One for the road – Our cocktail recipes of the month

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The cocktails that put the most considered Australian drops to good use, with cocktail recipes from the best bartenders in the country.

Cocktail: Bloody Jasmine

The cocktails that put the most considered Australian craft spirits to good use, with recipes from the best bartenders in the country.

 

Four Pillars is combining two of the greatest things on the planet, gin and shiraz, to make them even better. And you can make its Bloody Shiraz Gin better still with this cocktail from its ambassador and ‘bartender at large’, Sammy Ng; make it yourself or drop into the Four Pillars distillery bar in Healesville, Yarra Valley to sample. “The original jasmine cocktail is actually a modern classic from the early ’90s. This recipe is equal parts gin, Curaçao, lemon and Campari. We modified this by replacing the traditional London dry gin with our Bloody Shiraz – it plays beautifully with bright citrus and a hint of bitterness," says Ng.

Ingredients

20ml Four Pillars Bloody Shiraz Gin

20ml Campari

20ml Dry Curaçao (or any other orange liqueur, such as Cointreau)

20ml fresh lemon juice

1 dash of Regan’s Orange Bitters

Lemon twist for garnish

Instructions

Add ingredients into a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake and strain into a chilled coupette glass and garnish with a lemon twist.

Cocktail: Complexion

 

Complexion

We all love an espresso martini, but there is another way to sneak a caffeine hit into your evening soirée while also becoming something of a trailblazer for fine coffee liqueurs.

 

Mr Black is crafted at a small distillery on the NSW Central Coast, using cold-pressed, single-origin beans from Ethiopia, Brazil and Papua New Guinea.

 

Drop into the cosy bar at Annata in Sydney’s Crows Nest, and bartender Christian Blair will arrange an introduction.

 

“This variation on a negroni uses Mr Black Cold Drip Coffee Liqueur as the driving flavour," he says.

 

“Cold drip is said to highlight more floral flavours from the coffee it’s made with, so in this instance sweet vermouth is added to intensify the dark fruit character, Campari to enhance the bitterness, and tequila to bring up the sweetness."

Ingredients:

30ml Mr Black

30ml Oscar 697 Vermouth Rosso

20ml Calle 23 Blanco Tequila

10ml Campari

Instructions:

Stir, strain into a coupette, garnish with an orange twist.

Cocktail: Winter Side Car

Last year gin was all the rage – this year, vermouth is in vogue.

 

Indeed, such is the newfound appetite for vermouth that a dedicated bar Banksii, named after botanist Sir Joseph Banks, opened last year at Sydney’s Barangaroo to satiate the city’s desire for the botanical-infused fortified wine.

 

Causes & Cures is a great example of the stuff and is made down in Healesville, Victoria, its name harking back to vermouth’s original use as an Italian medicine.

 

“Causes & Cures Semi Dry White was one of the first Australian vermouths I tried and it’s still one of my favourites," says Banksii’s sommelier Rebecca Lines.

 

“It’s bold and has a good depth of flavour due to the viognier grapes and the use of oak in the process of making it.

 

There are plenty of orange notes from the Seville oranges they use, so I’ve used it as a replacement for Cointreau in the classic Side Car cocktail, also switching lemon juice out for orange juice.

 

The faintest hint of cinnamon adds to the winter appeal of this cocktail."

 

Enjoy!

Ingredients:

1 pure cane-sugar cube

30ml Cognac

20ml Causes & Cures Semi Dry

White Vermouth

10ml orange juice

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Instructions:

Rub the rim of a cocktail glass with orange, then dip in sugar mixed with a tiny pinch of cinnamon.

 

Place a sugar cube in a Boston glass and add Cognac, vermouth and orange juice.

 

Muddle until sugar has dissolved, add ice and stir until condensation forms.

 

Strain into the pre-prepared cocktail glass.

Cocktail: The Rose Train

The Rose Train
The Rose Train

You wouldn’t normally associate vodka with the hot climate of Australia, but nevertheless we found this lovingly crafted drop in Tasmania, a state that seems hell-bent on becoming the craft spirit capital of the world.

 

We dropped into Kentucky Rain, attached to smokehouse The Tickled Rib (currently on the move to a new and improved location in North Hobart), to sample Hellfire Vodka from Hellfire Bluff Distillery.

 

“Hellfire is a potato farm and it uses its excess potatoes to produce this vodka," says manager Lewis Rands.

 

“It operates with a ‘paddock to bottle’ ethos to produce a vodka in the traditional way, while reducing waste.

 

The cocktail is the combination of sweetness from the elderflower and tartness from the blackberry and lemon without taking away from the vodka’s unique taste."

Ingredients:

45ml Hellfire Potato Vodka

30ml St Germain Elderflower Liqueur

30ml Blackberry puree (made from 50g of frozen blackberries, blended)

15ml lemon juice

Instructions:

Shake all ingredients with ice and then strain into a tall glass filled with fresh ice.

 

Garnish with a mint spring.

Cocktail: A Walk in the Woods

A Walk In The Woods
A Walk In The Woods

If there was ever a spirit that embodies the place of its conception, it’s Brookie’s Byron Dry Gin.

 

Eddie Brook and master distiller Jim McEwan have harnessed the botanicals  – including native ginger and Dorrigo pepper – of Eddie’s family’s property, which includes a lush stretch of rainforest in the Byron hinterland.

 

You can sample it at nearby Harvest, where beverage manager Sam Curtis has turned it into A Walk in the Woods.

 

“Refreshingly subtle and very drinkable, I created this drink on the opening night of Eddie’s distillery," says Sam.

 

“Eddie and his father were kind enough to take us for a walk through the rainforest that they planted 30 years ago.

 

It was a genuinely moving experience." Take a walk in the woods yourself with this recipe.

Ingredients:

One fresh apple

One sprig rosemary, half the leaves removed and set aside

Three peppermint gum leaves

1/4 cup mixed nuts

One fresh finger lime, squeezed

45ml Brookie’s Byron Dry Gin

30ml Maidenii Dry Vermouth

Three dashes Angostura Orange Bitters

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Instructions:

Roughly chop half the apple and place in a cocktail shaker with the removed rosemary leaves, peppermint gum leaves, nuts, fresh finger lime, gin, vermouth and bitters.

 

Shake vigorously for 15 seconds then strain into the cocktail glass.

 

To garnish, slice the remaining apple into a fan shape.

 

Using a toothpick, pierce a hole through the apple fan and insert rosemary twig into the hole.

 

Squeeze finger lime balls on top of apple fan and place in drink to serve.

Cocktail: The Glenferri

The Glenferri Cocktail
The Glenferri Cocktail

Lark Distillery  has been at the vanguard of Tasmania’s burgeoning whisky industry, with its founder, Bill Lark, inducted into the Whisky Hall of Fame last year.

 

Pure water, lush barley fields, highland peat bogs and a perfect climate make Tasmanian whiskies the envy of the world.

 

Bartender Lam Tran from Melbourne’s The Kilburn  knows how to make the most of them, with more than 600 whiskies at his disposal.

 

“This drink showcases the intricacies of the Lark Classic Cask; something light enough to comfortably sip before dinner and whet the appetite," says Lam.

 

“Inspired by the classic Rob Roy cocktail, the Glenferri incorporates the elements of malt, sweet and savoury."

 

Enjoy!

Ingredients:

45ml Lark Classic Cask

10ml Picon Biere Apertif A L’Orange

10ml Australian Tawny

Instructions:

Stir with a block of ice in a crystal rocks glass and present with a skewer of deep crimson maraschino cherries.

Cocktail: The Bronx

The Bronx
The Bronx

Distilled in Sydney in three stills made from imported Scandinavian copper, the folk at Archie Rose have created a Signature Dry Gin that’s finely balanced but eminently complex, flavoured with native botanicals such as blood lime, Dorrigo pepperleaf, lemon myrtle, river mint, and juniper, of course.

 

It’s being put to good use by Charles Casben at his new bar Moya’s Juniper Lounge , a gin bar that he opened with his sister in Sydney’s Redfern in March.

 

With gins from all over the planet, Charles has put an emphasis on our home-grown best, Archie Rose among them, in a cosy bar that pays homage to classic cocktails as well as some signature takes.

 

His suggestion?

 

The Bronx.

 

“The Bronx is an old drink that was arguably invented at the Waldorf Astoria in Manhattan in the early 20th century by a young bartender who didn’t drink, but nonetheless had a talent for mixing," explains Charles.

Ingredients:

40ml Archie Rose Signature Dry Gin

20ml Regal Rogue Vermouth Rogue

20ml Maidenii Vermouth Sec

20ml orange juice

Instructions:

Shake and serve

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Explore historic wine towns and sculpture trails on a 3-day self-guided Murray River cruise

    Ricky French Ricky French
    Slow down and find your rhythm on a Murray River journey through time and place. 

    Trust is a funny thing. It seems not that long ago that my mother was insisting on pouring the milk into my cereal bowl, because she didn’t trust me not to slosh it over the table, and yet here I am on the Murray River at Mildura in far north-west Victoria, being handed the keys to a very new and very expensive luxury houseboat. 

    After a crash course in how not to crash, I’m at the wheel of the good ship Elevate – pride of the All Seasons fleet – guiding her upstream past red-ochre cliffs as pelicans glide above the rippled river and kookaburras call from reedy banks. There’s a brief moment of breath-holding while I negotiate a hairpin turn around a jagged reef of skeletal, submerged gum trees, before a cheer rings out and calm descends as the timeless river unfurls in front of us.    

    Murray River
    The Murray River winding through Yarrawonga. (Image: Rob Blackburn)

    Setting sail from Mildura 

    Murray River birds
    Home to a large number of bird species, including pelicans. (Image: The Precint Studios)

    A journey along the Murray River is never less than magical, and launching from Mildura makes perfect sense. Up here the river is wide and largely empty, giving novice skippers like myself the confidence to nudge the 60-tonne houseboat up to the riverbank where we tie up for the night, without fear of shattering the glass elevator (the boat is fully wheelchair accessible) or spilling our Champagne.  

    My friends and I spend three days on the water, swimming and fishing, sitting around campfires onshore at night, and basking in air so warm you’d swear you were in the tropics. The simplicity of river life reveals an interesting dichotomy: we feel disconnected from the world but at the same time connected to Country, privileged to be part of something so ancient and special.  

    Stop one: Echuca  

    19th-century paddlesteamers
    A historic 19th-century paddlesteamer cruises along the Murray River. (Image: Visit Victoria)

    The six-hour drive from Melbourne to Mildura (or four hours and 20 minutes from Adelaide) is more than worth it, but you don’t have to travel that far to find fun on the river. Once Australia’s largest inland port, Echuca is the closest point on the Murray to Melbourne (two hours 45 minutes), and you’ll still find a plethora of paddlesteamers tethered to the historic timber wharf, a throwback to the thriving river trade days of the 19th century. The PS Adelaide, built in 1866 and the oldest wooden-hulled paddlesteamer operating in the world, departs daily for one-hour cruises, while a brand-new paddlesteamer, the PS Australian Star , is launching luxury seven-night voyages in December through APT Touring.  

    The town is also a hot food and wine destination. St Anne’s Winery at the historic Port of Echuca precinct has an incredibly photogenic cellar door, set inside an old carriage builders’ workshop on the wharf and filled with huge, 3000-litre port barrels. The Mill, meanwhile, is a cosy winter spot to sample regional produce as an open fire warms the red-brick walls of this former flour mill.  

    Stop two: Barmah National Park 

    Barmah National Park
    Camping riverside in Barmah National Park, listed as a Ramsar site for its significant wetland values. (Image: Visit Victoria/Emily Godfrey)

    Just half-an-hour upstream, Barmah National Park is flourishing, its river red gum landscape (the largest in the world) rebounding magnificently after the recent removal of more than 700 feral horses. The internationally significant Ramsar-listed wetland sits in the heart of Yorta Yorta Country, with Traditional Owners managing the environment in close partnership with Parks Victoria. Walkways weave through the forest, crossing creeks lined with rare or threatened plants, passing remnants of Yorta Yorta oven mounds and numerous scar trees, where the bark was removed to build canoes, containers or shields.  

    The Dharnya Centre (open weekdays until 3pm) is the cultural hub for the Yorta Yorta. Visitors can learn about the ecological significance of the Barmah Lakes on a 90-minute river cruise, led by a First Nations guide, or take a one-hour, guided cultural walking tour along the Yamyabuc Trail.  

    Stop three: Cobram 

    Yarrawonga MulwalaGolf Club Resort
    Yarrawonga Mulwala Golf Club Resort. (Image: Visit Victoria)

    Continue east to Cobram to find the southern hemisphere’s largest inland beach. Swarming with sun-seekers in summer, the white sand of Thompson’s Beach is shaded by majestic river red gums and dotted with hundreds of beach umbrellas, as beachgoers launch all manner of water craft and set up stumps for beach cricket. But the beach is at its most captivating at sunset, when the crowds thin out, the glassy river mirrors the purple sky, and the canopies of the gum trees glow fiery orange. 

    The region is also home to some fine resorts and indulgent retreats. Yarrawonga Mulwala Golf Club Resort has two riverside championship golf courses, luxury apartments and self-contained villas. While not strictly on the Murray, the historic wine town of Rutherglen is rife with boutique (and unique) accommodation, including an exquisitely renovated red-brick tower in a French provincial-style castle at Mount Ophir Estate. Fans of fortified wines can unravel the mystery of Rutherglen’s ‘Muscat Mile’, meeting the vignerons and master-blenders whose artistry has put the town on the global map for this rich and complex wine style.  

    Stop four: Albury-Wodonga 

    First Nations YindyamarraSculpture Walk
    First Nations Yindyamarra Sculpture Walk is part of the Wagirra Trail. (Image: Carmen Zammit)

    Follow the river far enough upstream and you’ll arrive at the twin border cities of Albury-Wodonga. The Hume Highway thunders through, but serenity can be found along the five-kilometre Yindyamarra Sculpture Walk – part of the Wagirra Trail that meanders through river wetlands just west of Albury in Wiradjuri country. Fifteen sculptures by local First Nations artists line the trail, conveying stories of reconciliation, enduring connection to culture, local Milawa lore and traditional practices. It feels a long way from Mildura, and it is, but the pelicans and kookaburras remind us that it’s the same river, the great conduit that connects our country. 

    A traveller’s checklist  

    Staying there

    New Mildura motel Kar-rama
    New Mildura motel Kar-rama. (Image: Iain Bond Photo)

    Kar-Rama is a brand-new boutique, retro-styled motel in Mildura, with a butterfly-shaped pool and a tropical, Palm Springs vibe. Echuca Holiday Homes has a range of high-end accommodation options, both on the riverfront and in town. 

    Playing there

    BruceMunro’s Trail of Lights in Mildura
    Bruce Munro’s Trail of Lights in Mildura. (Image: Imogen Eveson)

    Artist Bruce Munro’s Trail of Lights installation, comprising more than 12,000 illuminated ‘fireflies’, is currently lighting up Mildura’s Lock Island in the middle of the Murray. Murray Art Museum Albury (MAMA) is a hub for contemporary art, with a rotating roster of exhibitions, and is a major outlet for young and First Nations artists. 

    Eating there

    Mildura’s diverse demographic means it’s a fantastic place to eat. Andy’s Kitchen is a local favourite, serving up delicious pan-Asian dishes and creative cocktails in a Balinese-style garden setting. Call in to Spoons Riverside in Swan Hill to enjoy locally sourced, seasonal produce in a tranquil setting overlooking the river.