How to Decorate Traditional Cocktails

When it comes to traditional garnishes cocktails, the maraschino cherry is just as famous as the olive. The maraschino cherry is made from marac or Queen Ann cherries that have had the color leached out of them. The two most readily available are, of course, the red almond-flavored ones and also green, which are sometimes mint-flavored.

However in the old days, pickled Queen Ann cherries, both the white and red kind were dropped at the bottom of Old Fashioned and Manhattan cocktails to give them a bit of kick. There is a trend to using sour and fresh Bing cherries in the swanky bars in New York. You can easily make your own “specialty” cherry by simply soaking your favorite type of cherry in some kind of brandy.

The most traditional and simple of garnishes is the orange, lemon or lime twist. This is a wedge of citrus fruit that is simply squished and then dropped in the drink.

A variation of this is the squeeze, in which a lemon or a lime is squeezed gently and then also speared with other fruit such as pineapple on a pick to use as a garnish for the drink. This is a standard garnish for drinks such as the Daiquiri, the gin and tonic or the Cuba Libre.

The green olive stuffed with red pimento is the stand-by garnish for a martini however nowadays you can find stuffed olives and black olives sitting on the rim of the drink. A very traditional garnish for a martini, which is enjoying a comeback, is the black olive that is stuffed with blue cheese and dropped to the bottom of the glass.

Skewering different fruits or condiments on a cocktail spear is only one way to garnish a drink. Another method is called frosting. This is where the rim of the glass is wetted and then dipped into crystalline or powdered substance of some kind. The traditional frostings are salt, sugar and powdered sour mix. However as cocktails have evolved both in terms of their presentation and their taste, new and unusual frostings for the rims of glasses have evolved such as cocoa, Jell-O powder and flaked coconut.

Make Door Wreathes for Summer

Here are some merry wreathes that you can hang on your front door and that can bring luck to you and your family.

Midsummer Hay Ring

This wreathe allows you to celebrate the height of summer’s glory with a dried flower hay ring composed of dried flowers in many colors. It can be hung on a rustic gate, on an outside wall or set up on a mantelpiece.

As it is made of hay you may prefer it outdoors if allergies are a problem.

Materials

Green twine
10 inches (25 cm) diameter copper wire ring
bundle of dry hay or dry sphagnum moss
selection of colorful dried flowers such as sea lavender, statice, cornflowers, strawflowers and carthamus
scissors
florists silver roll wire
wire cutters
stub floral wires
ribbons in colors that compliment the flowers

Step 1

Tie the twine to the outer circle of the ring. Place handfuls of hay or moss over the ring and bind it securely with the twine.

Step 2

Gather the flowers into small, colorful mixed posies. Cut the stems short and bind them florist’s silver wire.

Step 3

Cut several stub floral wires in half and bend them to make U shaped staples.

Place a posy over the covered ring, loop a staple over the stems and press them into the hay or moss. Bend back the wire ends and twist them around the back of the ring to secure them.

Step 4

Continue fixing more posies around the ring so that the heads of each one cover the stems of the one before. Alternate the colors for the brightest effect. Fold the ribbon lengths in half and attach them to the ring with a floral wire.
You can also make a Striped Rose Ring Wreathe

This is a mass of roses in two contrasting colors that once placed on the ring create the optical illusion of stripes. The roses you use can be of any color. We have only used red and yellow here as an example.

Materials

Scissors
34 stems dried red roses
33 stems dried yellow roses.
4-inch (10 cm) diameter plastic foam ring for dried flowers
ribbon.
This is George Bush laying a striped style of wreath at Ground Zero in New York. Only in this case there are also carnations in the mix.

Step 1

Cut the rose stems to 2.5 inches.

Around the outside edge of the foam ring form a circle of alternating yellow and red roses by gluing their stems and pushing them into the foam. Be sure to leave a small gap in the rose circle for a ribbon to be fixed into.

Step 2

Inside the first circle construct a second circle offsetting the colors in the first ring. Continue building circles of roses until the ring is covered.

Your summer rose wreathe is complete!