May 2026

Taming the Beastie

This is the first drink in The Alchemist’s Notebook, a series of original drink recipes. I publish a new recipe every full moon. If you would like to know more about the origin of these drinks, please read on past the recipe below.

Taming the Beastie has a beautiful, subtle appearance: a grey, green color, with a bit of cherry red. The Crême de Violette does most of the taming, while the added sweet of the spicebush and its complexity with that of the Génépy bring the drink to coherence and round out the flavor.

Taming the Beastie 

1.5 oz Ardbeg Wee Beastie
.5 oz crême de violette
.5 oz spicebush simple syrup*
.125 oz Génépy
garnish Luxardo maraschino cherry

Build on ice in a rocks glass, stir, garnish, serve.

* Spicebush simple syrup (and alternative)

To make spicebush simple syrup, first collect spicebush. Of the spicebush leaf, twig, flower, green and ripe fruit, each is an individual expression of the plant's range of flavor. Any or all of these will produce a fine simple syrup. The twigs are the mildest option, the berries the strongest. Combine a handful of spicebush (to taste) with equal parts sugar and water in a sauce pan and bring to a simmer. Stir until the sugar is fully dissolved, let cool, strain.

If you are not in a position to forage for spicebush where you live, allspice is a close alternative.

About the Drink

I think it’s fair to say that most cocktails which feature Scotch tend to prescribe a blended Scotch for the purpose. Certainly with the drink known as the Godfather this tends to be the case. That elegant recipe calls for some proportion of Scotch to amaretto liqueur, served on the rocks.

While I can appreciate a good blended Scotch, I for one enjoy the challenge of finding a place for a flavorful single malt within a mixed drink. Taming the Beastie is ultimately a riff on the Godfather, with a wonderful single malt, a substitution for the amaretto, and a couple splashes of additional herbal notes to round it all out.

Wee Beastie is a heavily peated single malt from Ardbeg distillery on the Isle of Islay. Aged for only 5 years, it has a youthful vigor that stands in contrast to smoother, older bottles from the same region.

The Beastie sips very well neat, and I believe this drink is a demonstration of its potential to play an integral part in a carefully considered cocktail. As with every other ingredient, please feel free to substitute what you may prefer.

Rothman & Winter’s Crême de Violette is a fine, subtle bottle of a viscous liqueur in a beautiful hue. The “crême” is a reference to the high sugar content, not the presence of dairy. In this drink it takes the place of the amaretto as the primary sweet component of the drink.

Spicebush simple syrup is added for the cohering power of its sugar content, as well as for a wilder herbal touch, further complemented by the alpine herbal Génépy, an artemisia based distillation. While Génépy is often recommended as a substitution for the recently rare Chartreuse Green, it is a compelling and versatile bottle in its own right.

For the garnish, a Luxardo maraschino cherry is specifically indicated, as all other brands of preserved maraschino cherries for garnish are not only inferior, they may as well represent a different product. If you can spring for this brand, you will be rewarded by the quality of the product as a component of the drink. If Luxardo is not an option for you, you might try a few dried tart cherries instead, or any other garnish that strikes your fancy.

About the Drinks

Most every evening I create an original drink to share with my partner. We have apparently been enjoying this tradition for a couple of years now, as my record of recipes extends back at least to May 2024.

Having never mixed anything more than a gin and tonic or martini before, I have been on a journey to become adept at creating cocktails. I continue to learn how flavors play together, how different types of liqueurs interact, and how to get better at reliably making drinks my partner and I like.

Over the past couple years I have explored spirits and a wide range of liqueurs, finding my way by improvisation. I have also learned a great deal from mixing the few dozen drinks I have made from recipes.

I have found my way by trial and error with occasional detours to explore particular drinks that provide useful structures which make riffing a joy. In addition to the Godfather, the Martini, Negroni, and Last Word each provide a simple structure with incredible range for substitutions.

I look forward to writing in greater depth about what I have learned; for now I will be sharing recipes with minimal commentary, this edition notwithstanding…

Homemade Liqueurs

Around the same time I started making these drinks, we started foraging for liqueur ingredients in order to begin stocking the bar with our own creations.

While all the spirits are necessarily proprietary, it has come to be a rare occasion when I buy a liqueur for the bar, as I have transitioned over the past year to a bar stocked with only our own liqueurs.

In the beginning, most of the recipes I share will be made exclusively from proprietary bottles, so you should be able to obtain the necessary ingredients by purchase, should you wish to try one on for size. Where there are homemade simple syrups involved, I will provide a recipe.

Over time, more and more of the drinks will include homemade liqueurs. As this happens I will begin posting both suggestions for proprietary substitutions and recipes for making these liqueurs yourself.

In the interim – and always – I encourage you to use your own judgment and knowledge of your own tastes to good effect when making any of these drinks. Substitute freely, and riff on.

This practice brings me immense joy, no doubt in part from the opportunity to indulge in playful curiosity as a guiding principle in my process. I also benefit enormously from this practice as a ritual. The exquisite attention my partner and I pay to the experience of the drink is a relaxing way to connect at the end of each day.

[Note: The links I provide in this blog are to sites with which I have no affiliation, and from which I receive no remuneration. I share them for the sake of information, and/or the value they have provided me, in the hope they might also benefit you.]

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As the River Bends

As the River Bends © 2026 Matthew Word Bain, all rights reserved.

This is the first image in Les Images sans Mots, a series of original photographs. While in the future these posts will not contain words, an introduction to the series seems fitting.

I have published many photograph and poem pairings online; this series marks a return to posting images on their own.

Besides a title, these images will remain otherwise unaccompanied by words.

I will post an image in this series every waxing quarter moon.

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How to Make a Website Functional by Writing a Blog – Part One

I have decided to proceed with blogging on this website before making any other effort to dress it up.

I would like to select fonts, choose header images, set up an email sign up form, choose a newsletter delivery platform, and a dozen other things to make the site more presentable.

And eventually I will do all of these things. But I have realized that in my current workflow, all of these tasks remain out of sight, out of mind, and so they remain undone.

It is interesting to consider that all of these accoutrements are really just that – accoutrements. They do nothing to advance the primary function of the website: a platform for publishing my creative work.

By publishing the blog instead of making the site look nice, the website functions as intended from the publication of the first post.

By cutting to the chase and blogging right away, I am creating meaningful content for the site from the beginning. I also place myself in the context of the website on a regular basis and thus within range of working on it drip by drip. In the meantime, the website functions as intended – a platform for publishing my creative work.

I am not worried about anyone finding the site inhospitable while I focus on function. I am not even planning to publicize the site until I have established a solid track record on the blog. That way, by the time most anyone finds it, it will be filled with substantive content. Doing so also insures I have developed a process that reliably generates new material on the site.

I believe the content is more valuable than the aesthetic appeal of the site anyway, and over time the appearance will also improve.

So, how does one make a website functional? Ultimately that will depend on the intended function of the website. But the principle undergirding my process should apply in all cases: begin by using it for its intended purpose.

Leave secondary purposes in second place among your priorities: first things first, second things second. In my case, email sign up forms, site structure, appearance, etc., all of these can wait until a solid practice of blogging is established.

Secondary purposes are only meaningful in support of primary purposes, so I will focus on primary purposes first.

In the next several posts I will go into detail about my process of creating the blog and how I am bringing to bear certain specific tools and principles along the way. While your process is sure to be different from mine, I am confident these tools and principles are universal in their utility and thus can be adapted to fit any process.

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