打开APP
userphoto
未登录

开通VIP,畅享免费电子书等14项超值服

开通VIP
鸡尾酒名词编年史

julep (as medicine, by 900, Persia, Imbibe p. 189)
punch (c 1670s, Imbibe p. 82)
hot spiced rum (17th C and earlier, Imbibe p. 204)
Stoughton’s Elixir [instant purl/proto Cocktail] (1690, Richard Staughton, London, Imbibe p. 210-11)
sangaree (c 1736-1740, London and Maryland, from Iberian sangria, Imbibe p. 201)
toddy (by 1750, Scotland, Imbibe p. 171)
Mint Julep (1770; Virginia Gazette, Jan. 11th, p. 2: “A Short Poem on Hunting.”)
Egg Nogg (by 1788, Imbibe p. 160)
sling (by 1785, Imbibe p. 184-5)
Cocktail (by 1803, but probably between ~1785 and 1800, Imbibe p. 215)
Sherry Cobbler (c. 1820s-1837, probably in New York, possibly by Martha King Niblo at Niblo’s Garden between. 1828 and 1838, Imbibe p. 141-2 )
John/Tom Collins (late 1820s, John Collin, Limmer’s, London, and evolved its way to 1872 New York)
smash (by mid-1830s, Imbibe p. 200)
Champagne Cocktail (prior to 1850 in California, everywhere thereafter; Imbibe p. 302)
Crusta (c. Joe Santini, 1850-1855, New Orleans, at City Exchange or Jewel of the South, Imbibe p. 314)
Caipirinha (by 1856, near Rio, )
Pisco Punch (c. 1856, Mrs. Sykes, San Francisco, Imbibe p. 89)
fix (c. 1850-1856, Imbibe p. 113)
sour (c. 1850-1856, Imbibe p. 113)
swizzle (1860s Caribbean, Imbibe p. 154-5)
Vermouth Cocktail (1868; NY Herald, June 14, “A Bohemian banquet to the Sorossians”)
Gin & Tonic (1868, Oriental Sporting Magazine, November 16, “1868-Seakote Races” p. 838)
fizz (c. 1870-1876, Imbibe p. 133)
Improved Cocktail (c. 1870-1876, Imbibe p. 235)
daisy (July 7, 1873, Frank Haas, Eberlin’s, New York, Imbibe p. 127-8)
Sherry Flip (by 1874, possibly Ed Simmons at French’s Hotel, New York, Imbibe p. 168)
Manhattan (by 1882, New York, Imbibe p. 252-6)
Martini (by various names, with Italian vermouth) (by 1884, Imbibe p. 260-2)
Rickey (c. 1883-1889, “Colonel” Joe Rickey, Shoomaker’s, Washington DC, Imbibe p. 147)
Bamboo (by 1886, Louis Eppinger, San Francisco, Imbibe p. 280-1)
“Old Fashioned” (c. 1888, Chicago, Imbibe p. 244-5)
Ramos Gin Fizz (c. 1890s, Henry Charles Ramos, Imperial Cabinet, New Orleans, Imbibe p. 138)
Sazerac (c. 1893, Billy Wilkinson and/or Vinent Miret, Sazerac House bar, New Orleans, Imbibe p. 237-8)
Cafe Brulot (c. 1895, Jules Alciatore, Antoine’s, New Orleans, [need better source])
Rob Roy (by 1897, New York/New Jersey, Imbibe p. 270-1)
Jack Rose (c. 1899, possibly Eberlin’s, Imbibe p. 321)
Cuba Libre (c. 1900, Cuba, commensurate with Coca-Cola being imported to Cuba)
Clover Club (c. 1900-1901, presumably from the Club at the Philadelphia Bellevue-Stratford Hotel, and then through the Waldorf-Astoria, Imbibe p. 322)
Dry Martini (between 1890-1896, Imbibe p. 265-6)
highball (1890s, Scotland, evolved from 1860s Cooler and Collins)
Singapore Sling (by 1897, Imbibe p. 152)
Daiquiri (c. 1897 Cuba, Robert Huntington Lyman Jr. and Jennings S. Cox, Jr., popularized c. 1909 at Navy Club, Washington, Imbibe p. 324 and)
Americano (Highball) (c. late 1890s, Italy; family of drinks combining vermouth, soda and Italian bitters; perhaps first appears by name in a German cocktail book and made with Fernet; in any case, not made with Campari until after 1904, except perhaps in Gaspare Campari’s own Milanese shop;)
Pisco Sour (c. or by 1903, Imbibe, p. 120)
Ward 8 (c. 1905, Charlie Carter at the Puritan Club, Boston, Imbibe p. 329)
Stinger (c. 1900-1909, Reginald Vanderbilt, New York, Imbibe p. 332)
Bronx (1900-1907 New York, possibly the Waldorf, Imbibe p. 319)
Gibson (by 1904, San Francisco, Imbibe p. 266-7)
Ohio (c. 1910, Germany; earliest known printed reference is Schoenfeld & Leybold, 1913)
El Presidente (c. 1910-1915, Contante Ribalaigua, Havana, Imbibe p. 289-91)
Rose (Giovanni “Johnny” Mitta, Chatham bar, Paris, ca. 1910)
Aviation (c. 1916 Hugo Ensslin in his Recipes for Mixed Drinks)
Negroni (c. 1912-1920, Camillo Negroni and Fosco Scarselli, Casoni’s, Florence, but not popularized until late 1920s, this article 2)
Sidecar (c. 1922, attribution unclear, but first documented in Robert Vermeire’s Cocktails How to Mix Them, London)
White Lady (c. 1922, attribution unclear, but first documented in Harry McElhone’s Harry’s ABC of Mixing Cocktails, London)
Brandy Alexander (c. 1922, first documented in Harry McElhone’s Harry’s ABC of Mixing Cocktails, London)
Mojito (c. 1920s, Cuba, first documented in Juan Lasa’s Libro de Cocktail, 1929)
French 75 (c. 1927, Judge Jr.’s “Here’s How”, New York)
Margarita (c. 1929, Agua Caliente, Mexico, Imbibe p. 129)
Bloody Mary (c. 1930s, evolved from canned tomato juice drinking, the Prohibition-era Tomato Juice Cocktail, the inevitable spiking of said beverages, and ultimately, a couple waves of Russian and Polish immigration and the popularization of vodka, known by various names on both sides of the Atlantic, this article )
Zombie (c. 1934, Ernest Raymond Beaumont Gantt, Don’s Beachcomber, Hollywood)
Vodka Martini (first known reference is a 1935 Smirnoff pamphlet—a marketing inevitability—and possibly spurred on by recent waves of Russian and Polish immigration)
Moscow Mule (1942, pushed by marketing efforts of Heubliein/Smirnoff)
Mai Tai (1944, Victor Bergeron, Trader Vic’s, Oakland)
Irish Coffee (1945, served in Ireland as “Gaelic Coffee”; Washington, DC Sunday Star, Deecember 9, “Overnight by Air to a Weary England”; popularized in US at Buena Vista Cafe, San Francisco, beginning in 1952)
Aperol Spritz (1950s, Venice, Aperol becomes regionally popular as a Spritz Veneziano flavoring; Grupo Campari acquires Aperol in 2003 and markets the product with the drink, building an international phenomenon by 2011)
Piña Colada (c. 1954, commencing with the introduction of Coco López to the market)
Blue Hawaii (c. 1957, Harry Yee, Hawaiian Village Hotel, Honolulu)
Harvey Wallbanger (c. 1969, attribution murky, but it’s a modified Screwdriver pushed by McKesson Imports to sell Galliano)
Tequila Sunrise (c. 1972, Bobby Lozoff and Billy Rice, Trident, Sausalito)
Lemon Drop (1970s, Norman Jay Hobday, Henry Africa’s, San Francisco)
Long Island Iced Tea (c. 1972, Robert Butt, Oak Beach Inn, Long Island)
Cosmopolitan (1988, Toby Cecchini, Odeon, New York)
Appletini (c. 1996-7, Lola’s Restaurant, West Hollywood, after introduction of DeKuyper Sour Apple Pucker)

鸡尾酒名词编年史,括号内是出处和年份,按照IBA官网整理,只收录了部分名词,还请评论/增强/改正。

本站仅提供存储服务,所有内容均由用户发布,如发现有害或侵权内容,请点击举报
打开APP,阅读全文并永久保存 查看更多类似文章
猜你喜欢
类似文章
【热】打开小程序,算一算2024你的财运
一张图了解各式香槟鸡尾酒
自由古巴
谁发明了鸡尾酒摇壶
15款大众鸡尾酒的做法
你真的了解味美思吗?
武康路新酒吧 Taste Buds Cocktail Palace:当清朝遇见欧洲
更多类似文章 >>
生活服务
热点新闻
分享 收藏 导长图 关注 下载文章
绑定账号成功
后续可登录账号畅享VIP特权!
如果VIP功能使用有故障,
可点击这里联系客服!

联系客服