Naw, what I meant was some folks think "cocktails" only involve hard liquor and perhaps a "mixer" or something to add flavor, so a gin-n-tonic is a "cocktail" to them as is a gin "martini" with gin and vermouth. Using Cider, Beer, or Ale is sometimes not thought as such..., that's all. :grin:
In fact I don't think a
boilermaker was really thought of as a cocktail..., you find it in bartender books, but I doubt when cocktails became "fashionable" [I write "fashionalbe" with a pinkey finger in the air - lol] they were more of a "blue collar" beverage. :wink: A lot of mixed drinks in the 18th century had old beer or cider as a base..., and they made a whole lot of different "punch" with beer, ale, wine, and cider too. I think these too are really cocktails.
BTW for all the winter outdoor types out there..., Jägermeister is being marketed right now as some sort of "shot in a glass". Jägermeister tastes like manure, and cold Jägermeister tastes like chilled manure.
That's because that's not how it was intended to be used. OK first, the name means "hunter master". So if you wonder why an alcohol based
herbal liqueur is called that..., try this...,
When you come in from the woods on a cold, damp, perhaps even snowy/drizzly day..., and you feel you've caught a chill, change your clothes to something dry, THEN...,
Take a 12 oz. coffee cup and add HOT coffee, milk (cream is better), and sugar to equal 8 oz., then add 1 - 2 oz. of Jägermeister, and drink! If the Jägermeister flavor is too strong you didn't add enough sugar.
Doesn't matter if you don't normally take milk and sugar, this is medicinal..., the alcohol helps your body warm by dialation of the blood vessels, and the herbs in the Jägermeister help to open your sinus cavities, which helps to ward off the common cold as the rhino virus doesn't like oxygen.
Sorry NOT a beer cocktail, so probably should be in different thread...
LD