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 Cocktails & Mocktails

How to Use Cachaça in Cocktails, Plus the Best Recipes to Try

admin by admin
May 22, 2023
in Cocktails & Mocktails


Best known for its role in the Caipirinha, cachaça has been experiencing a new wave of popularity as its aged varieties expand the spirit’s repertoire beyond Brazil’s national cocktail. 

As a spirit distilled from fermented sugarcane juice, unaged cachaça bears a close resemblance to Caribbean rhum agricole. But it’s the unique aging process, which often takes place in indigenous-wood barrels in both South and Latin America, that yields “a complete outlier spirit,” says Pietro Collina, former bar manager at New York’s The NoMad Bar. “Right now they’re counting over 28 different types of wood that cachaça is aged in,” explains Collina, “so you have a lot of variety [in flavor].”

Macunaíma

A citrusy shaken drink that’s become a national favorite in Brazil.

While the Caipirinha is the most well-known cachaça cocktail around the world, the most consumed drink made with the spirit in its native home of Brazil is the Rabo de Galo. The stirred cocktail made with sweet vermouth and Cynar is a bracing foil to the sweet-sour Caiprinha. Also popular across the country is the Macunaíma, a crowd-pleasing combination of the spirit, fernet and lime, served down without ice. Even in classics born outside of Brazil, the spirit can shine, as in Cafe La Trova’s take on the Cuban Chancleta, where the funky spirit is used to approximate the flavor of Cuban aguardiente.

Despite the rise of these regional drinks, and the fact that cachaça is the third most consumed spirit in the world, only a select number of bottlings are available in the U.S., most notably from producers Yaguara, Leblon, Novo Fogo and Avuá. Of these, it’s the Avuá Amburana—aged in barrels made of amburana wood, which is native to Brazil—that stands out most to Collina. He describes the amburana-aged spirit as being full-bodied with “hints of cinnamon, nutmeg and clove”—all flavors imparted by the wood—and says it complements the malt quality of genever. The NoMad’s Sakura Maru cocktail, a green tea- and yogurt-inflected sour, employs the pairing. “We want to go away from the idea of cachaça in a Caipirinha or a Daiquiri variation,” explains Collina. “We’re trying to kind of explore what the next thing is going to be.”

Nomad Cocktail Recipe

Sakura Maru

Citrus, pisco, genever and cachaça come together in this refreshing cocktail.

Iz Bananas Amaro Cocktail Recipe

Iz Bananaz

The odd mix of cachaça and Amaro Montenegro blends together seamlessly with toasty banana liqueur.

Banana Cocktail Recipe

Boardwalk Flyer

Aged cachaça, vermouth and banana liqueur, all swizzled together into a perfect beach drink.

Of course, Collina isn’t the only bartender intent on exploring the possibilities afforded by the unusual funkiness of this relatively new-to-market spirit. Bar consultant Rob Krueger, for example, finds an unlikely pairing of Avuá Amburana and bittersweet Amaro Montenegro, rounded out by a tropical note of banana liqueur, in his aptly named Iz Bananaz. Damon Boelte, of New York’s Grand Army, also makes the connection between cachaça and banana, pairing the spirit with Giffard Banane du Brésil, bianco vermouth and lime juice in the beach-ready Boardwalk Flyer. Jacob Grier, meanwhile, takes an entirely different approach in his Trigger Warning, which plays off both the grain character and spiced barrel notes of Novo Fogo Barrel Aged Cachaça by pairing it with wheat beer and habanero syrup.

The large degree to which bartenders are experimenting owes much to the diversity of the category; the lack of regulation dictating the types of wood that the spirit can be aged in has yielded a wide variety of expressions, even among the limited bottles available in the U.S.

“You can make so much more of an impact on a drink by using some of these spirits [rather] than just going back to your regular whiskey or your regular rum,” concludes Collina.

Get our freshest features and recipes weekly.

Related Articles

More Stories you may like





Source link

Tags: cocktail package
Previous Post

The French Martini Is Back, Plus the Best Recipe for the Classic

Next Post

Hangover Smoothie – Simple Green Smoothies

Next Post

Hangover Smoothie - Simple Green Smoothies

Recommended

Basil Hayden Releases a Red Wine Cask-Finished Bourbon

December 20, 2022

New Irish Whiskeys to Drink Now

March 15, 2023

Don't miss it

Cocktails & Mocktails

Need Affordability? Versatility? Variety? Look to Beaujolais.

June 8, 2023
Beverage News

Beaujolais: The Original ‘It’ Wine Region

June 8, 2023
Beverage News

How Climate Change Is Transforming Wine: An Interview with San Felice’s Carlo De Biasi

June 8, 2023
Liquor

India’s NV Group Introduces Smoke Lab Saffron Flavored Vodka

June 8, 2023
Cocktails & Mocktails

17 Best Classy But Affordable Whiskey Glasses On Amazon – Advanced Mixology

June 8, 2023
Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks

5 Vegan Pesto Recipes – Simple Green Smoothies

June 8, 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.