This gin sour recipe is a signature cocktail from the Fairmont Empress in Victoria uses their signature Empress 1908 Gin. It’s one of the best Empress gin cocktails.
While the craft beer scene in Victoria has exploded, it hasn’t been to the detriment of cocktails.
While Victoria is a relatively small city, cocktail bars are thriving here and restaurants are also in the game with in-house bar programs.
One of the reasons for this is the access to great local products and strong support for local businesses.
Victoria Distillers is just outside the city in the small sleepy town of Sidney.
It’s a family business making a variety of spirits and bitters, but it’s well known for its gin.
I drove out one afternoon to visit Victoria Distillers’ president, Peter Hunt and I didn’t think it would be a visit that was out of the ordinary.
It’s a small facility with a tasting room with lots of great Empress gin cocktails, production and packing in-house.
I sampled all of the spirits and they were great but he left one bottle until the very end.
Empress 1908 Original Indigo Gin
It’s named after the Fairmont Empress Hotel in Victoria, which opened in 1908. A historical landmark within the inner harbour.
The gin is a collaboration with the hotel. It incorporates Canadian water, 7 organic botanical and the hotel’s signature tea blend.
It is a nod to the importance of afternoon tea in Victoria and tea service at the hotel.
The first thing you notice is the vibrant indigo colour, and it’s naturally that hue as it uses the butterfly pea blossom.
We sampled it on its own and it’s very good, similar to a London Dry.
And then Peter said he’d like to pour a gin and tonic, but I needed to watch him make it.
As the drink changes from a vibrant indigo to a soft pink you can’t help but be impressed.
They did not intend to create a novelty drink, but it’s a chemical reaction with the butterfly pea flower.
Think of it as an adult science experiment, remember PH tests? In this case the butterfly pea flower changes colour with acid – in this case the tonic.
I wished I wasn’t traveling carry on so I could bring a bottle home. But Peter urged me to visit the newly renovated Q Bar at the Fairmont Empress.
The hotel renovated the bar before the distillery revealed its colour changing gin.
And yet the new decor with vibrant indigo and pink is completely appropriate.
The Fairmont Empress Q Bar
The Fairmont was so pleased with the signature gin that they created a signature gin sour called the Q 1908 Cocktail.
This is not to be confused with the regular 1908 cocktail that commemorated the centennial anniversary of the hotel.
Alas that cocktail uses a different, non-indigo, gin.
Normally a general word of food and drink advice for Victoria is that only tourist spots are on Government St.
I had more than a few people tell me not to bother going anywhere there.
But as always there are a few exceptions like Garrick’s Head Pub to drink craft beer in Victoria and the Empress Hotel.
Aside from the gin, the hotel bar is worth a visit.
The bartenders have been working there for decades and have a familiar charm about them.
For that reason I saw locals stopping in for a drink, including one lovely 80-year old regular who insisted on giving me a kiss on the cheek before I left.
As Paulo Coelho says,
“Frequent bars. Unlike museums, this is where the life of the city can be found. Bars are not discotheques, but places where the people gather to have a drink, pass the time, and are always willing to chat.”
This was definitely true here.
Gin Sour – The Empress Q1908
The squeezed lemon juice in this gin sour changes the drink from a vibrant indigo to a lovely soft lavender colour.
Making a syrup just for cocktails sounds complicated but it’s really simple. Over medium-low heat put equal parts of water and white sugar into a saucepan and stir. Once the sugar has dissolved into the water remove from the heat and let cool. Voila!
Gin Sour – The Empress Q1908
This gin sour recipe is a signature cocktail from the Fairmont Empress in Victoria uses their signature Empress 1908 Gin.
Ingredients
- 2 oz gin (Fairmont's signature 1908 Gin)
- 3/4 oz lemon juice
- 3/4 oz simple syrup
- 3/4 oz egg white
Instructions
- Place ingredients in cocktail shaker with ice and shake to combine.
- Double strain into a coupe glass.
- Garnish with purple pea flower.
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Nutrition Information:
Yield: 1 Serving Size: 1 Amount Per Serving: Calories: 181Total Fat: 0gSaturated Fat: 0gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 0gCholesterol: 0mgSodium: 42mgCarbohydrates: 11gFiber: 0gSugar: 10gProtein: 2gNutritional information is provided as a courtesy and is an estimate only. This information comes from online calculators. Although BaconisMagic.ca attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures are only estimates.
721 Government St, Victoria, BC V8W 1W5
(250) 389-2727
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Disclosure: I discovered these Empress Gin cocktails while on a sponsored program with Tourism Victoria to write the Victoria Gluttony Guide. This post was not part of the program. But I liked the cocktail, and the story, so much I wanted to share it with you.
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I absolutely LOVE Empress Gin! It is beautiful and tastes amazing. I fell in love with it while living in Seattle – I just wish that I’d known about it when my Mom and I stayed at the Empress in Victoria! Dang, missed opportunity. Either way, I’m in Texas now, my Mom in gone, but I can still enjoy a drink to her memory and the memory of our trip with this one. Gorgeous. Delicious.
My new favourite cocktail!! Thank you for sharing.