How the martini became the world’s most iconic cocktail
It has a glamorous history and can be endlessly personalised
AT DUKES BAR in London there is a limit of two martinis per person. Enrico Chiappini, one of the bartenders, says that in his 16 years he has made almost no exceptions. That is because the bar’s martinis, made with chilled gin or vodka and vermouth, are famously dangerous: each contains 120ml of booze. Two hold ten shots.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Glamour shots”
Culture September 21st 2024
Discover more
Is TV’s next sure-fire hit, “Disclaimer”, a must-watch or a dud?
The glitzy new thriller is both
Americans are chuffed as chips at British English
Why doesn’t the affection run both ways?
Time for LIV, golf’s Saudi-funded rebel tour, to drift into obscurity
As a golfing experiment it has failed
Boris Johnson shows how not to write a political memoir
His new book is full of revelations, but none of the sort readers actually want
How humans invented good and evil, and may reinvent both
Over thousands of years humans domesticated themselves
Fashion photography is in vogue
Museums and collectors now want what were once panned as commercial images for their walls