“Chartreuse, the only liqueur so good they named a color after it.” – Warren the bar owner, Death Proof
Yellow Chartreuse is a 40% liqueur which contains 130 herbal extracts (like a more complex version of Jägermeister?). The 55% variety, Green Chartreuse, is used in the classic cocktail The Last Word.
I mixed up two cocktail recipes from The Passenger which utilize Chartreuse – “Monk’s Mule” and “Walk of Shame-Rock” – using Yellow Chartreuse.
Here’s the Monk’s Mule:
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Gin
Green Chartreuse
Lime
Ginger Beer
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I changed out the Green Chartreuse in the recipe with the yellow variety. Since I didn’t know the proportions involved, I went with 1 oz Hendrick’s gin, 1 oz Yellow Chartreuse, and juice from 1/2 a lime. Shook these ingredients together, strained into a rocks glass over ice, then topped it off with Fever-Tree ginger beer. This came out as a nice, light cocktail…good with these steamy DC evenings.
Next up was a variation on the Walk of Shame-Rock.
Here’s the ingredients for this one from The Passenger:
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Jim Beam Rye
Green Chartreuse
Lemon
Cream
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I changed out Jim Beam for Bulleit, swapped in the Yellow Chartreuse, and used coconut milk instead of cream. 1 oz of the rye, Chartreuse, and coconut milk, and the juice from 1/2 a lemon, all shaken with ice. Tangy and different. I’ll try the original at a later point to compare/contrast.
The switch from Green to Yellow Chartreuse makes these drinks a little more sweet and less spicy than they would otherwise be (yellow has honey added, has citrus notes, and other accents, while the green is more floral/herbal). I’ll try making these drinks again with the green variety after I pick up a bottle.
See if you can get your hands on a bottle of Chartreuse V.E.P.
I’m hoping to get to some of the better liquor stores in DC soon to continue my shopping…VA does not stock much variety. Haven’t seen the VEP there, but I’m sure that some DC stores will carry it.