slushy paper plane

19 hours ago 4



A few years ago, Alex and I started batching cocktails and keeping them in the freezer. Batching may sound fancy and professional but at most we were participating in rudimentary math (“one ounce? nah, one cup!”) and advanced laziness (ahem, preparedness). Having cocktails ready to go and super, super cold so that they won’t immediately water themselves down by melting ice, was a win. And, as the habit has continued, it’s always fun when a friend stops by and you remember you already have perfect manhattans ready to go, as if you were trying to medal in the impromptu hosting olympics.

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Most freezer-batched cocktails are straightforward: lukewarm going in, chilled coming out. But earlier this year we made paper planes, poured them into a jar in the freezer for later, got too tired to enjoy them (adulthood!) and came back two days later to remember that (science lesson incoming, cover your ears!) that lower-proof cocktails alcohol actually, uh, freeze when frozen. Alcohol, as we probably learned a long time ago, has a lower freezing point than water, which is why vodka kept in your freezer (aka you’re my Russian in-laws) is pourable but paper planes, which contain both lemon juice and lower-proof aperol along with higher-proof amaro and bourbon — turn out to get suspended in a perfect half-frozen state we call slush.

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But I honestly feel like “slush” undersells them. Here is a thing I’ve learned trying to write frozen cocktails recipes over the years: It’s tricky to get the texture just right in a blender. Too much liquid, or liquid that’s not arctic to begin with, everything liquefies. Not enough liquid, nothing blends. Ice that’s too chunky never homogenizes; ice that’s too small melts. Yet these slushy paper planes are the texture I wish/dream all blender cocktails were, with no blender required: thick but pourable with the most delightful crunches of thin ice flakes everywhere. It’s gorgeous (thank you, Aperol, for the orange glow), balanced (the bourbon smooths it, the amaro harmonizes it, the lemon sharpens it), and feels like a popsicle in a glass and you did nothing, nothing but pouring ingredients into a jar and forgetting about them for a day to make it happen. We’re going to win at summer this year, and it starts with this.

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Slushy Paper Planes

This is simple 1:1:1:1 formula so it’s easy to scale up or down based on the amount of the ingredients you have, your jar size, or intended serving size. I’m showing this in a 3-cup/24-ounce Ball wide-mouth canning jar, so I used 3/4 cup (6 fluid ounces or 175 ml) of each ingredient. Each drink is usually 1/2 cup (4 ounces or 12ml).

  • 3/4 cup bourbon
  • 3/4 cup amaro nonino
  • 3/4 cup aperol
  • 3/4 cup lemon juice

Mix everything in a jar and place in freezer at least overnight and if you wish, much longer — it will not go bad. When ready to serve, stir mixture so it’s an even slushy texture (it’s often partly soft ice and partly liquid) and pour into either tall coupe glasses without ice, or, as shown here, shorter glasses (8 ounces) with ice.

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