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Man About Town

A rye-forward Boulevardier variation from Gramercy Tavern, swapping Campari for Cynar. Spicy, bittersweet, and elegantly stirred.

Ingredients

  • Rye whiskey2 oz
  • Cynar1 oz
  • Sweet vermouth1 oz

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Instructions

  1. 1Add rye, Cynar, and sweet vermouth to a mixing glass with ice
  2. 2Stir until very cold, about 15–30 seconds
  3. 3Strain into a chilled coupe glass
  4. 4Garnish with a brandied cherry
Glassware
Coupe glass
Technique
stir
Servings
1
Garnish
Brandied cherry
ryeamarocynarbitterstirredboulevardier

I came across this drink in the early days of both mixing drinks at home and discovering that "amaro" was a whole category of liqueurs — one that contained several bottles I'd already found and liked on their own, Cynar among them. I was already a fan of Negronis and Boulevardiers, and the Man About Town felt like the next logical stepping stone: swap Campari for Cynar to go from Boulevardier to Man About Town, the same way swapping gin for bourbon turns a Negroni into a Boulevardier.

The family tree

| Drink | Spirit | Bitter/amaro | Vermouth | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Negroni | Gin | Campari | Sweet | | Boulevardier | Bourbon (or rye) | Campari | Sweet | | Man About Town | Rye | Cynar | Sweet |

Cynar brings an earthy, artichoke-tinged bitterness that's gentler and more herbal than Campari's bright orange punch — a natural fit for spicy rye.

Notes

  • Gramercy Tavern's spec leans rye-heavy at 2:1:1; Rittenhouse is a classic choice.
  • You could serve this in any up glass, but a coupe is a particularly good choice.
  • If you like this template, try an Old Pal (dry vermouth + Campari) or a Boulevardier for the bourbon-and-Campari baseline.

Source: Gramercy Tavern, apparently