Navigation

Sundy House Introduces Garden Fresh Cocktails (Recipe)

Historic Sundy House has just created a new use for items in your garden -- turn them into cocktails. Starting this week, the restaurant will feature a different weekly cocktail, made with fresh ingredients found in the Sundy House garden. Each cocktail is created by Sundy House beverage manager Michael...
Share this:

Historic Sundy House has just created a new use for items in your garden -- turn them into cocktails.

Starting this week, the restaurant will feature a different weekly cocktail, made with fresh ingredients found in the Sundy House garden.

Each cocktail is created by Sundy House beverage manager Michael Richards, working closely with executive chef Lindsay Autry.

"The gardens at Sundy House are filled with beautiful, unusual flowers and fruits that make for interesting and deliciously different cocktails," chef Autry said.

Read Also:

- OpenTable names Sundy House, The Breakers Among 100 Best Brunches in the U.S.

- Lindsay Autry of Sundy House is South Florida's Top Chef

The first cocktail, available now through Sunday, is the Grove Street, made from vodka infused in-house with ginger flowers. The Grove Street is $11, but try one during happy hour (Tuesday - Thursday from 5 - 9 p.m.) and the drink is $7. A new cocktail will be introduced each Tuesday.

Here's the recipe, if you want to try it at home:

Grove Street Cocktail Recipe

1 oz. lemon balm run

1 oz. grapefruit cordial

1/2 oz. ginger flower vodka (recipe below)

1/2 oz. lime juice

1 oz. sparkling wine

5 dashes Bittermens Burlesque Bitters

Instructions

Combine all ingredients, except sparkling wine. Shake and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Top with sparkling wine.

Ginger Flower Vodka Recipe

1 pound of assorted ginger flowers

2 bottles of vodka

Instructions

Combine in a clear bottle and let infuse for 72 hours. Strain thru a fine strainer with cheesecloth at least twice.



BEFORE YOU GO...
Can you help us continue to share our stories? Since the beginning, New Times Broward-Palm Beach has been defined as the free, independent voice of South Florida — and we'd like to keep it that way. Our members allow us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls.