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Where does the "bloody mary" come from?

2022-06-30T05:26:45.110Z


OUR FAVORITE COCKTAILS (3/12): To shine during your summer evenings, Le Figaro invites you to come back to the origin of these popular drinks.


Renowned for its miraculous virtues against the "hangover", the "Bloody Mary" is a particularly widespread cocktail.

But where does this original name come from?

” READ ALSO – Where does the “spritz” come from?

"Bloody Mary" (literally Mary the bloodthirsty) is the nickname given to Mary Tudor, Queen of England from 1553 to 1558, who remained famous for the massacres she ordered against the Anglicans while trying to restore Catholicism in Great Britain. .

The expression is therefore old since it dates from the 16th century.

However, it was not until the 20th century that this name entered the menu of cocktail bars.

Two legends oppose to explain the creation of this drink based on vodka and tomato juice.

The first grants its relationship to Fernand Petiot, bartender at Harry's Bar in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris who invented the cocktail for the American comedian Roy Barton.

A small drink signed Hemingway

The second anecdote attributes the origin of the Bloody Mary to the American writer Ernest Hemingway.

Like many of his fellow citizens, members of the "Lost Generation", the author of

L'Adieu auxarmes

spent a large part of his time drinking in the most exclusive addresses in the French capital.

While on his way to the Ritz, Hemingway reportedly asked the bartender to make him a cocktail that didn't smell of alcohol to make sure his wife, Mary Welsh, wouldn't be mad at him when he returned.

As he called his spouse "Bloody Mary" (Satanée Marie), he would have given this name to the drink which he used to conceal his drunkenness.

Health!

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2022-06-30

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