curator’s picks

Winter Spirits

J.J. Harbster, head of the Science Section, chooses favorite holiday cocktails from the Library’s mixology and culinary collections.
Vintage illustration of a champagne glass with a festive bow and holly leaves, with the text "A toast to St. Nick!"
Recipe excerpt for a drink called Flutemaginley.

Flutemaginely

This drink not only is fun to say — “flutemaginely” — but also is a “refreshing and pleasant beverage not generally known,” according to Jesse Haney is his 1869 “Steward & Barkeeper’s Manual.” The recipe for this intriguing cider punch calls for the classic holiday spice nutmeg along with the warming properties of brandy. Punches are a popular beverage for holiday occasions and, according to Haney, are “… believe(d) to be the oldest of all made drinks.”
Scanned page featuring a recipe for Hot Pot by George Jeter with ingredients and instructions.

Jeter’s Hot Pot

The tradition of a Christmas hot pot is “a real starter for a Merry Day and a Merry Christmas,” wrote Freda DeKnight in her 1948 cookbook, “Date with a Dish.” DeKnight traveled the U.S. collecting recipes from Black chefs, home cooks and caterers. This family recipe for a hot pot — a warm melding of spices, sugar, cream and spirits perfect for a cold winter morning or night — has been served on Christmas morning by three generations of Jeters in Caroline County, Virginia, and Philadelphia.
Vintage cocktail recipe for the North Pole Cocktail with ingredients and instructions.

North Pole Cocktail

This “fancy drink” looks like a wintry wonderland but tastes like the tropics, and famed New York bartender Jacob Grohusko makes his North Pole cocktail easy to concoct. The simple recipe of French vermouth and pineapple in a glass rimmed with powdered sugar was published in Grohusko’s classic work of mixology from 1910, “Jack’s Manual.”
Illustration of various beverages and containers on a textured surface.
Vintage recipe for a Frosted Cocktail with detailed instructions and ingredients on aged paper.

Frosted Cocktail

Dashes and jiggers are not names of Santa’s reindeers, they are measurements of ingredients used in this frosted cocktail published in Tim Daly’s 1903 “Daly’s Bartenders’ Encyclopedia.” The cocktail glass rim is “frosted” with pulverized (powdered) sugar and filled with perfect ratios of spirits, sugars and bitters. The recipe base calls for whiskey (bourbon is recommended), and the use of Benedictine, an herbal liqueur, provides additional holiday spice flavors reminiscent of the winter season.
Vintage recipe for Baltimore Egg Nogg for fifteen people.

Baltimore Egg Nogg

Love it or loathe it. Eggnog originated in the U.S. and is a long-established winter holiday tradition. This recipe comes from the 1862 “How to Mix Drinks,” the first mixology book published in the U.S, by “father of American mixology” Jerry Thomas. What makes the Baltimore “egg nogg” distinct from other eggnogs? The use of Madeira wine, a favorite of the Founding Fathers.
Science and Business Reading Room collections