Ep. 37: Hey bub, drink the Clover Club – Clover Club and Lillet Rose Clover Club
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Welcome to episode 37 of The Art of Drinking with Join Jules and Your Favorite Uncle
What are we drinking this week?
For whatever reason, the Clover Club isn’t on many cocktail menus and that is a dang shame! This pink beauty has all the right moves to make its way into your heart. Uncle Brad makes the classic and gives us the history behind the drink. Jules makes it with a twist, tipping her hat to Julie Reiner who brought the once lost Clover Club back from the ashes.
Tip: different types of gin
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How do I make it Uncle Brad?
Brad, what do we need?
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Chilled Coupe Glass, throw that coupe in the freezer!
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Boston Shaker
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Jigger
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Egg white
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London Dry Gin (try Brockmans)
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Raspberry simple syrup (Sugar, Water + Raspberries)
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Lemons
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Ice
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Fine Mesh Strainer
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Hawthorne Strainer
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Cocktail Pick
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Garnish: Three Raspberries
Brad, how do I make it?
Chill your coupe glass
In your boston shaker:
1 egg white
Grab your jigger
2 oz gin (London dry works great here, as does New Western – in this case I used Brockmans. Look for flavors that compliment raspberry – citrus is always a great compliment)
¾ oz raspberry simple syrup
¾ oz lemon juice fresh
DRY Shake it
Add LOTSA ICE small side of shaker
SHAKE IT AGAIN
Double strain into your coupe (hawthorn strainer and fine mesh strainer)
Garnish with 3 raspberries
Jules, what do we need?
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Coupe glass, chill it while you’re making your cocktail!
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Boston shaker
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Jigger
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Hawthorne strainer
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Fine Mesh strainer
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Gin, try Gray Whale
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Lillet Rose
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Lemons
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Simple Syrup
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Raspberries
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Ice
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Cocktail pick
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Garnish: 3 raspberries
Jule’s Lillet Rose Clover Club Version
1 egg white
1.5 oz gin
1/2 oz Lillet Rose
3/4 oz fresh lemon juice
1/2 oz simple syrup
4-5 raspberries, muddled
Dry shake
Add ice
shake again
Double strain & garnish with 3 raspberries
Little history lesson
it went into decline in 1939, pink was no longer the color of “Men” and the drink landed on Esquire magazine’s 10 Worst Drinks of the decade. In WWII, supply chain issues and general rationing, combined with the dark age of cocktails, the 1950’s , 60’s and 70’s. Pre-mix, bottle juices, soda guns. Making fresh syrups and using fresh squeezed juices was insannnne. Plus it was just, inappropriate for a fella to order a frothy, let alone pink, drink. Men were expected to drink manly drinks… like the manhattans, martinis, whiskey. We said goodbye to egg white cocktails and the Clover Club vanished from menus. As did a lot of fab cocktails. By the way, a lot of fab cocktails being made with Gin.
Enter the ginasance – they say began around 2004 with Fever Tree tonic.
What’s our tip?
Tip: How to buy gin for your bar cart
Let’s get into the main types of gin
London Dry Gin, Old Tom Gin, Genever, and New Western or Contemporary Gin.
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London Dry gin is known for its juniper-forward flavor profile with a focus on botanicals like juniper berries, coriander, angelica root, and citrus peel.
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Cocktails like: Martini, Negroni
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Old Tom Gin is a slightly sweeter style of gin, bridging the gap between London Dry Gin and Genever as it has more sweetness.
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Cocktails like: Tom Collins, or Martinez
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Genever, also known as Dutch gin, has a maltier and more grain flavor compared to other styles of gin with flavors of juniper, malt, spices, and herbs.
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New Western or Contemporary Gin breaks away from the traditional juniper-forward focus of London Dry Gin with a wide range of flavors, with juniper not as predominant as the other botanicals like citrus, floral, or herbal notes.
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Example: Monkey 47, Hendricks
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Classic cocktails like: Bee’s Knee’s or French 75
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Make sure to get your History Lesson & the full recipes by listening to today’s episode and make sure to tune in every Wednesday for a brand new episode!
Tune in every Wednesday for a new episode
The Art of Drinking
Jules
IG: @join_jules
TikTok: @join_jules
Website: joinjules.com
Brad
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