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Buck (cocktail)
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Cocktail | |
---|---|
Type | Cocktail family |
Common alcohol(s) | |
Served | On the rocks: poured over ice |
Standard garnish | Any common garnish may be used |
Standard drinkware | Collins glass |
Commonly used ingredients | ginger beer for a classic buck, deeper more complex cocktail, or ginger ale, for a neutral/sweet, dive bar style buck. Lime or other citrus juice |
Preparation | May be mixed or muddled if mint, syrups, or fresh fruit is added; shaken vigorously with ice, then strained into the glass. Topped with ginger ale or ginger beer. |
A buck is a cocktail that is made with ginger ale or ginger beer, citrus juice, and any of a number of base liquors. Buck cocktails are sometimes called "mules" due to the popularity of a vodka buck that is known as a Moscow Mule.
History
The buck is believed to have gotten its name when someone added a shot of whiskey to the previously nonalcoholic Horse's Neck, which consisted of ginger ale with lemon juice. The added alcohol gave the horse a "kick" – hence, a bucking horse.
Variations
Variations include:
- Bourbon, rye, or whiskey buck.
- Kentucky Buck, containing bourbon and strawberry.
- Gin buck, containing gin. Sometimes known as British Buck or London Buck.
- Gin Gin Mule, containing gin and mint. Also known as a Ginger Rogers (after the actress of the same name.)
- Irish buck, containing Irish whiskey
- Mamie Taylor, containing scotch whisky.
- Rum buck, also called a Barbados buck or Jamaican buck to indicate the origin of the rum. Adding lime to a Dark 'n' Stormy creates a rum buck.
- Shanghai buck, made with light rum, and served at the Shanghai Club in the 1930s.
- Vodka buck, also known as a Moscow mule, invented in Los Angeles, California, US, and largely responsible for the popularity of vodka in the United States from the 1940s through 1960s.
- Chilcano, made with Pisco.
- Variations using brandy and other liquors
- Addition of syrups, different types of juice, fresh ginger, mint, and various garnishes