Gin Pahit |
Is an alcoholic drink made with gin and bitters, as enjoyed in colonial Malaya. The name means “bitter gin” in Malay.
The recipe, according to the food and beverage service of the Raffles Hotel, is 1½ ounces of gin and ½ ounce of Angostura bitters. At least one book on drinks from the 1930s describes it as identical to a pink gin, which would imply considerably less bitters.
Referenced often by the writer W. Somerset Maugham. For example his short story, “P. & O.” (Copyright 1926), Maugham’s character Gallagher, an Irishman who had lived in the Federated Malay States for 25 years, orders the drink. Gin pahit appears in several other Maugham stories, including “Footprints in the Jungle” , “The Book-Bag”, both set in Malaya, and in the novels “The Narrow Corner” (opening line of Chapter xviii), and in “The Outstation” (Two Malay boys,…, came in, one bearing gin pahits,..).



Ingredients
- 1½ ounces of gin
- ½ ounce of Angostura bitters
Preparation:
- Fill a glass with Angostura bitters and gin.

I tried this one last night and it was fantastic. Sometimes Gin can make cocktails too bitter, but this had the perfect balance. Your readers need to try it.