Emperor’s Garden

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Ingredients
- 1cup thinly sliced rhubarb
- 1cup sugar
- 5Thai basil leaves; more for garnish
- 1teaspoon seasoned rice wine vinegar
- 1½ounces gin
- ¾ounce lemon juice
Preparation
- Step 1
Make rhubarb simple syrup: Bring 1 cup water to a boil in a medium saucepan. Add rhubarb and sugar, and stir until sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat, cover and let stand for 1 hour. Reserve a selection of rhubarb slices as cocktail garnishes, then strain syrup and store chilled for up to 7 days.
- Step 2
In a mixing glass, muddle the Thai basil leaves with the seasoned rice wine vinegar. Add gin, 1 ounce rhubarb simple syrup and lemon juice. Fill mixing glass ⅔ full of ice and shake vigorously. Using a fine mesh strainer, pour into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with a Thai basil leaf and a slice of reserved rhubarb.
Private Notes
Comments
The rhubarb and basil were very nice for this spring season drink. Not that I was looking for improvement but adding bubbles by topping it off with San Pellegrino was a nice option, as well.
Apple cider vinegar also works.
This cocktail has been a springtime hit with guests. (Ah, guests! Remember what that word means?!) The flavor is bright and the vinegar adds an almost shrub-like quality. The basil is a fragrant complement to the rhubarb and lemon flavors. I made a pitcher to serve eight, steeping some basil in the fruity mix, but I'd recommend muddling a few fresh leaves before serving. They go down very, very easy! A float of seltzer or club soda could be a nice addition, as another reviewer noted.
Any suggestions on how to bulk produce this? Particularly with the muddling. Could I muddle the basil and vinegar ahead of time?
A few random notes -- - my cocktails came out much prettier than the NY Times photo. They were a gorgeous pale pink. - the nutritional information (for those, like me, who have to count calories) is wildly off base. I estimate each cocktail is about 250 - 300 calories. - I thought this was a good, but not great, cocktail. Clearly I am in the minority!
I recently discovered you can substitute the young shoots of the invasive plant Japanese Knotweed for rhubarb, and I did just that. Lovely color, pleasant sweet and tart drink.
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