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Hot Gin and Tonic

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Hot gin and tonic in a clear toddy glass with an orange twist.
Photo by Andy Sewell

The Hot Gin and Tonic is exactly as it sounds—the ever-popular cocktail-hour refresher retrofitted into toddy form. It debuted at London’s Ham Yard Hotel in 2015 for a Sipsmith Gin winter seasonal takeover menu and is the brainchild of master distiller/drink historian Jared Brown and the hotel’s bar manager, Eoin Kenny.

Brown says the concept came about as a dare. At the time, the Hot Gin & Tonic followed a series of “classic gin cocktail, but make it hot” challenge recipes that in previous seasons included steamy versions of negronis (made with red berry tea), martinis (served with a fried, breaded olive on the side), and espresso martinis, which Brown says was just a cheeky jab in memory of his dear, departed friend, the barman Dick Bradsell (inventor of the original), as it was essentially just an Irish coffee made with gin. But could a Hot G&T even be done? Would people be into it?

Not only could it be done, but it also seems it always should have been. Hot G&T became a winter staple at the Ham Yard and took off at other Sipsmith outdoor pop-ups, especially during the cold months of 2020 and 2021, when events could only be held outside because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Brown says the drink has become an integral part of the Sipsmith distillery tour tasting room, where at least 35 are served a night, three to four nights a week.

The original recipe was prepared with a tonic syrup as both the essential aromatic quinine component and the sweetener. Later versions call for less tonic and a touch of simple syrup, though the sweetener can be modified according to preference.

This recipe was excerpted from 'Signature Cocktails' by Amanda Schuster. Buy the full book on Amazon.

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What you’ll need

Cooks' Note

If more tonic flavor is desired, omit the simple syrup and add another teaspoon or so of tonic syrup.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Makes 1 cocktail

Ingredients

2 oz. Sipsmith London dry gin
½ oz. tonic syrup
1 tsp. simple syrup
Boiled water, to top
Orange twist, for garnish

Preparation

  1. Combine the gin and syrups in a heatproof mug or toddy glass. Add hot water and stir until the syrups dissolve. Garnish with an orange twist.

Signature Cocktails-COVER.jpeg
Excerpted from Signature Cocktails © 2023 by Amanda Schuster. Photography © 2023 by Andy Sewell. Reproduced by permission of Phaidon. All rights reserved. Buy the full book from Amazon or Phaidon.
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