Classic Martini

Classic gin martini.

Tonight's recipe is just the classic American Martini: gin & vermouth:
  • 3 oz. Gilbey's Gin 
  • 0.5 oz. Dolin dry vermouth 
  • Lemon Twist 
  • 2 Spanish Queen olives 
  • Shake over ice & pour into cocktail glass

Pick a martini glass.
Wilson & Chloe help pick a glass.

Gin.
Choosing gin for a martini--tonight it's Gilbey's!

I buy a lot of gin. I'll try just about any gin. And I like most of them. But for a classic american martini I prefer classic gins. You won't go wrong with Tanqueray, Gilbey's, Bombay, Beafeater's or Gordon's. We want clean juniper taste and we want to be able to taste the vermouth, lemon and olive. Seagrams offers gin in a beautiful bottle at a reasonable price. And it is awful. New Amsterdam has a dramatic bottle. I tried for months to find a way to drink it. Nope. It is disgusting. Tonight we are using Gilbey's. The Gilbey's recipe dates to the 1870s. The reason it has lasted so long is that the flavor still beats many of the very best on the market. And the bonus is that Gilbey's price is reasonable.

Vermouth.
Choosing a vermouth for a classic american martini.

The best vermouth I've found is from Noilly Prat. . . and it is a version you can't buy it in the United States. If you can find the straw-colored dry vermouth they sell in France, it produces the finest martini I've ever had. Noilly Prat tried to sell it in the USA for a couple of years and Americans complained that their martinis were no longer pure, clear gin. Noilly Prat gave up and returned to a clear, bland formula for the USA that is no better than Gallo. So don't waste your money. The closest match I've found to the French Noilly Prat is Dolin. So tonight's martini features Dolin Dry Vermouth.


Olive or Twist?
Lemon peel is required for a great martini.

Lemon oil from a twist makes a martini! I like a wide, irregular shred of peel. The most important part of this step is to hold the lemon rind over the glass and twist it. We want to release a spray of lemon oil into the glass for the intense flavor and aroma. Wipe the peel around the rim of the glass too. It makes a big difference.

Twist the lemon peel over the glass then wipe the twist around the rim.

When you order a martini, bartenders ask if you want an olive or a twist? Or?!!
The Phenomenal, classic martini includes both an olive and a twist!

The Phenomenal, classic martini includes both an olive and a twist!


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