If I had a horse running today in the Kentucky Derby, I’d name it Hapax Legomenon and spend the race chuckling at the announcer’s pronunciations.
But I can’t commemorate the Derby appropriately because I’ll be at Memorial Episcopal Church gussying myself up as Franklin Roosevelt for tonight’s performance of Annie.
Since you’re on your own for the Derby, some advice:
Make yourself a mint julep. A julep, I must caution you, is not some genteel lady’s drink or one of those candied concoctions that the unsophisticated young mistake for cocktails these days. A julep is a drink for serious topers.
Step one: Go outside and cut a handful of mint leaves.
Step two: In a silver cup or a squat glass with a good solid bottom, mix a little sugar — a teaspoon should be plenty — with just enough water to dissolve it.
Step three: Muddle the mint, crushing it in the sugared water. A miniature Louisville Slugger bat is very good for this. I had one from the ACES conference in Lousiville* in 2002, but it has gone astray. You may need to improvise with some other implement.
Step four: Fill the glass with cracked ice. Do not use crushed ice, which will melt too fast, or ice cubes, which will melt too slowly. Cracked ice.
Step five: Cover the ice with good bourbon. Old Forester will do; Maker’s Mark is better. If you’re flush, Woodford Reserve or one of the small batch bourbons will do nicely. On no account should you use any Tennessee whiskey. Garnish with a mint leaf or two.
Step six: Sip.
Step seven: Shut your mouth and stand respectfully while the band plays “My Old Kentucky Home.”
Step eight: Mix another. From this point it’s just a bunch of horses running around.
*That’s LOO-uh-vul.
L'chaim!
ReplyDeleteHow about non-alcoholic juleps in the rectory garden?
ReplyDeleteI don't think you CAN make non-alcoholic juleps.
ReplyDeleteThe very idea of a non-alcoholic julep threatens to rupture the space-time continuum. The alternative to a julep for anyone who prefers to or must shun alcohol is a tall glass of iced tea with mint.
ReplyDeleteExcellent recipe! As a native Kentuckian, this is my preferred recipe as well. I will have one for you today, with Woodford of course. :)
ReplyDeleteMr McIntyre, the race was a quagmire, but Calvin Borel *did* win his third Derby in four years. And, as a native Louisianan transplanted to his wife's Kentucky, it was worth watching a lackluster race to hear his mellifluous Cajun cadences during the victory interview.
ReplyDeleteThank you for smacking Anonymous for all of us; the idea of a "virgin" julep is one that for his/her safety's sake should only be mooted anonymously.
I much enjoy your blog. I hope your return to employment (congratulations!) won't mean the end of it!
The complete quondam bumper sticker read: "Ah luv LOO-uh-vil"
ReplyDeleteThat's "...LOO-uh-vul," as JMcI notes, of course.
ReplyDelete