|
The martini is the classic cocktail. H. L. Mencken once called the Martini, 'the only American invention as perfect as
the sonnet.'
A modern martini is made with two and one half ounces of gin and a half ounce of dry
vermouth, stirred with crushed ice and then
strained into a chilled cocktail glass, and served "straight up"
(without ice), though other recipes may be used. The drink is usually garnished with an
olive, or sometimes with lemon rind (a twist),
and less often with cocktail onions or capers.
Note that, to a cocktail purist, a "martini" with onions instead of olives is a gibson, and each other change in garnish
likewise requires a distinct name.
The benefit of the olive is to add salt, as bar olives are usually preserved in brine.
A "dry" martini is one made with less vermouth; a "very dry" Martini is basically a cold glass of gin (though the ice will
contribute some water to the final drink as well). Standard witticisms include to observe that "there was vermouth in the house
once," or to wave the cap of the vermouth bottle over the glass. General
Patton suggested pointing the gin bottle in the general direction of Italy. In a classic bit of stage business in the 1955 play
Auntie Mame sophisticated pre-adolescent Patrick Dennis offers a
martini, which he prepares by swilling a drop of vermouth in the glass, then tossing it out before filling the glass with gin.
Similarly, in the 1958 movie Teacher's Pet, Clark Gable mixes a martini by
turning the bottle of vermouth upside-down before running the moistened cork around the rim of the glass and filling it with gin.
Also, atomizers similar to those used
for perfume are sometimes used to dispense a token amount of vermouth.
Cocktail lore has it that the Martini is a descendent of the older Martinez, which consists of two
ounces of sweet vermouth, one ounce gin, two
dashes maraschino cherry liquid, and one dash bitters, shaken with ice, strained, and served with a twist of lemon. Martini
recipes of the 1800s are similar to the modern recipe except that they also add a dash of bitters.
William Grimes, restaurant critic for the New York Times avers (in Straight Up or On the Rocks: the story of the
American cocktail 2001) that the dry Martini was invented by the bartender, sig. Martini di Arma di Taggia, at the Knickerbocker Hotel, New
York, in 1912. However, Lowell Edmunds (Martini Straight Up, 2003) tracked the cocktail to California in the 1870s.
Western culture has created almost a mythology around the Martini. The classic Martini was stirred, 'not to bruise the gin'.
It was James Bond from the Ian
Fleming novels who ordered his "shaken, not stirred", and other devotees of the drink have similar preferences for the
technique of making the drink (In the novel Casino Royale,
Bond's recipe is specified in more detail as made with three measures of gin (Gordon's was Bond's preference, although that brand
has been cheapened. Any good London Dry will do), one measure of vodka (Russian or Polish is preferred), and half a measure of
Kina Lillet apertif, shaken until ice-cold, and with a large, thin slice of lemon peel for garnish (properly called a "Vesper"
after his love interest in the book). By the second Bond novel, Live and Let Die, Bond was drinking vodka "martinis" (properly called a "kangaroo"), a trend that
continued when 007 moved to the silver screen in 1962).
The concept of 'bruising gin' as a result of shaking a martini is an oft-debated topic. A shaken martini is different from
stirred for a few reasons. The shaking action breaks up the ice and adds more water, slightly weakening the drink but rounding
the taste. Shaking also adds tiny air bubbles, which can lead to a cloudy drink instead of clear. Also, the vermouth is more
evenly distributed by shaking, which can alter the flavor and texture of the beverage as well.
The martini is used as a symbol for cocktails and nightlife in general; American bars often have a picture of a conical martini glass with an olive on their
signs.
Many variations exist on the standard martini described above:
- A Vodka Martini (Kangaroo) is made the same way but with vodka
instead of gin, and more often uses lemon rind as the
garnish. This is the most common variation, and in fact is more popular than the original in some locations.
- A Dirty Martini has some of the brine (at least a teaspoon) from the olive jar added.
- A Naked Martini is made without ice, but with the ingredients and glass chilled.
- A Sweet Martini is made with sweet red vermouth, and may be garnished with a maraschino cherry instead of an olive.
- A Sake Martini substitutes a dry, clear sake for the vermouth.
- A Gibson is a standard dry martini that is garnished with a cocktail onion instead of an olive.
- A Tequila Martini, substituting tequila for gin.
- A Akvavit Martini, substitutes Akvavit for gin.
- A Gin Salad is made like the ordinary martini but with three olives and two cocktail onions as garnish.
Sometimes the term "Martini" is used to refer to other mostly-hard-liquor cocktails such as Manhattans, Cosmopolitans,
and ad-hoc or local conconctions whose only commonality with the drink is the cocktail glass in which they are served. Chefs with
a more whimsical bent are even producing dessert "Martinis" which are not a drink at all, but merely a reference to the
glass.
See also the Wikipedia Cocktail Guide.
See also retro
martini glasses.
|