The Pisco Sour is said to have bean created by Victor Vaughen Morris, an American expat who moved to Peru to work for the Cerro de Pasco Railroad. According to legend he ran out of whiskey when he was to make 5,000 Whiskey Sours to celebrate the inauguration of a new railway line. He found the solution in substituting the whiskey for pisco.
In 1916 Morris left the railway business and moved to Lima to open his own bar, simply called Morris’s Bar. One of his bartenders Mario Alfonso Bruijet Burgos added bitters to the cocktail making it what it is today.
That said, a cookbook called ”Nuevo Manual de Cocina a la Criolla”, published in Lima in 1903, presented a cocktail with all the same ingredients save bitters. That means the cocktail was clearly already around when Victor Morris moved from Salt Lake City to Peru in 1903.
The Pisco Sour is so celebrated it even has its own day. Pisco Sour Day is celebrated on the first Saturday of February.
The glass is called Fabulös (Fabulous in English) and was designed by Gunnel Sahlin in 2009.
Product information
This is one in a series of illustrations of classic cocktail recipes with a selection of the most beautifully designed glasses.
The size 40x50 cm (approx 16x20”) are signed and printed on Hahnemühle Photo Rag Bright White 310g archival paper and are sold in a limited edition of 50 prints.
The size 30x40 cm (approx 12x16”) are printed on Hahnemühle Fine Art Studio Enhanced 210g archival paper.