Gin Fizz

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(Original Recipe)
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*Take 1 tea-spoonful of powdered white sugar.
 
*Take 1 tea-spoonful of powdered white sugar.
 
*3 dashes of [[Fresh Lemon Juice]].
 
*3 dashes of [[Fresh Lemon Juice]].
*1 wine-glass of Holland [[Gin]].
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*1 wine-glass of Holland Gin (aka. [[Genever]]/ Jenever).
 
*1 small piece of Ice.
 
*1 small piece of Ice.
  
 
Fill up the glass with Apollinaris or Seltzer water, stir thoroughly and serve.
 
Fill up the glass with Apollinaris or Seltzer water, stir thoroughly and serve.
  
==Common recipe==
 
  
Recipe#1: Cocktaildb.com
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==[[David Wondrich]] Says==
  
*Shake in iced cocktail shaker & strain
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"In the nineteenth century, Holland or genever gin was imported at a ratio of 5 or 6 gallons to every gallon of English gin. This makes perfect sense: in the days before the dominance of the dry Martini, when gin was drunk in slings, simple punches (think Collinses) or cocktails (the original kind, with bitters and sugar), the mellow, malty roundness of the "Hollands," as it was known, was preferable to the steely sharpness of a London dry gin, or even an Old Tom, which stood somewhere between the two styles."
*1 oz fresh lemon juice (3 cl, 1/4 gills)
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*1 tsp sugar (4 dashes)
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*1 1/2 oz gin (4.5 cl, 3/8 gills)
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*Strain into glass
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*Fill with soda
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*Stir
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*Serve in a highball glass (9.0 oz)
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Recipe#2: Dale DeGroff, King Cocktail.
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*2 oz. Tanqueray Gin
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*3/4 oz. Fresh Lemon Juice
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*1 oz. Simple Syrup (or 1 tsp. super fine sugar)
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Shake and strain into a highball glass with ice. Fill with club soda. No garnish.
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Revision as of 17:56, 21 May 2006

The Gin Fizz is a Cocktail which consists of Gin, Fresh Lemon Juice, Sugar, and Soda water.


Historical Recipes

Jerry Thomas (1862)

  • Gin Fizz.
  • (Use medium bar-glass.)
  • Take 1 tea-spoonful of powdered white sugar.
  • 3 dashes of Fresh Lemon Juice.
  • 1 wine-glass of Holland Gin (aka. Genever/ Jenever).
  • 1 small piece of Ice.

Fill up the glass with Apollinaris or Seltzer water, stir thoroughly and serve.


David Wondrich Says

"In the nineteenth century, Holland or genever gin was imported at a ratio of 5 or 6 gallons to every gallon of English gin. This makes perfect sense: in the days before the dominance of the dry Martini, when gin was drunk in slings, simple punches (think Collinses) or cocktails (the original kind, with bitters and sugar), the mellow, malty roundness of the "Hollands," as it was known, was preferable to the steely sharpness of a London dry gin, or even an Old Tom, which stood somewhere between the two styles."


Whats the difference between a Gin Fizz and a Tom Collins?

"...the two are identically the same drink, made in the same manner with the same ingredients......"

Fine Art of Mixing Drinks - David A Embury - 1948, page 287

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