Queen's Park Swizzle
The Queen's Park Swizzle is a classic rum cocktail that originated in Trinidad.
It is a prominent member of a cocktails genre from the West Indies that started most likely in the 19th century, but has gained recent popularity in New York City. Other drinks in genre include the Bermuda Swizzle and the Barbados Red Rum Swizzle. These drinks are "swizzled" with a swizzle stick. It is traditionally from a tree native to the Caribbean called Quararibea turbinate, locally known as the swizzle stick tree or commonly known as the South Caribbean evergreen tree. However, although there are wooden swizzle sticks in addition to metal and plastic ones in the present day, they are usually not from the original tree.
The ingredients of rum, lime juice, sugar, and mint are similar to the Mojito. One key ingredient that contrasts the drink is Angostura bitters, one of Trinidad's most famous exports. Also, the drink uses Demerara rum. Demerara rum comes from Guyana from sugarcane grown on the banks of the Demerara River, and is comparable to Jamaican rum.
House of Angostura from Trinidad has promoted it as Trinidad and Tobago's national drink.
History
The drink's name comes from the hotel, Queen's Park Hotel, in Port of Spain, Trinidad where it was first created in the 1920s. Port of Spain was at the time a thriving trade center and vacation destination among the wealthy. The Queen's Park Savannah neighborhood was its leisure center of eating, drinking and dancing, and the Queens Park Hotel was the main attraction. The hotel opened on January 15, 1895.The hotel was moderately successful through 1920, and more so after the 18th Amendment was passed, making the purchase and consumption of alcohol illegal in the United States. Prohibition prompted many well-to-do Americans to leave the country on weekend trips to the Caribbean where they could legally drink. Queen's Park Hotel has been said to be one of the grandest hotel bars at the time.
Hotels abroad hired previously employed American bartenders who brought in clients and cocktail expertise. The Queen's Park Hotel asked the bartenders to concoct a signature drink. They modified a popular drink at the time, the Daiquiri, and added mint and locally made Angostura bitters.
The Queen's Park Swizzle enjoyed many years of popularity. Trader Vic's named it "the most delightful form of anesthesia given out today" in 1946. Bergeron wrote in the 1972 edition of the Trader Vic's Bartender's Guide, "If you like to make and drink a real doozer of a rum drink that really is a rum drink, try this. It’s from the Queen’s Park Hotel in Trinidad." The original Queen's Park Hotel closed in 1996.