becoming the distillery's clerk and manager.
Throughout his career at Mortlach, Grant saved up his earnings--which reached no more than 200 pounds per year. Finally, in 1886, Grant had saved enough to go into business on his own. Together with his wife and their seven sons and two daughters, Grant purchased a plot of land in Speyside, near the River Fiddich. For a little less than 120 pounds sterling, Grant acquired a secondhand still and other equipment from the Cardhu Distillery. Construction began that same year, with all work being carried out by Grant, his sons, and a stone mason; by 1887, the distillery had begun production. Grant named his distillery Glenfiddich, Gaelic for "Valley of the Deer." The company's stag's head logo was later to become famous around the world.
Grant's whisky, using spring water from Robbie Dru, quickly achieved a popular following in Scotland, attracting other distillers to the Speyside region. While much of the Scottish market at the time consisted of blended whiskies, combining grain and malt whiskies, Grant's whisky remained a purely malted whisky, produced in small quantities in single barrels--almost a century before the creation of a true single-malt variety. The rising popularity of Scottish whisky in general led to a boom in the number of distilleries in operation as the 19th century drew to a close.
Grant too took part in the expansion of the Scotch market when, in 1892, he bought Balvenie Castle--previously owned by Grant's former employer, the Duke of Fife--and surrounding farmlands. Grant set to work converting the castle itself into a distillery, which began producing its own, unique whiskey in 1893. The Balvenie, as the brand became known, remained one of the only whiskies to boast not only having its own malting plant but also growing its own barley.
Until the end of the century, much of Grant's production was sold to third-party blenders, such as Pattison Limited, then the leading whisky blender and distributor in the country. Yet the huge growth in the number of new distilleries at the turn of the century had led the industry into over-production, resulting in financial collapse. Pattison itself was one of the early victims of the whisky market crash, declaring bankruptcy in 1898. By 1899, the crash had claimed a growing number of distilleries.
William Grant & Sons too was hit hard by the crash, losing its largest customer and finding itself saddled by debt. Yet Grant saw opportunity in the turmoil of the Scottish whisky market and decided to expand his business from a simple distillery to a complete wholesale, blending and distribution operation. Grant was joined by his sons, and also by son-in-law Charles Gordon, who became the company's sales agents. In 1903, the company set up a whisky storehouse in Glasgow, and by 1904, Grant had established its first export office, in Blackburn, in Lancashire, England.er, Grant began exporting to Canada after discovering that the country's High Commissioner was a distant relative. After setting up an export office in Canada, Grant also opened an office in the United States. While John Grant was building up the company's North American operations, Charles Gordon traveled to the Far East on a year-long tour starting in 1909, introducing the Glenfiddich brand throughout India, Singapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Japan, before turning to Australia and New Zealand. Gordon next brought the Glenfiddich brand to the European continent, opening sales offices in Rotterdam, Hamburg, and in Scandinavia. By 1914, the company had more than 60 sales offices, supporting its exports to 30 countries.
Rationing efforts during World War I coincided with increasing prohibitionist sentiment to cut into the growth of the Scottish whisky industry. A major blow, at least in the short term, was the passage of the Immature Spirits Act in 1915, which barred sales of whisky that had been aged for less than two (later three) years. While the Act spelled the end of large numbers of distillers, it would later provide one of the major selling points for Scottish whisky. Nonetheless, continued raw materials shortages during the war put an end to production in 1917.
Grant did not resume production again until 1919 and the following year faced a new threat to its business, as prohibition sentiment swept across many of its major markets. While Prohibition was enacted most famously in the United States, the ban on alcohol extended into Canada, most of Scandinavia, Belgium, and Russia as well. The drop in whisky sales nearly wiped out the Scottish industry; by the end of Prohibition, only six Scottish distilleries remained in operation, including both the Glenfiddich and Balvenie distilleries.
William Grant himself did not live to see the end of Prohibition. By the time of his death in 1923, a new generation of the Grant Gordon family, and in particular William Grant Gordon, had joined the company. The younger Grant Gordon persuaded the company to increase its production despite the drop off in sales. In this way, the company was prepared to meet the surge in demand as countries began dropping their prohibition efforts in the early 1920s. In this way, Grant not only edged out potential newcomers, it also was able to present a higher-quality whisky that had spent more years aging.
Postwar Market Leader
Grant opened a London office in 1927, and restored its Scandinavian export markets soon after. The repeal of Prohibition in the United States in 1933 brought a new peak in demand and the Glenfiddich brand had already begun to assert its dominance as the world's best-selling Scotch whisky.
World War II once again brought a halt to whisky production, with barley diverted as a crucial food crop. Yet Winston Churchill correctly recognized the importance of Scotch whisky as a valuable source of foreign currency, stating, in 1944: "On no account reduce the amount of barley for whisky. This takes years to mature and is an invaluable export and dollar producer. Having regard to all our other difficulties about exports, it would be most improvident not to preserve this characteristic British element of ascendancy." Through Churchill's intercession, distillers were once again given an allotment of barley, and production could continue. In order to counter the coal shortage, Grant took to burning peat--which in turn added a distinctive flavor to the company's wartime production.
The postwar period saw the emergence of a new and stronger worldwide demand for Scotch whiskeys. Faced with a fresh rise in the number of Scottish distilleries, Grant turned to marketing for the first time. In 1957, the company commissioned a new bottle for its flagship Glenfiddich brand. Designed by Hans Schleger, the new bottle featured a highly distinctive triangular shape that made it instantly recognizable among the host of whisky brands and other types of alcohol on the shelves.
The 1960s brought a fresh marketing coup. If most of the whisky sold in the world remained of the blended type, a growing number of connoisseurs had begun to discover the single-malt type preferred by the Scots themselves. While a blended whisky might be composed of whiskies from several different distilleries, a single malt was the product of a single distillery--and often from a single barrel. In 1963, William Grant & Sons recognized the marketability of this whisky type, and became the first to market its whisky on the export market under the new denomination.
Grant also sought to increase its control over its distribution network, and in 1964 the company acquired the U.S.-based distributor Popper Morson. In this way, Grant claimed to be the first Scottish distiller to own its U.S. import business. The company's export efforts were later acknowledged during the 1970s, as the Glenfiddich brand became the world's leading Scotch whisky brand.
Glenfiddich remained the company's flagship brand through the 1990s. In that decade, however, the company began stepping up its marketing efforts for its other brand, The Balvenie, which
Chronology
•Key Dates:
•1886: Scotsman William Grant builds his own distillery, Glen Fiddich, and is joined by his seven sons.
•1887: Glen Fiddich begins production of whisky.
•1892: Grant buys Balvenie castle and converts it to a distillery, beginning production of The Balvenie whisky the following year.
•1903: Grant enters blending, wholesale and distribution, opening storehouse in Glasgow.
•1905: Exports to Canada begin; sales offices in Canada and the United States are established.
•1923: William Grant dies; grandson William Grant Gordon convinces company to increase production in spite of Prohibition.
•1957: Glenfiddich brand receives new and distinctive triangular bottle design.
•1963: William Grant & Sons becomes the first to market its whisky as "single malt" to the export market.
•1964: Company acquires its own U.S. importer and distributor, Popper Morson.
•1990: New distillery in Kininvie is built to support third-label production business.
•1998: Company acquires 30 percent stake in Highland Distillers.
•2000: Patrick Thomas is appointed CEO, the first from outside the Grant Gordon family to lead the company.
•2002: The portfolio diversifies with acquisition of three rum brands, a Canadian whisky brand, and Iceland's Polstar vodka brand.
•2003: Patrick Thomas resigns, and Grant Gordon resumes management control of business. had become the whisky connoisseur's favorite. At the same time, Grant had built up a strong business as a private label supplier for other brands. In support of this activity, the company built a new distillery, the Kininvie, located in Banffshire near Grant's historical Dufftown home. In the meantime, the company's private label sales encompassed not only blended whiskies, but other categories of alcoholic beverages as well. In this way, the company began producing the vodka for the launch of Virgin Vodka in the early 1990s.
•By the mid-1990s, however, Grant had been confronted with the rapid consolidation of the global drinks industry, which saw the emergence of such major players as Seagrams, Diageo, Allied Distillers, and Remy Cointreau. Determined to maintain its status as a privately held, family-owned company, yet hoping to remain competitive, the secretive Grant began opening itself up to outsiders, taking on a number of directors from outside of the family. The company also moved to add to its product range, adding new labels, such as the 15-year-old Solera Reserve, and the 18-year-old Ancient Reserve, both under the Glenfiddich brand. Another new product was Grant's first single-malt whisky liqueur. At the same time, the company began looking for external growth opportunities. After talks to acquire a stake in publicly listed Burn Stewart Distillers failed to result in agreement in 1997, the company instead acquired a 30 percent stake in rival Highland Distillers, in a partnership with the Edrington Group, which took the other 70 percent of the formerly public company, in 1998.
•In 2000, the company appointed Patrick Thomas, from France, as the group's CEO, marking the first time someone from outside of the Grant Gordon family would lead the company. Thomas promptly led the group on a restructuring, and took the Glenfiddich brand into a successful new marketing campaign designed to update its image. Thomas, who had originally joined the company as a director in 1994, also began seeking opportunities for diversifying Grant's product portfolio.
•Toward that end, Thomas oversaw a series of brand acquisitions. The first of these included three rum brands held by Diageo and Pernod Ricard, which was followed by the purchase of Gibson's Finest, a Canadian whisky owned by Diageo. At the end of 2002, the group added to its portfolio Iceland's Polstar and its line of flavored and premium vodkas. Following the purchase, the company began preparations to build a new vodka distillery for the brand.
•Under Thomas, revenues at William Grant & Sons grew strongly, topping £400 million, with profits topping £40 million. Yet in 2003, the Grant Gordon family decided to take back managerial control, and Patrick Thomas resigned as CEO. As newly appointed chairman Charles Gordon told The Herald: "We wish to continue the transition of our family business towards a fully professional organization, focusing on the development of brands and leveraging the enormous advantages of the values and long-term perspective that the family can bring to the business." In this way, the company intended to maintain its tradition as a family company, even as it developed into a diversified drinks group in its own right.
Additional Details
•Private Company
•Incorporated: 1886
•Employees: 915
•Sales: £400 million ($700 million)(2002 est.)
•NAIC: 312140 Distilleries
Further Reference
•Charles, Mathew, "A Family Business Shows its Spirit," Herald Sun (Melbourne, Australia), October 22, 2001, p. 26.
•Fursland, Eileen, and Jane Pickard, "Breaking Tradition Takes Great Bottle," People Management, September 12, 1996, p. 34.
•Powell, Robert, "Grant & Sons Cheered by Booming Sales," Herald, October 16, 2002, p. 21.
•Walsh, Dominic, "Whisky Distiller Adds Frenchman to Mix," Times, October 25, 2000, p. 31.
•------, "William Grant Adds to Range After Shake-Up," Times, October 5, 1998, p. 47.
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mardi 12 juin 2012
Atholl Brose Recipe - Whisky Oatmeal Cream Honey Egg Drink
The history of the Scottish drink Atholl Brose
It is not known for how long Scottish folk have been drinking Atholl Brose but the earliest recorded recipe dates back to 1475. Prior to this Atholl Brose recipes were handed down from generation to generation as each person was taught to make this delicious drink.
Origins of Atholl Brose
The drink is so sweet and tasty that legend has it that it led to the capture of renegade Iain MacDonald the Lord of the Isles who was leading a rebellion against the King. He was caught supping at a well that had been filled with whisky, oatmeal and honey at the order of the Earl of Atholl who knew that MacDonald drank regularly from the small well. The Duke’s recipe was the downfall of Iain MacDonald who stayed to enjoy the drink and was captured by this cunning trap. Since then Atholl Brose has been enjoyed by many a Scot since.
Other stories of the origins of Atholl Brose give the name of the Lord as Lord John who was the last Lord of the Isles and was under sentence of death but had escaped and fled to the hills. It is said it was he who could not resist the drink at the well and stayed drinking it rather than fleeing the Earls of Atholl and Crawford.
It is possible to buy Atholl Brose in bottles from whisky liqueur sellers and off licences. Most distillers use single malt whisky to give a richer tasting liqueur. Others have secret recipes and use secret herbs to give unique flavours.
The book Scots Cooking: The Best Traditional and Contemporary Scottish Recipes by Sue Lawrence has a recipe for Atholl Brose pudding for those who do not like to drink whisky.
Atholl Brose can be drunk on its own and can also be enjoyed with various other drinks and accompaniments such as with crushed ice, with mixers like coca cola, soda, ginger beer, lemonade or with cream floated on top.
The recipe for Atholl Brose below can be drunk straight away but it does taste better when left to mature for a week.
Maw Broon from the Sunday Post has published a cookbook full of her favourite Scottish and family recipes. Read More About It!
Atholl Brose is often made specially at Hogmanay and makes a welcome drink and dessert treat. It is very sweet so should only be served in small drams to see in the New Year.
Traditional Easy To Make Atholl Brose Recipe
This easy to make Atholl Brose recipe can be made in a few minutes and can be made on the day it is to be drunk but tastes much better if stored for a week.
Ingredients For Atholl Brose
One bottle of Scotch whisky
10 fluid ounces (Half Pint) of double cream
450g of clear Scottish honey
The whites of six large eggs
One handful of fine ground oatmeal
Directions To Make Atholl Brose
1. Soak the oatmeal with the Scotch whisky and set aside.
2. Beat the egg whites until they become stiff.
3. Fold the cream into the egg white mixture.
.
Athole Brose
Atholl Brose is sometimes spelt as Athole Brose. For example in the Maw Broon's Cookbook For Busy Day and Special Days by the Sunday Post there is an Atholl Brose recipe in the inside front cover. This is spelt as Athole Brose. This Maw Broon Athole Brose recipe differs slightly from the Scottishrecipes recipe and suggests adding Scottish raspberries. The Athole Brose recipe was originally sourced from Housewife Weekly as part of their cut out and keep Scottish Recipes number 8. Buy Maw Broon's Cookbook at a discounted price and with free delivery available.
It is also spelt as Athole Brose in the book The Scots Kitchen by F. Marian McNeill. Her recipe has heather honey, whisky and cold water as the only ingredients and cites a reference to Athole Brose in The Heart of Midlothian by Sir Walter Scott. The Scots Kitchen has a brief history of Athole Brose which includes its use as a cure for the cold and that sometimes a beaten egg yolk is added to the mixture. It also describes how two subalterns and a piper carry Athole Brose into the sergeants mess of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders on Hogmanay where it is served in a quaich to each officer and sergeantAtholl brose
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Atholl Brose (or Athol Brose, Athole Brose) is a Scottish drink obtained by mixing oatmeal brose, honey, whisky, and sometimes cream (particularly on festive occasions). When made with cream the drink is rather like Baileys Irish Cream. Atholl Brose has also become an alternative name for the dessert Cranachan, which uses similar ingredients.
According to legend, the drink is named after the 1st Earl of Atholl, who quashed a Highland rebellion in 1475 by filling the rebel leader's well with the mixture, making him easily captured.
[edit] Recipe
Simon (1948), in a recipe attributed to the Royal Scots Fusiliers, gives the following proportions, to be mixed, as is the tradition, "with a silver spoon if available":
• 7 parts oatmeal brose
• 7 parts whisky
• 5 parts cream
• 1 part honey
The brose is prepared by steeping a volume of oatmeal overnight in three times as much cold water, then straining the liquid through muslin (discarding the oatmeal).
[edit] References
• Simon, André (1948). A Concise Encyclopædia of Gastronomy. Section VIII, Wines and Spirits. London: The Wine and Food Society. viii + 178.
• Davidson, Alan (1999). The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. xix + 892. ISBN 0-19-211579-0.
John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl (c. 1440 – 19 September 1512), also known as Sir John Stewart of Balveny, was a Scottish nobleman and ambassador to England (in 1484).
Contents
1 Life
2 Marriage and children
3 Ancestry
4 References
Life
He was the oldest child of Joan Beaufort, widowed Queen of James I of Scotland, and her second husband Sir James Stewart, the Black Knight of Lorn.
He was created Earl of Atholl in around 1457, the first Earl of the eighth creation of the title. He is believed to have had a hand in suppressing the rebellion of John Macdonald, 11th Earl of Ross, the last of the Lords of the Isles. According to legend, the Earl of Atholl had whisky, honey and oats added to Macdonald's water well, which so entranced or intoxicated him that Macdonald was easily captured. The mixture became a drink named Atholl Brose.
Stewart was buried in Dunkeld Cathedral in Perthshire.
Marriage and children
John Stewart married twice and had several children. However, the exact number, names and the attribution of his children to their mothers is unclear. He married first, in 1459-1460, Margaret Douglas, Fair Maid of Galloway, daughter of Archibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Douglas. Margaret had been married already to the 8th Earl and possibly the 9th Earl of Douglas. She died between 1473 and 1475. They had three daughters:
Janet Stewart, married Alexander Gordon, 3rd Earl of Huntly.
Elizabeth Stewart, married Andrew Gray, 2nd Lord Gray.
Christian, married Neil Stewart of Garth.
He married second, before April 1475, Eleanor Sinclair (d. 21 March 1518), daughter of William Sinclair, 3rd Earl of Orkney. They had two sons and nine daughters:
John Stewart, 2nd Earl of Atholl, living 1520, and died before 1522. He married Janet Campbell (died about Candlemas 1545/6), daughter of Archibald Campbell, 2nd Earl of Arygll.
Andrew Stewart, Bishop of Caithness.
Jean (or Janet) Stewart, married by contract dated 31 August 1507, James Arbuthnott of Arbuthnott. He had a crown charter of the feudal barony of Arbuthnott 29 January 1507. He left a testament dated 7 March 1521, and died before 13 March 1521.
Katherine Stewart, married Sir John Forbes, 6th Lord Forbes.
Elizabeth/Elspeth Stewart, married Sir Robert Innes 2nd of Innermarky.
Marjory Stewart, married Sir Colin Campbell, of Glenorchy.
Margaret Stewart, married Sir William Murray, of Castleton.
Elizabeth Stewart, married Alexander Robertson, of Strowan.
Elizabeth (or Isabel) Stewart, married John Stewart, 3rd Earl of Lennox
Jean Stewart, married Robert Gordon, Knt., of Pitlurg.
Margaret Stewart, married Robert Robertson younger, of Strowan.
dimanche 10 juin 2012
Scotch Cocktails
1. 19th Hole,
2. 69th Punch,
3. Aberdeen Angus,
4. Adelle Special,
5. Affinity Cocktail,
6. Aggravation,
7. Aquarius
8. Alice Cocktail,
9. Alice Mine Cocktail,
10. Amarath,
11. Amber's Revenge
12. A.M.B.A,
13. Apple Crumble Martini,
14. Apple Mac,
15. Apricot Kiss,
16. Aquarius,
17. Artists Special
18. Artists Special Cocktail,
19. Artist’s (Special) Cocktail,
20. Atholl Brose,
21. Auld Acquantance,
22. Auld Alliance,
23. AWOL,
24. Bairn,
25. Balmoral,
26. Balmoral Cocktail
27. Bannockburn,
28. Barbary Cocktail,
29. Barbary Coast
30. Barbary Coast Martini,
31. Barbican,
32. Barn Door,
33. Barn Door #2,
34. Barton Special Cocktail,
35. Beadlestone Cocktail,
36. Beadleston No. 2,
37. Beal’s Cocktail
38. Bellamy Scotch Sour,
39. Bessie & Jessie,
40. B.I.F.,
41. Bitter 'n' Twisted,
42. Black & White Cooler,
43. Blackjack
44. Black Stuff
45. Black Stuff 2
46. Black Tartan
47. Black Tie
48. Black Watch
49. Blackwood’s Hot Whisky Punch,
50. Blimey
51. Blinder
52. Blood And Sand Cocktail,
53. Blood & Sand Cocktail,
54. Bloody Joseph,
55. Blue Blazer,
56. Blues Cocktail,
57. Bobby Burns,
58. Bobby Burns Cocktail,
59. Bogey,
60. Bolger Over,
61. Bonny Doon,
62. Bonny Prince
63. Borden Chase,
64. Boston Tea Party,
65. Bournemouth Limited,
66. Boyd of the Lock
67. Brainstorm
68. Broadmoor,
69. Brown,
70. Brubaker Old Fashioned,
71. Bunny Hug,
72. Bunny’s Hug,
73. Bunny Hug Cocktail
74. Burgarello Alter Boy
75. Burn's Night Special
76. Butter Nut Scotch
77. Butterscotch Milk Punch
78. C60
79. Caleigh
80. Cameron’s Kick,
81. Cameron’s Kick Cocktail,
82. Cameron’tini,
83. Canal Street Daisy
84. Canvasback,
85. Cappercaille,
86. Ceasefire
87. Celtic Mix Cocktail
88. Celtic Margarita,
89. Champion
90. Channel Crosser
91. Charmer
92. Chauncy,
93. Chin Chin
94. Chlorinated Spa
95. Choker
96. Choker Cocktail
97. Churchill,
98. Citrus Twist,
99. Clansman's Coffee,
100. Cloud Walker
101. Cock-A-Bendy
102. Cocktail No.13,
103. Cocoboodo
104. Coffee Egg Nog
105. Cold Porridge
106. Coller & Cuff,
107. Columbia Skin,
108. Commonwealth,
109. Cotonian,
110. Cowboy,
111. Cowboy Cocktail
112. Crow,
113. Culloden
114. Cumulus
115. Cutty Collins
116. Cutty Rickey
117. Daily Mail
118. Dead Man’s Handle
119. Dead Penis
120. Death by Whisky
121. Debonaire Cocktail
122. Delta Cocktail
123. Derby Fizz
124. De Riguer
125. De Rigueur Cocktail
126. Dickie Ward
127. Dinah Cocktail
128. Dixie Whisky Cocktail
129. Dirty Mama
130. Dirty Referee
131. Dirty Sock
132. Dr. Dewar’s
133. Dry Rob Roy
134. Dundee Dream
135. Dunny
136. Duppy Cocktail
137. Eastern Sin,
138. Elle for Leather,
139. Egg-Nog,
140. “Everything But” Cocktail
141. Exploration,
142. Express
143. Fancy Scotch
144. Fancy Whisky Cocktail,
145. Fanciuilli,
146. Flotater,
147. Flying Scotchman Cocktail
148. Flying Scotsman,
149. Freefall,
150. Frozen Gael
151. Gaelic Coffee,
152. Galliano Toddy
153. Galvanised Nail,
154. GE Blonde,
155. Godfather,
156. Gold,
157. Golden Mac,
158. Golden Shot,
159. Gold Mine
160. Graceland
161. Grace’s Delight Cocktail
162. Grand Master
163. Graveyard
164. Green Goddess
165. Green Mist
166. Grippe Chaser,
167. Gumdrop Haig Cocktail,
168. Hair of the dog,
169. Handlebar,
170. Hanseatic Cog,
171. Hawaii cooler,
172. Heather Blush
173. Hell Bender
174. Hell Hole
175. Hearn’s,
176. Heather Julep,
177. Henry Knight’s Punch,
178. High Kick, Highland,
179. Highland Cooler
180. Highland Cooler 2
181. Highland Cream
182. Highland Fling,
183. Highland Fling Cocktail
184. Highland Moon,
185. Highland Sling,
186. High-Ball
187. High Road
188. Hole In One,
189. Hollywood Scully
190. Hoot Mon Cocktail
191. Hoots Mon
192. Hoots Mon Cocktail,
193. Honolulu No. 2,
194. Honey & Marmalade Dram’tini
195. Hopscotch
196. Horse’s Neck
197. Horse’s Neck with a Twist
198. Hot Boland Punch,
199. Hot Mon
200. Hot Mon Cocktail
201. Hot Pecker
202. Hot Scotch Nightcap
203. Hot Scotch,
204. Hot Scotch Punch,
205. Hot Scotch Whiskey Sling,
206. Hot Toddy,
207. Hot Toddy 1,
208. Hot Toddy 2,
209. Hot Whiskey Toddy
210. Hot Whiskey Toddie
211. Hpnotiq Blue Devil
212. Huguette,
213. Hurricane,
214. Ice Ricky
215. Improved Whisky Cocktail
216. Infestation
217. Italian Heather
218. Izcaragua
219. James The Second Comes First
220. Japalac
221. Jay Leno
222. Joan Mirí³
223. Jock Collins
224. Jock-In-A-Box
225. Joe Collins
226. Joker,
227. Joyce of Hillhouse
228. Julep
229. June Buck
230. Kilmarnock Johnnie
231. Kilted Mexican
232. Kiltlifter
233. King Cole
234. King Cole Cocktail
235. Klondike cooler
236. Kon Tiki
237. L'aird Of Summer Isle
238. La Rosa
239. Lark
240. Lemon Highlander
241. Lemon Pie Cocktail
242. Leprechaun Lynch
243. “L.G.” Cocktail
244. Linstead,
245. Linstead Cocktail,
246. Loch Almond,
247. Loch Lomond
248. Loch Lomond 2
249. Loch Ness Monster 2
250. Loch Ness Mystery
251. Loensky,
252. London Sour,
253. Lord Byron,
254. Los Angeles (L.A.)
255. LSD
256. Lychee Mac
257. Ma Bonnie Wee Hen
258. Ma Wee Hen
259. Ma Wee Hen Cocktail
260. Mac 2,
261. Macbeth's Dream
262. Mac Orange,
263. Maeek
264. Mamie Gilroy,
265. Mamie Taylor
266. Man of the Moment
267. Manhattan,
268. Manhattan Cooler à la McGregor
269. Maple Pomme,
270. Mark Twain Cocktail
271. Mary Queen Of Scots,
272. Mauvais Pas
273. McDuff
274. Miami Beach Cocktail
275. Mickie Walker
276. Milk & Honey Martini,
277. Mint Cooler, Modern
278. Mithering Bastard
279. Modern Cocktail
280. Morning Glory Fizz
281. Morning Glory Fizz#2
282. Moscow Mule Var
283. Mystique
284. Mystique Martini,
285. Narragansett cooler
286. N.D.C. ,
287. New Brunswick,
288. New York
289. Oh Henry! Cocktail,
290. Ohio,
291. Old Fashioned Candy,
292. Old Fashioned Scotch,
293. Old Moorhen's Shredded Sporran
294. One WayTrip To The Bathroom
295. Oppenheim Cocktail
296. Ortensia
297. Paisley Martini
298. Pan American,
299. Pashonette,
300. Pat Quinn
301. Pearl Harbour Revisited
302. Pear Shaped 1,
303. Pear Shaped
304. Penicillin Cocktail
305. Pepsin Toddie,
306. Perfect Rob Roy
307. Picca,
308. Pimms No.2 Cup,
309. Pineapple Blossom,
310. Pink Puff
311. Pink Almond
312. Ping Pong No.2,
313. Piper At Arms
314. Piper At The Gates of Dawn
315. Plank Walker
316. Plinius
317. Polish F++K
318. Polly’s Special
319. Prince
320. Prince Charlie
321. Puates Delight
322. Purple Heather
323. Purple Princess
324. Quarterdeck Cocktail
325. Queen Of Scots
326. Ramsay Cooler
327. Rase-Mottes
328. Red Breast,
329. Red Neck Martini,
330. Red Scotch,
331. Remsen Cooler
332. Rim Job
333. R.M.S. Queen Mary,
334. Robert Burns,
335. Robin,
336. Rob Roy,
337. Rob Roy 1,
338. Rob Roy 2,
339. Rob Roy Cocktail,
340. Royal Scot,
341. Rusty Mist
342. Rusty Nail,
343. Rusty Nail Cocktail,
344. Rusty Screw
345. Rusty Spike
346. Rickey
347. R U Bobby Moore?
348. Sam’s Special
349. Sandy Collins
350. Sangarees
351. Santa Anita
352. Sazerac,
353. Scotch and Water
354. Scotch Bird Flyer
355. Scotch Bishop Cocktail
356. Scotch Bounty Martini,
357. Scotch Cocktail,
358. Scotch Collins,
359. Scotch Cobbler
360. Scotch Cooler
361. Scotch Daisy
362. Scotch Fix
363. Scotch Flip
364. Scotch Highball
365. Scotch Holiday Sour
366. Scotch Melon Sour
367. Scotch Milk Punch,
368. Scotch Mist,
369. Scotch Negroni,
370. Scotch Old Fashioned,
371. Scotch Paradise,
372. Scotch Rickey
373. Scotch Royale
374. Scotch Sour
375. Scotch Stinger
376. Scotch Tom Collins
377. Scotch Whiskey Punch,
378. Scotch Whiskey Skin,
379. Scottalian
380. Scottie
381. Screaming Green Lizard
382. Seawanhaka yacht club cooler
383. Seething Jealousy
384. S.G Sherman
385. Sherry Twist
386. Shoot
387. Silent Third
388. Silver Bullet
389. Silver Fizz
390. Sing Sing
391. Single Standard,
392. Sky Highball
393. Slamma Jamma
394. Slapshot
395. Sling
396. Slippery Surprise
397. Smash
398. Smoky Martini
399. Smoky Martini 1
400. Smoky Apple Martini
401. Smuggler’s Gold
402. Softy
403. Sour
404. South Coast Cocktail
405. Southgate
406. Spicy Sandstrom
407. Sporran Cooler
408. Stone Fence
409. Stone Wall,
410. Speyside Martini,
411. Spiders Web,
412. Sporran Breeze,
413. Suburban
414. Summer Scotch
415. Sunrayed
416. Surprise Browst
417. Sweet Lady,
418. Sweet Science,
419. Sweet Scotch,
420. Swizzle
421. Tartan Swizzle
422. Tartantula
423. The Barbary Coast Cocktail,
424. The Bonny Scot,
425. The Broadmoor
426. The Cowboy Cocktail
427. The Crow
428. The Crow Cocktail
429. The Earthquake Cocktail
430. The Game Bird,
431. The Gloucester
432. The Hurricane Cocktail
433. The Los Angeles Cocktail
434. The Scott
435. The Shoot
436. The Spread Eagle Punch
437. Thistle,
438. Thistle Cocktail,
439. Thompson
440. Thriller
441. Thriller Martini
442. Tilt The Kilt
443. To Hell With Swords And Garter
444. Toddies,
445. Toddy,
446. Topaz
447. Trilby,
448. Trilby Cocktail,
449. Trinity,
450. Trouser Rouser
451. Troya
452. Velvet Kilt
453. Vowel Cocktail
454. Waldorf
455. Walters
456. Wam Bas
457. Warm Woolly Sheep
458. Waterloo
459. Wembley,
460. Wembley Cocktail No. 2,
461. Wildflower Cocktail,
462. Whiskey
463. Whiskey and Mint,
464. Whiskey and Tansey,
465. Whiskey Cobbler,
466. Whiskey Cocktail,
467. Whiskey Crusta,
468. Whiskey Fizz,
469. Whiskey Fizz No. 2,
470. Whiskey Fix,
471. Whiskey Flip,
472. Whiskey Julep,
473. Whiskey Milk
474. Whiskey Orange The Jesperian Way
475. Whiskey Punch,
476. Whiskey Sling,
477. Whiskey Sour,
478. Whiskey Toddy,
479. Whiskey Flash,
480. Whisky And Honey
481. Whisky Cobbler
482. Whisky Cocktail
483. Whisky Collins
484. Whisky Cooler
485. Whisky Crusta
486. Whisky Daisy
487. Whisky Daisy L’Amour
488. Whisky Fix
489. Whisky Fizz
490. Whisky Flip Flap
491. Whisky Highball
492. Whisky Julep
493. Whisky Mac
494. Whisky Melba
495. Whisky Punch,
496. Whisky Punch à la Barrett,
497. Whisky Punch à la Taylor,
498. Whisky Rickey,
499. Whisky Royale,
500. Whisky Sangaree,
501. Whisky Sling,
502. Whisky SmashWhisky & Soda,
503. Whisky Sour
504. Whisky Toddy
505. Whisper
506. Whispers of the Frost
507. White Christmas
508. White Horse,
509. White Horse Daisy ,
510. White Knight
511. Whiz-Bang,
512. Whiz-bang Cocktail
513. Whizz Bang
514. Widow Wood’s Nightcap
515. Wild Honey
516. Wildflower Cocktail
517. Witch Hunt
518. Wonderland
519. Woodward Cocktail
520. Xfour Summer Tody
521. York
522. Zeke’s Suprise
523. Zazarac I
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