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Peychaud's Bitters Cocktails
Bloomsbury
gin, Licor 43, Lillet blanc, Peychaud's bitters,
De La Louisiane
rye whiskey, sweet vermouth, Benedictine, absinthe, Peychaud's bitters,
Deshler
rye whiskey, Dubonnet, Cointreau, Peychaud's bitters, orange twist, lemon twist,
Fourth Regiment Cocktail
rye whiskey, sweet vermouth, orange bitters, Peychaud's bitters, celery bitters,
Metropole
brandy, dry vermouth, orange bitters, Peychaud's bitters,
Mother-In-Law
bourbon whiskey, Cointreau, maraschino liqueur, simple syrup, Peychaud's bitters, Angostura Bitters, Amer Picon,
Sazerac
absinthe, simple syrup, Peychaud's bitters, rye whiskey,
Seelbach
bourbon whiskey, Cointreau, Angostura Bitters, Peychaud's bitters, champagne,
Tillicum
gin, dry vermouth, Peychaud's bitters,
Vieux Carre
rye whiskey, brandy, sweet vermouth, Benedictine, Peychaud's bitters, Angostura Bitters,
While not nearly as readily available as Angostura Bitters, Peychaud is perhaps the second most common type of bitters in a well stocked bar. But unless you are in the New Orleans area, this isn't saying very much.
This brand of bitters originated from a family recipe brought to America by Antoine Amedee Peychaud when he fled Haitian in 1795 and settled in New Orleans. Antonie was an apothecary by trade, and around 1830 he produced the first known version of his secret bitters. He would often mix up a special brandy toddy according to his own recipe which used his private brand of bitters. This drink later evolved into the Sazerac, a cocktail which many claim was the original cocktail, and some accounts even indicate that the term cocktail is derived from the egg-cup, or coquetier, in which early New Orleans brandy cocktails were served.
Numerous sources claim that the Sazerac mixed drink was America's first cocktail and that New Orleans thus gave birth to an American tradition. The name, according to those accounts, derived from the egg-cup, or coquetier, in which early New Orleans brandy cocktails were served.
If you have a hard time finding Peychaud's Bitters in your area, you can contact:
{b}Sazerac Company, Inc.{/b}
info@sazerac.com
504-849-6400
And they can either fax, or mail you an order form.