Drink of the Week: The Disneyfied Manhattan or The Space Mountain Cocktail

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Today’s DOTW is the first I’ve done in some time I can take a little credit for. One night recently, I stumbled over Difford’s guide recipe for The Mountain Cocktail. The article described it as “a perfect Manhattan smoothed by egg white.” (For cocktail newbies, a Perfect Manhattan is just like a regular Manhattan except that it employs dry vermouth as well as sweet vermouth in equal amounts.)

While the Mountain recipe seemed very dry for an egg white beverage, I thought maybe skipping the bitters (a must for standard Manhattans) would make it something other than mouth-puckeringly dry. I was wrong. I thought it was awful…but salvageable. The next move became obvious to me – make it more like a real perfect Manhattan, not less. Restore the bitters included in any self-respecting Manhattan but also add a bit of extra sweetener. The result was a spiffed-up Manhattan without the rough edges, the beverage equivalent of the 1990s-and-beyond cleaned-up geographical Manhattan often described as “Disneyfied.” Or, it could also be the Space Mountain Cocktail, heading into the stratosphere with sweetener and egg white. I came up with two names I sort of like.

The Disneyfied Manhattan or The Space Mountain Cocktail

2 ounces whiskey (probably bourbon or rye though Irish whiskey and Canadian may be just dandy)
½ ounce sweet vermouth
½  ounce dry vermouth (Dolin’s or another non-extra-dry vermouth)
½ ounce pasteurized egg white or ½ large egg white
½ ounce simple syrup or 2 teaspoons superfine sugar (aka caster or baker’s sugar)
2 dashes Angostura bitters
1 cocktail cherry (partially visible but tasty garnish)

Put everything but the cherry into a cocktail shaker. If you’re using egg white straight from the egg, shake first without ice to emulsify the viscous white into a froth. This step is very optional if you’re using packaged egg white, which is kind of pre-emulsified. Add ice and shake very vigorously for a decent amount of time (at least wait until you’re tired of doing it). Next, use a fine strainer to filter out the ice chunks while you pour your drink into a chilled cocktail glass. Add a cocktail cherry if you’ve got one.

*****

I had fun killing a couple of bourbon bottles for this mountainous Manhattan. First on the sacrificial altar was Jim Beam Repeal Batch – surprisingly delicious in this beverage. Next to the gallows was Maker’s 46. It’s much better on its own than any bargain bourbon but it produced only a slightly smoother and richer cocktail.

The original Mountain called strictly for bourbon but I thought rye – less sweet and spicier in flavor –  would also be a good fit. 100 proof bottled-in-bond Rittenhouse had its sharp edges very nicely sanded down by the other ingredients. Sazerac Rye, which I picked up for less than $30.00 at my neighborhood Trader Joe’s, brought a superior balance between sharp, soft, sweet, dry, and bitter flavors.

Finally, a word about dry vermouth. Most widely available dry vermouths in the U.S. are actually “extra dry.” I gather this is a concession to American tastebuds that European vermouth makers have made. Around the time I was first getting into cocktails, the Noilly Pratt people had decided that we Americans had grown up enough for their original formula – and that was the brand of dry vermouth I first seriously bonded with. Sales must have dropped because, a few years later, Noilly Pratt’s extra-dry reappeared and the original formula disappeared from US shelves. Now something of a cult product, the original formula returned a couple of years ago but only in 750 ml bottles – not ideal unless you’re planning a Martini party.

Dolin’s is one of the very few widely available non-extra dry vermouths and one of the better dry vermouths of any type. I tried the Disneyfied Manhattan/Space Mountain once with the standard American extra-dry Martini vermouth. It had an odd edge that wasn’t terrible but was noticeably less good. I’d stick with Dolin’s or something similar.

Finally, I gave the drink a try one time as a regular, imperfect Manhattan with an entire ounce of sweet vermouth. That was a serious disappointment – milky Robitussin. Avoid.

NEWS FLASH — You can’t get to where this drink is made right now for obvious reasons but there actually is a Disneyfied Manhattan of sorts, as shown below. Two thoughts…where the hell was this last time I was at California Adventure? Second…I hope I don’t get sued.

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About Author

Writer guy Bob Westal was literally born in Hollywood and has commented on the worlds of movies, popular culture, politics, and food ever since. His interest in cocktails is more recent, but he made up for lost time with hundreds of “Drink of the Week” blog posts for Bullz-Eye. In addition to writing and editing, Bob also talks a lot.