Spirits | Saveur https://www.saveur.com/category/spirits/ Eat the world. Wed, 04 Feb 2026 17:14:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.saveur.com/uploads/2021/06/22/cropped-Saveur_FAV_CRM-1.png?auto=webp&width=32&height=32 Spirits | Saveur https://www.saveur.com/category/spirits/ 32 32 Ginger Makgeolli Twist https://www.saveur.com/recipes/ginger-makgeolli-twist-recipe/ Fri, 01 Oct 2021 03:17:17 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/?p=123681
Ginger Makgeolli Twist
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

The effervescent Korean rice brew brings brightness to this warming, refreshing cocktail.

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Ginger Makgeolli Twist
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

Rum and ginger liqueur lend a tropical note to Hana Makgeolli brewer Alice Jun’s refreshing twist cocktail. For this recipe, seek out an undiluted, premium version of the Korean rice beverage, such as Jun’s Takju 16.

Featured in: “Makgeolli Magnate Alice Jun Is Spreading Korean Culture, One Bottle at a Time” by Juliana Sohn.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4 oz. undiluted makgeolli, such as Hana Makgeolli Takju 16
  • 2 oz. ginger liqueur, such as Domaine de Canton
  • 2 oz. white rum
  • Lemon peel, for garnish

Instructions

  1. To a mixing glass filled halfway with ice, add the makgeolli, ginger liqueur, and rum. Stir until well chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain into a collins glass, garnish with a lemon peel, and serve.

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Ginger Julep https://www.saveur.com/article/recipes/ginger-julep/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:37:27 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/article-recipes-ginger-julep/
Ginger Julep
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

Everyone will love this citrusy, warmly spiced twist on the beloved Derby Day cocktail.

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Ginger Julep
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

A hit of ginger liqueur turns the traditional mint julep squarely on its ear into a spicy, sweet, and modern cocktail, with a citrus tang from lemon. It’s a fresh twist on a beloved Kentucky Derby party classic.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 mint sprigs, plus more for garnish
  • 2 oz. bourbon
  • 1 oz. ginger liqueur, such as Domaine de Canton
  • ½ oz. fresh lemon juice
  • ½ oz. <a href="https://www.saveur.com/article/Wine-and-Drink/Simple-Syrup/">simple syrup</a>
  • Lemon wedge, for garnish

Instructions

  1. In a cocktail shaker, muddle the mint with a wooden spoon until thoroughly bruised, about 10 seconds. Add the bourbon, ginger liqueur, lemon juice, and simple syrup and shake vigorously until well chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain into a rocks or julep glass filled with crushed ice. Garnish with a lemon wedge and mint sprig.

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Mango-Ginger Margarita https://www.saveur.com/recipes/mango-ginger-margarita/ Wed, 04 Feb 2026 17:09:15 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/api/preview?id=188442&secret=cM2XMtKpK3Lj&nonce=5a7ac700fc
Mango-Ginger Margarita
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

Tropical fruit and warm spice transform this classic cocktail.

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Mango-Ginger Margarita
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

Domaine de Canton, an aromatic, small-batch ginger liqueur made in France, adds a spicy note to this fruity twist on the classic margarita from New York City’s Le Bernardin, where the drink was dubbed “Le Mexique.” While optional, a garnish of thin dark chocolate shavings pairs surprisingly well with the subtly sweet, silky smooth cocktail.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 oz. white tequila
  • ½ oz. ginger liqueur, such as Domaine de Canton
  • ½ oz. fresh lime juice
  • ½ oz. mango purée
  • ¼ oz. agave syrup
  • Dark chocolate shavings, for garnish (optional)

Instructions

  1. To a cocktail shaker filled halfway with ice, add the tequila, ginger liqueur, lime juice, mango purée, and agave syrup. Shake vigorously until well chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain into a chilled champagne coupe, garnish with dark chocolate shavings if desired, and serve.

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Ginger Martini https://www.saveur.com/ginger-martini-recipe/ Mon, 18 Mar 2019 22:23:19 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/ginger-martini-recipe/
Ginger Martini
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

This spin on the ice-cold vodka cocktail has a gentle heat and subtle sweetness.

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Ginger Martini
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

Ginger liqueur adds a mildly sweet, lightly spicy note to this twist on the classic vodka martini.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1½ oz. vodka
  • ½ oz. ginger liqueur, such as Domaine de Canton
  • ½ oz. dry vermouth, such as La Quintinye Vermouth Royal
  • 2 dashes Angostura bitters
  • Orange peel, for garnish

Instructions

  1. To a mixing glass filled halfway with ice, add the vodka, ginger liqueur, vermouth, and bitters. Stir until well chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain into a chilled martini glass, garnish with an orange peel, and serve.

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Honey Ginger French 75 https://www.saveur.com/sponsored-post/honey-ginger-french-75-cocktail/ Tue, 27 Jan 2026 22:05:19 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/api/preview?id=188258&secret=cM2XMtKpK3Lj&nonce=1dd9176809
Honey Ginger French 75
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

This warmly spiced and subtly sweet rendition of the classic cocktail is inspired by Korean yakgwa cookies.

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Honey Ginger French 75
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Ben Weiner

This fun, fizzy cocktail is perfect for ringing in the Lunar New Year (or for any party, really!). It’s inspired by Korean yakgwa, deep-fried flower cookies soaked in honey, sesame, and ginger. Here, a homemade honey-sesame syrup imbues the classic French 75 with a nutty flavor and creamy texture, while Domaine de Canton adds a soft, balanced ginger flavor. Leftover syrup can be drizzled over ice cream, used as a sweetener for coffee, or made into tea with more hot water. 

Makes: 1 cocktail, plus additional syrup
Time: 15 minutes

Ingredients

  • ½ cup honey
  • ¼ cup well-stirred tahini
  • ¼ tsp. ground cinnamon
  • ¾ oz. gin, such as Bluecoat
  • ¾ oz. Domaine de Canton ginger liqueur
  • ¼ oz. fresh lemon juice
  • 1½ oz. sparkling wine
  • Yakgwa, for serving (optional)

Instructions

  1. To a blender, add the honey, tahini, cinnamon, and ½ cup of boiling water and blend until fully incorporated. Set aside to cool to room temperature. 
  2. To a cocktail shaker filled halfway with ice, add the gin, ginger liqueur, lemon juice, and ¼ ounce of the honey-sesame syrup and shake well until chilled, about 30 seconds. Strain through a fine-mesh strainer into a Nick & Nora or coupe glass and top with the sparkling wine. Serve with yakgwa on the side if desired. 

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Bull Shot https://www.saveur.com/recipes/bull-shot/ Fri, 23 Jan 2026 03:47:28 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/api/preview?id=188141&secret=cM2XMtKpK3Lj&nonce=6a2f30b4fa
Bull Shot
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Thu Buser

A pair of unlikely bedfellows, vodka and beef broth come together in this classic 1950s savory cocktail.

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Bull Shot
Photo: Murray Hall • Food Styling: Thu Buser

Vodka and beef broth pair surprisingly well in this unusual cocktail that originated at Detroit’s Caucus Club in the 1950s. Legend has it that advertising executive John Hurley was brainstorming ways to sell more Campbell’s beef broth with the club’s owner Lester Gruber, and lo and behold, the Bull Shot was born. Think of it as a Bloody Mary with beef broth in place of tomato juice and plenty of Tabasco. 

Featured in “Drinks That Beat the Heat” in the June/July 2009 issue.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 6 oz. beef broth
  • 1½ oz. vodka
  • ½ oz. fresh lime juice
  • Tabasco
  • Worcestershire sauce
  • Lime twist, for garnish (optional)

Instructions

  1. In a rocks glass with a few ice cubes, stir together the broth, vodka, and lime juice. Season to taste with Tabasco and Worcestershire and garnish with a lime twist if desired.

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Love in a Hurricane https://www.saveur.com/recipes/love-in-a-hurricane-cocktail/ Fri, 16 Jan 2026 15:44:53 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/api/preview?id=188050&secret=cM2XMtKpK3Lj&nonce=7834a47437
Love in a Hurricane Cocktail Recipe
Photo: Scott Semler • Food Styling: Camille Becerra

This riff on the classic New Orleans cocktail uses homemade fassionola, a Prohibition-era syrup made with strawberries, guava, and passion fruit.

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Love in a Hurricane Cocktail Recipe
Photo: Scott Semler • Food Styling: Camille Becerra

The Hurricane is a classic rum-based cocktail allegedly invented at legendary New Orleans piano bar Pat O’Brien’s around the 1940s. Passion fruit and guava are nonnegotiable in most versions, and early Hurricanes often relied on a tropical fruit syrup called fassionola, a floral mixer whose original formula has been lost to time. This riff on the classic from bar lead Sheila Arndt at New Orleans’ Restaurant R’evolution uses both passion fruit liqueur and homemade fassionola for an extra tart punch. Arndt also makes her grenadine from scratch, but store-bought will work in a pinch.

Featured in “The Secret History Behind a Prohibition-Era Cocktail Syrup” by Ellery Weil.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1½ oz. spiced rum, such as Don Q
  • 1¼ oz. fresh lime juice
  • 1 oz. fassionola syrup
  • ½ oz. grenadine
  • ½ oz. overproof rum, such as Planteray O.F.T.D.
  • ½ oz. passion fruit liqueur, such as Chinola
  • Mint sprig, pineapple slice, Luxardo cherries, and confectioners sugar, for serving

Instructions

  1. To a cocktail shaker filled halfway with ice, add the spiced rum, lime juice, fassionola, grenadine, overproof rum, and liqueur and shake until well chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain over fresh ice into a Hurricane glass. Garnish with a straw tucked behind a mint sprig, pineapple slice, and Luxardo cherries on a pick. Top with a sprinkle of confectioners sugar. 

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Ménage à Quatre Cocktail https://www.saveur.com/story/recipes/david-lebovitzs-menage-a-quatre-cocktail/ Thu, 01 Oct 2020 19:28:31 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/david-lebovitzs-menage-a-quatre-cocktail/
Ménage à Quatre Cocktail
Maura McEvoy

Equal parts gin, Grand Marnier, lemon, and Lillet, this four-ingredient formula couldn't be easier to make—or drink.

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Ménage à Quatre Cocktail
Maura McEvoy

Like the classic Negroni, which has three ingredients sharing one communal space in equal quantities, this less-conventional four-way—adapted from David Lebovitz’s book Drinking French—is equally alluring.

Featured in “The 2020 Saveur 100: 21–30” in the Fall 2020 issue.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • ¾ oz. gin
  • ¾ oz. Grand Marnier, Cointreau, or triple sec
  • ¾ oz. fresh lemon juice
  • ¾ oz. Lillet Blanc or Mattei Cap Corse Blanc
  • Lemon twist, for garnish

Instructions

  1. To a cocktail shaker filled halfway with ice, add the gin, Grand Marnier, lemon juice, and Lillet and shake until well chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain into a chilled coupe, garnish with a lemon twist, and serve.

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Creole 75 https://www.saveur.com/recipes/creole-75-cocktail/ Tue, 16 Dec 2025 20:11:41 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/api/preview?id=187045&secret=cM2XMtKpK3Lj&nonce=3db17e57ad
Creole 75
Photo: Doaa Elkady • Food Styling: Jason Schreiber • Prop Styling: Paige Hicks

Cinnamon-infused elderflower liqueur gives the French 75 a spiced New Orleans twist.

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Creole 75
Photo: Doaa Elkady • Food Styling: Jason Schreiber • Prop Styling: Paige Hicks

In this French 75 variation, chef Dominick Lee pays homage to réveillon’s roots, combining French cognac and Champagne with a Creole twist: cinnamon-infused elderflower liqueur. To make it, simply submerge a cinnamon stick in a full 750-­milliliter bottle of St-Germain and set aside for at least 48 hours. Lee recommends topping the cocktail with real-deal brut Champagne—it is a celebration, after all.

Featured in “In Montreal and New Orleans, A French Holiday Celebration Endures” by Chantal Martineau and Kayla Stewart in the Fall/Winter 2025 issue. See more recipes and stories from Issue 205.

Makes: 1 cocktail
Time: 4 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 oz. cognac
  • ¾ oz. cinnamon-infused St-Germain
  • ½ oz. lemon juice
  • Champagne, or other sparkling wine

Instructions

  1. To a cocktail shaker filled with ice, add the cognac, cinnamon-infused St-Germain, and lemon juice and shake until chilled. Strain into a Nick and Nora or coupe glass, top with Champagne, and garnish with a lemon twist.

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How to Make a Perfectly Balanced, Complex Amaro at Home https://www.saveur.com/how-to-make-your-own-amaro/ Tue, 09 Dec 2025 22:20:09 +0000 https://dev.saveur.com/uncategorized/how-to-make-your-own-amaro/
How to Make a Perfectly Balanced, Complex Amaro at Home
Matt Taylor-Gross

Choose from an assortment of herbs, citrus, and botanicals for a bittersweet liqueur that’s uniquely yours.

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How to Make a Perfectly Balanced, Complex Amaro at Home
Matt Taylor-Gross

A unique class of Italian liqueurs, amari are the ultimate all-in-one spirits. Carefully concocted from wild herbs, roots, and flowers, the best contain all the depth of flavor and complexity of a craft cocktail while their alcohol content makes them smooth sippers. Their medicinal aspects are most pronounced when served neat, though a splash of seltzer or an ice cube or two is never a bad decision. Italians have been making these aperitivi and digestivi for centuries, slowly perfecting the craft with the patience of a monk on a mountaintop (which is actually how many of them are traditionally made).

So while the average overly ambitious person might not produce a sublime, retailable amaro on the first try, that didn’t stop me from wanting to make a go of it. To start, I turned to Sother Teague, the barman behind New York City’s Amor y Amargo, a tasting room devoted to the craft of bitters. “The exciting (and frustrating) thing about amari,” he told me, “is there really aren’t any rules. ‘Bittersweet liqueur’ is the basic definition, and from there, anything goes.”

ingredient amaro spread
A diverse selection of fresh and dried roots, flowers, and herbs goes into a single bittersweet amaro. (Photo: Matt Taylor-Gross)

Bitter and sweet. It’s a start. But the final product is infinitely complex, and most recipes remain a secret: One of my favorites, Bràulio, from Valtellina in the Italian Alps, uses gentian root as its bittering agent and gets its deep brown color from years spent aging in oak barrels. A blend of herbs gathered from the alpine hills fills in the gaps between recognizable flavor bursts of spearmint, juniper, and chamomile. Even Campari, perhaps the most well-known of the Italian amari family, keeps its ingredient list behind lock and key, alluding only to an infusion of “herbs, aromatic plants, and fruit.” And it’s not just the Italians; the French have their bitter amers, and the Germans have their slightly sweeter kräuterlikör, the recipes of which all remain equally elusive.

Let’s start with bitter. “Gentian root and cinchona bark are the workhorses when it comes to bittering agents,” Brad Thomas Parsons, author of Amaro, told me the other day as I started plotting my grocery list. Gentian root contains many bitter compounds that release easily into alcohol, but most notable is amarogentin, supposedly the most bitter-tasting compound of all. “Bitterness can also come from other ingredients like wormwood, licorice root, and even tea leaves,” Parsons adds; the complete list in his book goes on to include burdock root, angelica root, cherry tree bark, fringe tree bark, and quassia bark—all ingredients high in bitter compounds. 

amaro ingredients assembled
Everything is tossed into a very large jar before it’s topped off alcohol to infuse for a couple months. (Photo: Matt Taylor-Gross)

With the bitter accounted for, the rest of the ingredients start to feel like a free-for-all. “There’s a Wild West element to making amaro,” Parsons told me, “but there are some category profiles to consider.” When he creates an amaro, he avoids using commercially available products as models: “Most Italian producers have a headstart by a century or two,” he said, “so I’m not necessarily interested in making a clone of an existing amaro, but instead creating something driven by the season, occasion, or spotlighting local ingredients.”

Most amari were the result of foraging ingredients from the surrounding landscape, and therefore came to represent the flavors of their respective locations. Danny Childs, in his book Slow Drinks, tried to recreate an alpine-style amaro using plant parts scavenged from his home state of New Jersey in the wintertime—pine needles, juniper branches, birch bark, and horehound sprigs, to name a few.

Alpine-Style Winter Amaro
Foraged botanicals are topped with alcohol for an alpine-style winter amaro. (Photo: Heami Lee • Food Styling: Jason Schreiber)

The real magic of amaro, it seems, is that it doesn’t really matter so long as the plants are edible and the flavors appeal; a variety of contrasting and complementary elements will ultimately result in something complex and intriguing. It’s also worth noting that certain ingredients can seem appealing but should be avoided due to their latent toxicity. It’s best to start with a recipe, or at least do some research beforehand.

For my first foray, I used Parsons’ “Rite of Spring Amaro” as a loose guide. I visited Flower Power, an herbalist shop in Manhattan that stocks food-grade botanicals, and stocked up on angelica root, elderflower, licorice root, dried hops, calendula petals, hyssop, cardamom pods, lemongrass, and dried artichoke leaf. I also gathered some citrus peels, anise seed, fresh sage, fresh mint, and a few hoja santa leaves that were lying around the SAVEUR test kitchen.

I muddled a small heap of each of them together with a mortar and pestle, breaking down the fibers of the leaves and the citrus peels, and incorporating them all before putting the mixture in a giant lidded mason jar and covering it with Spirytus Rektyfikowany, a Polish rectified spirit not unlike Everclear that clocks in at 96 percent alcohol by volume (ABV). And then I covered it with a kitchen towel and put it under my desk for five weeks.

homemade amaro spirits
The stronger the spirit, the greater the flavors it can pull out of your assorted ingredients. (Photo: Matt Taylor-Gross)

By the time I uncovered it, the mixture had turned a cloudy olive green color, and when I removed the lid, I was reminded of the sheer amount of alcohol present in it; at first it smelled like paint thinner, but then it opened up into a perfume of grapefruit peels, then a warm, herbaceous aroma of freshly cut summer lawns. In hindsight, I was perhaps a bit overzealous with the alcohol—I learned that a neutral spirit between 50 and 75 percent ABV will do just fine and will result in a final product that requires less dilution to taste nice. But my infusion was a whopping 192-proof, and the lightest drop on your tongue came with a burning sensation and an intense bitter sting. This is where the sweet part of ‘bittersweet liqueur’ comes in.

After the infusion is strained through a cheesecloth over a fine-mesh strainer (and strained again, then again once more), the sweetening stage is when you get to balance the bitterness of the liqueur you’ve prepared, and when you can bring your undrinkable hooch down to a palatable ABV. Kate O’Connor Morris, an experienced home amaro maker, says 30 percent ABV is her sweet spot. “30 percent gets you a smooth, non-burning sipping bitter that can also shine through when mixed with other ingredients into a cocktail,” she told me.

amaro
The finished amaro had a brilliant green color and tasted like citrus and freshly cut summer lawns. (Photo: Matt Taylor-Gross)

Frankly, I was worried I’d ruin it. With some slightly complicated math I hadn’t used since high school, I figured I’d need to mix my amaro with around twice its volume in simple syrup (equal parts water and sugar) to get it even close to the 30-ish percent range. I imagined a treacle-y sweet schnapps-like concoction that would have defeated the whole purpose of waiting a month for something meant to be intentionally bitter. So I experimented again, using a syrup made from a higher ratio of water to sugar, taste testing with every addition until I felt it didn’t need to be any sweeter. The alcohol content got progressively weaker as the mixing went on, but I still consumed enough that I’m slightly unsure of my math at the end there. (I think I got it to about 33 percent?) Everyone in the office had a sip and mostly the reaction was, “This is…actually really good?” I was giddy with success (and maybe a little drunk).

Poured over ice, it was the best I could have imagined it being. It tasted like it smelled: citrusy, herbaceous, and assertively bitter, with only the slightest sugary-sweet aftertaste. It certainly wasn’t Bràulio—it lacked the precision of flavor and the toasty vanilla notes from barrel-aging—but it was good, and far greater than the sum of its parts. If you’d like to make your own amaro, here’s a choose-your-own-adventure guide to help you get started. Or, you can trust the professionals and follow a recipe. But isn’t experimenting half the fun?

How to Make Your Own Amaro

illustrated amaro guide
Alex Testere

Making your own amaro can be divided into five basic elements: the spirit, the bitter ingredients, the dried ingredients, the fresh ingredients, and the sweeteners used at the very end.

1. Spirit: Start with any overproof clear spirit that strikes your fancy (think vodka, rum, or Everclear), but try and keep it neutral so the flavors you choose can develop fully and shine through on their own. Around 75 percent ABV (or 150 proof) is ideal, but don’t go below 50 percent ABV, or the alcohol won’t absorb the flavors as well.

2. Bitter: Arguably the most important component, the bitter provides the backbone of the finished product. Choose one or two bittering agents to add to the infusion—like cherry tree bark, cinchona bark, wormwood, licorice root, angelica root, or gentian root—and use about one tablespoon per 750mL of spirit.

3. Dried: The dried ingredients lend depth and complexity to amaro and allow for a more diverse flavor experience than you can get with fresh ingredients alone (unless, of course, you happen to live on an alpine hillside). Use about one teaspoon each of 5–10 edible dried components as it appeals to you, like lemongrass, anise seeds, cardamom, juniper cranberries, hyssop, or elderflower.

4. Fresh: The liveliness of fresh herbs adds top layers of brightness to amaro, but use them sparingly as fresh ingredients like citrus peels can easily become overpowering. Use a handful of fresh mint, sage, or rosemary and a few strips of orange, grapefruit, or lemon zest.

5. Sweet: Once everything gets muddled together and infuses for several weeks, the inedible alcohol infusion needs to be diluted and sweetened to taste. Simple syrup is a classic, but for more depth of flavor, you can make a demerara syrup or dilute honey or maple syrup with fresh water before stirring into your filtered amaro.

Recipe: Alpine-Style Winter Amaro

Alpine-Style Winter Amaro
Photo: Heami Lee • Food Styling: Jason Schreiber

Get the recipe >

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Alpine-Style Winter Amaro https://www.saveur.com/recipes/alpine-style-winter-amaro/ Tue, 09 Dec 2025 22:18:55 +0000 https://www.saveur.com/api/preview?id=186874&secret=cM2XMtKpK3Lj&nonce=3485ec1b82
Alpine-Style Winter Amaro
Photo: Heami Lee • Food Styling: Jason Schreiber

dozen seasonal botanicals, including pine needles, birch bark, and citrus peels, make for a cozy sipping spirit that’s worth the wait.

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Alpine-Style Winter Amaro
Photo: Heami Lee • Food Styling: Jason Schreiber

The category of alpine amaro is notoriously loose—defined only by the inclusion of “alpine herbs” and a bright, piney flavor profile. That ambiguity became the inspiration to reimagine the style by drawing on winter-hardy herbs from my garden (many of which can be found in the Alps) as well as foraged evergreens, birch, and sumac from New Jersey’s Pine Barrens. The result is a conifer-forward, deeply aromatic amaro that tastes like a cold walk through the forest. To go the extra mile, you can add the strained liquid to a 3-quart oak barrel and allow it to age for an additional month (or longer), which will impart the classic flavor notes of vanilla and spice. Enjoy this bold digestivo on its own or add it into your cocktails for a welcome bit of woodsy complexity.

Featured in “How to Make a Perfectly Balanced, Complex Amaro at Home” by Alex Testere.

Excerpted with permission from Slow Drinks by Danny Childs, published by ‎Hardie Grant North America, October 2023.

Makes: About ½ gallon
Time: 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 3 pine cones (about 1 oz.)
  • 3½ oz. pine needles (about five 6-in. branch tips)
  • 3½ oz. coarsely chopped juniper needles and nonwoody stems (about three 1-ft. branches)
  • 1 cup sumac berries
  • ½ cup dehydrated trifoliate orange peels or dried common orange peels
  • 0.3 oz. birch bark (about one 3- by 6-in. swath of bark)
  • 1½ tsp. dried horehound or three 6-in. fresh sprigs
  • One 6-in. sage sprig
  • Five 6-in. thyme sprigs
  • One 6-in. mint sprig
  • 3 Tbsp. juniper berries
  • 151-proof vodka, for topping (about 5 cups)
  • 1½ cups maple syrup, plus more if needed

Instructions

  1. To a 2-quart glass jar, add the pine cones, pine needles, juniper needles and stems, sumac, orange peels, birch bark, horehound, sage, thyme, mint, and juniper berries and top with the vodka. Tightly secure the lid and set aside to macerate for 5 weeks. 
  2. Strain out the solids and reserve the liquid (it should yield about 4½ cups). 
  3. Add the maple syrup and 3 cups of water. If the alcohol level feels too high or the flavor is too dry, add more water and maple syrup to adjust. Store at room temperature indefinitely.

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