How To Make The Pisco Sour - Best Drink Recipes
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Pisco Sour is a cocktail typical of
South American cuisine. The drink's name comes from pisco, which is its base liquor, and the cocktail term sour, in reference to sour citrus juice and sweetener components. The
Peruvian Pisco Sour uses
Peruvian pisco as the base liquor and adds
Key lime (or lemon) juice, syrup, ice, egg white, and
Angostura bitters. The
Chilean version is similar, but uses Chilean pisco and Pica lime, and excludes the bitters and egg white. Other variants of
the cocktail include those created with fruits like pineapple or plants such as coca leaves.
The cocktail originated in
Lima, Peru, and was invented by
Victor Vaughen Morris, an
American bartender, in the early
1920s.
Morris left the
United States in 1903 to work in
Cerro de Pasco, a city in central
Peru. In
1916, he opened Morris' Bar in
Lima, and his saloon quickly became a popular spot for the
Peruvian upper class and
English-speaking foreigners. The Pisco Sour underwent several changes until
Mario Bruiget, a Peruvian bartender working at Morris' Bar, created the modern Peruvian recipe of the cocktail in the latter part of the 1920s by adding Angostura bitters and egg whites to the mix.
In
Chile, historian
Oreste Plath attributed the invention of the drink to
Elliot Stubb, an
English steward of a ship named
Sunshine, who allegedly mixed Key lime juice, syrup, and ice cubes to create the cocktail in a bar, in 1872, in the port city of
Iquique, which at that time was part of Peru. The original source cited by Plath attributed the invention of the whiskey sour to Stubb, not the Pisco Sour. The oldest known mentions of the Pisco Sour are from a
1921 magazine attributing Morris as the inventor and a 1924 advertisement for Morris' Bar published in a newspaper from the port of
Valparaíso, Chile.
Chile and Peru both claim the Pisco Sour as their national drink, and each asserts exclusive ownership of both pisco and the cocktail; consequently, the Pisco Sour has become a significant and oft-debated topic of
Latin American popular culture. The two kinds of pisco and the two variations in the style of preparing the Pisco Sour are distinct in both production and taste. Peru celebrates a yearly public holiday in honor of the cocktail during the first Saturday of February.
The term sour refers to mixed drinks containing a base liquor (bourbon or some other whiskey), lemon or lime juice, and a sweetener.
Pisco refers to the base liquor used in the cocktail. The word as applied to the alcoholic beverage comes from the Peruvian port of Pisco
. In the book
Latin America and the Caribbean, historian Olwyn Blouet and political geographer
Brian Blouet describe the development of vineyards in early
Colonial Peru and how in the second half of the sixteenth century a market for the liquor formed owing to the demand from growing mining settlements in the
Andes. Subsequent demand for a stronger drink caused Pisco and the nearby city of Ica to establish distilleries "to make wine into brandy", and the product received the name of the port from where it was distilled and exported.