{
  "id": "aviation",
  "version": "1.0",
  "source": {
    "front_image": "20260111_094126927_iOS.jpg",
    "back_image": "20260111_094132611_iOS.jpg"
  },
  "title": {
    "key": "cocktail.aviation.title",
    "default": "Aviation"
  },
  "ingredients": [
    {
      "key": "cocktail.aviation.ingredient.1",
      "item": {
        "key": "ingredient.tanqueray_gin",
        "default": "Tanqueray Gin"
      },
      "amount": 1.67,
      "unit": "fl_oz",
      "metric": {
        "amount": 50,
        "unit": "ml"
      }
    },
    {
      "key": "cocktail.aviation.ingredient.2",
      "item": {
        "key": "ingredient.fresh_lemon_juice",
        "default": "Fresh Lemon Juice"
      },
      "amount": 0.75,
      "unit": "fl_oz",
      "metric": {
        "amount": 25,
        "unit": "ml"
      }
    },
    {
      "key": "cocktail.aviation.ingredient.3",
      "item": {
        "key": "ingredient.maraschino_liqueur",
        "default": "Maraschino Liqueur"
      },
      "amount": 1,
      "unit": "tsp",
      "metric": {
        "amount": 5,
        "unit": "ml"
      }
    },
    {
      "key": "cocktail.aviation.ingredient.4",
      "item": {
        "key": "ingredient.creme_de_violette",
        "default": "Creme de Violette"
      },
      "amount": 1,
      "unit": "tsp",
      "metric": {
        "amount": 5,
        "unit": "ml"
      }
    }
  ],
  "instructions": {
    "key": "cocktail.aviation.instructions",
    "default": "Shake all the ingredients in a cocktail shaker with cubed ice and fine-strain into a chilled coupe glass. There's no garnish, but you may choose to perform a salute to your relevant country of origin."
  },
  "history": {
    "key": "cocktail.aviation.history",
    "default": "The first reference I can find for the Aviation cocktail is in the 1916 book Recipes for Mixed Drinks by Hugo R. Ensslin. This places the likely creation date of the drink slap-bang in the middle of the golden era of aviation. It's easy to forget, given the mundane commercialization of air travel today, that once upon a time aviators were the rock stars of the world. It contains gin, traditionally the preferred tipple of flying men and women, and is even the color of a morning blue sky."
  },
  "tasting_note": {
    "key": "cocktail.aviation.tasting_note",
    "default": "A delicate pale lavender cocktail with floral violet notes, balanced citrus from fresh lemon, and the subtle sweetness of maraschino. The gin provides a crisp juniper backbone, creating an elegant, aromatic drink reminiscent of a morning blue sky."
  }
}
