Beverage News Hubb
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
Beverage News Hubb
No Result
View All Result
Home Beverage News

How to Use Pandan Syrup in Negronis, Tropical Drinks and More

admin by admin
May 1, 2023
in Beverage News


Floral, nutty and aromatic, pandan often finds itself in tropical drinks like swizzles or Jungle Birds. But just like coconut, whose flavor it sometimes recalls, the Southeast Asian herb can figure into drinks of any style.

Given pandan’s complex flavor profile, it’s comparatively simple to incorporate its distinctive notes into a cocktail. Pandan syrup is all you need. There are two easy ways to make it: Steep pandan leaves in a simple syrup, as Napier Bulanan does in her Old-Fashioned riff, Sige Na, or combine simple syrup and the leaves in a blender, then strain the mixture, as French bartender Nico de Soto does for his Pandan-quiri, a straightforward riff on the rum classic that benefits from pandan’s nuanced profile.

Outside of an Old-Fashioned and a Daiquiri, though, using this easy syrup is one of the most versatile ways to bring a verdant punch to a range of recipes. In a Negroni, it recalls the aperitiki canon, an easy-drinking mashup of Italian and tropical flavors; it also shines in dessert-like drinks thanks to its confectionery notes, as well as in long, crushable cocktails owing to its herbaceous qualities.

The versatile sweetener is also customizable based on personal taste. Using dried herbs versus fresh, for instance, can yield a syrup with a more pronounced flavor. And in place of the herb, which can often be found dried or frozen at Asian grocery stores, pandan extract can be swapped in or used to amplify an already infused batch. It’s a forgiving format, one that’s worth experimenting with, especially because, as de Soto says, “it is one of the most complex flavors you can have… There’s no ingredient in the world that has that nutty flavor, those layers, that complexity.”





Source link

Tags: technique
Previous Post

Review: Wines of Dutcher Crossing, Summer 2023 Releases

Next Post

15 Easy Beer Cocktail Recipes To Try at Home

Next Post

15 Easy Beer Cocktail Recipes To Try at Home

Recommended

What Chilled 100 Bartenders Learned from the Social Media Seminar with Beautiful Booze at this Year’s Elevate

February 2, 2023

Bar Agricole Launches a Single Origin Spirits Line

December 15, 2022

Don't miss it

Cocktails & Mocktails

The Best Gin Brands for a Gin & Tonic, According to Bartenders

May 29, 2023
Beverage News

5 Party Drinks, from Italy’s Long Island Iced Tea to a Gin Slushy

May 29, 2023
Beverage News

Review: 2021 Three Sticks Chardonnay Origin and Pinot Noir Monarch

May 29, 2023
Liquor

Chilled 100 Spirits Awards Judge Brad Coburn on Blind Tasting Spirits and Word of Mouth

May 29, 2023
Liquor

Serve in Style with Barfly Mixology Gear’s New Bitters Bottles

May 29, 2023
Beverage News

Review: 2022 Sonoma-Cutrer Rose of Pinot Noir Russian River Valley

May 28, 2023

© Beverage News Hubb All rights reserved.

Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us

Newsletter Sign Up

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us

© 2022 Beverage News Hubb All rights reserved.