that's the Spirit! Cocktails, Drinks and Entertaining ideas
Quick Cocktail Recipe Search

Search: Cocktails Articles
HomeNewsletterContact Us November 20, 2008



  Holiday Meal Planning:
Which Wine goes with Turkey ?

3000 Cocktail and Drink recipes
search
popular drinks
drink spotlight
all about Caesar
Entertaining Ideas presented by Schweppes
party planning
party themes
home bar setup
occasions calendar
Mixology
all about
how to
tools of the trade tools of the trade
glossary
ask the EXPERT
Wine
world tour
wine types
how to
wine of the Month
wine glossary
Beer
all about beer
beer cocktails
entertain with beer
beer BLOG
Food
from BLAND to BOLD
cooking with spirit
beer & food
wine & food
food BLOG

Resources
contests & surveys
email the bartender
link to us
media guide

3000 Drinks
3000 Drinks and cocktails

THE GIMLET

 

Like many a great cocktail, the gimlet, a crisp tipple traditionally made with gin and Rose’s Lime Cordial, has a bit of a foggy history. One thing’s for sure though, it all started with scurvy on the high seas.

The Origin

In 1867, the Merchant Shipping Act declared that, in an effort to prevent the dreaded scurvy, all ships of the British Royal Navy had to carry stores of lime juice. Sailors, to make the lime more palatable, added gin and named the mixture after the corkscrew-like device used to open the barrels of juice. In the official Royal Navy story, it was T.O. Gimlette, a naval surgeon who came aboard in 1879, who created the concoction to encourage shipmates to take the lime rations. (One can assume that the juice not only tasted better, but was a lot more fun to drink.)

TASTE TEST

Vodka or gin? Fresh lime or cordial? Falernum or tequila? Um…Tequila? Try these gimlet recipes (along with a couple of variations) and discover your ideal mix:

The Recipe

While the drink’s name and origins are a matter of some debate, they’re secondary, really, to the tussle over how to craft a proper gimlet. The answer depends on how close to the textbook you go.

In Raymond Chandler’s 1953 novel, The Long Goodbye, gumshoe and gimlet connoisseur Philip Marlowe asserts, “A real gimlet is half gin and half Rose’s Lime Juice, and nothing else. It beats martinis hollow.” Marlowe’s recipe has the authenticity of being listed in Harry Craddock’s 1930 Savoy Cocktail Book, though many prefer it with more gin than lime – less sweet syrup, more head-boring gin kick.

Sometime in the late 20th century, vodka entered the gimlet vernacular and became, for some, the preferred accompaniment to lime. Also vying for a spot in the mix are soda water (really a gin rickey), fresh lime juice (Craddock calls this one a gimblet), sugar, and lime wedges. Lovers of the gimlet are often fiercely loyal to their particular mixture, obstinately refusing to consider, or even taste the rival quaff. Gin wins on historical accuracy, but taste usually trumps, so you’ll have to decide what you like best. Whatever you do though, make it cold.

 

BAR FACT

Rose’s Lime Cordial

In the 19th century, ships of the Royal Navy carried citrus juice, preserved with rum, to keep scurvy at bay. In 1867, lime juice became the law and, as luck would have it, Lauchlin Rose found a way to preserve the drink without alcohol. Lucky for Lauchlin Rose, of course; he enjoyed sky-high sales from shipping companies who didn’t want their men clouded with alcohol. Not so lucky for the sailors, who surely preferred their juice with rum.


from BLAND to BOLD in a flash

Current Features
Drink Spotlight
Party Ideas

party calculator