If you like cocktails and you haven’t bought a bottle of Amontillado sherry yet, I highly recommend you try it. It’s not a big investment nor a big commitment; a decent bottle runs under $20, and because it’s a fortified wine like vermouth, it should be stored in the fridge and can eventually go bad. It’s a unique ingredient because it has flavors like raisin, nuts, and spice, but is actually fairly dry. So it can add those flavors to a cocktail without adding sweetness. I’ve made a number of recipes with Amontillado that I absolutely love: the
Sherry Cobbler,
Teenage Riot,
Toffee Negroni,
Flor de Jerez, and
Legend are a few I’ve posted, as well as a couple originals of mine: the
Pear Tree and
L’Orchid.
Amontillado sherry plays a starring role in the Bamboo. This is a classic, turn-of-the-century cocktail that was extremely popular in its time. With the resurgence of interest in sherry cocktails, it’s finally receiving some attention again. And not a moment too soon. This is a seriously tasty drink, particularly if you love sherry as much as I do. It has a nutty, raisiny flavor while still being surprisingly light. Also, without any hard liquor, the Bamboo is a relatively low ABV cocktail that still drinks like something more spirit-forward. As David Wondrich
writes, it “looks like a cocktail, tastes like a cocktail, and punches like a six-year-old.”
The first recipe for the Bamboo in print (see below) as well as the more famous version in Boothby’s 1908
The World’s Drinks and How to Mix Them, don’t specify what kind of sherry should be used. As such, you’ll see the Bamboo made with a number of different sherries besides Amontillado, as well as with both blanc and dry vermouths. But ever since the
Death & Co book changed the way I made Sazeracs, I’ve trusted them on the classics. When their recipes stray from tradition, it’s usually for the better. And I think that’s true of their specs for the Bamboo. They use Amontillado sherry and blanc vermouth, which probably tastes more similar to the “French vermouth” of Boothby’s day. They also add half a teaspoon of simple syrup, which makes the drink less dry and really helps the sherry shine.
History: According to Boothby, the Bamboo was invented by Louis Eppinger, a German bartender who worked in Yokohama, Japan, where he managed the Grand Hotel from 1890-1907. Most accounts of the Bamboo’s creation claim that Eppinger came up with it while he worked at the Grand, and that the name is a reference to Japan. But the Bamboo pre-dates Eppinger’s stint in Yokohama by several years. The recipe appears in the St. Paul Daily Globe in 1886, and by 1893 it appeared on menus in New York as a Boston Bamboo. It was extremely popular, and a pre-bottled version was even sold.
This timeline doesn’t mean that Eppinger didn’t invent the Bamboo. Before he worked in Japan, he tended bar in San Francisco, and may have invented the drink there, which would explain its gradual journey eastward over the years. But it’s clearly an even older drink than most people assume – another little piece of history you can sip on in your own home.
Bamboo
1 1/2 oz. Amontillado sherry (Lustau)
1 1/2 oz. blanc vermouth (Dolin)
1/2 tsp. simple syrup
1 dash Angostura bitters
1 dash orange bitters
Combine all ingredients in a mixing glass with ice and stir until chilled. Strain into a coupe glass. Garnish with a lemon twist.
Recipe from Death & Co: Modern Classic Cocktails.
Historical information from Tuxedo No. 2, Cold Glass, and Imbibe!