Thank you. I have no idea where I bought it. I usually get my glasses at salvation army’s or goodwills. I only need one for photos so I have no need to buy a whole set, and they cost around 1 to 2 dollars. Also those places are filled with cool old vintage glasses that older couples donate.
It was the signature cocktail of the British officer pegu club in British occupied Burma during the early 1900s. This recipe is from the 1930 savoy cocktail book. I use to put the history but I like it better when I just make the drink more. I can also make videos faster. Tell me what you think of the drink!
WEBSITE ▶▶▶ vintageamericancocktails.com/pegu-club/
RECIPE SOURCE ▶▶▶ euvs-vintage-cocktail-books.cld.bz/1930-The-Savoy-Cocktail-Book
Wow, this drink is so easy to make because we have all the ingredients! Tonight’s libation! 😊
Nice! The woman said it was a bit too boozy for her, but I liked it.
Love that glass, early 1900s vibe goin on. It looks a lot like the Death & Co. logo or the illustration of a cocktail glass found in Imbibe.
Thank you. I have no idea where I bought it. I usually get my glasses at salvation army’s or goodwills. I only need one for photos so I have no need to buy a whole set, and they cost around 1 to 2 dollars. Also those places are filled with cool old vintage glasses that older couples donate.
@@VintageAmericanCocktails Always good idea to check those places. It's a Libbey speakeasy martini glass, so it's fairly new👍
This looks great, citrus and gin. Gonna try it tonight.
What's the source/history? Thanks.
It was the signature cocktail of the British officer pegu club in British occupied Burma during the early 1900s. This recipe is from the 1930 savoy cocktail book. I use to put the history but I like it better when I just make the drink more. I can also make videos faster. Tell me what you think of the drink!
@@VintageAmericanCocktails Oh yes, I've seen that online at the EUVS Cocktail Library. Thx
@@scottsims9506 I just linked it in the comments but it’s also in the description