Cookbook:South Side (cocktail)

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Cookbook | Ingredients | Recipes

A south side or southside is an alcoholic beverage made with gin, lime juice, simple syrup and mint. A variant, the Southside Fizz, adds soda water. Its origins are subject to speculation; it has been alternatively proposed that it gets its name from either the South Side district of the city of Chicago, or from the Southside Sportsmen's Club on Long Island.

According to one story, the drink was the preferred beverage is Al Capone, whose gang dominated Chicago's South Side.[1] The gin imported by Capone's rivals on the North Side of Chicago was smooth, and usually consumed with ginger ale.[1] However, the gin run by Capone's gang had a rougher edge to it, and required more sweeteners to make it palatable.[1] Thus the South Side was born.[1]

Simple South Side[edit | edit source]

The following recipe for a South Side is used by the famed 21 Club in New York City.

Ingredients[edit | edit source]

Procedure[edit | edit source]

  1. Combine all ingredients except mint into a cocktail shaker, fill shaker with ice and shake well.
  2. Open shaker and add mint, leaving one mint leaf around the size of your thumb for garnish.
  3. Close cocktail shaker and roll the mint from one end of the shaker to the other to gently express the mint oils but to not bruise the mint.
  4. Use a hawthorn strainer and a fine mesh strainer to filter the contents into a chilled cocktail coupe.
  5. Garnish with the spare mint leaf you left aside.

South Side Fizz[edit | edit source]

A South Side Fizz adds soda water:[2]

Ingredients[edit | edit source]

Procedure[edit | edit source]

  1. In a shaker, muddle the mint, lime juice and simple syrup.
  2. Add the gin and fill with ice.
  3. Shake, and strain into a highball glass filled with crushed ice.
  4. Stir until frost appears on the outside of the glass.
  5. Fill with club soda and garnish with another mint sprig.[2]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. a b c d Puchko, Kristy. "The Origins Of 10 Popular Prohibition Cocktails". Mental Floss. Mental Floss. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  2. a b "Ten Southside Fizz Cocktail". Liquor.com. Retrieved 3 September 2016.