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Prizefighter No. 1

Two glasses of prizefighter one cocktails garnished with mint.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Prop styling by Anne Eastman, Food styling by Judy Haubert
  • Active Time

    5 minutes

  • Total Time

    5 minutes

When I say that bartender Nicholas Jarrett is a legend, I don’t mean that he simply makes great drinks. He does, but there’s something mythic about the guy. He’s as gracefully comfortable rattling off obscure drink recipes in the snazziest of cocktail haunts as he is handing out life advice in the dankest of dives, and the guy seems capable of superhuman endurance. When I worked with him in 2010 he’d been commuting via the (now defunct) Fung Wah bus back and forth between Brooklyn and Philadelphia for shifts every week. That was when I first heard about the Prizefighter.

The smash is one of those drinks families that were repopularized in the aughts and early teens but have since mostly fallen to the wayside. The 19th-century-style mixed drink is usually executed today as a sour (often with rum or whiskey) with muddled lemon and mint, in this one supplemented with fresh juice. Jarrett’s drink starts with this model but veers off the tracks by splitting the drink’s base between sweet vermouth and the old bartender handshake, Fernet-Branca. The bracing Italian bitter has been used in a lot of drinks since the cocktail revival of the early 2000s but few as pleasantly as the Prizefighter. Rarer still is the use of sweet vermouth in a sour; here Jarrett perfectly pairs the vanilla bomb Carpano Antica with the spicy menthol of Fernet. —Al Sotack

Click through for more lesser-known bartender-favorite cocktails →

Ingredients

Makes 1

6 mint leaves
3 lemon wedges (each ⅛th of a lemon)
¾ oz. simple syrup (1:1)
1 oz. Fernet-Branca
1 oz. sweet vermouth (preferably Carpano Antica Formula)
¼ oz. fresh lemon juice
Pinch kosher salt
Mint sprig (for serving)

Preparation

  1. Muddle 6 mint leaves and 3 lemon wedges in a cocktail shaker with ¾ oz. simple syrup (1:1), pushing firmly enough to express juice but not destroy the mint. Add 1 oz. Fernet-Branca, 1 oz. sweet vermouth, ¼ oz. fresh lemon juice, and a pinch kosher salt. Fill with ice and shake until exterior is chilled, 10–15 seconds. Double-strain, using a cocktail strainer and a fine-mesh strainer, into a rocks glass filled with crushed ice. Garnish with a mint sprig.

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  • This is such a fun, weird drink!

    • Anonymous

    • 6/30/2023

  • I’ve loved Fernet-Branca for years and I’m always thrilled to introduce it to others. This cocktail is perfect as-is for an introduction to the uninitiated but is leveled UP exponentially by the use of its sweeter sister, Menta! All the flavor notes of the original are there, but the additional sweetness and, well, minty-ness, of Menta plays well with the sour notes of the lemon and, quite frankly, improve on this funky drink’s surprising refreshment.

    • Wonsuponatime

    • Vancouver, WA

    • 9/15/2023

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