Ep. 135 Lost for over 75 years: The Champs-Elysees episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 4, 2026 · 50 MIN

Ep. 135 Lost for over 75 years: The Champs-Elysees

from The Art of Drinking with Join Jules and Your Favorite Uncle · host Redd Rock Music, LLC

In 1925, an American novelist and a British food critic walked into a French restaurant in London and changed cocktail history; even if nobody noticed for about seventy-five years.  This episode traces the remarkable origin story of the Champs-Élysées cocktail, beginning with the unlikely partnership behind Drinks - Long and Short, the book that first put the recipe to paper. We explore who Nina Toye really was (a supernatural thriller novelist, a Vogue contributor, and one of the few women of her era to put her name on a cocktail book, above her male co-author no less) and what her presence in this story tells us about how women have always thought about drinks differently. We follow the thread to A.H. Adair, whose role as drink-maker for chef Marcel Boulestin's celebrated London restaurant gives the book its true context: not a bartender's manual, but a love letter to a table, a season, and a moment.  Along the way, Brad and Jules explore what it means that this drink (named not for a technique but for a feeling, a boulevard, a place you want to be) was born from a distinctly holistic way of thinking about cocktails. One that asked not what's the correct spec but who's there, what are we eating, and what does the occasion call for. It's a question that Nina Toye was answering in 1925, and one that the best home entertainers are still asking today.  Plus: Cognac, Green Chartreuse, a French chef who famously hated cocktails, and a drink that disappeared for half a century before the craft cocktail renaissance brought it back to the glasses it always deserved.    Champs Elysees  Ingredients:  2oz Cognac – Pierre Ferrand Ambre  0.5oz Green Chartreuse – or a suitable alternate   0.75oz Fresh lemon juice  0.5oz Simple syrup  1 dash Agnostrua Bitters  Add to a shaker and shake with ice.  Double strain into a chilled coupe  Garnish with a lemon tiwst Yuzu Champs Elysees  Ingredients:  1 oz Japanese whisky, Suntori Toki  ½ oz Cognac  ½ oz Green Chartreuse  ¾ oz yuzu  1/2 oz honey 2:1 to help balance the yuzu tartness  Add to a shaker and shake with ice.  Double strain into a coupe  Garnish with a dehydrated citrus wheel  Optional: dust the rim with a citrus sugar salt   TIP: Citrus ins and outs    The Art of Drinking  IG: @theartofdrinkingpodcast     Jules  IG: @join_jules  TikTok: @join_jules   Website: joinjules.com    Brad   IG: @favorite_uncle_brad    This is a Redd Rock Music Podcast  IG: @reddrockmusic  www.reddrockmusic.com  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In 1925, an American novelist and a British food critic walked into a French restaurant in London and changed cocktail history; even if nobody noticed for about seventy-five years.  This episode traces the remarkable origin story of the Champs-Élysées cocktail, beginning with the unlikely partnership behind Drinks - Long and Short, the book that first put the recipe to paper. We explore who Nina Toye really was (a supernatural thriller novelist, a Vogue contributor, and one of the few women of her era to put her name on a cocktail book, above her male co-author no less) and what her presence in this story tells us about how women have always thought about drinks differently. We follow the thread to A.H. Adair, whose role as drink-maker for chef Marcel Boulestin's celebrated London restaurant gives the book its true context: not a bartender's manual, but a love letter to a table, a season, and a moment.  Along the way, Brad and Jules explore what it means that this drink (named not for a technique but for a feeling, a boulevard, a place you want to be) was born from a distinctly holistic way of thinking about cocktails. One that asked not what's the correct spec but who's there, what are we eating, and what does the occasion call for. It's a question that Nina Toye was answering in 1925, and one that the best home entertainers are still asking today.  Plus: Cognac, Green Chartreuse, a French chef who famously hated cocktails, and a drink that disappeared for half a century before the craft cocktail renaissance brought it back to the glasses it always deserved.    Champs Elysees  Ingredients:  2oz Cognac – Pierre Ferrand Ambre  0.5oz Green Chartreuse – or a suitable alternate   0.75oz Fresh lemon juice  0.5oz Simple syrup  1 dash Agnostrua Bitters  Add to a shaker and shake with ice.  Double strain into a chilled coupe  Garnish with a lemon tiwst Yuzu Champs Elysees  Ingredients:  1 oz Japanese whisky, Suntori Toki  ½ oz Cognac  ½ oz Green Chartreuse  ¾ oz yuzu  1/2 oz honey 2:1 to help balance the yuzu tartness  Add to a shaker and shake with ice.  Double strain into a coupe  Garnish with a dehydrated citrus wheel  Optional: dust the rim with a citrus sugar salt   TIP: Citrus ins and outs    The Art of Drinking  IG: @theartofdrinkingpodcast     Jules  IG: @join_jules  TikTok: @join_jules   Website: joinjules.com    Brad   IG: @favorite_uncle_brad    This is a Redd Rock Music Podcast  IG: @reddrockmusic  www.reddrockmusic.com  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Ep. 135 Lost for over 75 years: The Champs-Elysees

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This episode was published on March 4, 2026.

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In 1925, an American novelist and a British food critic walked into a French restaurant in London and changed cocktail history; even if nobody noticed for about seventy-five years.  This episode traces the remarkable origin story of the...

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