Fancy a nightcap?

A nightcap isn’t so much a category as an occasion

Kara Newman, the author of ‘Nightcap’, at the East Village bar Amor y Amargo. Photograph: Sasha Maslov for The New York Times
Kara Newman, the author of ‘Nightcap’, at the East Village bar Amor y Amargo. Photograph: Sasha Maslov for The New York Times

When drinks writer Kara Newman began work on her new book, Nightcap, she first had to address a central issue: just what exactly is a nightcap, anyway?

On the face of it, the answer seems simple – a nightcap is that final drink of the evening. It caps the night, and comforts like the nightcaps that sleepers wore back in the 19th century when the custom took hold.

But that explains only the timing. What type of drink should it be? Can anything be a nightcap? What is the drink’s larger social function? The more questions Newman asked of bartenders, the less certain she felt. “No one ever said, ‘This isn’t a nightcap,’” she recalled. “Everyone is open to whatever it can be.”

She was able to establish at least one solid rule. “Everyone I talked to says, ‘There is no ‘s’ in nightcap.” (That is, you should have only one nightcap per night.)

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Newman does not believe that today’s drinkers think much in terms of nightcaps – it was partly for that reason that she thought it would be an interesting school of drink to examine. “It just seems like an unsung category,” she said.

She does, however, acknowledge that there is a popular public image of the nightcap as a strong drink, which typically involves a brown spirit like brandy, whiskey, rum or amaro. "They're just warming spirits and have these dessertlike flavours, caramel and vanilla and spice," says Newman, the spirits editor at Wine Enthusiast. "It's comforting and pleasing and calming. And, personally, I think it's something that is hard to drink quickly."

Still, she is not opposed to a glass of smoky mezcal (a spirit made from the agave plant), if that’s what someone prefers. And the Negroni, an aperitif cocktail typically drunk at the start of a night or before a meal, is also fair game in her opinion – although instead, she would recommend a Boulevardier, a Negroni made with bourbon instead of gin.

Ending an evening

What a nightcap is meant to accomplish is an equally complex question. It is not just about ending the evening; it’s more about how you want the evening to end. So she has divided the recipes in the book into four categories: “To Send You Off to Sleep” which includes lighter drinks using fortified wines and vermouth; “To Keep the Conversation Going” is composed of more strongly spirited cocktails; “To Aid Digestion” are drinks that contain stomach-settling amari; and “To Sweeten the Deal” are dessert drinks like the grasshopper and the brandy Alexander.

But sometimes an intention is all that it takes for a drink to be crowned a nightcap.

Although Newman says she doesn’t think a shooter could ever be a nightcap, she breaks that rule in her book by including Paper Plane Shots. The recipe takes the Paper Plane, a modern classic cocktail (bourbon, Aperol, Amaro Nonino and lemon juice), and divides it into four one-ounce shot glasses.

She watched one night as a bartender served it as a customer send-off. “It violates all the rules,” she says. “It’s a sour. It has an aperitivo in it. It’s a shot.”

But the nightcap, she explains, isn’t so much a category as an occasion. “Here you had four people. They toasted one another, had this civilised moment and went on their merry way. It felt like a punctuation.”

Newman’s preferred nightcap? A simple brandy pour of Armagnac.

When it was suggested that there’s a world of difference between a glass of Armagnac and Paper Plane shots, she shrugs.

“There’s more than one kind of night,” she says. – New York Times