Marin Independent Journal

Mimosas, the star of brunch cocktails

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“Champagne and orange juice is a great drink. The orange improves the champagne, and the champagne definitely improves the orange,” the late Prince Philip once said of the mimosa, named for a flower but made with a fruit.

And as such, the mimosa is the king of brunch drinks.

The advent of spring typically kicks off brunch season with Easter and Mother's Day following close behind. This year's Easter is almost two weeks later than last year's, which might be one of the biggest problems with moveable feasts: the math used to arrive at them is arcane and, ironically, immoveable.

If one is looking for a citrus that pairs best with acidic bracingly bubbly wine, these early spring citrus that are hanging on are more than up to the task.

Another irony with the brunch season, and for the royal brunch cocktail, too, is that brunch season does not coincide with orange season. Sure, here we get used to seeing citrus fruit year around, but the best part of orange season is late fall and early winter.

I blame it on the orange itself. Oranges as we know them (the most common are the navel and the Valencia) are actually hybrids of the pomelo and the mandarin. The orange did not originate on its own in the wild. It is entirely manmade, as are many of the typical citrus fruits we eat. It makes them odd in several respects. They flower and fruit at the same time, contradict­ory reproducti­ve processes, and many, like the navel orange, are seedless, another severely compromise­d reproducti­ve situation. And don't get me started on limes, which we have been conditione­d to eat unripe (fully ripe limes are yellow, not green). But have hope, because hope springs eternal.

With California's exceptiona­lly long growing season, the beginning of brunch season, while not lining up with orange season, does happen to coincide with the end of tangerine, blood orange and pink grapefruit season. And if one is looking for a citrus that pairs best with acidic bracingly bubbly wine, these early spring citrus that are hanging on are more than up to the task.

Much orange juice these days is made from the more bitter and less-expensive navel orange and not the sweeter Valencia orange. It's that touch of bitterness in both the bubbly wine, and the fruit juice in it, that only enhances a mimosa's overall pleasantne­ss. Too sweet, and a mimosa might as well be orange soda, which is why winter citrus work so well.

Tangerines add a bright tang, pink grapefruit adds not only color but an assertive tartness and blood orange takes both of those up another notch. Try using fresh pomelo juice in your mimosas and you will be the hippest hipster on the whole brunch block.

Despite a comical assertion on Wikipedia that the mimosa was invented in Spain “centuries ago,” the mimosa is a relatively new drink — at least the way we know it now. Based on the Buck's fizz (invented at the London Buck's Club in 1921) the mimosa is only different in proportion­s and in glassware. In 1921, the preferred glass for bubbly would have been the coupe, and a Buck's fizz's proportion­s of two to one sparkling wine to orange juice would shock a modern-day mimosa drinker. Less is more, and that is certainly true of citrus juice in this cocktail.

Brunch became popular across the pond in America, where the repeal of Prohibitio­n and the winning of a world war fomented an avid interest in day drinking. In the late 1940s, director Alfred Hitchcock is said to have taken a shine to the mimosa (in San Francisco of all places), in the 1950s, the Duke of Edinburgh made his famous quip and by the 1960s, American football on Sundays would take the idea of brunch and day drinking to a different level.

In fact, some credit the implementa­tion of the flute glass as the primary vessel for bubbly wine, specifical­ly to the popularity of the mimosa.

Whatever the case, citrus and seasonal angle you come at it from, the mimosa is still the reigning king or queen of the brunch cocktails. If it was good enough for the husband of the Queen of England, then it's probably good enough for you, too.

Long live the queen!

RECIPE Mimosa

3ounces dry sparkling wine (prosecco, cava, California sparkling or champagne) 1 ounce chilled freshsquee­zed citrus juice (orange, tangerine, grapefruit or pomelo)

1 chilled flute

1 half-wheel citrus slice (or in the case of a grapefruit or pomelo, one quarter wheel)

Combine juice and sparkling wine in a mixing beaker or pitcher, stir and then let foam subside. Pour into your chilled flute glass and garnish gently with the citrus wheel.

Note: Many novice mimosa makers try and combine the juice and wine in the serving glass. Fresh juice and sparkling wine will foam profusely if combined too quickly, which is why many restaurant mimosas wind up with sticky stems. By mixing the drink in a separate glass, the foaming problem is nullified completely and the proportion­s are maintained correctly. Méthode champenois­e wines rated “dry” or higher work best in mimosas. Avoid sweet bubblies like asti spumante or demisecs. Their sweetness will overwhelm the drink.

Jeff Burkhart is the author of “Twenty

Years Behind Bars: The Spirited Adventures of a Real Bartender, Vol. I and II,” the host of the Barfly Podcast on iTunes and an awardwinni­ng bartender at a local restaurant. Follow him at jeffburkha­rt. net and contact him at jeffbarfly­IJ@outlook. com

 ?? PHOTO BY JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO ?? Mimosas can be made using a variety of citrus.
PHOTO BY JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO Mimosas can be made using a variety of citrus.
 ?? ??
 ?? COURTESY OF GETTY IMAGES ?? Despite a comical assertion on Wikipedia that the mimosa was invented in Spain “centuries ago,” the mimosa is a relatively new drink — at least the way we know it now.
COURTESY OF GETTY IMAGES Despite a comical assertion on Wikipedia that the mimosa was invented in Spain “centuries ago,” the mimosa is a relatively new drink — at least the way we know it now.

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