Where Do Crazy Drink Names Come From?

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Photo by Saquan Stimpson/monstersh aq2000/Flickr CC


During the last week of January, the District of Columbia was inundated with more than history-seeking tourists, gowned-ball-goers, and bobble-headed Obama dolls; we were inundated with a glut of presidential-themed cocktails.

It's not surprising--bartenders have often used special events as an excuse to create new cocktails. A good example is the Japanese Cocktail, named in the mid-19th century for the first Japanese delegation to arrive in the United States.

Yet, walking past restaurants and seeing the Obama-Mama or Barack-a-tini advertised on street signs, with ingredients like clear rum or vodka mixed with blue Curacao or cranberry juice, I had to wonder: What is the connection with the presidential pitch and the cocktail at hand? Surely, there must be a sensible, rule-based system of nomenclature for cocktails besides throwing the suffix "tini" on the end of the drink's main ingredient (e.g. Choco-tini, Mango-tini, etc.). Perhaps some kind of giant database that bartenders turn to when creating cocktail names?

Well, there is a spectacular online database for cocktail recipes but if you want a name you're on your own. There are no explicit rules that determine how a drink is named.

Like naming horses, the pedigree of a drink matters. There are no more fun examples than Sex on the Beach variants.

Oh, there was a time when bartenders had something resembling a system. If you ordered a Toddy, Smash, Sling, Sour, or Julep from a bartender in the 1890's, everything else became a modifier: I'll take a hot whiskey sling. Although, even then, creative and inventive names were part of the bartender's repertoire. So how do bartenders come up with cocktail names like the Corpse Reviver #2 and Negroni?

Here are a few guidelines when naming cocktails. I'll pick an attention-grabbing category to get you started.

Like naming horses, the pedigree of a drink matters. There are no more fun examples than Sex on the Beach variants. By the name alone you can ascertain the combination of ingredients and determine the cocktail from which it originates. There's the Sloe Comfortable Screw on the Beach, which is a Sex on the Beach with Sloe gin and orange juice (thus the "Sloe" and "Screw," as in Screwdriver). Then there is also the Sloe Comfortable Screw Up Against a Wall, which includes Galliano (the "Wall" is short for Harvey Wallbanger that uses Galliano). You can take it from there. Here are some more name sources.

Places


Perhaps one of the most famous old cocktails--which is still a staple in bars today--is the Manhattan. Purportedly named after the Manhattan Club in New York, it also has the interesting distinction of being named after an Indian word Manahactaniek, meaning "The island where we drank liquor," according to social historian Iain Gatley in Drink: A Cultural History of Alcohol. At least Gatley claims the island is named such--the drink came much later, leading to an odd recursive effect when we drank that drink named after the place named after the place we drank.

People


Famous people and larger-than-life personalities often invent their own drink and pass the word around: Count Camillo Negroni and Colonel Joe Rickey are two perfect examples with the Negroni and Rickey. The Colonel went to various bars during his travels and instructed bartenders how to make his drink.

Then there are people honored with a drink name, such as with the Robert Burns and the Montgomery. Hemingway named his variation on the classic Martini the Montgomery since the gin to vermouth ratio is 15:1 (the odds that Field Marshal Montgomery purportedly favored when going in to battle).

Liquor


Sometimes the liquor is essential to the name, such as the Bacardi cocktail (in fact it's illegal to state that you're serving a Bacardi Cocktail and not use Bacardi). Dubonnet Cocktail is another. These seem to lack inspiration but get right to the point. Whenever I'm stuck on a name, this makes a good placeholder: "You know, that Dolin Vermouth Cocktail."

Media


Plays, movies, and popular songs are sometimes drafted for name recognition. The Rob Roy was named after a famous operetta, based on a famous novel, based on a famous poem about a Scottish, Robin Hood-like character. I myself enjoy using albums titles or famous songs from bands I like. I have both a Paul's Boutique and Lebanese Blond cocktail named after the Beastie Boys' best album (go ahead, try and argue otherwise) and the Thievery Corporation's breakout song.

Sequence


Sometimes a name just fits the bill, so it gets the same name with a sequential number. A perfect example is the Corpse Reviver #2. Part of an early category of morning drinks, including the Morning Glory, Eye Opener, and Anti-fogmatic, the Corpse Reviver #2 follows none other than the Corpse Reviver. While they are two totally different drinks, both are purported to wake the corpse.

Now that you know these loose guidelines, try it on the "tini"-set. Why not call the Obama Mama and Barack-a-tini the Blue State Hawaiian--after the Blue Hawaiian--and the Cosmopolitan President using their "geography" and "pedigree"? You could also call the rum and blue Curacao combo the "Yes We Can" after will.i.am's famous song and Obama's catch phrase, or the Barack-a-tini simply The Obama.

Derek Brown is a writer, illustrator, bartender, and co-owner of acclaimed bars The Passenger and Columbia Room in Washington, D.C. He sits on the board of directors for the Museum of the American Cocktail.