I love seeing the homemade ingredients, There's a ton of cocktail channels on RU-vid and I think one of the things that makes yours unique is that you do so much homemade stuff. I can learn a basic recipe from someone else any day, I come here for seeing something unique.
Such a great feedback! I hope more people will start making homemade ingredients for their cocktails. It's fun and delicious if made properly. Thank you!
Hi ! I’m a french head bartender and I made my own Horchata at the bar. For this, I use dehydrated nutgrass tubers that I let soak for 24 hours after well washed them. Then I putt them in a blender with water and simple sirup (250g nutgrass tubers, 1000ml water, 150ml simple sirup). After blending everything, I strain it with tea towel. Keep it 2 days, not more !
My friday night is complete! My 3 fav cocktail (TOTR, Anders, and this channel) channels all uploading on the same night! Wow, this pina colada has got to be the best one yet
Kevin, I think you've just outdone yourself! This is the craziest episodes so far (so fancy, technical, intriguing, satisfying and complex), yet the one I want to try myself the most! May I ask, in what competition did you compete with your original version?
So nice, Erik! I am glad you see it this way. I thought the same when I finished this drink. Thank you! I compete in a Monkey Shoulder competition. A whisky that would go well in here too.
Kevin, you know you're doing well when your peers are watching too, and contributing in the comments. Congratulations on your RU-vid channel's great work.
I gave the leftover pineapple fruit leather to friends and coworkers to try and the all LOVED it! They were a bit sceptical based on the looks 🙈 but it's such an awesome way to use up the pulp! 🍍👑
The "Just drink faster" part killed me :) , as always great work, you have definitely changed the cocktail making experience for me after 5 years working in the industry. Well done sir.
My man,you should do something to never be forgoten. You remind me of some of the greatest caracters I've read about in those cocktail books,so much style,so much class...and most important so much dedication and passion...my god, I love your work man.
Hi i'm from mexico and even i just prepare horchata in an easy way to make what we call, "agua de horchata", i like to use oatmeal instead of rice, maybe You can give it a try PD. Sorry if i make some mistakes writing this And i love your videos
I just want to thank you for using a shrub and tell us your ratios, I love shrubs and pickles stuff in cocktails, I think people don't use them enough, and they give a completely other layer to the drink. love every single video you do and even more your bartending style.
Kevin you never stop making me thirsty with those cocktails. I love your videos ! If you were posting more videos a week I swear I would be alcoholic 😂.
Was intrigued by this cocktail and had some freshly made Horchata that a Catalonian friend bought here to Monaco so did this version of your Pina Colada and the tiger nuts in the Spanish Horchata give it an amazing earthy flavour. Maybe one day we can hope to see a tiger nut horchata featured in one of your cocktails? You don't need to make Horchata from scratch to have natural Horchata since it holds for over a week, just order some from Mon Orxata in Valencia.
this video makes wonder if anyone has made a pulque colada. Pulque is a traditional Mexican beverage of fermented agave sap and has a thick texture and is starting to get popular in socal. It has almost no shelf life but could be a replacement for the xanthum.
Nice recipe, Kevin! As you said, Horchata is very common in Mexico, and I love that you used the same ingredients and even the same condensed milk brand that we use here. This is something that I must try!
My Singapore version of this using local ingredients… “Max coconut” (fresh coconut milk thinned with coconut water, blended with foraged coconut ‘flesh’, copra, home made pandan wine, infused with lightly smoked coconut skin & husk), “max pineapple” (fresh pineapple juice with pineapple skin syrup), “max lime” (juice of 3 kinds of limes blended with their zest and freshly picked kaffir lime leaf), Malaysian lemon rum from Yeo Buan Heng Liquor Shop (v. rare and might actually be an arak despite its name), blended with frozen coconut water, garnished with a pandan leaf holding up a ‘dried pineapple ladder ring’. Very rich, coconut water ice adds a very constant smooth background (almost like umami), complex yet round ingredient profiles, complements the climate nicely
Horchata (orxata in Catalan) is originary from Spain, although in Spain you'll most likely find it made from tigernuts. It's rather different! I wonder how this would work with tigernut orxata instead of rice horchata.
I love you and Thank you for your creations. Showing us how to make process... Looking forward to see more & learn from you, Master Kevin💕 ( you have a lot of toys in your place!!)
I would love to see your reaction to tiger nuts as the base for horchata instead of rice. It's a unique ingredient that you might be able to find other uses for!
Thanks a lot for another awesome recipe 🙏🏼 Im positive your technique’s never seize to amaze the viewers. One request: Can you please advice, if I follow your homemade horchata’ recipe, how long would I be able to store it and kindly share the best way to achieve it. Thanks a ton !
Every homemade thing in this recipe sounds amazing! As always impeccable presentation, editing and all! You said the horchata only lasts a couple of days, could you keep it for longer by adding some alcohol? Plain vodka perhaps or some rum?
A microplane is great for zest. Hold it upside down and drag it over the lime as you roll the lime under it with your hand. Microplanes cut very shallow so you get none of the white pith. That means no scraping afterwards. Great for making zest for other recipes too.
Barrachina in Puerto Rica "The birthplace of the Pina Colada" has cases of Coco Lopez and Dole pineapple juice under the bar and a four slushee makers on the top. Sure, they are tasty, but certainly nothing special.
Awesome cocktail, Kevin! It still curdles for me though despite xantan gum. I've even increased it to 0.6g, incorporated it first in horchata and kept blending while adding ingredients. Even decreasing amount of shrub didn't help:( Are there any additional tips to keep it stable? I wonder if your also breaks ~1 min after pouring? Serving it over crushed ice made the cocktail last longer, but I really love your straight-up version.
Hi Michael. We already talked on Instagram but I am putting my answer here since it might be helpful to someone else reading the comments. A: Thank you for trying this recipe. The separating part happened in my case as well but it wasn't happening so fast. Curdling occurs when mixing horchata with acids (pineapple and shrub) but this does not affect the taste however is visually unappealing. This is the reason I used a mug. Serving it over crushed ice could be helpful but in this case, you have to add that in the equation when mixing with ice since it will cause more dilution as you said. Maybe add less ice in a blender. The curing can happen with homemade orgeats as well. Do you have such an experience with orgeats too?
Some sherries (especially Fino kind) have some salinity on their own and with adding it in a drink there is no need to add an aditional solution. It wouldn’t hurt though. I am glad you noticed that! Amazing observing!
Okay, Kevin...but tell me how many milligrams of salt a "pinch" comprises. If you're going to help us overengineer a piña colada, how can I be satisfied with "a pinch"?!
Sorry - but there are some concerns: - you cannot call it by any means Pina Colada (not literally - but as cocktail name). It is not how our reality _should_ work... - the whole sherry thing cannot be really justified. Sherry barrel notes in whiskeys taste like dried fruits. Fino doesn’t taste at all like it. - Correlation does not imply causation. Only because apples contain malic acid it doesn’t mean that apple cider vinegar contains a lot of malic acid (it contains rather mostly acetic acid). + a hint: if you would use koji for your horchata, it could be very interesting (as the koji spores would convert the rice starch into sugars).
Very nice teachings as always!! But a hot detail, Horchata is original from Valencia, Spain ! 😅😶🌫 Made from something strange called "Chufa" Some links for the curious:🧐🧐🧐 es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horchata_de_chufa en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyperus_esculentus