The Caesar cocktail, Canada's brunch (or anytime) drink is similar to a Bloody Mary, with a few key changes. Once you try one, you'll never go back. 158 calories and 7 Weight Watchers Freestyle SP

Although the Caesar (the cocktail, not the salad) is a drink reminiscent of my wayward twenties and several queasy morning-afters, I still have a very soft spot for this tomato-based cocktail. Okay, I wasn't actually that wayward, though perhaps my story about the Kamikaze shots had you thinking otherwise. At the end of a long dinner shift at the restaurant where I worked during some of my university years, the staff would line up at the bar with the vodka, Clamato juice, Worcestershire sauce and Tabasco sauce to make some stiff cocktails. Who said these babies need to be relegated to brunch on Sundays?
If you've never heard of a Caesar that doesn't involve romaine lettuce and creamy dressing, you're not alone. It likely means that you are neither a Canadian nor a regular visitor to my maple-leafed homeland. In fact, you are probably thinking that the drink in the picture looks suspiciously like a Bloody Mary. However, there are several distinct differences, starting with the Clamato juice. This juice, as the name suggests, is a mixture of tomato juice and clam broth and is found on the shelves of most supermarkets in the United States. I know the flavor combination sounds questionable, but you really can't taste the clams. At least I can't. In fact, I prefer it over tomato juice because it is not as thick and makes the cocktail go down more smoothly than a Bloody Mary.

The Clamato juice is mixed with vodka, kicked up with Worcestershire and Tabasco sauce (I like mine spicy) and served in a glass rimmed with celery salt. Traditionally, it is served with a rib of celery, but I also toss in a couple of pimento-stuffed olives. The big ones. I always save them to the end because, after marinating in the cocktail, they become little drunken orbs of joy.
So, who the heck thought of this crazy drink combination? As the story goes, the Caesar was invented in 1969 by Walter Chell, who was given the task of coming up with a signature drink for a new Italian restaurant opening in Calgary. Chell found inspiration in the classic Italian dish, Spaghetti alle Vongole (Spaghetti with Clams). The Caesar became an instant sensation and continues to be so popular that, in 2009, a petition was started to make the Caesar into Canada's national drink. Move over Molson...here comes the Clamato.
If a petition isn't enough to convince you, then perhaps this purported statistic will: Over 350 million Caesars are consumed each year in Canada. There are only 34 million people living in Canada. So, either we're filling up the mountain water holes with Caesars (which might explain some of those drunken moose stories) or we think these cocktails are pretty darn tasty. So, get out there and pick up some Clamato juice and I'll raise my Caesar-filled glass to you. Eh?
The recipe:
Spread the celery salt onto a small plate. Rub the rim of one 12-ounce glass with a lime wedge. Turn the glass upside down and dip the rim of the glass into the celery salt. Repeat with remaining 3 glasses.

Fill each glass with ice cubes. Divide the vodka equally between the 4 glasses. Pour Clamato juice into each glass.

Season each Caesar with several dashes of Worcestershire and Tabasco sauces, to desired spiciness. Stir each cocktail with a stir stick. Garnish with celery sticks, olives and remaining lime wedges. Serve.

More of my favorite cocktails:
Cookin' Canuck's Kamikaze Cocktail or Shot
Cookin' Canuck's Frozen Strawberry & Lime Daiquiri
Creative Culinary's Blueberry Lemonade Vodka Cocktail
Family Style Food's Italian Greyhound with Rosemary Sugar
Inspired Taste's Pear & Cranberry Cocktail
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The Caesar Cocktail, aka the Canadian Bloody Mary
Ingredients
- ¼ cup celery salt*
- 1 lime cut into 8 wedges
- Ice cubes
- 6 ounces vodka
- 32 ounces Clamato juice
- several dashes of Worcestershire sauce for each
- several dashes of Tabasco sauce for each
- 4 long ribs of celery*
- 8 pimento-stuffed olives optional*
Instructions
- Spread the celery salt onto a small plate. Rub the rim of one 12-ounce glass with a lime wedge. Turn the glass upside down and dip the rim of the glass into the celery salt. Repeat with remaining 3 glasses.
- Fill each glass with ice cubes. Divide the vodka equally between the 4 glasses. Pour Clamato juice into each glass.
- Season each Caesar with several dashes of Worcestershire and Tabasco sauces, to desired spiciness. Stir each cocktail with a stir stick.
- Garnish with celery sticks, olives and remaining lime wedges. Serve.
Video
Notes
Nutrition
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Danie
Yum. One of my favourites. Better than celery? Pickled spicy green beans, or pickled asparagus.
Also, some people make them with horseradish in them. Also tasty.
Save-on-Meats, a local diner in Vancouver, makes peperoni infused vodka to use in their caesars. Oh man are they good.
maria
its my favourite i am from toronto but make it with gin insted of vodka it will give it so much flavour you will never have it with vodka again
Heidi / foodiecrush
you read my Superbowl mind and have solved all of my non-football needs. LOVE a BM in the AM! XO
Marla
This is much more sophisticated than those Kamikazes. Thank goodness for that. Pretty miss Dara 🙂
Trisha
Motts clamato makes it truly Canadian, and delicious, no other clamato juice I've tried comes close!
Joanne (Inspired Taste)
These look absolutely stunning! I'm not usually a fan of Bloody Marys but after seeing that photo, I might need to double check!
Marly
Love the celery salt edging on the glass. Tomatoes makes this entirely healthy, right?
Lisa@One Cook Two Kitchens
As a confessed Clamatoholic, I LOVE this version. And the olives are wonderful! Thank you Dara! (And Sandy, it does make a wonderful mocktail!)
Ashley's Cooking Adventures
Bloody Marys are my FAVORITE!!! I am drooling and sad because I have to wait 5 more months til baby is here to enjoy one!!
Nikki
lol me too... I'm thinking of making myself a virgin...
Suzanne
My favorite drink ever! I just didn't know that I had been fixing the Canadian version all along. 😀