This article, Salute Summer with these 15 Gin and Tonic Variations, originally appeared onChowhound.
The tinkle of its ice cubes signals refreshing cocktail relief — something cool, dry, and clear. A gin and tonic is everything we crave in the muggy, hot summer doldrums. Why is that?
For the same reason lemonade slakes our thirst, says Dianne de la Veaux, professional chef and mixologist in New York City. "Bitter and sour flavors are perceived as refreshing by the palate," she says, "and with a gin and tonic, you usually have lime with it and just enough sweetness to make it easy to drink."
When the classic G&T gets boring, there's no end to the ways you can mix it up. De la Veaux created a new gin and tonic recipe by infusing her Dorothy Parker gin with leftover Key lime shells (the remains after being zested and juiced) and slices of ginger. Then de la Veaux added a touch of hibiscus flower Hella Tonic syrup, along with a squeeze of lime juice and Q tonic, a brand that uses agave nectar instead of high fructose corn syrup.
As for the basics: Gin is a clear alcohol made from distilled grain or malt that tastes predominately of juniper berries. Unlike other liquors, gin has loose definition other than that, so the taste of gin among each distiller is enormously diverse and often has citrus, nuts, herbs, and cucumbers added to it. Tonic water is different from club soda and soda water because, while it's also a carbonated water, it has quinine, a bitter-flavored cinchona bark that used to be a malaria drug for sailors visiting the tropics. Legend has it, gin was added to the quinine tonic water to make it taste less bitter. (Tonic water has a lot less quinine in there now.)
One ingredient just can't be excluded from a gin and tonic, de la Veaux says.
"I probably wouldn't bother if I didn't have a lime," de la Veaux says. "Sometimes with other drinks, the lemon or lime garnish is superfluous, but with a gin and tonic, the lime is essential."
Our classic recipe has all the essentials, but as for the rest, well … see for yourself how we mix it up.
1. Gin and Tonic
Chowhound
When you want a classic gin and tonic, this is the recipe that gets it done. Take note of the ratios and technique. It's simple, but a few things can be improved upon. Get our Gin and Tonic recipe.
2. Gin and Tonic, Barcelona Style
Chowhound
Spain is a gin and tonic swilling country. One of their most celebrated cities has its own angle on it too, involving a lemon twist, rosemary sprig, sea salt, caperberry, small, mild, aromatic olives, Plymouth gin, and Indian tonic water. Get our Gin and Tonic, Barcelona Style recipe.
3. Virgin Gin and Tonic
Chowhound
Making a nonalcoholic rendition of a cocktail that uses only two (or three, if you count the lime) ingredients actually takes a lot more ingredients. Get our Virgin Gin and Tonic recipe.
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