Recipes

Classic Recipe No. 131 —

Corpse Reviver #2

Corpse Revivor

In my line of work, the occa­sion­al over-indul­gence is near­ly inevitable. There are plen­ty of odd con­coc­tions tout­ed as hang­over cure-alls from sushi and coca-cola to greasy burg­ers and kale juice, but none so enthu­si­as­ti­cal­ly rec­om­mend­ed as the trusty “hair of the dog” rem­e­dy. I can’t say I believe ful­ly in its effec­tive­ness, but the “like cures like” phi­los­o­phy dates back to the days of Aristo­phanes:

Take the hair, it’s well writ­ten,
Of the dog by which you’re bit­ten;
Work off one wine by his broth­er,
And one labour with anoth­er…
Cook with cook, and strife with strife:
Busi­ness with busi­ness, wife with wife.
— Aethenæus

Effec­tive as a hang-over cure or not, it nev­er hurts to add a great clas­sic to your brunch reper­toire.

The Corpse-Reviv­er fam­i­ly of drinks has unclear ori­gins, but what we do know is they are men­tioned in cock­tail books as ear­ly as 1871 in The Gen­tle­man’s Table Guide (an inter­est­ing read in its own right). This ver­sion, the Corpse Reviv­er #2, was includ­ed in Har­ry Crad­dock­’s famous Savoy Cock­tail Book pub­lished in 1930. He wrote, “To be tak­en before 11 a.m., or when­ev­er steam and ener­gy are need­ed.”

The drinks pack a punch! Enjoy, but keep Crad­dock­’s warn­ing in mind, “Four of these tak­en in swift suc­ces­sion will quick­ly unre­vive the corpse again.”

Recipe

  • 1 oz Old Tom gin
  • 3/4 oz Coin­treau
  • 3/4 oz Lil­let Blanc
  • 3/4 oz fresh lemon juice
  • An absinthe rinse
  • Gar­nish with a Luxar­do cher­ry

Add all ingre­di­ents into a shak­er except for the gar­nish. Shake with ice. Rinse your chilled cock­tail glass with 3 drops of absinthe. Dis­card any excess absinthe. Strain your shak­er into the cock­tail glass. Gar­nish with a cher­ry.

9 Notes on Corpse Reviver #2

  1. Fan­tas­tic! I intend­ed to give it 5 stars, but it read my click as 4.5. It’s a 5 in my heart though.

    Do you have a pre­ferred gin for this?

  2. Recent­ly I’ve been enjoy­ing it with Bro­ker’s Gin. This is one of my favorite gin clas­sics too.

  3. I’ve always been a fan of tylenol for the headache, pep­to bis­mol for the nau­sea, dra­mamine for the dizzi­ness, and a 5 hour ener­gy for the B vit­a­mins as a hang­over cure. Plus tons of water, most impor­tant part.

    I find too that qual­i­ty plays a big part in how I feel in the morn­ing too. I’ve noticed that mar­ti­nis made with Whistling Andy gin give me more of a headache than Dry Fly gin, same with cheapo vod­ka com­pared to Tito’s.

  4. This recipe some­times needs a tiny splash of sim­ple syrup. This depends on you choice of gin and orange liqueur.

  5. I appre­ci­ate, cause I found just what I was look­ing for. You have end­ed my 4 day long hunt! God Bless you man. Have a great day. Bye bfed­ced­ded­cf

  6. I have recent­ly start­ed a web site, the info you pro­vide on this site has helped me great­ly. Thank you for all of your time &amp work. There can be no real free­dom with­out the free­dom to fail. by Erich Fromm. eagck­c­c­ck­k­da

  7. You have Beau­ti­ful­ly expressed your thoughts and have explain in a prop­er way, your post tells your expe­ri­ence which is show­ing an orga­nized post. I have enjoyed read­ing, keep it up!

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