Juice of a Few Flowers
- By Katie Roche
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- 16 May, 2018
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Juice of a Few Flowers

The intro to this recipe is about how some dude who lived in the Hamptons in the 1920s hosted these amazing parties where he served this cocktail. As such, I was expecting something fussy in the ingredient list, but behold! Simply vodka and all of the citrus juices. I did not, however, escape an item quest; I came to this recipe not owning two critical pieces of kitchenware: martini glasses and a cocktail shaker.
In anticipation of this project, I had begun scoping out cocktail shakers a month ago, just because I had never even considered owning one and was curious as to how much they cost and how crucial it is to own one of some quality. The first one I picked up in a Williams Sonoma in Indianapolis was $130 - surely, made of repurposed glass from the shattered windows of a historically important church or something. (As a side note, if you love making fun of pretentious things and have never seen The Hater's Guide to the Williams Sonoma Catalog, go read that. Language warning, and frivolity warning - if the idea of someone being able to order two dozen pigs in a blanket from a catalog for $40 makes you angry, maybe don’t read that.) Anyway, I braved one of my least favorite places on the planet - the Made-For-TV nightmare that is Bed Bath & Beyond - and procured a super basic cocktail shaker for $9.99, along with a set of four martini glasses for the same price.
My procurement of vodka was not nearly as dramatic as my Campari purchase was, but I did learn, much to my frustration, that you cannot buy liquor in South Carolina on Sundays. In addition, you cannot buy it anywhere after 7 PM which I unfortunately learned a couple of months ago in the middle of making a cake that required Kahlua when I ran out of it and couldn’t restock because everywhere was closed. In years past I might have told you that Alaska doesn’t have all of the conveniences and commodities of the Lower 48, as we call the rest of America excluding Hawaii, but we actually do, and have fewer restrictions on just about everything so I did get a little unreasonably frustrated at being prevented from buying what I wanted when I wanted it. Thankfully, when I did get to a liquor store before sunset, I found out that there are tons of types of vodka and that it is possible to buy it in a lot of flavors (why???) and tiny amounts. One pint, good to go.



I did pre-chill my martini glass in the freezer, and then sugar-rimmed it as the recipe instructed. I shook it in the cocktail shaker with the ice, for the full 30 seconds, and poured it. To be honest, I had made up my mind at some point that I did not like vodka, never having tried it, and so was not excited to try this and assumed that I wouldn't like it. I also read the reviews of the recipe on the internet, in which nearly every single reviewer said he added sugar, finding the drink too tart.
Potent though it is for someone who rarely drinks, and almost never drinks any liquor, this drink is definitely worth the $20 I spent on unpretentious cocktail equipment. Beyond the sugar rim, no extra sugar is needed, in my opinion - Ina strikes again with the recipe that is perfect as is. This time around, the only available taste-tester was my husband, and I poured him the drink when he walked in the door from work at 1 AM; an interesting picture - a tired man with dirty mechanic hands being handed a drink Ina Garten enjoys at Hamptons summer parties. It’s the sunlit Jeffrey-coming-home scene, adapted for the average blue-collar American. How fabulous is that?

Yes, I did rim my glasses using Tupperware bowls.



#1: Butternut Squash Soup

So with that, #1: Juice of a Few Flowers

We went to Publix to ItemQuest for this and Dan said, "Don't we already have strawberries???" And I had to confess that I had eaten them all because it's honestly amazing how good fruit can be when it's 1) in season, 2) somewhat local, and 3) not ludicrously expensive. I'm about to travel home to Alaska for about a month, and it's going to put a real damper on my current fruit-snacking habits when I go into Fred Meyer for some strawbs and they're like, $7/lb and already trying to be moldy. Also needed blueberries (partly for the jam, mostly for the snax), one Granny Smith apple, and more superfine sugar. Publix had all of these things, plus about a million old people 'cause Sunday + Publix = Old People City.




So down to the granola bar ingredients. I rolled up to Kroger only to find that their already meager bulk bins had been EMPTIED because if you scoop dates into a bag and then someone else scoops dates into a bag, you might get the coronavirus. I'm glad they've taken the precaution of removing this shopping option, since I cannot resisting licking my hands after every grocery trip I make. Thankfully, they still had the lil tower of small containers of some of the weirder items right there in the organic section, which was where I was able to find dates. The rest of this stuff was on the baking aisle, with the exception of wheat germ which was, for some reason, with the cereal. I'm still kind of unclear on what wheat germ is actually used for by people, and the context of it being located on the cereal aisle makes me wonder even more. Do people eat it like grape nuts? Sprinkle it on stuff like how people like to do with nutritional yeast right now? ("It tastes just like cheese!" You know what else tastes like cheese? Actual cheese. You're welcome.) Anyway, I was very grateful that Kroger at least had everything I needed and I didn't have to go on a for real ItemQuest.

ItemQuest was only dramatic because the stores just DID NOT have puff pastry sheets; I was only finding it in "shells". I tried Bi-Lo and Dan tried Food Lion before he finally located sheets at Publix. The rest of the ingredients, I already had on hand!