Yes, I try to be informational with my videos to provide a bit of background on where the drink came from and why it came to be. I'm glad you enjoyed it, thanks so much for watching!
I love the fact that is very raw vidéo. No overcute every 2 seconds ... No flashy way to make the cocktail. You are doing it the way i do. The face you made when you peel the lemon is probably the same as mine haha. Don't change anything mate. Cheers from France
Thank you so much! Yes, I very much so try to keep it as simple and organic as possible, so I thoroughly appreciate your observation and compliment! And peeling can be dangerous business at times 😂 Your comment means a lot to me, so thank you again, and cheers from Columbus, OH! 🥂🙏🏾
@@homecraftcocktails I agree. When people are trying too hard to be loaded with “personality” I find myself gritting my teeth and move on. Nice presentation.
Awesome! I just moved from the USA to Mexico and was looking for new drinks to serve. I haven't had a lemon drop since the 90's! Great call and excellent video, thanks!
Circumference isn't wrong. For those wondering it's only sweet because of the rim, the drink itself is balanced, no differnt than most cocktails. In the 90s all we did was lemon drop shots.
Thank you! Circumference definitely didn’t seem wrong, but perimeter was the initial word I was trying to go for 😅 And yes, the drink itself is balanced when done correctly! But you do have your dive bars (and the like) that will over-sweeten it; same with daiquiris, margs, cosmos, etc.
I hate sweet drinks but love lemon drops. I live in a beach town so lots of dive bars and they can’t make even simple cocktails. Even when they look them up in a recipe book.
Understand the struggle; dive bars will over-sweeten almost any cocktail, and it makes no sense! That’s why I don’t recommend ppl trying cocktails for the first time at dive bars, because it will give the wrong impression of how the drink is SUPPOSED to taste
The already-minimal taste difference in the various brands of vodka is further dissipated when incorporating other ingredients. Outside of the cheapest of the cheapest Vodkas (I’m talking $5 cheap) which have a harsh ethanol burn, you will be very hard pressed to taste the difference in a cocktail whether using a $10 brand of Vodka or a $30 one. But to each his own! Regardless, thanks for the comment! 🙏🏾🍸
I’m new to mixed drinks and I’ve heard triple sec is like the cheaper alternative to Cointreau. Can/should I use Cointreau if I have it or triple sec is the preferred ingredient?
First off: great question! Triple Sec and Cointreau are both Orange Liqueurs. All Orange Liqueurs are, for the most part, entirely interchangeable! So if a recipe calls for Triple Sec, you can most definitely use Cointreau (or vice versa)! Same applies for Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao and Grand Marnier, which are also other popular orange liqueurs. Each liqueur will provide subtly different tasting notes; experiment with different ones to try and find one(s) that you like best (AND that fits within your budget, since it’s a very common ingredient and you’ll need to re-up once it runs out).
When I tell you I made this over the New year holiday and everyone I served this drink to absolutely loved it. Thank you for sharing.
That’s great! I’m so glad everyone enjoyed it, and no problem! Thank YOU for watching and utilizing my video! 🙏🏾
I like that you told a story about the history of the drink as well as how to make it.
Yes, I try to give each and every cocktail’s backstory prior to showing how to make it! Thank you for subbing and watching the video! 🙏🏾🍸
I’ve been looking at drink recipes all day and yours is the first to educate me on the history of the drink. I thought that was cool
Yes, I try to be informational with my videos to provide a bit of background on where the drink came from and why it came to be. I'm glad you enjoyed it, thanks so much for watching!
I love the fact that is very raw vidéo.
No overcute every 2 seconds ... No flashy way to make the cocktail. You are doing it the way i do.
The face you made when you peel the lemon is probably the same as mine haha.
Don't change anything mate.
Cheers from France
Thank you so much! Yes, I very much so try to keep it as simple and organic as possible, so I thoroughly appreciate your observation and compliment! And peeling can be dangerous business at times 😂
Your comment means a lot to me, so thank you again, and cheers from Columbus, OH! 🥂🙏🏾
@@homecraftcocktails
I agree. When people are trying too hard to be loaded with “personality” I find myself gritting my teeth and move on. Nice presentation.
@@lindaartz3297 trying too hard is definitely cringeworthy; I try to be myself at all times. Thank you for the kind words! 🙏🏾🍸
Awesome! I just moved from the USA to Mexico and was looking for new drinks to serve. I haven't had a lemon drop since the 90's! Great call and excellent video, thanks!
I'm glad you enjoyed it -- thanks so much for watching!
Circumference isn't wrong.
For those wondering it's only sweet because of the rim, the drink itself is balanced, no differnt than most cocktails.
In the 90s all we did was lemon drop shots.
Thank you! Circumference definitely didn’t seem wrong, but perimeter was the initial word I was trying to go for 😅
And yes, the drink itself is balanced when done correctly! But you do have your dive bars (and the like) that will over-sweeten it; same with daiquiris, margs, cosmos, etc.
@@homecraftcocktails yeah they probably use sour mix which is basically candy
@@steverocksyo exactly! And not the “true” properly-made sour mix, but the artificially-made, overly sweet stuff 🤢
Lol. This recipe is sweet.
This drink is lovvvvvvely - thank you for sharing.
No problem! Glad you liked it! Thank you for watching!
Love what you’re doing, subbed!
Thanks so much! 🙏🏾 you don’t know how much that means to me!
I hate sweet drinks but love lemon drops. I live in a beach town so lots of dive bars and they can’t make even simple cocktails. Even when they look them up in a recipe book.
Understand the struggle; dive bars will over-sweeten almost any cocktail, and it makes no sense! That’s why I don’t recommend ppl trying cocktails for the first time at dive bars, because it will give the wrong impression of how the drink is SUPPOSED to taste
Love, love, love the lemon drop! I wonder if bringing in Limoncello could be nice?
Interesting thought, I wouldn't be opposed to trying that out at all!
Lemmon drops go down like candy 🎉
That they do!
Looking good
Thank you! Cheers! 🍸
👍👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 sound amazing
Circumference is correct for circles. Perimeter is also correct but more generic… any shape has a perimeter
Thank you! Definitely was second guessing myself in the moment lol
You should make this again and called it “48 oysters and a lemon drop” 😂
Create your own story for what you do
See you too you have too much baby and
Hi hi well wandy up lol dead
SKYY, absolutely awful, even worse than TITO's. Next.
The already-minimal taste difference in the various brands of vodka is further dissipated when incorporating other ingredients. Outside of the cheapest of the cheapest Vodkas (I’m talking $5 cheap) which have a harsh ethanol burn, you will be very hard pressed to taste the difference in a cocktail whether using a $10 brand of Vodka or a $30 one. But to each his own!
Regardless, thanks for the comment! 🙏🏾🍸
Don't use it.
@@sb5064 Brilliant response. Take you long to figure it out?
Is that not obvious?
I’m new to mixed drinks and I’ve heard triple sec is like the cheaper alternative to Cointreau. Can/should I use Cointreau if I have it or triple sec is the preferred ingredient?
First off: great question! Triple Sec and Cointreau are both Orange Liqueurs. All Orange Liqueurs are, for the most part, entirely interchangeable! So if a recipe calls for Triple Sec, you can most definitely use Cointreau (or vice versa)! Same applies for Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao and Grand Marnier, which are also other popular orange liqueurs.
Each liqueur will provide subtly different tasting notes; experiment with different ones to try and find one(s) that you like best (AND that fits within your budget, since it’s a very common ingredient and you’ll need to re-up once it runs out).