Irish Car Bomb VS. the Sake Bomb! YOU decide....

okay... so, I know I was writing about staying in... but, as I'm in, i thought I'd write about.. um... going OUT?

Today's lesson?

The IRISH CAR bomb vs. the SAKE bomb.

(by the way, these drinks are SO Americano.  Good luck ordering them anywhere else!  ... though, it might now be a bad idea to remember the recipes, and teach your local bartender!!)


Irish Car Bomb (shooter)



From Colleen Graham,
Your Guide to Cocktails.
FREE Newsletter. Sign Up Now!
Recipe Feedback:
User Rating 4 out of 5 4 out of 5
(1 review)

Another popular bar shot similar to the Jäger Bomb. You want to chug this drink right away or it will curdle and taste worst than it already does. This shot is not for the faint of heart.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 3/4 pint lager (Guinness)
  • 1/2 shot Irish cream liqueur
  • 1/2 shot Irish whiskey

PREPARATION:

  1. Pour the Irish cream liquer into a shot glass.
  2. Pour the Irish whiskey on top.
  3. Pour the Guinness into a pint glass or beer mug 3/4 of the way full and let settle.
  4. Drop the shot glass into the Guinness and chug.

THE SAKE BOMB

Sake bomb

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Sake Bomb
Type: Beer cocktail
Primary alcohol by volume:
Served: "Straight up"; without ice
Standard drinkware: A pint glass and a shot glass.
Commonly used ingredients:
  • 1 pint (~14 parts) beer
  • 1 shot (1 part) Sake
Preparation: The shot of sake is dropped into the beer, causing it to fizz violently. The drink should then be consumed immediately.


The sake bomb or sake bomber is a drink made by pouring sake into a shot glass and dropping it into a glass of beer. Sometimes two chopsticks are placed parallel on top of the glass of beer, and the shot glass is balanced carefully between them. The drinker then chants "sake...sake...sake...BOMB!", slamming the table with two balled fists, and the sake drops into the beer.[1] It is to be drunk immediately, and works best with warm sake.



heee. heeeee. have fun!






 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments
Page: 1 of 1
Page: 1 of 1
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.