
“Those bold flavors, if paired well, can create cohesive wonderful cocktails,” he says. He likens this technique to the philosophy behind the Last Word, a cocktail with several intense ingredients that on paper shouldn’t work together but somehow find perfect synergy. "You have to play fernet with either other bold spirits or flavors, or things that will soften it,” says Kraig Rovensky, the general manager of Life on Mars in Seattle, who has always found vermouth, sweeter amari, funky pot-still rums and smoky scotches to work seamlessly with fernet. “It still offers the sweetness of the vermouth with a more herbaceous and exciting flavor.” “I also love to replace sweet vermouth with Fernet-Branca in stirred drinks like a Manhattan,” he says. He believes spicy rye whiskey and gin best play off its herbal quality, like in his #4 With a Smile, which stirs rye with smoked Fernet-Branca and a house-made cola syrup. “I always tell guests that Fernet-Branca is bitter but with a steeped tealike bitterness bright refreshing peppermint quality,” says Alex Cuper, the general manager and beverage director at El Che Steakhouse & Bar in Chicago.

It’s also so popular among drinks-industry workers that it’s often called the “bartender’s handshake.” It’s made with 27 herbs, roots and spices-its recipe is a closely guarded secret-and spends at least 12 months aging in Croatian oak barrels. It dominates the category to the point it has become nearly synonymous with it, as Kleenex has for facial tissue. But the merits of this bracing liqueur, which was invented in Milan in 1845 and originally intended as a medicinal tonic, go well beyond that of glorified boozy mouthwash or potent digestivo.įernet-Branca is the best-known brand of the fernet category of amari, or bitter herbal liqueurs. Or you bought it to mix a Hanky Panky, an early-20th-century creation with gin and sweet vermouth first stirred by bartender Ada Coleman at The Savoy in London. Maybe you were curious about Fernet-Branca’s cultlike following among bartenders.

Bartenders weigh in with tips and recipes for getting every last drop out of an underutilized ingredient so it doesn’t gather dust on your bar shelf. Now you’re stuck with the remaining 9/10ths of the bottle and what to do with it. You bought a spirit or liqueur because a cocktail recipe called for a very small amount.
