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	<title>Comments on: El Floridita Cocktail</title>
	<link>http://thespiritworld.net/2006/07/17/el_floridita_cocktail/</link>
	<description>Quenching your thirst with sips, nips and tipples.</description>
	<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 06:11:13 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>by: Pensive Frog &#187; Blog Archive &#187; Shirley Temple never had it so good</title>
		<link>http://thespiritworld.net/2006/07/17/el_floridita_cocktail/#comment-2339</link>
		<pubDate>Fri, 17 Nov 2006 18:19:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://thespiritworld.net/2006/07/17/el_floridita_cocktail/#comment-2339</guid>
					<description>[...] Ever since I read about &#8220;real&#8221; grenadine on the Slashfood, I&#8217;ve been itching to try it. Lo and behold, I found a bottle in the endcap at my local grocery store.  Even though I am morally opposed to impulse buying, I snagged a bottle. At $6 for 12 ounces, it costs about twice as much as Rose&#8217;s &#8220;fakey&#8221; grenadine. A taste test revealed almost no resemblance between the dueling grenadines. But I think both have something to offer. Rose&#8217;s grenadine has a stronger candy flavor, and just screams &#8220;Roy Rodgers!&#8221;. But that certainly has its place. The Stirrings grenadine tasted sharper, with a definite tinge of pomegranate pith. It&#8217;s also much less viscous than Rose&#8217;s, even though Stirrings includes pectin as a thickener. Although I haven&#8217;t tried it, I&#8217;d bet money (or yarn) that the &#8220;real&#8221; grenadine won&#8217;t layer as well as the fake stuff, and a bead of grenadine at the bottom of a martini glass is a great visual element. So my verdict is that there is a place for both grenadines in your bar, although &#8220;real&#8221; grenadine has to be refrigerated after opening, so I&#8217;m planning to use it up quickly. Grenadine is an integral component of the El Floridita cocktail, which is kind of odd tasting, but a fun departure from the usual Manhattans and cosmopolitans. And you gotta love a drink with a cherry in it.  Next step - homemade grenadine. I&#8217;m betting this will turn out to be even better (and cheaper) than my impulse purchase. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[&#8230;] Ever since I read about &#8220;real&#8221; grenadine on the Slashfood, I&#8217;ve been itching to try it. Lo and behold, I found a bottle in the endcap at my local grocery store.  Even though I am morally opposed to impulse buying, I snagged a bottle. At $6 for 12 ounces, it costs about twice as much as Rose&#8217;s &#8220;fakey&#8221; grenadine. A taste test revealed almost no resemblance between the dueling grenadines. But I think both have something to offer. Rose&#8217;s grenadine has a stronger candy flavor, and just screams &#8220;Roy Rodgers!&#8221;. But that certainly has its place. The Stirrings grenadine tasted sharper, with a definite tinge of pomegranate pith. It&#8217;s also much less viscous than Rose&#8217;s, even though Stirrings includes pectin as a thickener. Although I haven&#8217;t tried it, I&#8217;d bet money (or yarn) that the &#8220;real&#8221; grenadine won&#8217;t layer as well as the fake stuff, and a bead of grenadine at the bottom of a martini glass is a great visual element. So my verdict is that there is a place for both grenadines in your bar, although &#8220;real&#8221; grenadine has to be refrigerated after opening, so I&#8217;m planning to use it up quickly. Grenadine is an integral component of the El Floridita cocktail, which is kind of odd tasting, but a fun departure from the usual Manhattans and cosmopolitans. And you gotta love a drink with a cherry in it.  Next step - homemade grenadine. I&#8217;m betting this will turn out to be even better (and cheaper) than my impulse purchase. [&#8230;]
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