The Telegram (St. John's)

Here’s the right way to mash up barbecue and cocktails

- BY ELIZABETH KARMEL Elizabeth Karmel is a barbecue and Southern foods expert. She is the chef and pit master at online retailer Carolinacu­etogo.com and the author of three books, including “Taming the Flame.”

Craft cocktails are all the rage these days and there isn’t a barbecue lover or bartender who I know who hasn’t pondered how to mash up barbecue and cocktails.

Some people grill fruit to garnish their cocktails, others use liquid smoke or a fancy “Smoking Gun” that emits a puff of smoke, but those seem a little forced to me. I decided to look in my liquor cabinet and see if there was anything more organic that would make a smoky cocktail.

My brother-in-law is a big fan of single-malt scotch and recommende­d I start my scotch education with Laphroaig 10-year. That happened to be around the time that I participat­ed in a scotch tasting taught by the Scotch whisky expert and Scotland native, Simon Brooking.

Laphroaig is made on the Ile of Islay from malted barley. The barley is soaked in water from a nearby stream and dried with the heat of a peat fire. The peat grows on Islay and is hand cut and dried for three months before it is used as fuel to dry out the wet barley. The smoke from the peat is what gives the barley and the resulting Scotch whisky its distinctiv­e smoky, peaty flavour. Learning this was a revelation. Using a single-malt scotch could be the secret to a smoky cocktail. But what to pair it with?

The cocktail needed a neutral spirit to pair with the smoke note. I envisioned an icy vodka martini-you know the kind that I am talking aboutit’s so cold that ice crystals of vodka float on the top-and it’s garnished with a salty, briny olive that you can bite into between sips. What if I took the base of a clean, crisp, cold vodka martini and added a kiss of smoke?

I had the ingredient­s, how was I going to make the cocktail? I tried adding a touch of scotch to the vodka in the shaker, but it tasted like watery scotch-not what I was looking for. I tried a few more methods-after all, it was only vodka

and scotch so there weren’t a lot of configurat­ions. But none of them delivered. I asked a few friends and amateur bartenders what they would do, but none of their ideas panned out.

Not wanting to give up, I posed the question to a veteran bartender, and he gave me my answer in a nano second: Pour the scotch into an atomizer and spray the top of the icecold vodka martini after it was poured.

That was a game changer. I purchased a stainless-steel atomizer and filled it with single-malt scotch. I chose a very smooth, clean vodka and shook it in a cocktail shaker with a lot of ice. The frosty liquid shimmered

in the martini glass and just before serving it, I sprayed it with a whiff of my smoky scotch. The atomizer makes all the difference as it distribute­s the scotch on the top of the martini and fills the nose with just the right amount of smoky notes. And since smell plays an equal (if not greater) role in helping us determine flavours, it’s a powerful way to make a smoky cocktail.

Smoked Martini

Servings: 1

Start to finish: 10 minutes 2-4 ounces vodka

1 generous cup of ice 2 ounces smoky single-malt

scotch such as Laphroaig 10year

1 mini pickle or cornichon for garnish

Special Equipment: Cocktail shaker Martini glass Atomizer (small spray bottle)

Short bamboo skewer or cocktail pick

Fill the shaker with ice cubes. Add the vodka and shake well. Strain into a martini glass. Spray the top of the glass twice with the atomizer of Scotch.

Garnish with the cornichon. (Chef’s Note: I chose a mini pickle like a cornichon

to lend that tangy sharp, briny salty flavour and compliment the vodka, the Scotch and the smoky world of barbecue. If you aren’t a fan of pickles, a pickled onion would also work well.)

Serve immediatel­y. Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 430 calories; 0 calories from fat; 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg cholestero­l; 58 mg sodium; 0 g carbohydra­te; 0 g fiber; 0 g sugar; 0 g protein.

 ?? ELIZABETH KARMEL VIA AP ?? A “Smoked Martini” from a recipe by Elizabeth Karmel, in Amagansett, N.Y. A whiff of scotch whisky lends a smokey note to an ice-cold vodka martini.
ELIZABETH KARMEL VIA AP A “Smoked Martini” from a recipe by Elizabeth Karmel, in Amagansett, N.Y. A whiff of scotch whisky lends a smokey note to an ice-cold vodka martini.

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