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A little sangrita is good for the soul

William Dowd photo
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BRUNSWICK, NY -- I was having dinner at Pancho’s on Hoosick Street (Route 7) in this Rensselaer County town a few weeks back, chowing down on some authentic Mexican food (several of the cooks are from the beautiful Mexican city of Guanajuato, where I’ve enjoyed some excellent meals), when I decided to request some sangrita to go with my tequila.

“We don’t have sangria,” said the new waitress, referring to the fruit-and-wine punch.

“No, not san-gree-AH,” I replied. “San-gree-TAH, to go with my tequila.”

She hastily corraled a bartender who told me that, while they didn’t usually have sangrita, he’d whip some up for me. Now, that’s service.

Sangrita is to tequila drinkers what garlic is to Italian chefs. Important. At heart, it’s a combination of tomato juice, orange juice, peppers and hot sauce. Most of the time. What I got at Pancho’s was that particular bartender’s version.

In various visits to Mexico, I’ve had maybe four other versions. All are basically tomato juice that’s been tweaked, but arguments over what you tweak it with are sometimes akin to arguing about how to make the perfect martini. Particularly after a few tequilas.

But, back to sangrita, Spanish for “little blood.” Like most tequilas, it is served in a small glass called a caballito (cab-ah-YEE-toe). The most common way to drink it is to have a sip after a couple of sips of tequila. The bite of the non-alcoholic concoction nicely complements its companion, each helping bring out the best in the other.

My own recipe for sangrita has a V-8 base, rather than plain tomato juice. I like the additional vegetable notes, and make it six parts V-8 to one part orange juice, several grinds of fresh cracked black pepper, and liberal shots of Tabasco jalapeño sauce. Shake well, refrigerate and serve well chilled.

Other people add clam juice, or minced chile peppers, Tabasco or Worcestershire sauce, fresh lime juice … . As noted, there really is no one way. Like a Virgin Mary cocktail, which it resembles, sangrita is in the eye of the beholder.

A tip when ordering or making a completo, the Mexican term for a set of sangrita and tequila as shown in my photo above: Do NOT serve a cheap tequila. Look for one that is 100% blue agave, the premium grade of a wonderful spirit that increasingly is being appreciated on the world stage rather than just in Mexico and border areas.

Notes On Napkins: I prefer the do-it-yourself sangrita, but some restaurants and lounges serve commercial pre-mixed styles, such as these. ... If you're new to the tequila scene and want some guidance on the whole genre, go to my Spirits Notebook and type "tequila" in the search box. You'll find all sorts of news and  features about tequila, including the results of the most recent "Spirits of Mexico" competition.  
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