Monday, September 26, 2011

Cocktails, Chilean style

Filed under: Arts and Culture, History, Learning, Food and Drink, South America, Chile, Hotels and Accommodations, Ecotourism, Luxury TravelA few weeks ago, I was sitting at the bar of the very lovely Alto Atacama Desert Lodge & Spa, outside of San Pedro de Atacama in Northern Chile. I'd just returned from an afternoon at 12,600 feet, exploring the Andean Altiplano Lakes of Miscanti and Miñiques, and I was feeling parched.

Small wonder I was thirsty; Atacama is the driest desert on earth. Visually and geographically, it's like the Southwest on steroids. If the love child of Sedona, Arizona and Abiquiu, New Mexico inherited a chain of conical, snow-dusted volcanoes, the largest salt flat in Chile, and shimmering lagoons full of flamingos, Atacama is what you'd get. Kraig recently wrote a great series on exploring Atacama, which you can find here.

San Pedro itself is a surprisingly sweet little village of adobe walls and buildings, with a whitewashed church and dusty streets. It's the world's least offensive tourist-mecca. Alto Atacama is located about a mile-and-a-half outside of town, in the middle of a river valley sided by craggy, brick-red rock.

Native plant gardens dot the property, there are resident llamas, the small restaurant serves many locally grown foods. But these are mere details. My biggest concern that evening was soothing my dust-coated throat with a cocktail.

I most definitely approved of the pisco sour made by Sebastián, the bartender. Pisco sours are a tricky thing; too often they're made with old lemon juice or concentrate or too much sugar, and the result is a cloying, flat-tasting mess. But Sebastián squeezed fresh lemon juice (limón de pica, or Peruvian lime, which may or may not be the same species as key lime, depending upon who you ask). The final addition of good pisco made for a smooth, tangy, refreshing libation.

Sebastián raised his eyebrows at my swiftly drained glass. "Was good?" he enquired.

"Delicioso," I assured him. "Uno mas, por favor." As we spoke I watched him expertly muddling a mess of quartered limóns with something brown and sticky looking.

He followed my gaze. "It's a Mojito Atacameño. Invented here at the hotel. You like to try?"

[Photo credit: Frank Budweg]Continue reading Cocktails, Chilean styleCocktails, Chilean style originally appeared on Gadling on Mon, 26 Sep 2011 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



Ruka ski holidays Finland Lapland holidays Lapland skiing holidays

No comments:

Post a Comment