The Cocktail Diaries: Gimlets and DIY Lime Cordial
Welcome to volume two of me exploring, testing, thinking about and then re-testing classic cocktail recipes and methods. I’m going to try to make this a weekly installment, so if there’s something you’ve been wondering about, I would love your suggestions. Otherwise, I’m going to be looking through old cocktail recipes, occasionally doing new ones and telling you my thoughts as I go.
This week I made a vodka gimlet. I am aware that sometimes there is a firm divide between gin people and vodka people when it comes to certain cocktails. I happen to like both, and this weekend I happened to be out of gin. Therefore, what you see in the photos is in fact a vodka gimlet.
I’m not able to find a ton of storied history behind this one. There are lots of variations that combine liquor, lime juice, simple syrup and sometimes water or soda. But since the invention of a certain sweetened lime juice product, Rose’s lime juice, the recipe seems to veer toward just being half your booze of choice, half Rose’s. Rose’s, it turns out, is just a lime coridal – a syrup with some acids in it that you can find at your local homebrew shop.
And yes, you can purchase Rose’s but that wouldn’t be a very interesting blog post. A few weeks ago I found myself wishing for a gimlet but without the famous lime cordial. I tried to mix a drink up and found that the regular lime juice/simple syrup combination is not easy to improvise. That’s when I decided to make my own lime cordial. In fact, I used it as one of my swap items at the most recent PDX Food Swap.
Here’s what you need:
1 1/2 cups water
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 tsp citric acid
1/2 tsp tartaric acid
Juice of 5 limes – save lime rinds and cut into quarters. Set aside.
In a bowl, combine the sugar and acids Stir the water and sugar mixture together in a saucepan over medium heat, until the solids have dissolved.
Turn the heat off for a moment and add in the lime juice and lime rinds. Bring to a simmer for another 1-2 minutes. Remove from heat, allow to cool, then allow to steep overnight in a covered container in the fridge.
The next day, strain using a fine mesh strainer into a clean glass container. Refrigerate for 1-2 months.