查看原文
其他

Traditional Chinese medicine-inspired cocktails to try in BJ

TimeOutBeijing 2020-11-03


Beat the cold with these warming, healthy cocktails


Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is all about philosophies of balance, which means when it’s cold out you want to be focused on upping the heat in your diet. Cocktails being an important part of any balanced regimen, now’s the time to make sure your booze gives you the boost you need to fight the frost. Whether or not you know your yin from your yang, sip on these TCM-inspired bevs and you’ll be feeling warm and fuzzy in no time. Who needs a beer jacket?


Mandarine Porcelain


This cocktail is so warm and so good on so many levels. Firstly, it’s served warm in a porcelain teacup that is perfect for icy fingers. Secondly, smoky aged rum, bitter orange marmalade, homemade kumquat liquor and a magical TCM-inspired ginger date syrup make for a drink that’s sweet, sour and succulent all at once. Served with a cracker of gingerbread, this is a homely hot toddy with a sophisticated twist.

Get it at Botany.


Awaken Negroni


The holy trinity of gin, vermouth and Campari is not a formula to be messed  with lightly, but the wise folk at Nina – known otherwise for their wacky artichoke spritz – know what they’re doing when it comes to cocktails. Their homemade coffee-infused vermouth adds real kick to the negroni; coffee is a warming TCM ingredient and fans of an espresso martini will do well by this lighter and cleaner caffeinated cocktail.

Get it at Nina 


Black Forest


Another hot cocktail, the Black Forest isn’t too far from a spiked hot chocolate, but it’s so much more than that. The base here is single malt whiskey and the TCM element comes from hot jasmine tea, the smokiness of which mirrors the alcohol’s aromas perfectly. Dark chocolate and a dash of cream turn it into a deeply naughty evening treat. This is the alcoholic baby bear to the Mandarine Porcelain’s grown-up mama, made even more playful by the addition of two melting marshmallows on top.

Get it at Botany 


TCM ingredients to look out for

Other than the flavours mentioned here, ingredients said to give you that TCM buzz include basil, black pepper, chilli, cinnamon, clove, coriander, fennel, nutmeg and...wine. Glass of mulled vino in the name of health? Don’t  mind if we do.

You might have missed

Stuck at home this Spring Festival? 8 classic CNY films to watch


5 things not to do during Chinese New Year

More from Time Out Beijing

The top 8 most auspicious foods for Chinese New Year

    您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

    文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存