Pink Lady Recipe

By
Paul Clarke
Paul Clarke blogs about cocktails at The Cocktail Chronicles and writes regularly on spirits and cocktails for Imbibe magazine. He lives in Seattle, where he works as a writer and magazine editor.
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Updated August 30, 2018
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Maggie Hoffman

Stop sneering.

For decades the Pink Lady was a punchline drink, written off as a dainty little thing in a demure cocktail glass, consumed by those too delicate to handle the real stuff. You can kind of see why; the name is nothing if not frilly and bouncy, and it has a rosy appearance that hardly equates with the idea of a firm drink. Here's how Jack Townsend, president of the bartender's union of New York, Local 15, described the typical Pink Lady drinker back in 1951 (with a little help from The Bartender's Book co-author Tom Moore McBride):

Why, surely you know her. She's that nice little girl who works in files, who's always so courteous but always seems so timid. She's the one who sort of reminds you of your aunt, the quiet one. Naturally, you never expected to see her at a bar. She gets into one about twice a year, at Christmas time or some other high old time. Just why she picks the Pink Lady for these occasions--since the Lady packs quite a wallop--remains a mystery, even to her perhaps. It's quite possible she has seen the decorative and innocuous-appearing pink-and-white amalgamation passing on a waiter's tray and decided, "Hmmm, that couldn't do me any harm.

Hidden in the middle of that paragraph is the Pink Lady's secret, and the reason it's worth rediscovering. Like its close relative the Clover Club, the Pink Lady is built on a foundation of gin, with lemon juice for tartness and egg white for body, along with a note of grenadine (or, in some Clover Club recipes, raspberry syrup) to both sweeten and color the drink. But the Pink Lady needs additional fortification, and that's where a mild dose of applejack comes in; this lends more depth and backbone to the drink, and makes it about as unassuming as the brick that file clerk is packing around in her purse.

So desperate has the Pink Lady's situation been in recent decades that in his book, Vintage Spirits & Forgotten Cocktails, published in 2004, drink historian Ted "Dr. Cocktail" Haigh renamed the drink "The Secret Cocktail" in hopes of getting them into reader's hands before the prejudice against the old PL made them turn the page. That was a good idea.

If you've read this far you owe it to yourself to put its reputation aside for a moment and try a Pink Lady this weekend. There's still a lot of life in the old gal.

Recipe Details

Pink Lady Recipe

Active 5 mins
Total 5 mins
Serves 1 serving

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 ounces dry gin

  • 1/2 ounce applejack

  • Juice of 1/2 a lemon

  • 4 dashes grenadine (to taste)

  • 1 large egg white (will suffice for two drinks)

  • Cherry for garnish (optional)

Directions

  1. Combine ingredients in a cocktail shaker and shake very hard, without ice, for at least 10 seconds, to help emulsify the egg white. Fill shaker with ice and shake again for at least 10 seconds, then strain into chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with a cherry, if you dare.

Special equipment

Cocktail shaker and strainer

This Recipe Appears In

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
268Calories
3gFat
12gCarbs
4gProtein
×
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 1
Amount per serving
Calories268
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 3g3%
Saturated Fat 1g4%
Cholesterol 93mg31%
Sodium 39mg2%
Total Carbohydrate 12g4%
Dietary Fiber 2g6%
Total Sugars 5g
Protein 4g
Vitamin C 41mg207%
Calcium 29mg2%
Iron 1mg4%
Potassium 160mg3%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

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