List of cocktails: Difference between revisions
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* [[Mixed drink shooters and drink shots#Shooters with whiskey/whisky or bourbon|Heart of Fire]] |
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* [[Irish Coffee]]{{Wikipedia:WikiProject Cocktails/Templates/Badges/IBAOfficialMini}} |
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Revision as of 15:44, 1 September 2011
A cocktail is a mixed drink typically made with a distilled beverage (such as gin, vodka, whiskey, tequila, or rum) that is mixed with other ingredients. If beer is one of the ingredients, the drink is called a beer cocktail.
Cocktails contain one or more types of liqueur, juice, fruit, sauce, honey, milk or cream, spices, or other flavorings. Cocktails may vary in their ingredients from bartender to bartender, and from region to region. Two creations may have the same name but taste very different because of differences in how the drinks are prepared.
- This article is organized by the primary type of alcohol (by volume) contained in the beverage.
- Cocktails marked with "" are designated as "IBA Official Cocktails" by the International Bartenders Association, and are some of the most popular cocktails worldwide.
- Expanded articles are cross-referenced. Cocktails without separate articles are listed below, along with their primary ingredients and any notable facts.[1]
- This article is not intended to be comprehensive list of all cocktails or every variation thereof, and cocktails for which sufficient information is not available are not included.
Cocktails with absinthe
Cocktails with beer
Cocktails made with beer are classified as beer cocktails.
Cocktails with brandy or cognac
- Curacao Punch
- B & B
- The Blenheim
- Brandy Alexander
- Brandy Manhattan
- Brandy Sour/Brandy Daisy
- Brandy Sour (Cyprus)
- Cafe Zürich (cocktail)
- Chicago Cocktail
- Jack Rose
- Four Score
- French 75
- French Connection
- Hayride
- Horse's Neck
- Incredible Hulk
- Nikolaschka
- Orgasm
- Panama
- Paradise
- Pisco Sour
- Piscola
- Porto flip
- Savoy Corpse Reviver
- Sidecar
- Singapore Sling
- Stinger
- Tom and Jerry
- Zombie
Cocktails with cachaça
Cocktails with gin
- The Amarosa Cocktail
- 20th Century
- Alexander
- Aviation
- Bijou
- Bloodhound
- Bronx
- Chocolate Soldier
- Corpse Reviver #2
- Culture Shock (Gin and Ramune (Original flavor))
- French 75
- Gibson
- Gimlet
- Gin Fizz
- Gin and tonic
- Gin pahit
- Gin, rum and tonic
- Gin Sling
- Gin Sour
- Hanky-Panky
- The Last Word
- Lime Rickey
- Long Island Iced Tea
- Joker
- Lorraine
- Martini
- Mickey Slim
- Montgomery
- My Fair Lady
- Negroni
- Old Etonian
- Pall Mall
- Paradise
- Pegu
- Pimm's Cup (incl. Nos. 1, 3, 6, and variants)
- Pink Gin
- Pink Lady
- Ramos Gin Fizz
- Royal Arrival
- Salty Dog
- Satan's Whiskers
- Shirley Temple Black
- Singapore Sling
- Smoky Martini
- Tom Collins
- Vesper Martini
- White Lady or Delilah
- Wolfram
Cocktails with rum
- Bacardi
- Blue Hawaii
- Brass Monkey
- Bumbo (also called a Bombo or Bumboo)
- Caribou Lou
- Corn N' Oil
- Cuba Libre
- Culto A La Vida
- Dark and Stormy
- Daiquiri
- El Presidente
- Fish House Punch
- Flaming Dr Pepper
- Flaming Volcano
- Grog
- Hairy Virgin
- Hurricane
- Jagertee
- Long Island Iced Tea
- Macuá
- Mai-Tai
- Mojito
- Painkiller
- Piña Colada
- Planter's Punch
- Royal Bermuda Cocktail
- Rum Swizzle
- Spanish Coffee
- Staten Island Ferry
- Sundowner
- Ti Punch
- Tom and Jerry
- Zombie
Cocktails with sake
- Caipisake or Sakerinha or Japonesinha
- Duncan MacLeod
- Ginza Mary
- Gong
- Nog-a-Sake
- Sake Bomb
- Sake Screwdriver
- Sake Manhattan
- Saketini
- Tamagozake
Cocktails with tequila
- Bloody Aztec
- Brave Bull - tequila and Kahlúa
- Charro Negro — tequila and Coca-Cola, standard in Mexico
- Chimayó Cocktail
- Chupacabra
- Long Island Iced Tea
- Margarita
- Matador
- Paloma — a Margarita made with white grapefruit juice (jugo de toronja), standard in Mexico
- Paralyzer
- Slammer Royale
- Tequila Slammer
- Tequila Sunrise
- Tequila Sunset
- Tonic And Tequila
- Toro Rojo
- Bananarita
Cocktails with vodka
- Agent Orange
- Apple Martini or Appletini
- Angel's Tit
- Batida (traditionally made with cachaça)
- Bay Breeze
- Black Bison - Żubrówka with blackcurrant juice
- Black Cossack
- Black Russian
- Bloody Mary
- Bull Shot
- Blue Lagoon
- Caesar
- Caipivodka or Caipiroska
- Cape Cod
- Chi-Chi
- Colombia
- Colorado Bulldog
- Cosmopolitan
- Critty Bo
- Ectoplasm
- Fizzy apple cocktail
- Flirtini
- The Goldeneye
- Godmother
- Greyhound
- Gibbon
- Harvey Wallbanger
- Harrogate Nights
- Hi-fi
- Kamikaze
- Kensington Court Special
- Kremlin Colonel
- Lime Rickey
- Link Up
- Long Island Iced Tea
- Madras
- Moscow Mule
- Mudslide
- Orange Tundra
- Paralyzer
- Polish Martini
- Red Lotus
- Redline Equal parts vodka and Old Glory energy drink
- Rose Kennedy Cocktail
- Salmiakki Koskenkorva
- Salty Dog
- Screwdriver
- Sea Breeze
- Sex on the Beach
- Vesper
- Vodka Gimlet
- Vodka Martini or Kangaroo.
- Vodka McGovern
- Vodka Sundowner
- Vodka Sunrise
- White Russian
- Yorsh
Cocktails with whiskey/whisky, rye or bourbon
- Admiral Halsey - half Jameson, half Kahlua, on ice, shaken. It is said that Admiral Halsey, a commander of US Fleet in Pacific during World War II, was a fan of this combination.
- Bearded Lady - Sweet iced tea, bourbon, and optional lemon.
- Black Tooth Grin
- Blue Blazer
- Bourbon Lancer
- Cactus Jack
- C Arthur or Prince Shnell
- Choking Hazard
- The Creeps Scotch whiskey, red Gatorade, ginger ale
- Churchill
- Farnell (cocktail)
- Four Horsemen
- General Sherman
- Godfather
- Heart of Fire
- Irish Coffee
- Jack and Coke
- Tennessee cowboy
- John Collins
- Jungle Juice
- Police Gazette - rye whiskey, white vermouth, triple sec, cherry liqueur, simple syrup, aromatic and orange bitters
- Lynchburg Lemonade
- Man O'War
- Manhattan
- Mint Julep
- Missouri Mule
- Nixon
- Northern Comfort 4 shots of whiskey mixed into one 40 US fl oz (1,200 ml) of malt liquor
- Old Fashioned
- Phlump Jameson's and ginger ale
- Presbyterian
- Rob Roy
- Rosemary - whiskey and dry vermouth, served straight up and often (though not always) garnished with a sprig of rosemary and/or lemon peel. When sweet vermouth is preferred, it is a "sweet rosemary", when Scotch is preferred it is a "rosemary mac".
- Royal Widow
- Rusty Nail
- Sazerac
- Seven and Seven or 7 & 7
- Bloody Mary or Bloodball
- Three Wise Men
- Snowball Advocaat and soda lemonade
- Whiskey sour
- Widow's Cork
- Irish Flag
Cocktails with wine, sparkling wine, or port
The following drinks are not technically cocktails unless wine is secondary by volume to a distilled beverage, since wine is a fermented beverage not a distilled one.
- Agua de Valencia
- Bellini
- Buck's Fizz
- Kalimotxo or Calimocho or Rioja Libre
- Champagne Cocktail
- Cheeky Vimto
- Chicago Cocktail
- Death in the Afternoon
- Flirtini
- French 75
- Glögg
- Golden Doublet
- Kir
- Kir Royale (see Kir)
- Mimosa
- Moonwalk
- One-Balled Dictator
- Prince of Wales
- Ruby Dutchess
- Sangría
- Savoy Affair
- Spritzer
- Tinto de Verano
- Wine cooler
- Zurracapote
Cocktails with a liqueur as the primary ingredient
Chololate Martini Duo and trio cocktails#List of Duos and Trios
Coffee-flavored drinks
- .357 (aka Colorado Bulldog)
- Admiral Halsey half Kahlua, half Jameson Irish whiskey, on ice, shaken.
- B-52 (and related B-50 series cocktails)
- Baby Guinness
- Black Russian
- Blow Job
- Brave Bull
- Dirty Mother
- Dirty White Mother
- Jamaican Coffee
- Kahlúa
- Kahlúa Colada
- Kioki (aka Spanish Coffee)
- Mexican Coffee
- Oatmeal Cookie
- Orgasm
- Smith & Kearns
- Smith & Wesson
- Spanish Coffee
- Toasted Almond
- White Russian
A liqueur containing cream, imparting a milkshake-like flavor
- Baileys Irish Cream
- B-52 (and related B-50 series cocktails)
- Blow Job
- Buttery Nipple
- Irish Car Bomb
- Irish Coffee
- Oatmeal Cookie
- Orgasm
- Quick Fuck
- Scooby Snack
- Slippery Nipple
- Screaming Orgasm
- White Russian
- Gay Dinsdale
- Banshee
- Cricket
- Golden Cadillac
- Grasshopper
- Locust
- Pink Squirrel
- Crème de menthe - Green
An intensely green, mint-flavored liqueur
- Cricket
- Grasshopper
- Green Hornet
- Orion Slave Girl
- Crème de menthe - White
A colorless mint-flavored liqueur
- Cricket
- Locust
- Stinger
Orange-flavored
One of several orange-flavored liqueurs, like Grand Marnier or Triple Sec
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A clear, blue-colored, orange-flavored liqueur
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Other fruit flavors
A clear, bright-green, melon-flavored liqueur
- Green Eyes
- Illusion
- Iguana Margarita
- Midori Sour
- Melon Ball
- Nuclear Iced Tea (aka Tokyo Tea)
- Nuclear Martini
- Pixie Stick
- Japanese Slipper
- Jump Up: 2cl Vodka, 4cl Blueberry liqueur and 14cl Sprite. Served with ice in a tall glass.
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (January 2011) |
Ouzo Licorice-flavored liqueurs Sambuca
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Tazer Tequila, jagermeister, and lime juice
- Almond-flavored liqueurs
- Alabama Slammer
- Amaretto Sour
- Blueberry Tea
- Cafe Amore
- French Connection
- Godchild (aka Goddaughter)
- Godfather
- Godmother
- Italian Sunset
- Orgasm
- Screaming Orgasm
- Silverlake Slip
- Rusty Nail
- Backdraft (also a Pepperdraft variation)
- Common Market
- Flaming Sambuca
- Grasshopper
- Jägerbomb
- Jellybean
- Pucker Up
- Carrot Cake (cocktail)
- Flaming Plum (cocktail)
Cocktails with less common spirits
Bitters (as a primary ingredient)
- Fuzzy Navel
- Hairy Navel
- Polar Bear (cocktail)
- Red headed slut
- WooWoo (aka Hairy Naval Shooter)
- Glitterbomb
- Fizzy Peach
- Appletini
Other
Historical classes of cocktails
- Bishop
- Chad Eng - anything involving liquor that blends well with fruit juices and can be appropriately garnished with flower blossoms. Typically a shade of pink, purple, turquoise, or orange.
- Cobbler — a traditional long drink that is characterized by a glass 3/4 filled with crushed or shaved ice that is formed into a centered cone, topped by slices of fruit
- Collins — a traditional long drink stirred with ice in the same glass it is served in and diluted with club soda, e.g. Tom Collins
- Crusta — characterized by a sugar rim on the glass, spirit (brandy being the most common), maraschino liqueur, aromatic bitters, lemon juice, curaçao, with an entire lemon rind as garnish
- Daisy — a traditional long drink consisting of a base spirit, lemon juice, sugar, grenadine. The most common daisy cocktail is the Brandy Daisy. Other commonly known daisies are the Whiskey Daisy, Bourbon Daisy, Gin Daisy, Rum Daisy, Lemon Daisy (the non-alcoholic variant), Portuguese Daisy (port and brandy), Vodka Daisy, and Champagne Daisy.
- Fix — a traditional long drink related to Cobblers, but mixed in a shaker and served over crushed ice
- Fizz — a traditional long drink including acidic juices and club soda, e.g. Gin Fizz
- Flip — a traditional half-long drink that is characterized by inclusion of sugar and egg yolk
- Julep — base spirit, sugar, and mint over ice. The most common is the Mint Julep. Other variations include Gin Julep, Whiskey Julep, Pineapple Julep, and Georgia Mint Julep.
- Negus
- Punch
- Sangaree
- Sling — a traditional long drink prepared by stirring ingredients over ice in the glass and filling up with juice or club soda
- Smash
- Sour
- Toddy
- Shrub - a cocktail made with a fruit syrup, usually with a vinegar base.[2]
See also
References
- ^ IBA Official Cocktail. International Bartender Association. Retrieved March 24, 2007.
- ^ Felten, Eric (November 28, 2007). "Chapter 1, Of Ice and Men". How's Your Drink?: Cocktails, Culture, and the Art of Drinking Well (1st ed.). Agate Surrey. pp. 18–21. ISBN 1572840897. Retrieved 2009-05-27.