Home » Drinks » co*cktails » Red Moon Over Manhattan co*cktail Recipe
by Eden
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This Red Moon Over Manhattanrecipe is a red wine co*cktail that is delicious and creative! It’s a take on the classic bourbon co*cktail. Made with red wine, this drink will be a hit at your next party!
The Manhattan is one of the finest and oldest co*cktails around. It’s a classic co*cktail and sophisticated co*cktail. For this Red Moon Over Manhattan recipe, we’ve added a twist to it by incorporating red wine!
Much like vintage libations, red wine co*cktails also show a massive spike in popularity. And while a red wine in Manhattan may sound unique, it’s really tasty with a great flavor combination!
It’s the perfect mixed drink to get ready for all of that fall entertaining you’ll hopefully be doing!
IN THIS POST
This drink is made for cozy nights at home with a movie or a good book. It’s sophisticated and smooth. The perfect red wine co*cktail to sip under a full moon.
How to make a Red Moon Over Manhattan co*cktail
Shake all of the ingredients together with ice for 20 seconds.
Rub the orange peel around the rim of the glass.
Add in the ice sphere and strain the co*cktail over the ice.
Scoop one cherry to place inside the drink and add two more on a twig or co*cktail stirrer to garnish the glass!r
Enjoy this new classic!
What is in a Red Moon Over Manhattan co*cktail?
A twist on a perfect Manhattan. This drink is made with red wine and bourbon and garnished with orange peel and a maraschino cherry. Here are the ingredients in this co*cktail:
The Manhattan drink is thought to have originated in the 1860s in a Manhattan Club in Manhattan! It is closely related to the Brooklyn co*cktail which uses dry vermouth instead of sweet vermouth. We call this co*cktail a manhattan too because it was inspired by the classic co*cktail.
A Red Wine co*cktail
This tasty co*cktail is so quick to make it’s great for serving your guests at a gathering. It is fairly low in calories, coming in at less than 150 calories a drink, so win-win! The color is so stunning it’s bound to stand out amongst the crowd!
Tips for Making a Red Moon Over Manhattan co*cktail
Don’t make these before the guests arrive, or the ice will dilute the drink.
Use one large ice cube rather than lots of small ones, it won’t melt as fast.
Shake the co*cktail shaker until it has turned ice cold.
Use whatever red wine is your favorite!
When to Serve a Red Wine co*cktail
This drink is great year-round. Sip it in the evening during happy hour or serve it on any of these occasions:
This would also make a wonderful Christmas co*cktail.
Looking for more? Check out our mixed drinks, great co*cktail recipes our favoritebrunch recipes,tequila co*cktails, gin co*cktails, vodka co*cktails, andcheap drinksto make at home!
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Red Moon Over Manhattan co*cktail
A delicious twist on a classic co*cktail
4.35 from 55 votes
Print Pin Rate
Course: Drink
Cuisine: American
Prep Time: 5 minutesminutes
Total Time: 5 minutesminutes
Servings: 1drink
Calories: 143kcal
Author: Eden
Ingredients
2 ozred wine
1/2ozbourbon
1/2ozsimple syrup
1large round ice sphere
3gourmet maraschino cherries
Instructions
Shake all of the ingredients together with ice for 20 seconds.
Rub orange peel around the rim of the glass.
Add in the ice sphere and strain the co*cktail over the ice.
Scoop one cherry to place inside the drink and add two more on a twig or co*cktail stirrer to garnish the glass!
Nothing wrong with Angostura, although other brands have a bit more character. My two essentials, which I swap according to mood, are Regan's Orange Number Five Bitters and Fee Brothers' Whiskey Barrel Aged Bitters.
Both co*cktails call for whisky and Angostura bitters, but the defining factor lies in their sweetening agents. The Old Fashioned opts for straightforward sugar or syrup, helping to soften the whisky.In contrast the Manhattan favours a sweet vermouth – adding fruity and caramel flavours into the mix.
The co*cktail is usually stirred with ice then strained into a chilled co*cktail glass and garnished traditionally with a maraschino cherry. A Manhattan may also be served on the rocks in a lowball glass.
When in doubt, know that a dash of bitters measures to be approximately 1/8 of a teaspoon and that you should start small. You can always add more as needed. A couple dashes of bitters go a long way.
Measured out in drops, using a precise, milliliter-dropper like the ones used to dispense medicine, a dash is about 10 single drops. Measured out in teaspoons, a dash would be 1/5 teaspoon, or as I discovered in my kitchen, between 1/8th teaspoon and 1/4 teaspoon.
Some of the best co*cktail bitters available are Angostura, Regans' Orange, Peychaud's, Bittermens, and The Bitter Truth. A boom of commercially accessible bitters in myriad diverse tastes has accompanied the 21st-century co*cktail revolution. There are hundreds of different variations to pick from.
Another bitters substitute? Any type of Amaro, a family of Italian herbal liqueurs that taste bitter (amaro means bitter in Italian). It encompasses a wide range of spirits, including Campari and the super-bitter Fernet-Branca. Fernet is so strong, you only need to use a few drops.
Both are stirred well with ice to chill and dilute, then strained into a chilled co*cktail glass or coupe to serve. However, a Manhattan uses a whiskey as the base spirit (rye whiskey or bourbon, typically), and sweet vermouth, with aromatic bitters such as Angostura as the usual choice.
American Rye whiskey is typically used over Bourbon in the classic co*cktail recipe. This is because an average co*cktail recipe calls for sugar or a mixture or sweeter liquors. Some may find that substituting for Bourbon is cloy. However, replacing American Rye with Bourbon is another variant of classic co*cktails.
Martinez. This Manhattan variation is a classic in its own right. Made with equal parts gin and sweet vermouth, alongside maraschino liqueur and bitters, the co*cktail is widely thought to be the precursor to the Martini.
This perfect Manhattan recipe has got you covered. Rye, sweet vermouth, bitters and some amarena cherries combine to form a drink that is as epic as the city it was named for.
You have a touch of old-school charm, but a bit more courage than those who order an Old fashioned (the Manhattan's close cousin). This bourbon-based co*cktail – with its mix of whiskey, sweet vermouth, and bitters – reveals your appreciation for complex though balanced flavors.
And wheated bourbons tend to be sweeter still; Maker's Mark (both the classic and the Maker's 46), Old Elk's wheated bourbon, and Wilderness Trail all make for lovely, velvety Manhattans that are hard to resist.
Instead of using the classic co*cktail shaker to blend the ingredients in a Manhattan, the drink should be stirred together using a spoon. Shaking or blending your co*cktail will dilute the drink and diminish the flavour of Manhattan, whereas using a spoon will gently blend the ingredients.
An Old Fashioned calls for two to three dashes of bitters—no more, no less—that are added to the glass once the sugar or simple syrup is in. While the amount seems small, having too many or too few dashes can dramatically change the taste makeup of the drink. The type and quality of bitters matters too.
However, they're used in such small quantities that the alcohol they add to a drink is nearly negligible. Adding 2 dashes bitters to a drink is ¼ teaspoon or 0.04 ounces.
We love the New Orleans bitters with lime, Orange bitters with lemon, Aromatic with either, and Lavender with lemon! Use as much or as little bitters as you prefer. 3-5 dashes in an 8-ounce glass is a good place to start, but you may find you prefer more or less depending on how strong a flavor you desire.
The perfect Manhattan is indeed a great co*cktail, though the name doesn't refer to its perfection. Instead, it adds dry vermouth to the classic Manhattan's trio of whiskey, sweet vermouth, and bitters.
Introduction: My name is Terence Hammes MD, I am a inexpensive, energetic, jolly, faithful, cheerful, proud, rich person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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