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These Cocktails Are Kind of a Big Dill

These Cocktails Are Kind of a Big Dill


Mixologists have long reached into the crisper drawer for fresh herbs to utilize in cocktails. 

Mint is a longtime favorite; it’s the foundation of many smash cocktails, which date back to the 1840s, and muddled mint juleps, which surge in popularity every year around a certain springtime horse race. Herbs like basil and cilantro also make frequent barroom cameos, especially as savory cocktails gain popularity.

More recently, another herb has entered the chat: dill. With a distinctly grassy, bright herbal flavor profile, it’s an iconic element in foods like pickles, matzo ball soup and many Greek dishes. However, the form it takes in cocktails can vary.

Some bartenders are taking cues from classic dill-forward cuisine. Consider the Tzatziki cocktail at La Otra in Aberdeen Township, New Jersey, which takes inspiration from the famous Greek dip. The gimlet-like concoction, which is clarified with Greek yogurt, features vodka, aquavit, yogurt, cucumber and, of course, dill.

Meanwhile, others are taking advantage of the herb’s adaptability to create even more inventive, dill-forward takes.

Image Courtesy of La Otra

The Wide World of Dill

“Dill is pretty flexible,” says Logan Rodriguez, head bartender at Smithereens, a New England-inspired restaurant in New York City. He considers it “underused,” but that’s changing. “It’s an herb that has a meandering identity. With dill, you may think of Scandinavian food or the strong Greek culinary connections, but it can also be found in Thailand, Africa and other parts of the world.”

The herb stars in Smithereens’s Goblin cocktail, a bright green drink resembling a gimlet. It packs a dialed-up herbaceous flavor against a base of coconut fat-washed gin. Just like how a dill pickle cuts the richness of a greasy burger, the drink’s dill-infused simple syrup cuts through its fatty gin notes.

Goblin Cocktail from Smithereens
Photography by Matthew Hirtz for Smithereens

Dill also delivers a slight sweetness, which can be a great complement to spice. This plays out in a dill-infused cocktail called the Seabass at Indienne, a Michelin-starred Indian fine dining spot in Chicago. The drink—a blend of gin, lacto-fermented cucumber, dill and chili oil—is indicative of a cocktail program that “[doesn’t] just complement food but [becomes] an extension of it,” says head mixologist Akshar Chalwadi.

“Using dill in a cocktail at Indienne made a lot of sense given the restaurant’s focus on blending bold, aromatic flavors,” he says. “Dill offers a refreshing element that helps balance out rich, spicy dishes.”

Seabass Cocktail Indienne
Photography by John Burger for Indienne

Dill-igent Use of Technique

While heartier herbs are often muddled, dill is quite delicate and needs to be handled with care. With this in mind, many bartenders opt to incorporate it through a syrup or cordial to deliver dill flavor without having to worry about texture.

Such is the case at Sap Sua, a Vietnamese restaurant in Denver. Dill features in its Tiger’s Milk cocktail, an ocher-hued libation of gin, orange, onion and chili. Beverage director George Wright sous vides the gin with dill to extract a subtle presentation of the herb’s earthy flavor.

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“Dill can be somewhat polarizing,” he says. “I really wanted to find a way to incorporate it without it being so much dill in your face. It was tricky because it has such a strong, aromatic flavor.”

Wright then takes the dill flavor a step further, finishing the cocktail with a drizzle of homemade dill-infused oil. In addition to creating a striking visual effect, it also delivers a whiff of dill that greets drinkers at first sip.

Tigers Milk Cocktail
Image Courtesy of Sap Sua

Dill is also the star of the Dill Breaker cocktail at Little’s Oyster Bar in Houston. It features a blend of vodka, lemon juice and a house-made dill cordial, all garnished with a fresh sprig of dill.

Oliver Brooks, the restaurant’s bar manager, chalks the herb’s newfound popularity behind the bar up to an overall swing toward more culinary cocktails—a trend he says is exciting to bartenders and drinkers alike.

“By using more savory herbs in cocktails, we have an opportunity to introduce new flavors,” Brooks says. “It means we still have an opportunity to surprise people.”

Dill Breaker cocktail
Photography by Arturo Olmos for Little’s Oyster Bar

Dill Breaker

Recipe courtesy of Little’s Oyster Bar in Houston, Texas.

Ingredients

  • 2 ounces vodka
  • ½ ounce lemon juice
  • ¾ ounce house-made dill cordial (recipe below)
  • 1 bar spoon simple syrup
  • 1 sprig of fresh dill

Instructions


Step 1

Combine vodka, lemon juice, cordial and simple syrup into a cocktail shaker with ice.


Step 2

Shake for 10 to 15 seconds and fine strain into a martini glass.


Step 3

Garnish with a sprig of fresh dill.

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Dill Cordial

  • 10 to 12 dill sprigs
  • 1½ ounces lemon juice
  • 1½ ounces grapefruit juice
  • 1/8 cup citric acid
  • 2¼ cups water
  • 2½ cups granulated sugar


Step 1

Add all ingredients to a blender and blend until sugar is completely dissolved. Strain through the finest strainer possible. (Some small pieces of dill may remain after straining.) Store in the refrigerator for up to a week.


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The post These Cocktails Are Kind of a Big Dill appeared first on Wine Enthusiast.





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