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SOUTHSIDE COCKTAIL

citrus
refreshing

The recipe can be traced back to at least 1916, when it appeared in Huge Enslinn’s book “Recipes for Mixed Drinks” as the South Side Fizz. His version called for gin, lemon and lime juices, sugar, mint and club soda. Lose the bubbles and cull one of the citrus fruits, and you get the South Side as we know it today. Multiple accounts peg the South Side’s creation to the 21 Club in New York, a bar that poured countless South Sides throughout the decades. But considering that the first iteration of the famous speakeasy didn’t open until 1922, it’s more likely that the bar popularized the drink rather than invented it. Browse South Side recipes at cocktail bars today, and you will find some drinks made with lemon and others with lime. This citrusy kerfuffle may stem from Enslinn’s recipe containing both juices

Ingredients

  • 2 oz. (60 ml) (Dry) Gin
  • 1/2 oz. (15 ml) fresh lemon juice
  • 1/2 oz. (15 ml) fresh lime juice
  • 3/4 oz. (22.5 ml) Simple syrup
  • 6-10 mint leaves

Method

    Add the mint leaves and lemon juice into a shaker and gently muddle. Add the gin and simple syrup with ice, and shake until well-chilled. Double-strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with a mint sprig.

Crafted for you by

dit is thomas

Thomas

Mixologist

A good bartender is part mixologist, part therapist, and part magician.