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Boulevardier (cocktail)

Boulevardier
Cocktail
VTR Happy Hour - Boulevardier.jpg
Type Cocktail
Primary alcohol by volume
Served On the rocks; poured over ice
Standard garnish Orange peel or cherry
Standard drinkware
Old Fashioned Glass.svg
Old Fashioned glass
Commonly used ingredients
Preparation Stir with ice, strain, garnish and serve.

The boulevardier cocktail is an alcoholic drink composed of whisky, sweet red vermouth, and campari. Its creation is ascribed to Erskine Gwynne, an American-born writer who founded a monthly magazine in Paris called Boulevardier, which appeared from 1927 to 1932.

The boulevardier is similar to a Negroni, sharing two of its three ingredients. It is differentiated by its use of bourbon whiskey or rye whiskey as its principal component instead of gin. Paul Clark, writing for the food blog Serious Eats, says, "This isn't a Negroni. It is, however, the Negroni's long-lost autumnal cousin." He continued:

A simple substitution? Hardly. The bittersweet interplay between Campari and vermouth remains, but the whiskey changes the storyline. Where the Negroni is crisp and lean, the Boulevardier is rich and intriguing. There's a small difference in the preparation, but the result is absolutely stunning.

Recipes vary the proportions of its components. Some boulevardier recipes call for 1 1/2 parts rather than 1 part whiskey, or call for two parts bourbon to one part vermouth and one part campari.



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Wikipedia

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