Henry Jeffreys

Is it my imagination or does Pimm’s get weaker every year?

issue 22 June 2013

Call me a terrible lightweight, but I’m a little wary of drinking cocktails when the sun is out. A summer drink should be like a good soak in the pool, but the sort of cocktails I love — martinis, manhattans etc — are all about a sharp injection of alcohol into the system, a sharp injection which can quickly turn to drowsiness or even irritability on a hot day. The fact that most cocktails need to be drunk quickly, so that they don’t warm up or become dilute, compounds the problem. Therefore what is needed during the summer is a drink that can take a little dilution from the ice melting and won’t get you drunk too quickly.

Consider, for example, the negroni. I was introduced to this drink by my late Uncle Peter. One summer he invited me for lunch at his club, Boodle’s. I said I’d take an hour off for lunch and he replied, ‘Nonsense, boy. We won’t even have started eating by then.’ We began in the bar with a couple of negronis each — Campari, gin, red vermouth in equal measure with ice and a slice of orange. Then we had a bottle of Sancerre with our smoked eel, followed by claret. I forget what we ate with the claret. Afterwards I think there may have been Green Chartreuse followed by a sleep. The negroni has since become a firm favourite of mine, but I find it much too strong for outdoor drinking.

Thankfully there exists something called a negroni sbagliato — ‘wrong negroni’ — in which you replace the gin with Prosecco. Instantly the alcohol level is halved and you have a drink that you can enjoy by the bucketful when the sun comes out. My wife works a similar kind of magic with that old southern states classic, the mint julep — she’s from California but her heart is in pre-civil war South Carolina. Her julep contains two shots of bourbon, one-and-a-half of lemon juice (heretical, apparently) and one of sugar syrup. You muddle them all in a highball glass with lots of ice and mint and then — here’s the clever bit — top up with sparkling water. This means that you’ll have a cool head in case the Yankees try anything sneaky.

There is one summer cocktail, however, with which you must take the opposite approach: Pimm’s. Is it my imagination or does Pimm’s get weaker every year? Certainly the way it’s served in British pubs, with all that fruit and lemonade, means that it’s only a notch above a shandy. I’d be happy serving it to children. In order to turn it into a drink for adults it needs a little stiffening up. For each serving of Pimm’s, add a shot of strong gin such an Tanqueray Ten — you really want to taste the juniper and feel the alcohol — then top it up not with lemonade but with ginger ale. Serve in pewter tankards with ice, mint and orange. That’s how my Uncle Peter used to order it in Boodle’s.

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