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Long Island iced tea

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Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox cocktail The Long Island iced tea, or Long Island ice tea, is an IBA official cocktail, typically made with vodka, tequila, light rum, triple sec, gin, and a splash of cola. Despite its name, the cocktail does not typically contain iced tea, but is named for having the same amber hue as iced tea.<ref name="iba" />

The drink has a much higher alcohol concentration (approximately 22 percent)<ref name="Strong">Template:Cite web</ref> than most highball drinks due to the relatively small amount of mixer.

Origin

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There are two competing origin stories for the Long Island iced tea, one from Long Island, Tennessee, and one from Long Island, New York.<ref name="OSBORNE"/>

Robert "Rosebud" Butt claims to have invented the Long Island iced tea as an entry in a contest to create a new mixed drink with triple sec in 1972 while he worked at the Oak Beach Inn on Long Island, New York.<ref name="Strong" /><ref name="liicetea">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="huffingtonpost">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="youtube">Template:Cite web</ref>

A slightly different drink is claimed to have been invented in the 1920s during Prohibition by an "Old Man Bishop" in a local community named Long Island in Kingsport, Tennessee.<ref name="OSBORNE" /><ref name="Moore">Template:Cite book</ref> The drink was then tweaked by Ransom Bishop, Old Man Bishop's son, by adding cola, lemon, and lime. Old Man's version included whiskey, maple syrup, varied quantities of the five liquors, and no triple sec, rather than the modern one with cola and five equal portions of the five liquors. It was prepared in the following way:<ref name="OSBORNE">Template:Cite news</ref>

It is unknown what the quantities of the original recipe were, when and how it was changed, and how and why the varied alcoholic ingredients were distilled all in the same place or otherwise acquired during Prohibition.

While some sources say there was a recipe for Long Island iced tea in the 1961 edition of Betty Crocker's New Picture Cook Book,<ref name="Strong"/> no such recipe can actually be found there.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Reception

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The cocktail is considered a favorite of university students in the United States and it has thus garnered negative connotations as "an act of mixological atrocity favored by college students and wastrels", in the words of one food critic.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The variety of spirits needed to prepare the drink means that one can prepare many other types of cocktails if they have the ingredients for a Long Island already.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The cocktail's flavor has been described as "bright and refreshing".<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref> It is easy to drink,<ref name="Strong"/> making it "dangerously boozy".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Recipes and variationsTemplate:Anchor

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The International Bartenders Association (IBA)'s recipe calls for equal parts vodka, tequila, white rum, cointreau, gin, 2 parts lemon juice, Template:Fraction syrup topped with cola. After stirring gently, the drink may also be garnished with a lemon slice.<ref name="iba" /> Robert Butt's recipe uses sour mix instead of lemon juice and simple syrup, and he has stated that only a small amount of Coke is used, to give color.<ref name="liicetea" /><ref name="huffingtonpost" /> A more complex recipe published by The New York Times differs from the IBA recipe in that it uses maple syrup instead of simple syrup, uses both lemon and lime juice, and adds salt.<ref name=":0" />

File:Adios Motherfucker Cocktail.jpg
Adios Motherfucker, made with blue curaçao

However, there are many similar cocktails due to the popularity of the cocktail and the large number of ingredients that can be substituted with alternatives.<ref name="Strong" /><ref name="huffingtonpost" /> Some variations include:

  • Boston Tea Party,<ref name="Strong" /> also called a Walk Me Down or an Adios Motherfucker,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> is a variation of the Long Island iced tea with blue curaçao substituting for the triple sec, and with lemon-lime soda substituting for the cola.<ref name="Strong" />
  • Grateful Dead (also known as the Black Widow), which uses the same mix as a Long Island but the triple sec is replaced with raspberry liqueur and the cola with lemon-lime soda.<ref name="Strong" />
  • Hawaiian iced tea is made by replacing the cola with pineapple juice.<ref name="Strong" />
  • If cranberry juice is substituted for cola, the result is a Long Beach iced tea.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • If Midori is substituted in for the triple sec and lemon-lime soda replaces the Coca-Cola the result is a Tokyo iced tea, and has a greenish color.<ref name="Strong" />
  • Tennessee tea replaces the gin with Tennessee whiskey and does not use tequila.<ref name="Strong" />
  • Texas tea is created by adding whiskey.<ref name="Strong" />

References

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Template:IBACocktails