Aperitif
Cranberry Gin and Tonics
Festive and beautiful, this creation of editor Nichol Nelson is packed with real cranberry flavor. Forcing some of the berries through a sieve into the syrup intensifies the drink's fruitiness.
French 75
This drink was featured as a Cocktail of the Month.
Blood Orange French 75
Blood orange pulp and a dash of bitters update the classic Champagne-gin cocktail. Make the base for the drink one day ahead if you like.
French 75 Cocktail III
These refreshing cocktails, named for the French 75-millimeter howitzer cannon, starts a party off with a bang.
Vodka Cooler
This refreshing drink can be made without the vodka to appeal to thirsty tennis players between sets or after a long match.
French 75 Cocktail II
This intoxicating champagne cocktail was named after a French 75-millimeter gun used in World War I. Many American bartenders claimed to have invented the drink. One recipe, from 1919, called for absinthe, Calvados, and gin, but no champagne. Supposedly, the champagne version was introduced at Harry's New York Bar in Paris in 1925. Or the cocktail might have originated with American soldiers in Paris, who added gin and liqueur to champagne to crank up its potency.