Classic (Game) Cocktail of the Week: West of a White House

Some people like to unwind over the weekend by listening to favorite podcasts; others prefer to relaxing with an alcoholic libation. We figure: Why not both? With the Classic (Game) Cocktail column, we'll offer weekly recommendations on cocktail recipes to accompany our most recent podcast episode.

Disclaimer: Please drink responsibly, and only if you are of legal age (or have permission). 

Classic (Game) Cocktail #7: West of a White House

We explored Zork this week — explored literally, thank you very much — so I wanted to put together a drink that ties into the classic text adventure's iconography. I considered something Grue-themed (pitch-dark and probably coffee-based) but decided to go with a less intimidating sight. One everyone who's ever loaded a game of Zork has encountered: The white house.

This one's more of a dessert cocktail. Kind of. It's slightly sweet, but not cloyingly so.

Ingredients

My goal was to make the whitest cocktail possible (in the chromatic sense; the whitest cocktail possible in the cultural sense would probably be, I dunno, a Cosmo or a Pimm's Cup). That means clear liquors. The chocolate bitters do add a hint of off-white to the mixture, but the drink really needs that extra element to bring it all together. Please understand.

Instructions

  1. Crack the egg and separate it, using only the whites. Discard or find some other use for the yolk. Add the whites to a cocktail mixer filled with ice.
  2. Add the other ingredients.
  3. Shake vigorously for a minute or longer, until the ice in the mixer has practically disintegrated.
  4. Strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish with a delicate clockwork egg (optional). 

This is a rich yet overall quite mild cocktail. Despite the chocolate element, it doesn't come off like, say, some sugar-saturated dessert cocktail you'd find on a fast-casual restaurant's bar menu. The gin helps ground the flavor, and the hint of chili in the bitters gives it just the tiniest little bite to cut through the frothy egg and milk. This won't be a drink to everyone's tastes, but I was pleasantly surprised by how well it turned out.

Some notes