How to Flame an Orange Twist for Cocktails

A cocktail is just more fun when it involves (intentionally) setting something on fire. In this case, it’s an orange peel. Aside from the spectacle, the point of a flaming orange twist garnish is to impart some citrus oil and a little smoke to your drink. It’s wholly optional—an unflamed citrus twist will do the job, too—yet wholly entertaining.

This garnish is for drinks with aged dark spirits or a lot of bitterness. So it’s too intense for, say, a Martini or Mojito and definitely overkill for a Piña Colada. But enough no, here’s some yes. Try it with these drinks:

Watch the video from Bon Appetit to learn how to do it … and be safe!

Bloody Mary Improvisation

I posted over on Serious Eats about my favorite Bloody Mary garnish, the bacon swizzle stick. So my intention was to share my Bloody Mary recipe here … until I realized I don’t have one. Now, this isn’t because I don’t make Bloody Marys. But every time I’ve tried to document my recipe, I end up tasting and tweaking. I have at least 13 half-written recipes that I stopped documenting. I think as much as I love the taste of a good Bloody Mary, I also love the process of improvising one.

I link to some good recipes in the bacon post, but here’s what I usually do:

  1. Make spicy tomato juice by blending fresh or canned tomatoes with a chile pepper. (You’ll need about 4 ounces per drink.)
  2. Add soy sauce (or Worcestershire sauce) to taste. Possibly also some garlic? Maybe a dash of Tabasco or Sriracha?  Often some celery salt, but usually some pepper? Oh, and of course a big old dollop of horseradish.
  3. Now some lemon juice. Maybe a little more.
  4. Vodka time! One shot (1 1/2 ounces) of whatever I have, which is often a mini-bar-sized sample bottle I got for review purposes.
  5. Roll the drink with ice (this is pouring the liquid and ice back and forth between two halves of a Boston shaker or two pint glasses).
  6. Serve on the rocks in a tall glass and garnish the hell out of it.

Now for the best part … garnishing options. I usually do at least two garnishes. Besides the always-wonderful bacon stirrer, other options are:

  1. The traditional leafy celery stalk
  2. Olives
  3. Cornichons
  4. Pickled asparagus or green beans
  5. Crab claw
  6. Skewered, hard-boiled quail egg
  7. Shrimp
  8. Okra
  9. Skewered cheeses

I’m open to more. Like I always say: Everyone loves a cocktail that comes with a snack.