
Ingredients
- 2 oz Scotch Whiskey
- .5 oz Benedictine Herbal Liqueur
- 1 tsp Sweet Vermouth
Instructions
Prepare the Cocktail:
- In a mixing glass half-filled with ice cubes, combine 2 oz of Scotch whiskey, 0.5 oz of Benedictine, and 1 tsp of sweet vermouth.
- Stir the mixture well until thoroughly chilled.
Strain and Serve:
- Strain the cocktail into a chilled cocktail glass.
Serve:
- Serve immediately and enjoy your Brainstorm Cocktail. This drink is perfect for those who appreciate bold, sophisticated flavors.
Notes
- Chilling the Glass: For an extra touch, chill your cocktail glass in the freezer before preparing the drink to keep it nice and cold.
- Benedictine: This herbal liqueur adds a unique depth of flavor to the cocktail, balancing the richness of the Scotch and the sweetness of the vermouth.
- Garnish: For an optional garnish, consider a lemon twist or a cherry to add a hint of citrus or sweetness.
Estimated Nutrition:
Where it came from
The Brainstorm is a Prohibition-era American cocktail, first appearing in print in The Savoy Cocktail Book by Harry Craddock in 1930. Two ounces of Scotch whisky, half an ounce of Benedictine herbal liqueur, a teaspoon of sweet vermouth, stirred over ice and strained into a chilled coupe. The cocktail is named for the cleansing-the-mind effect of the herbal Benedictine.
It sits in the Manhattan family with the Rob Roy, the Bobby Burns and the Manhattan itself. All four lean on a brown spirit and a vermouth pour for the stirred-cocktail character. The Brainstorm separates itself with the Benedictine, which adds a sweeter, herbal middle note that the standard Manhattan-family cocktails do not have.
Best ordered at a craft cocktail bar with a strong herbal-liqueur selection, not at a dive bar. The cocktail is complex, herbal, and rewarding for slow sipping; the Prohibition-era heritage gives it serious-cocktail-menu credentials.
What it tastes like
Soft Scotch malt up front, sweet honey-and-herbs from the Benedictine through the middle, faint sweet vermouth on the finish. The combination is balanced and complex; the Benedictine adds a sweetness curve that the Scotch-only Rob Roy does not have, and the small vermouth pour rounds off the spirits without dominating.
Around 30 percent ABV in the glass once stirred. Two ounces of Scotch at 40 percent ABV plus half an ounce of Benedictine at 40 percent ABV gives a moderately strong cocktail; the small vermouth pour and the dilution from stirring soften the alcohol on the palate.
The technique
Combine two ounces of Scotch whisky, half an ounce of Benedictine and a teaspoon of sweet vermouth in a mixing glass with ice. Stir for 25 to 30 seconds with a bar spoon to chill and dilute. Strain into a chilled coupe glass. Garnish with a lemon twist or a maraschino cherry on a cocktail pick.
The stir is the technique. A shake aerates the cocktail too much and breaks the herbal character; a 25 to 30 second stir delivers the right chill and dilution while preserving the complexity. Use a quality blended Scotch like Famous Grouse or Johnnie Walker Black, and a fresh bottle of Benedictine for the standard build.
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Ingredient Spotlight
The bottles that make or break this drink.
The Scotch whisky
- Use
- A blended Scotch like Famous Grouse, Johnnie Walker Black, or Chivas Regal.
- Skip
- Heavily peated single malts. Too much smoke.
- Why
- Scotch is the load-bearing spirit. A blended Scotch carries the cocktail without dominating; the malt-and-grain character pairs cleanly with the Benedictine. Heavily peated single malts overpower the herbal liqueur.
The Benedictine
- Use
- Benedictine DOM, the original French herbal liqueur from 1863.
- Skip
- Drambuie. Different sweetness curve.
- Why
- Benedictine is the sweet herbal middle of the cocktail. The blend of 27 herbs and spices in the original recipe delivers a unique complexity; Drambuie is sweeter and Scotch-based, which throws the cocktail balance off entirely.
The sweet vermouth
- Use
- Carpano Antica, Punt e Mes, or any quality Italian sweet vermouth.
- Skip
- Dry vermouth. Wrong flavour profile.
- Why
- Sweet vermouth is the cocktail rounder. The small teaspoon pour adds a touch of sweetness and aromatic complexity without dominating; the herbal-and-bitter character of the vermouth complements the Benedictine.
Three Variations
Three real ways bartenders riff on this drink. Same idea, three different jackets.
The standard build
- Brainstorm, stirred
- Two ounces Scotch, half ounce Benedictine, teaspoon sweet vermouth, stirred with ice and strained into a chilled coupe. Garnish with a lemon twist.
The Bobby Burns build
- Bobby Burns, no Benedictine
- Replace the Benedictine with half an ounce of sweet vermouth. Closer to a Rob Roy with a herbal accent; loses the Benedictine complexity.
The smoky build
- Brainstorm with peated Scotch
- Replace the blended Scotch with a lightly peated single malt like Talisker or Highland Park. Adds a smoke note that the Benedictine can support if used carefully.
What if I don't have…
Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.
Drambuie as a last resort. Different sweetness profile, the cocktail tilts sweeter.
Irish whiskey or a soft bourbon. Different flavour but holds the brown-spirit character.
A small splash of cherry liqueur. Different flavour, holds the cocktail rounding.
A martini glass or a small Nick and Nora glass. Both work for a stirred-and-strained cocktail.
Frequently Asked Questions
Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.
What is in a Brainstorm cocktail?
Two ounces of Scotch whisky, half an ounce of Benedictine and a teaspoon of sweet vermouth, stirred with ice and strained into a chilled coupe glass. Three ingredients, one stir.
Where does the Brainstorm come from?
The Savoy Cocktail Book by Harry Craddock, 1930. The cocktail is a Prohibition-era American invention; the name refers to the cleansing-the-mind effect attributed to the herbal Benedictine.
How strong is a Brainstorm?
Around 30 percent ABV in the glass once stirred. The cocktail drinks like a moderately strong stirred drink in the Manhattan band; the small vermouth pour and the dilution from stirring soften the alcohol on the palate.
What does it taste like?
Soft Scotch malt up front, sweet honey-and-herbs from the Benedictine through the middle, faint sweet vermouth on the finish. The combination is balanced and complex; reads like a Manhattan crossed with a Bobby Burns.
Should I shake or stir?
Stir. A shake aerates the cocktail too much and breaks the herbal character; a 25 to 30 second stir delivers the right chill and dilution while preserving the complexity.
What is Benedictine?
Benedictine DOM is a French herbal liqueur, around 40 percent ABV, made from a blend of 27 herbs and spices. The recipe dates to 1863 and remains a closely-guarded secret; the flavour is sweet, herbal and faintly honeyed.
Can I use a different Scotch?
Yes. A blended Scotch like Famous Grouse or Johnnie Walker Black is the standard pour; a lightly peated single malt like Talisker works for a smokier variant. Avoid heavily peated whiskies, which overpower the Benedictine.
What other cocktails are similar?
A Manhattan, a Rob Roy, a Bobby Burns and a Vieux Carre. All four sit in the brown-spirit-stirred family and lean on a vermouth or herbal liqueur for the cocktail balance.
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