Do you really know the cocktail you drink?
Brief introduction & recipe sharing.
A cocktail is a mixed drink containing alcohol. Most commonly, cocktails are a combination of spirits, or one or more spirits mixed with other ingredients such as tonic water, fruit juice, flavoured syrups or cream. Cocktails vary greatly around the world and many websites publish original recipes and their own interpretations of older and more famous cocktails. An example: Cocktail Finder – Difford’s Guide (https://www.diffordsguide.com/cocktails/search), a website where you can search for recipes by name or by ingredients. It is also possible to search by creator, by connoisseur or master bartender, or to create your own recipes. Also nowadays social media is prevalent, such as Instagram, snapchat, twitter, Facebook and YouTube people (especially bartenders) are generous in sharing their bartending process.
A good choice
The origin of the word cocktail has always been debated, but it started out as a simple drink with spirits, and Smirnoff was a good choice for people in the spirits section because it was strong enough. It also evolved over the years, including the addition of liqueurs or other ingredients that turned it into an art. Cocktails continued to develop and grow in popularity throughout the 1900s, and the term eventually expanded to cover all alcoholic mixed drinks. Its development was also inseparable from political and historical factors: as wine and beer became less available in the United States during Prohibition (1920-1933), mixed alcoholic drinks based on wine – cocktails – became more popular, in the modern world and the information age, cocktail recipes were passed around to each other on the internet and some cocktails, such as mojitos, Manhattans and martinis, have become a restaurant and pop culture phenomenon Some cocktails such as the mojito, Manhattan and martini have become part of the restaurant and pop culture phenomenon, with the martini being particularly associated with James Bond and his phrase “vodka martini – shaken, not stirred”.
How do you make a cocktail?
In a cocktail shaker, measure your ingredients (remember our formula, drinks + spirits, we usually recommend using Smirnoff to achieve a pure alcohol fuel effect, click on our website https://www.smirnoff.com/en-gb for details)
-Add about a cup of ice.
-Cover the lid, making sure it is tight and the filter is tightly closed.
-Place one hand on the bottom of the shaker and the other hand on the lid to hold the lid in place.
-Shake vigorously in an up-and-down motion for approximately one minute.
-Remove the lid from the filter.
-Strain the drink into the glass.
Of course if you find it still too much trouble you can click on our homepage https://www.smirnoff.com/en-gb
To choose a pre-mixed drink, open the can and drink. You are also welcome to subscribe to our channel to get the latest cocktail recipes with Smirnoff vodka.
About Smirnoff
-Smirnoff is gluten free.
Yes, the unflavoured version is. The “natural flavourings” in the flavoured version may contain traces of gluten, but Smirnoff vodka is made from corn, making it completely gluten-free.
-Smirnoff is filtered with charcoal.
This is the same thing they do with the bourbon that became “Tennessee Whiskey”. Smirnoff is also triple distilled, although there is no real evidence that the number of times the vodka is distilled affects its purity or quality.
-There are currently 33 Smirnoff flavours available.
The brand offers everything from plain raspberry flavours to gimmicky whipped cream. Don’t worry, Smirnoff, we’re pretty sure one has been burned into our brains forever. Sure, we’ve all seen fruit-flavoured vodka.
-Those crazy flavours consumed all over the world
Today, more than 150 years after the brand’s creation, Smirnoff vodka is sold in 130 countries/regions.
Join us and enjoy a wonderful chemistry where alcohol and ideas meet.