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Don't tell your high school English teacher about this drink

cover of The Grapes of WrathMy fashion-forward roommate reads Nylon Magazine, and I was flipping through it the other day when I came across the drink of the month: the Grapes of Wrath martini. The Grapes of Wrath is one of my favorite novels, but to see it as a martini? I'm not so sure how I feel.

It would be one thing if the magazine had designed a martini around a book like The Great Gatsby (I'd actually bet there are many), but The Grapes of Wrath? I mean, it takes place during the Great Depression -- none of the characters go near anything like a martini, especially not one featuring Belvedere Vokda, grapes, apple juice, elderflower cordial, and a dashes of lemon juice and sauvignon blanc. Is it blasphemous, or am I reading too far into a name?

But the whole thing got me wondering about other novels, and whether they have drinks named after them. I found a Scarlett O'Hara from Gone With the Wind (another personal favorite), which consists of peach liqueur, cranberry juice and a lime wedge. That's appropriate enough -- though I'd have loved to see something perhaps with a touch of sour mix! I found a Monte Cristo with coffee and orange liqueurs, hot coffee and whipped cream, though the drink could be named after one of the various cities by that name and not the book The Count of Monte Cristo. Anyone know of any others? Extra points for books you read in high school English and for drinks that are wildly inappropriate for their respective novels.

Filed Under: Magazines, Drink Recipes
Tags: Belvedere, cocktails, coffee, drinks, liqueurs, martini, novels, spirits, The Grapes of Wrath, vodka

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Reader comments (Page 1 of 1)

Doink

6-15-2008 @9:17PM Doink said... I think you may possibly be reading into
the name of the drink far more than intended
because you have a biased opinion of the
book--"The Grapes of Wrath is one of my favorite novels."

Take a moment and realize what a great play
on words that is for a cocktail.
I'm sure a wrath would soon ensue after
downing a few of the the grapey drinks.

The mixologist who came up with the name probably
hadn't intended for the drink to relate anywhere
near the book's, The Grapes of Wrath, plot or theme.
Reply

1 Comments / 1 Pages

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