Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

Enter the email address associated with your account, and we’ll email you a link to reset your password.

Password Strength

Must contain at least

*Enter your email to receive news and exclusive offers from Jamie Oliver Limited about Jamie's businesses, including books, TV shows, restaurants, products, commercial partners and campaigning activities. By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use . Learn how we collect, use and share your data in our Privacy Policy .

0
Apricot Sidecar cocktail

Apricot Sidecar cocktail

Apricot Sidecar cocktail

Not Too Tricky

serves 1

About the recipe

Before I was a journalist, I was a musician of sorts – a job that mainly involved lugging my amp around London in the rain and playing to half-empty rooms that smelled of stale beer. Then, one day in 2007, the band I was in got a call from the White Stripes: they wanted us to support them on tour. We played Vienna, Rome, Milan, Paris and London. The Sidecar cocktail will always remind me of Paris. It was a June night, and swelteringly hot. There were snails on the rider. And at one point there was definitely more than one person in the backstage shower. We careened through our set and then watched, from the side of the stage, as a sea of fists punched the air to “Seven Nation Army”.

Afterwards, high on adrenaline and Jameson whiskey, we sped off in convoy to the Hemingway Bar at The Ritz. Jack White ordered the bar’s signature, a Sidecar, made with cognac from 1865. It cost the best part of a grand. “This is for all the musicians who played tonight,” he said, holding the drink aloft. “Everyone, take a sip.” As it passed among us, the room fell silent for a moment.

How did it taste? I’m afraid I can’t remember – by that stage my tastebuds were shot. But it’s a memory I’ll treasure forever. Even if we did miss our ferry home the next day. This is my twist on the classic Sidecar, made with a little extra dash of stone-fruit liqueur.



Recipe From

These Delicious Things

These Delicious Things

By Clerkenwell Boy, Jane Hodson & Lucas Hollweg (recipe by Alice Lascelles)

Ingredients

50ml cognac (1865 vintage optional)

25ml lemon juice

12.5ml triple sec

12.5ml apricot liqueur (a good-quality peach liqueur works well, too)

Method

  1. Shake hard with ice and strain into a frozen coupe.
  2. Spritz with a lemon twist and serve.

Tags