Shaken not stirred
Vodka Martini (shaken, not stirred) and in recent films, the Vespa Martini
Vodka Martini (shaken, not stirred) and in recent films, the Vespa Martini
He drinks a vodka martini "shaken, not stirred."
BooksIn the James Bond novels he drinks a total of 317 drinks. His favourite drink is a straight whiskey (101 total) He has 30 glasses of champagne, and in "You Only Live Twice" he has 35 sakes.The Vodka Martini tallies up a measly 19 totals. Only slightly over the gin martinis- 16.MoviesIn the movies, his signature drink is the "vodka martini, shaken, not stirred", but in the 2006 relaunch starring Daniel Craig ("Casino Royale" II), Bond first defines the drink (a "Vesper") then notably dismisses this as pretentious ("Do I look like I give a damn?").
beer
As James Bond used the expression first then the answer is 007
The famous variant of a martini made famous by the James Bond movie "Casino Royale" starring Daniel Craig, is the Vesper Martini. Its ingredients are:* Gordon's Dry Gin* Vodka* Kina Lillet (no longer produced)* A piece of lemon peel, twisted
Smirnoff
either ask James bond or buy a shaker like the ones you see on bond or on amazon or household department stores! x
Vesper Martini 3 oz. Gin 1 oz. Vodka 0.5 oz. Lillet Blanc "Shake it very well until it's ice-cold, then add a large thin slice of lemon-peel." there ya go!
There is no well known fictional hero in modern culture that takes his martini stirred, not fried. However James bond who is a well known fictional hero of modern culture takes his martini shaken not stirred.
BooksIn the James Bond novels he drinks a total of 317 drinks. His favourite drink is a straight whiskey (101 total) He has 30 glasses of champagne, and in "You Only Live Twice" he has 35 sakes.The Vodka Martini tallies up a measly 19 totals. Only slightly over the gin martinis- 16.MoviesIn the movies, his signature drink is the "vodka martini, shaken, not stirred", but in the 2006 relaunch starring Daniel Craig ("Casino Royale" II), Bond first defines the drink (a "Vesper") then notably dismisses this as pretentious ("Do I look like I give a damn?").