Lillet and the Vesper Cocktail


Posted by Robert Hess on The Spirit World.

VesperLillet is an often overlooked ingredient, while technically it may not be considered a vermouth, like a vermouth it is a aromatized and fortified wine. There are a variety of fruits, herbs, and spices that make up the proprietary recipe for Lillet, one of those spices is quinine, the same ingredient found in tonic water, and this gives an ever-so-slight bitterness to the product.

Created in the late 1800’s, it originally had a lot more quinine, but in the mid 1980’s the recipe was modified to produce a more approachable balance of flavors. Lillet comes in both a white (Blanc) and red (Rouge) version. While vermouth manufacturers will use the same (white) wine, just different herbs and spiced to differentiate their white and red vermouths, Lillet uses the exact same spice mixture in both their white and red Lillet, just using a white Bordeaux wine for Lillet Blanc, and a red Bordeaux wine for Lillet Rouge. Originally, Lillet was referred to as “Kina Lillet”, where kina is the Peruvian word for “bark of the cinchona tree”, which is used to produce quinine. Kina was dropped from the name many years ago.

There aren’t many cocktails which call for Lillet, it is more commonly served on the rocks with a twist of lemon, and as such it is a wonderful aperitif. Perhaps one of the most popular Lillet based cocktails, is the “Vesper”, which made its first appearance in 1953 in the first James Bond Novel “Casino Royale”, by Ian Fleming. Here is an expert of where Mr. Bond orders this drink for the first time:

“A dry martini,” he said. “One. In a deep champagne goblet.”

“Oui, monsieur.”

“Just a moment. Three measures of Gordon’s, one of vodka, half a measure of Kina Lillet. Shake it very well until it’s ice-cold, then add a large thin slice of lemon peel. Got it?”

“Certainly, monsieur.” The barman seemed pleased with the idea.

“Gosh, that’s certainly a drink,” said Leiter.

Bond laughed. “When I’m…er…concentrating,” he explained, “I never have more than one drink before dinner. But I do like that one to be large and very strong and very cold and very well-made. I hate small portions of anything, particularly when they taste bad. This drink’s my own invention. I’m going to patent it when I can think of a good name.”

While Mr. Bond doesn’t indicate if this should be made with white or red Lillet, you can rest assured that it was made with white, since red didn’t exist at that time. However the white Lillet that was available, was the version with a higher quinine level then is available today, so you unfortunately can no longer get this drink made exactly the way James would have had it.

It is said, that Ian Flemming designed this drink himself, with the help of bartenders at Dukes hotel in London. He apparently was fairly proud of it, but unfortunately it never shows up again. In the movies Bond tends toward straight vodka more often than not. Fortunately, Casino Royale was finally made into a full-fledge Bond movie, and in it this drink is once again introduced to the public. The new movie is intended to take place in the modern day, but James still orders his drink using “Kina Lillet”, this either shows that the scriptwriters didn’t really do any research on the product at all, or were intent on preserving the dialog from the book while sacrificing accuracy.

Here then is the Vesper Cocktail, note that this recipe makes a big cocktail, Mr. Bond did after all ask for it in a deep champagne goblet. You might want to cut the recipe in half to make a more elegantly sized drink. It’s the ratios which are most important to preserve, not the overall size.

Vesper 

  • 3 ounces gin
  • 1 ounce vodka
  • 1/2 ounce Lillet (blanc)

Stir with ice. Strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish with a lemon twist.



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Reader Comments

As a big fan of Lillet and martinis, I’m looking forward to trying this.

Dr Blockbuster has 2 bottles (well … 1.7 bottles) of Kina Lillet and you’re getting neither !!!

:wink:

Very good article for a nasty tasting drink. The gin and Lillet combo does not really work. Still, it is unique for 007.

Also, there is only one ‘m’ in Fleming.

I have tried out white Lillet — available at any supermarket in France — and it is delicious on the rocks as you say, despite my preference for “real” wine.

FJK… The Vesper is a drink worthy of being re-discovered. Soft and gentle in nature.

Blockbuster… you’ve got Kina Lillet and you aren’t sharing! For shame! :->

Gary… to each his own, I love a well made Vesper, as long as it is made with Lillet Blanc. Lillet Rouge on the other hand really doesn’t work well here. (Fleming… at least I got it right in one of the two places I used it! :-)

Betty… Lillet on the rocks with a twist, is a wonderful drink, and in those times when I want a drink on the rocks with a twist, I’d rather do that to Lillet, instead of a glass of wine! :->

With all respect, your recipe at the end of your article has a glaring fault. You wrote, “Stir with ice. Strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish with a lemon twist.” A Vesper is Shaken, not Stirred. Personally, I rather like the drink; but I have had one where it was stirred instead of shaken. The result was nigh undrinkable.

darkpath…

To shake or to stir. On that issue it might be that we will have to agree to disagree.

I do realize that Mr. Bond’s requested version called for shaking instead of stiring, but Bond is just an imaginary character, and so I can easily allow him to make such a mistake.

It would be my firm belief that the problem with the “nigh undrinkable” Vesper that you had was simply that it was made poorly, not that it stirred instead of shaken.

Shaking and stirring both do an equally wonderful job at chilling a cocktail down (trust me, I’ve done the tests), the most notable difference between the two however is that a properly shaken cocktail will pour into the glass cloudy as swamp water, while a stirred cocktail can swoop into that glass with crystal clarity.

The rule of thumb known by properly trained mixologists is that if the cocktail consists of clear ingredients then it should be stirred in order to preserve that clarity, if the cocktail includes any opaque or cloudy ingredients, then you might as well shake it, since it’s not going to matter, and shaking will chill the drink quicker.

In my classes I regularly illustrate the differences between shaking and stirring, showing three specific things:

1. Both chill equally well (when properly done).

2. There is no detectable taste difference between the two (the shaken one will have an almost totally indetectable difference in mouthfeel due to the trapped air bubbles).

3. The shaken cocktail looks gastly. The more vermouth (or Lillet in this case) it includes the worse it looks, and the longer it looks that way. A “just vodka” Martini will clear up pretty quickly

-Robert