Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails. Harry MacElhone

Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails


Harry.s.ABC.of.Mixing.Cocktails.pdf
ISBN: 9780285638914 | 128 pages | 4 Mb


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Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails Harry MacElhone
Publisher: Souvenir Press



1922, MacElhone, Harry, Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails, 3/5, 4/5. 1922, Vermeire, Robert, Cocktails: How to Mix Them, 3/5, 4/5. But where does the name come from? The Old Pal Cocktail first appears in "ABC of Mixing Cocktails" by Harry MacElhone of the famed Harry's New York Bar in Paris. In his 1922 book Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails, Harry MacElhone credits the drink to Pat MacGarry, one of the great bartenders of the day. From the From Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails, ca. Following the 1922 “Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails” recipe book, the Side Car combines Courvoisier VS, Cointreau and fresh lemon juice. You might not have Harry MacEthone (bartender at Ciro's club in London who published one of the first cocktail books, Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails, in 1919. Hailing first from Harry McElhone's ABC of Mixing Cocktails (1923), this cocktail then appears in The Savoy Cocktail Book (1930), The Official Mixer's Manual (1934), and The How and When (1937). The Old Pal is credited to Harry MacElhone in his 1922 book, ABC of Mixing Cocktails , which is made with equal parts Canadian Rye Whiskey, French Vermouth and Campari (1:1:1). Here are some of the ads which friends have turned up and scanned from various London publications, contemporaneous with the publication of the Savoy Cocktail Book. The first recipe for a Sidecar cocktail appeared in 1922 in Harry MacElhone's Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails. The origins of the drink are still slightly fuzzy, but the first written mention of the drink comes from Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails, in 1919. This was also backed up in Robert Vermeire's 1922 Cocktails and How to Mix Them. 1899 Ye Cocktails - Cocktails How to make them - anon. McElhone's earlier volume, “Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails,” has the cocktail listed using Canadian Club as the whisky. 1926, John Hamilton Publishers, Limited, The Cocktail Book, 3/5, 3/5. Furthermore, according to Regan, a recipe for the cocktail can be originally found in a book by Hugo R. According to the 1922 tome Harry's ABC of Mixing Cocktails book, Harry McElhone is the creator of the strangely named drink.

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