A Valentine’s Threesome
(EE-craftiness: part of a heart garland.)
I love Valentine’s Day. I view it as an ideal holiday, and strenuously disagree with those who consider it to be over-commercialized, depressing, and all the rest. Valentine’s is a bright spot in in the otherwise desolate month of February (at least in the Northeast). Even before the days of EE, I was always happy to invite a pretty lady to be my valentine (and in my limited experience, ladies always enjoy being a valentine). What could be better than fine dining, and perhaps the exchange of an extravagant gift or two, with someone whose company I enjoy? Share the love, that’s what I say.
(Only on Valentine’s Day will your friends give you this card. Hopefully.)
This year, EE and I somewhat reinterpreted our traditional Valentine’s celebration: we threw a cocktail party!
We hosted about 30 guests, a mix of singles and couples, for the express purposes of Valentining and having cocktails. The goal was not to provide dinner - it was to provide an extra oomph of glizt and glam (and maybe even gossip and drama) to whatever evening people may or may not have planned for themselves.
In preparation for this momentous event, I went to work creating some drinks that fit the occasion. The challenges/criteria were:
- 3 colors – EE often thinks in colors, so we determined the need for a red drink, a pink drink, and a white drink.
- Glassware – we only have so many of each type of glass, and wanted to avoid plastic. The drinks had to spread across tumblers, stemmed wine, and stemmed cocktail glasses.
- Flavors – needed more than one type of flavor profile for a range of drinkers.
The results were (bearing their Valentine names):
Passion
Color: Red
Glass: Tumbler
Flavor area: Bitter
Ingredients
1 Tequila
3/4 Campari
3/4 Blood Orange Italian Soda (I bought this at Whole Foods)
1/3 Sweet Vermouth
drop Orange bitters
A muddled cherry (buy the frozen ones)
Muddle the cherry, stir vigorously with ice and all ingredients except the soda. Strain into serving pitcher, add soda and stir gently. At the party, I mixed batches of these in a pitcher, which we put out with an ice bucket and the correct glassware.
Blush
Color: Pink
Glass: Cocktail
Flavor area: Lightly fruity, easily accessible gin
Ingredients
1 Bombay Sapphire
1/4 Domaine de Canton ginger liqueur
1/4 Kumquat liqueur (you have to make it yourself – a post for another time – substitute Cointreau)
half a Lime’s juice
drop of Cranberry juice
Combine all ingredients with ice in a shaker and shake vigorously. At the party I shook up batches and funneled them into a good-looking clear liquor bottle that I had de-labeled and cleaned. The bottle was then left in an ice bucket next to the correct glassware.
Lovely
Color: White (ok, it’s yellowy, like white wine is white. But true white is a pain)
Glass: Wine
Flavor area: Light, aromatic, refreshing, and sweeter
Ingredients
2 Seltzer Water
1 White Wine (something dry and simple – I used an Austrian wine made by Berger)
3/4 St. Germain Elderflower Liqueur
1/4 Dry Vermouth
1/4 Dolin Blanc Vermouth
Combine all ingredients and stir. Or, if using a siphon for the seltzer (a superior way to go), just add the seltzer last and allow the blast of seltzer to do the mixing. For the party, I had some old french lemonade bottles with flip-tops that I put batches into and then topped with seltzer. We left the bottles in a bowl with ice next to the correct glassware.
Note: Sadly, we had such a good time at the party that we didn’t take any drink/party pictures. Sorry, that was lame of us. Here’s a final photo:
(My present to EE this year – they are antique sterling stirrer-straws. I was a little wary of giving her something cocktail-related, given it’s kind of my own hobby at all, but she does seem to like them very much.)



Have you and EE come to Old Town Alexandria for the ultimate mix at PX ? Aboslutely worth doing, although I beleive you and Todd Thasher (their mixologist) could go head-to-head ! hope y’all are well. I enjoyed hearing about Bev’s NYC visit with y’all.