Frozen Margaritas
- 6-ounce can of frozen limeade concentrate
- 6 ounces tequila
- 2 ounces triple sec
- 6 ounces lemon-lime soda
- 5 cups crushed ice
- lime slices
- margarita salt
Pour limeade concentrate, tequila, triple sec and soda into large
plastic container, and stir to mix. Fill blender with 5 cups crushed
ice. Add limeade mixture to ice in blender and blend until slushy.
Pour into salt-rimmed Margarita glasses. Garnish with lime slices.
Honest-to-Goodness Margaritas for a Crowd
Makes 20 to 24 old-fashioned margaritas In the age of the 32-ounce
(or larger) Big Gulps and the like, a small drink may not necessarily
seem fashionable. But large quantity is not always related to good
quality, as is attested by those mammoth margaritas, laced as they
are with artificially flavored sweet-and-sour mix. This margarita
is the real thing purity and refreshing freshness that's strained
into martini glasses after a vigorous rumble with ice cubes in a
cocktail shaker. Just before your guests arrive, combine the tequila,
orange liqueur, and lime juice in a pitcher, and you'll be poised
for the shaking to begin.
Though we gave an "equal part" recipe for the three main
ingredients in our Top-of-the-Line Margarita in Rick Bayless's Mexican
Kitchen, these proportions focus a bit more on the flavor of the
good tequila. And it's silver (unaged) tequila here, the freshest
and most agave-flavored of the tequilas. Reposado (6-month-old)
tequila is a little softer, without the bright freshness of a silver,
while the añejo (aged) tequila is moving toward the flavor
of an aged brandy and I personally don't think that's what margarita
flavor is all about.
- 1 750-milliliter bottle silver tequila (in this margarita,
the better the tequila, the better the drink. Try Herradura, El
Tesoro, El Viejito, Patron, or practically any of the 100% agave
tequilas that are available in the market)
- 1 to 2 cups (1/3 to 2/3 of a 750-milliliter bottle) triple
sec or Cointreau
- 1 cup freshly squeezed lime juice, plus several tablespoons
extra for rimming the glasses
- Several tablespoons coarse (kosher-type) salt, for rimming
the glasses
- About a gallon of ice cubes
- Just before serving, in a half-gallon pitcher combine the tequila,
the minimum amount of triple sec or Cointreau, and the lime juice.
Taste and add more of the orange liqueur if you think your margaritas
need more sweet oranginess to balance the other flavors. Remember,
you're tasting it warm and undiluted: when chilled and diluted,
the flavors will be mellower and the lime's tartness will be more
compelling (tangy, warm champagne is not nearly as inviting as
ice-cold).
- Pour several tablespoons of lime juice onto one small plate,
several tablespoons coarse salt onto another. Have martini glasses
at hand (for an extra special touch, you can chill them). I like
the 5-ounce size, since that size drink will stay cold from first
sip to last. As your guests ask for their margaritas, invert a
glass into the plate with the lime juice to moisten the rim, then
lightly dip into the plate with the salt. For each drink measure
2 ounces (4 tablespoons) of the margarita mixture into a cocktail
shaker I can do 3 drinks at a time comfortably in mine. If you
have a 2-ounce ladle that you can keep in the pitcher, measuring
goes much faster. Add ice cubes (I put in 5 cubes for 1, 8 for
2, and 10 for 3). Secure the lid and top and shake vigorously
for 10 to 15 seconds. Strain into the salt-crusted glasses and
hand off to the lucky recipients.
Remarks
Taste of this recipe is awesome, I cooked it myself and really its too easy to cook. By- Alda Johnson
Hey I am a chef and I try Margarita Recipe, you people prove it that your guidelines can make a delicious dish. Great work done.. By- Devid Herley
Hey I tried many recipe but this one is so delicious, now it will be the secret for my next party. Thankx to you all. By- Merrisa
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