Our Team
The people who take care of business.
We are a group of intellectually curious people who are utterly fascinated by the variety of management and strategic challenges that arise in the course of business…especially when trying to make organizations better. What drives us is turning seemingly insoluble situations into seemingly common-sense solutions, and the deep satisfaction we get from helping our clients succeed.
Our carefully cultivated, multidisciplinary team brings together enormous talent and experience in business, communications, government, community affairs, management, media, marketing, and other arenas. It’s this foundation, backed by the confidence and trust our clients have placed in us every day since 1986, that drives us to be the best we can be.
John’s Holiday Wishes
On this Festival of Lights, celebrated every December, we wish for peace and tranquility to be restored for all people throughout the world. And to the extended family and friends of GBSM, may this be a year of health, happiness and good fortune imbued with gratefulness for all the many blessings that grace our lives.
Janine’s Activity Advent Calendar
One favorite holiday tradition is our activity advent calendar. Each day in December, we count down the days to Christmas by doing a special (or less special) activity as a family. Activities include writing letters to Santa, decorating gingerbread houses, going to plays or concerts, volunteering, ice skating, watching holiday films, baking goodies, looking at Christmas lights, etc. Each year the calendar is filled with old favorites and new things to try (like curling)! The most important part is that we spend a bit of quality time together each day.
Sam’s White Elephant
Each year on Christmas Eve, we gather with my mom’s side of the family for dinner and a white elephant gift exchange. The tradition spans four generations and 30-plus years, and the guest list continues to grow as new members of the family join the celebration. One of the best parts of the gathering in recent years has been the unplanned “twinning” between my oldest nephew and me. Great minds dress alike!
Emma D.’s Cape Cod Chips
My favorite holiday family tradition is the bags of Cape Cod chips on our Christmas tree – it was the first thing my brother ever asked for from Santa. His wish was granted and continues to be every year since then. However, some years, Santa’s elves struggle to find the Cape Cod brand which is met with much disappointment from those who celebrate with our family. They’re a great snack to power you through the holiday season!
Andy’s Competitive Giftwrapping
My first job, at 13-years old, was being the stock boy at the Stationery Station in Highland Park, IL. During the busy holiday season, I was tasked with wrapping presents. This taught me to master perfect, crisp, folded corners…beautifully voluminous hand-tied bows and using the sharp edge of a scissor blade to curl ribbon. Those skills still get put to use at our house every Christmas as my wife and I compete over who can pick the perfect combination of paper, ribbon and various present-topping accoutrements. The result is that – while some homes have their elegant “department store” Christmas tree – our home has a decadent array of presents adorning our vintage silver tree.
Alana’s Turkey Trot
Every year since before I was born, my family has participated in the Mile High United Way Turkey Trot at Washington Park. From being pushed in a baby jogger while my dad raced for top times, to running with Irish cousins visiting for their first Thanksgiving, the Turkey Trot has always started my family’s holiday season with chilly temperatures and a fun crowd!
Emma H.’s Thanksgiving Day Run
I’m a proud proponent of one of the most polarizing holiday traditions – the Thanksgiving Day Turkey Trot. Yes, when most are enjoying their lazy holiday weekend morning, my fiancé Rory and I have made it a tradition to find our nearest turkey trot and get in some pre-feast miles. We love the sense of community at the Mile High United Way Turkey Trot in Washington Park in Denver and the Boulevard Bolt in Nashville, where we celebrated Thanksgiving this year with Rory’s family.
Mavis’s Holiday Ski
We look forward to some early morning skiing Christmas Eve followed by afternoon fondue, and mulled wine or bubbles. And on Christmas day the same skiing, good food and cheer around a backyard firepit with friends and family.
Abby’s Marveling at Lights
Every December, our family looks forward to our (usually cold and snowy) visit to the Denver Botanic Gardens Blossoms of Light. We bring hot chocolate for the kids and marvel at the always-beautiful holiday light display.
Lauren’s Baking
My Holiday Tradition: Baking (of course.) The holiday season isn’t complete until cookies have been baked for my friends and family. Spending a weekend filling the house with the sweet smells of ginger, cinnamon, peppermint and chocolate, then delivering them across town (or country if I brave the Post Office early enough) brings joy to my heart and extra goodies to my loved ones. And anything that involves pounds and pounds of butter is ok by me!
Stephanie’s Fried Chicken
My favorite holiday tradition is an antique bowl filled with fried chicken underneath the tree. Santa asked a very young and clueless me what I wanted for Christmas one year. All I could think of was, “A bowl of fried chicken ‘cuz my momma loves fried chicken!” Since then, every Christmas morning we eat fried chicken for breakfast along with some bubbly champagne for those old enough.
Victoria’s Christmastime Simmer Pot
During the holiday season, my mom always puts a simmer pot on the stove. It fills the house with the warmest, most aromatic scent. The ingredients may change each year but they include some mix of cranberries, apples, oranges, rosemary and cinnamon. The smell always reminds me of Christmastime and home.
Jackie’s Stockings
Coming from a large family, we took our stockings very seriously. My mother would hand-sew and personalize each one. She would also make homemade stockings for the occasional visitor so they would feel included. Our anticipation for the stockings exceeded any for the gifts under the tree. Dinner had to be finished, and dishes needed to be cleaned and put away before anyone could begin opening. It is a memory that all of us hold dear.
Annabelle’s PJ Brunch
The ultimate highlight of our Christmas mornings? Hands-down, Dad’s genius move: Christmas brunch in full-on festive PJs! It is a non-negotiable rule—no PJs, no brunch! We’ve rocked this tradition for a solid 15 years, and let me tell you, it is the coziest, most ham-and-cheese-croissant-filled part of the season!
Ronnie’s Festive Village
I received my first Christmas village house in 2011—Sowder’s Tree Stand. I’ve been hooked on it ever since. There’s just something so magical about miniature people, going about their tiny lives in festive homes with a perpetually cozy glow. Setting up the Christmas village every year (and arranging it differently every time!) is what really makes me feel like the holiday season has begun. And after I finish, my partner, Aaron, goes through with the cotton snow to make sure our village is all set for tiny ski season!
Sara’s Growing Village
When I was a girl, I could spend hours marveling at the tiny holiday villages in department stores, imagining the lives of the little porcelain people who lived there. Now, my husband and I venture out each year to add to our own tiny village, which includes several small businesses (in pet portraits, Christmas trees, chestnuts and a pub) and residential homes. This year, our village ventured into the nonprofit sector by opening its first animal sanctuary!
Colleen’s Decorations and Cooking
When my mom retired, she, my sister and I traveled to Christmas markets in Paris, Budapest, Prague, Venice, Trier and Bratislava. Now, she visits me on Thanksgiving, and we put up the tree with ornaments from that trip and many others over the years – hand carved wood from India, blown glass from Italy, painted tile from Morocco and kitschy kiwis from New Zealand. We took a cooking class to learn to make traditional Christmas market dishes, and now chimney cakes (a cinnamon sugar dessert) are a holiday food tradition alongside buckeye candy and pierogis for Wigilia (Polish Christmas Eve).
MILES’ HOLIDAY FLIGHT FOR MORNING, NOON & NIGHT
No time to concoct complicated holiday drinks? This one’s for you. Made for a fun-filled day of work and play, us fortunate ones may find ourselves sipping on…
- Morning: Costa Rican Red Honey Coffee. Black. Felix Coffee Roasters, Aspen.
Pair with a dawn patrol skin-up/ski-down at Tiehack - Noon: Ginger Elvis Parsley. Fresh Juice. Daily Dose, Crested Butte.
Pair with a few lunch laps at the CB Nordic town trails - Night: Mountain Mash Rye Whiskey. Neat. Telluride Distilling Company, Mountain Village.
Pair with a nighttime fat bike ride to the Lift 10 yurt
Bonus points for imbibing all three in any 24-hour period…happy trails!
- Servings: As big as your crew
- Suggested glassware: Insulated metal thermos
- Specialty tools needed: Skinny skis, fat bikes and fully charged lights for these long solstice nights!
INGREDIENTS
- Cash money
DIRECTIONS
- Open the door.
- Belly up to the bar.
- Let your order rip (and don’t forget to tip)!
JANINE’S SHAKEN, NOT STIRRED HOLIDAY ESPRESSO MARTINI
Sometimes you need that extra shot of caffeine with your post-dinner cocktail. This is for those nights when you need to stay up extra late to wrap the last-minute gifts you never heard of, but your kid *just* asked Santa for…or when you need to find the energy to research what to do with that darned elf that you keep forgetting to move…or just to snuggle up and unwind with while you watch Christmas Vacation for the thousandth time. A “special” espresso is also a great morning drink to get through gift opening with the in-laws…Cheers!
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Martini glass
- Specialty tools needed:
- Cocktail shaker
- Espresso machine (highly recommended)
- Measuring jigger or other measuring device
INGREDIENTS
- 7 oz. cold espresso (I brew mine and then put in the freezer for a bit)
- 4 oz. Licor 43
- 4 oz. Vodka (your favorite brand will work)
- Orange peel, coffee beans or crushed candy canes for garnish (Optional)
- Ice
DIRECTIONS
- Brew espresso (or coffee) and cool. You can put in the freezer to cool more quickly
- Add ice, cooled coffee, Licor 43 and vodka to shaker.
- Vigorously shake the cocktail.
- Strain into martini glasses.
- Top with orange peel or three coffee beans (optional) and serve.
- For a festive twist – create a peppermint rim on your martini glass by dipping the rim in water, citrus juice or honey and coating in crushed candy canes.
- Enjoy!
MAVIS’ SPICED CRANBERRY THYME MOSCOW MULE PUNCH
This beverage tastes like the holidays in a glass and makes the house smell festive when you’re making the syrup!
- Servings: 6
- Suggested glassware: Any (I use stemless wine glasses)
- Specialty tools needed:
- Saucepan
- Measuring cup
INGREDIENTS
- ½ cup honey
- ½ cup water
- 2 cup fresh cranberries
- 1 inch fresh ginger, sliced
- 1 tbsp. cardamom pods
- 2 sprigs fresh thyme
- ½ cup lime juice
- 1 1/3 cup pomegranate or cranberry juice
- ¼ cup apple cider
- Spiced cranberry syrup (1st part of the recipe)
- 4 cans ginger beer
Making it naughty?
- 1 c. vodka (give or take, I added a bit more)
DIRECTIONS
- Cranberry syrup: in a pot, bring ½ c water, thyme, cranberries, ginger and cardamom to a boil. Boil 5 minutes or until the cranberries begin to burst, remove from heat. Stir in the thyme. Let cool. Remove the ginger, cardamom, and thyme. Leave cranberries in or strain out.
- Combine the vodka, lime juice, pomegranate juice, and cranberry syrup in a large pitcher. Stir to combine and chill for ~2 hours.
- To serve, fill a pitcher with ice and top off with ginger beer. Or fill glasses with the mix and top each off with ginger beer.
Notes: If making it naughty: reduce 1/3 c pomegranate juice and omit ¼ c apple cider. Or don’t and it’s still good.
*from halfbakedharvest.com
SHAY’S COCONUT CHAI
Cold winter nights accompanied by a warm cup of tea, a cozy blanket, and your favorite movie or TV show equals bliss!
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Well-loved mugs
INGREDIENTS
- 2 cups water
- 1 ½ cups coconut milk
- ¼ cup maple syrup
- 4 chai tea bags (or ½ cup loose leaf chai tea)
- Ground cinnamon, as needed for garnish (optional)
- Ground cardamom, as needed for garnish (optional)
Making it naughty?
- 6 ounces rum (light or spiced; optional)
DIRECTIONS
- In a medium pot, add the water, coconut milk, and maple syrup. Stir, and bring to a simmer over medium heat.
- Remove the pot from the heat and add the tea bags (or the loose-leaf tea). Let the mixture steep for 5 to 7 minutes. Remove the tea bags or strain out the loose tea.
- Optional: Stir in the rum.
- Divide the mixture among four mugs and garnish each with a pinch or two of cinnamon and cardamom. Serve immediately.
Notes: Full fat coconut milk can be used for a richer flavor. I served mine with a cinnamon stick, but that is optional.
SARA’S WARM HOLIDAY CIDER
Warm, aromatic and perfect for sharing, this holiday bevvy invokes the memory of your most special holidays past.
- Servings: 10
- Suggested glassware: A good old coffee mug (holiday theme preferred)
- Specialty tools needed:
- Dutch oven or a pot with lid
- Cheese cloth (optional)
INGREDIENTS
- 1 half gallon of local, unfiltered apple cider
- 1 orange
- 3 cinnamon sticks
- 3 star anise
- 1 T cloves (whole)
- 1 T allspice (whole)
- 1 small piece of ginger root (about 1”)
Making it naughty?
- 2 c. rum or bourbon
DIRECTIONS
- Slice the orange and the ginger.
- (Optional) Place the spices loosely in a cheesecloth, secure with a knot. (This makes the removal of spices easy. Alternatively, I like to poke the cloves into the skin of the orange slices and let everything else float freely.)
- Combine the sliced orange and ginger, spices and cider in the Dutch oven or pot; bring to a simmer over medium heat.
- Reduce to low and cover for at least 25 minutes.
- Serve 6 ounces of cider in a mug, top each with 1.5-2 ounces of rum (rhymes with yum!) or bourbon
- Enjoy!
Notes: This is not a fancy holiday party cocktail. Instead, a generous pour straight off the stove pairs best with your coziest fireside loungewear and deep belly laughs with your friends or family.
SID’S HOLIDAY EGGNOG
I love this recipe because it’s simple, takes no more than 20 minutes, and it reminds me of time spent with family. Plus, it’s incredibly versatile – it can be mixed with bourbon for a holiday evening treat or consumed by itself the next morning for a heavy breakfast before a day of spending time with loved ones.
- Servings: 5-7
- Suggested glassware: Your favorite holiday glass
- Specialty tools needed: Hand mixer
INGREDIENTS
- 4 eggs
- 2 tbsp. sugar (or other sweetener of choice, to taste)
- 2 c. whole milk
- 1 c. heavy cream
- Dash nutmeg
- Dash cinnamon
DIRECTIONS
- Separate the egg yolks from whites and beat the yolks in a bowl with a mixer until they lighten (just barely) in color. Add sugar/sweetener to preferred level of sweetness (our family adds a dash of Stevia as a replacement).
- Add the cream, milk, nutmeg and cinnamon and stir.
- Place the egg whites in a separate bowl and beat with an electric mixer until they stiffen.
- Whisk or fold the whites into the mixture of egg yolks and cream.
- Chill, if you’d like, or begin drinking right away.
LAUREN’S VIN CHAUD
The epitome of what you want in winter – either snuggled up with some twinkling lights and a roaring fire or walking around a Christmas market in the bitter cold – you need something to warm you up inside and out! Warning, may induce a fabulous fake French accent.
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: A mug you can wrap both hands around
- Specialty tools needed:
- A saucepan
- Zester/peeler
- Strainer
- Technically, you can measure the ingredients if you want to, but I go with a gut feeling.
INGREDIENTS
- 1 bottle Beaujolais (or other young, fruity *cough, cheap, cough* red wine)
- 1 blood orange
- ¼ cup sugar
- Cloves (I suggest 6-8 as I love cloves)
- Cinnamon sticks (4-ish) or ½ tsp cinnamon powder
- 1 star anise (easily omitted for those that think black licorice is disgusting)
- Cardamom pods (3-4, lightly smashed)
- A dusting of nutmeg
- 1/2 cup cognac or Cointreau
DIRECTIONS
- Pour a small taster of the wine into a glass to sip on while the rest of it comes together.
- Combine remaining wine, spices and sugar in the saucepan and stir together.
- Peel the blood orange over the pan to collect all the citrus oils that spray off and drop the peels into the pan. Juice the blood orange and set it aside.
- Heat until the wine begins to steam a little and the sugar is dissolved – don’t let it boil, though! It’ll just be grape juice then.
- Remove from heat and cover. Let steep for 5 – 30 minutes, depending on how strong the spice flavor you enjoy is and how quickly you drank your taster. May need to re-warm slightly if you steep the full 30 minutes.
- Add the blood orange juice and cognac to the wine mixture.
- Strain into mugs – santé!
Notes: Also known as mulled wine, glögg, glühwein, spiced wine and hot wine. Who names something hot wine? Terrible branding there. Regardless, it’ll sneak up on you. If you suddenly have a beret on and accordion music seems like a good idea, have a glass of water before the next mug.
EMMA’S CLASSIC APEROL SPRITZ TO CHANNEL YOUR PERFECT ITALIAN HOLIDAY
While the Aperol Spritz is a drink traditionally enjoyed in the summer months on the coast of Italy, who says you can’t enjoy a relaxing aperitif while the snow falls in December?
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: White wine glass
- Specialty tools needed:
- Cocktail jigger
- Stir spoon
- Sharp knife
INGREDIENTS AND RATIOS
- 1 part Aperol
- 1 part Prosecco
- 1 part sparkling water
- Orange slices
- Ice
DIRECTIONS
- Fill a large white wine glass with ice.
- Pour in the Aperol and then the Prosecco.
- Stir and top with sparkling water.
- Garnish with an orange slice.
Notes: Pairs well with bite-sized snacks and a lazy afternoon spent on a patio in Sorrento.
ANDY’S VEUVE DE ZORRO
No holiday celebration is complete without bubbles. But bubbles with a little danger and adventure…and maybe even a mask and cape? Now that’s a party I want to attend!
- Servings: 5
- Suggested glassware: Champagne flute
- Specialty tools needed: A champagne saber (fear not, a chef’s knife can work as well)
INGREDIENTS
- 1 750 ml Bottle of Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label Brut (well chilled)
DIRECTIONS
- Chill your champagne until it’s around 38-40 degrees. (Straight from your refrigerator, or 10-15 minutes in an iced wine bucket, will do.)
- Remove the gold foil and metal wire fastener. (If you have feline friends, save them both as they make great cat toys.)
- Find the seam on your bottle (the line that runs down the side of your bottle) as it’s the weakest part of the glass.
- Hold your bottle firmly at a 45-degree angle with the cork facing away from you…and not pointing at anyone you don’t want to injure. (In-laws and annoying co-workers are always fair game for target practice.)
- Hold the saber (or chef’s knife with the blunt edge facing the lip of the bottle) flat against the bottle. Run the blade along the seam and then quickly and firmly thrust forward, up the seam toward the lip of the bottle. Aim for the spot where the seam meets the lip of the bottle.
- Ensure you didn’t shoot your eye out (like Ralphie in a Christmas Story) or inadvertently blind any of your guests (like Todd and Margo from Christmas Vacation).
- Allow a little champagne to pour out to ensure any remaining glass shards are washed away (and also because you should always pour one out for your homies).
- Pour flutes of champagne for your guests to enjoy!
Notes: If all of this sounds too challenging, just grip the cork firmly with one hand, gently twist the bottle with the other hand to release the cork, pour and enjoy.
VICKI’S CHRISTMAS SANGRIA
Although not the exact recipe, this is the only contribution I remember my grandpa making to the holiday meal. Everyone always looked forward to it, and it always looked so pretty!
- Servings: 8-10
- Suggested glassware: Pint glass
- Specialty tools needed:
- Large pitcher
- Muddler (or large spoon)
INGREDIENTS
- 6 ounces cranberries, rinsed
- 1 orange, sliced
- 1 apple, cored and cut into thin wedges
- 1 pear, cored and cut into thin wedges
- 2 bottles red wine, recommend Tempranillo
- 1 liter club soda or tonic water, chilled
DIRECTIONS
- Muddle the cranberries in a large pitcher. Use the back of a spoon to crush and smash them against the sides of the pitcher.
- Add the orange, apple and pear slices and muddle.
- Pour in the wine and stir. Cover and refrigerate overnight.
- Before serving, stir in tonic water or club soda. Serve cold.
STEPHANIE’S HOTTY TODDY
It fills you with warmth and comfort. And as it is giving you a nice fuzzy cozy feeling, your sore throat might just fade away. Without this recipe in your repertoire, winter can be dreary and cold.
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Mugs
- Specialty tools needed: Tea kettle
INGREDIENTS
- Tea: 4 bags or equivalent in loose-leaf (The type of tea is of your choice, but I recommend a nice black or green tea. My personal favorite for this is oolong.)
- Lemon
- Honey (some people prefer to substitute honey with maple syrup)
- Whiskey
- Optional extra flavors: Star anise, cloves, rosemary sprig, ginger, cinnamon stick or peppermint
DIRECTIONS
- Heat about 1 liter of water to the desired temperature for your type of tea.
- Steep your tea for the ideal time for your type of tea.
- Pour into mugs and leave room for more liquid to be added.
- Add in a spoonful of honey to each mug, but really add as much as your heart tells you to.
- Squeeze some lemon in each mug. You can drop the lemon quarters in after a good squeeze for more potent lemon flavor.
- Add your shot, dash, or splash of whiskey, however much or little as you want in each mug.
- Optional: add some extra flavor(s).
- Wait until it is cool enough to drink but still hot enough to warm you up. Then, enjoy with your friends or family!
ABBY’S BOURBON MILK PUNCH
Festive for day or night!
- Servings: 2 – a parent’s glass of milk
- Suggested glassware: Rocks glass
- Specialty tools needed:
- Mixing glass
- Stirrer
- Strainer
INGREDIENTS
- 5 oz bourbon
- 1 oz dark rum
- 4 oz milk (use cream or ½ and ½ for a richer drink)
- ½ tsp vanilla
- 1 oz maple syrup
- Dash of grated nutmeg
- Ice
DIRECTIONS
- In a mixing glass, fill halfway with ice.
- Add everything but the nutmeg and stir vigorously for 30-45 seconds.
- Strain into the rocks glass and garnish with a dusting of nutmeg.
ALANA’S COZY THYME TEA
It is not the holidays without this glass of cheer because the holidays are for snowy evenings, crackling fires, snoozing pups, mugs of tea and smoky whiskey drinks. This cocktail combines all of those feelings into one glass!
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Whiskey tumbler
- Specialty tools needed:
- Measuring jigger
- Spoon
- Glass for mixing
INGREDIENTS
- 8 oz freshly brewed Earl Grey tea, cooled
- 6 oz smoky whiskey
- 2 oz spicy ginger honey simple syrup
- 2 oz freshly squeezed lemon juice
- 4 small pinches of sea salt (optional)
- 4 sprigs of thyme
- Ice
DIRECTIONS
Spicy Ginger Honey Simple Syrup
- Make simple syrup by combining 1 cup of honey with ½ cup of water and simmer, mixing until honey dissolves.
- Add ¼ cup ginger and stir, allowing to combine.
- Let the mixture cool and steep overnight (a couple days, if possible) in the fridge in an airtight container; strain before using.
Cocktail
- Brew and cool the Earl Grey tea.
- Fill a stirring glass ¾ full with ice.
- Pour whiskey, tea, lemon juice, and ginger simple syrup over the ice and stir to combine.
- Pour cocktail over ice in a cooled whiskey tumbler.
- Sprinkle a pinch of sea salt in each glass and garnish with thyme.
- Enjoy while snuggled up next to the fire with your pup and loved ones.
Notes: Recipe from http://theadventuresofbobandshan.com/ulysses-left-on-ithaca-cocktail/
JOHN AND SUZY’S GIMLET
While we have a few good recipes that have found their way into our seasonal repertoire, this gimlet is my wife Suzy’s favorite. Cheers to another wonderful holiday season!
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Martini glass
- Specialty tools needed:
- Shaker
- Measuring device
- Strainer
INGREDIENTS
- 10 oz Grey Goose or Ketel One vodka
- 4 oz Rose’s lime juice
- 2 oz fresh-squeezed lime juice
- Lime slice
- Ice
DIRECTIONS
- Combine the liquids in a shaker with lots of ice.
- Shake for 10 seconds.
- Pour into a chilled martini glass.
- Garnish with a lime slice.
Notes: Depending on the size of your shaker, you may want to split into two rounds of shaking!
COLLEEN’S POLISH75
This is a Polish twist on the classic French 75. It’s bubbly, so it is appropriate to drink before noon on Christmas morning.
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Champagne flutes
- Specialty tools needed:
- Shaker
- Measuring jigger
INGREDIENTS
- 4 oz vodka (Zubrowka Bison Grass Vodka recommended)
- 4 oz simple syrup
- 4 oz fresh lemon juice
- Dry sparkling wine, cava or champagne
- Raspberries, strawberries or your choice of fruit
DIRECTIONS
- Shake together vodka, simple syrup and freshly squeezed lemon juice.
- Divide the mixture into four equal parts into champagne flutes.
- Top with your choice of bubbles!
- Drop in berries for festive fun.
JACKIE’S SANTA CLAUSMOPOLITAN
There are two things that are meant to be shaken and not stirred over the holidays: martinis and gifts.
Top the rim of this libation with a slight dusting of light pink sugar and garnish with iced, sugared cranberries and a rosemary sprig and I promise, it will impress even your weird Uncle this holiday season – if he’s invited.
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Martini glass
- Specialty tools needed:
- Shaker
- Measuring jigger
- Strainer
INGREDIENTS
- 8 oz vodka
- 4 oz Cointreau
- 4 oz white cranberry juice
- 2 oz fresh lime juice
- Ice
Garnish
- Rosemary sprig
- Sugared cranberries
DIRECTIONS
- Combine all ingredients in the shaker with lots of ice (depending on the size of your shaker, you may need to split into two rounds).
- Shake well while singing a round of “Jingle Bells.”
- Strain into a chilled martini glass.
- Garnish with sugared cranberries and a rosemary sprig.
SAM’S FESTIVE POMEGRANATE MARTINI
Not your typical gin martini, this pomegranate martini is delightfully festive without being overly sweet.
- Servings: 4
- Suggested glassware: Martini glass or punch glass
- Specialty tools needed:
- Shaker
- Strainer
- Measuring jigger (shot glass will do)
- Citrus squeezer
INGREDIENTS
- 4 oz freshly squeezed lime juice
- 6 oz gin (this author humbly suggests Bluecoat American Dry Gin)
- 4 oz pomegranate juice
- 2 oz triple sec or simple syrup
- Ice
DIRECTIONS
- Combine all ingredients into a shaker.
- Shake vigorously.
- Strain and serve.
- Repeat as desired/needed.