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Boilermaker (beer cocktail)

Beer cocktail From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boilermaker (beer cocktail)
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A boilermaker is either of two types of beer cocktail. In American terminology, the drink consists of a glass of beer mixed with a shot of whiskey.[1]

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The ingredients of the American version of a boilermaker

Name

The drink originated in Butte, Montana in the 1890s. It was originally called a Sean O'Farrell and was served only when miners ended their shifts.[2][3][4] When the beer is served as a chaser, the drink is often called simply a shot and a beer.[5]

In England, the term boilermaker traditionally refers to a half pint of draught mild mixed with a half pint of bottled brown ale. In the south-west of England it is also known as a 'brown split', although it also refers to the American shot and pint.[6] In Scotland, a half and a half is a half pint of beer with a whisky ("a wee hawf").[7] The use of these terms in Scottish and English pubs can be traced back to about 1920.[8]

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Drinking

There are a number of ways to drink an American beer chaser:

  • Traditionally, the liquor is consumed in a single gulp and is then "chased" by the beer, which is sipped.[9][10]
  • The liquor and beer may be mixed by pouring or dropping the shot into the beer. The mixture may be stirred.[9] If the shot glass is dropped into the beer glass, the drink can also be known as a depth charge.[11]

Similar drinks

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A Lüttje Lage, a common pairing in the Hannover region, of a 50 ml (1.7 US fl oz) glass of beer and 10 ml (0.34 US fl oz) glass of Korn.

Other pairings of a shot and a beer are possible; traditional pairings include:

  • Herrengedeck ("gentlemen's menu"), a German pairing of Korn (grain brandy) and beer[12]
  • Regenschirm ("umbrella"), a German pairing of Allasch and Gose[13]
  • Lüttje Lage [de], a German pairing of top-fermented beer and Korn.
  • Irish car bomb (cocktail), a pairing of a shot of Irish cream and whiskey into a glass of stout[14]
  • Kopstootje ("little headbutt"), a Dutch pairing of Jenever (Dutch gin) and beer,[15] term attested 1943[16]
  • Somaek or Poktan-ju, a Korean pairing of soju and beer[17]
  • The Chicago Handshake or Chicago Drive-by, a shot of Jeppson's Malört alongside Old Style beer[18][19]
  • The Citywide, sometimes called the Citywide Special, a Philadelphia pairing of a shot of Jim Beam and a Pabst Blue Ribbon[20]

See also

References

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