Tiki Central / Tiki Drinks and Food
Pat O'Brien's Hurricane mix - Yay or nay?
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Shaun of theTiki
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Mon, Aug 25, 2008 8:21 PM
I still have respect for the drink's birthplace but their mix is rather meh. The product is pretty much rum-spiked Kool Aid, based on the package's instructions. Does anybody have better recipes for O'Brien's dry mix? |
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Hakalugi
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Mon, Aug 25, 2008 9:05 PM
I take it you don't have a copy of the Grog Log? The Grog Log Hurricane recipe may not be the actual O'Briens one, but it sure beats their pre-packaged mix. |
SOT
Shaun of theTiki
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Mon, Aug 25, 2008 9:14 PM
I'm still awaiting my copy in the snail mail, but I am curious if anybody has performed miracles with the mix. |
CAA
Chip and Andy
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Tue, Aug 26, 2008 5:44 AM
That would be a miracle! I find the dry mix to be overly sweet. Try adding some lime (or lemon, or grapefruit, be creative) and/or a couple of dashes of Peychauds bitters. And, use the finest crush ice you can, bordering on a shaved sno-cone texture. But, I am working from older memory because I haven't used the pre-mix in a long while. Play with it and let us know what you come up with. |
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captnkirk
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Tue, Aug 26, 2008 11:02 AM
I use Pat O'Brien's Hurricane mix in my tiki bar. In real old recipes which call for "Fasionola" I found that Hurricane mix is a great substitute. |
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oysterschnapps
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Wed, Aug 27, 2008 9:04 AM
I use Chuck Taggart's recipe, and I trust him on New Orleans cocktails. I've never been to Pat O'Brien's or tried their mix, though, so I have no idea how close this is to the "official" hurricane. |
CAA
Chip and Andy
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Wed, Aug 27, 2008 11:43 AM
You can't get much farther away from each other. The Dry-Mix makes a good cocktail. Like I said earlier, the result is too sweet for my taste, but it is still a good cocktail. Is it a 'real' Hurricane? Probably not, and it depends on who you ask. How is it compared to a 'real' Hurricane? Apples to Oranges comparison. Which is better? Another Apples to Oranges comparison. The better one is the one you have in your glass right now. |
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AlohaStation
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Wed, Aug 27, 2008 12:06 PM
I have had Hurricanes at several PO locations and many other establishments. If you do not want a strong, sweet, fruity drink that tastes like Koolaid maybe you should try something else. |
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oysterschnapps
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Wed, Aug 27, 2008 2:39 PM
I guess I should add, then, that I highly recommend Chuck Taggart's recipe, regardless of its authenticity. At the first party where I served it punch-style, everyone loved it, and that's the first party of mine where we had to take somebody to the hospital for drinking-related injuries. So I consider it a great success. For the passion fruit nectar, I use Looza with the sugar water siphoned off per Scottes's suggestion on an old thread here; I increase the rums to 2 oz each; and for the grenadine I use 1 oz of Trader Vic's Grenadine. (If all you have is Rose's Grenadine, it'll work fine, but only use 1/2 oz.) |
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Rum Balls
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Thu, Aug 28, 2008 8:14 AM
If you're after Pat O'Brien's Hurricane Mix, I spotted it last night at Cost Plus World Market for $3 a package. |
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GentleHangman
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Thu, Aug 28, 2008 8:46 AM
I've made the Hurricane from the Grog Log on many occasions using home-made passion fruit syrup with great success. |
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Chuq
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Tue, Sep 30, 2008 12:51 AM
I posted that recipe not for its authenticity, whatever that still means with regards to the Hurricane these days, but 'cause I thought it tasted good -- I'm glad someone's enjoying it. It's my adaptation of a recipe I found in an old Times-Picayune clipping from ages ago, which was someone's take on the powdered/bottled version. I also remember a recipe from a New Orleans cookbook that we used to use for "Hurricane Parties" I threw after I left N.O. for college -- one large can of Hawaiian Punch Fruit Juicy Red, a 12-oz. can of frozen orange juice concentrate, and a 6 oz. can of frozen daiquiri mix. Pour 2 ounces each light and dark rum (starting with Bacardi, i.e. "the good stuff," and toward the end of the party with stuff from bottles with white labels and a blue stripe that said only "LIGHT RUM" and "DARK RUM") and fill with that mix. All my felllow students loved it at the time, and it was at least as good as the powdered mix, if not better! If any Hurricane recipe could be called truly authentic, it's probably the one The Bum put in Grog Log, but I recall reading somewhere that the very earliest used actual fresh passion fruit puree. I don't think the published one has been served at Pat O's in my lifetime though, certainly not in my drinking lifetime. I really can't stand that red Kool-Aid they serve by the tanker-load these days ... Oh, by the way, hi y'all. :) |
CAA
Chip and Andy
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Tue, Sep 30, 2008 1:49 PM
Aloha! Welcome to our little bar on the internet. I guess I shouldn't call it a bar, TC is so much more..... what, exactly, no one has ever quite figured out. |
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bewarethe151
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Tue, Sep 30, 2008 5:33 PM
The mix is a horrid bag of noxious chemicals! I could not believe how bad this stuff turned out to be. |
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oysterschnapps
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Sun, Oct 5, 2008 10:19 PM
Ahh, thanks for clearing up the provenance of that recipe. I'd been wondering. Yep, we've definitely been enjoying it! |
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Howland
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Tue, Oct 7, 2008 10:32 PM
I have tried a recipe using dry/powdered margarita mix mixed with flour/cornmeal and used for battering catfish with before frying--pretty damn good! (seriously) I came up with a similar recipe using the Pat O' Hurricane powder mix for another fish recipe: take your favorite type of fish (catfish, mahi, grouper, carp--really doesn't matter in the long run), coat generously with Pat O' powder mix and salt and pepper. Place on a cedar plank and preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Place the seasoned fish on the cedar plank in the preheated oven, cook until fish flakes easily with a fork (10-15 minutes--depending on thickness of fish). When done, take out of the oven, throw away the fish and eat the plank. :lol: |
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telescopes
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Mon, Feb 7, 2011 11:38 AM
Can anyone clear up what the recipe for the Hurricane really was and what it would have tasted like? |
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arriano
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Mon, Feb 7, 2011 1:11 PM
Hurricane (according to Jeff Berry's books)
Shake well with plenty of crushed ice. Pour into a hurricane glass |
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telescopes
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Mon, Feb 7, 2011 5:07 PM
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thePorpoise
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Tue, Feb 8, 2011 6:26 AM
Here's how I've been making it for several years now (i think i derived this from the listing at cocktaildb.com): 1.5 oz light rum serve in a tall ice-filled glass with a straw, garnish with cherry, orange slice. I have no idea why the Pat O's are so red. food coloring I guess. |
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arriano
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Tue, Feb 8, 2011 10:30 AM
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telescopes
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Tue, Feb 8, 2011 1:20 PM
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thePorpoise
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Tue, Feb 8, 2011 2:08 PM
I'm pretty sure all of the Pat O's hurricanes are now made from the powdered mix and have been for decades, even in the French Quarter. I wonder when they last made them from fresh ingredients?? Also, passion fruit is so yellowish, seems to me even grenadine can't redden it up as much as the Pat O's mix. If they served them that red in the days before powdered mix, they musta been adding food dye. My friends say the version i make tastes like Pat O's (even tho its the wrong color) when I add tons of sugar. Mabuhay! [ Edited by: thePorpoise 2011-02-08 14:09 ] |
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arriano
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Tue, Feb 8, 2011 3:17 PM
I wonder if they may have used (or are using) fassionola. I seem to recall this being used in place of passionfruit syrup in other drinks before, and the red version of fassionola would certainly account for the color. More on this forum regarding fassionola: "I am Lono!" -- Hale Ka'a Tiki Lounge [ Edited by: arriano 2011-02-08 15:20 ] |
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LetsTiki
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Wed, Mar 9, 2011 7:43 PM
A friend of mine gave me a bottle of the Pat O'Brien's Hurricane Mix in a bottle. So I did a taste test. I made the Beachbum Berry Remixed version and the Pat O'Brien's Mix version. To me the difference was night and day. After tasting the Berry version the O'Brien version tasted mainly like corn syrup, and was kind of bitter. That is the last Hurricane I'm going to make with that mix. Especially, since the Berry recipe is so easy. |
Pages: 1 25 replies