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Cocktail Glossary

204 bartending terms — techniques, tools, ingredients, and drink styles explained.

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Techniques & Methods

How drinks are made: shaking, stirring, muddling, layering, and more.

Batching

intermediate

Pre-mixing large quantities of a cocktail recipe for efficient service at events or busy bars. Scale recipes by volume, adjust dilution (add 15-20% water), and …

Blending

beginner

Using a blender to create frozen cocktails with smooth, slushy consistency. Blend with crushed ice for 5-10 seconds. Essential for Piña Colada, Frozen Daiquiri, and …

Building

beginner

Assembling a cocktail directly in the serving glass without separate mixing. Pour ingredients over ice, give a brief stir, and serve. Used for Highballs, Gin …

Carbonating

advanced

Adding CO₂ to cocktails using a soda siphon, iSi whip, or forced carbonation rig. Creates effervescent drinks. Chill liquids thoroughly before carbonating for better CO₂ …

Clarification

advanced

Removing particles from a cocktail using milk proteins (casein), agar-agar, or gelatin to create crystal-clear, shelf-stable drinks. The milk punch technique dates back to the …

Double Straining

intermediate

Using both a Hawthorne strainer and a fine mesh sieve simultaneously for a crystal-clear pour. Catches ice shards, herb fragments, and pulp that a single …

Dry Shake

intermediate

Shaking cocktail ingredients without ice first to emulsify egg whites or aquafaba, creating a stable, creamy foam. After the dry shake, add ice and shake …

Expressing

beginner

Squeezing a citrus peel over the surface of a finished drink to release aromatic oils. The oils create a fragrant mist that enhances the nose. …

Fat-Washing

advanced

Infusing spirits with liquid fat (bacon grease, butter, coconut oil), then freezing to solidify and remove the fat while retaining its savory flavor. Creates rich, …

Flaming

advanced

Igniting spirits or citrus oils for dramatic visual effect and caramelized flavor. Used for flamed orange peels, flaming absinthe, and theatrical presentations. Requires safety awareness.

Flash Blending

intermediate

A brief 3-5 second pulse blend with crushed ice, developed for Tiki-style drinks. Achieves a lightly aerated, slushy texture without the full smoothie consistency of …

Float

intermediate

Gently pouring a spirit or liqueur on top of a finished drink so it sits on the surface. Creates a visual layer and a flavor …

Infusing

intermediate

Steeping ingredients (herbs, spices, fruits, teas) in spirits over hours or days to extract their flavors. Strain when desired intensity is reached. The foundation of …

Layering

advanced

Carefully pouring ingredients over the back of a bar spoon so they float in distinct density layers. Heavier syrups sink, lighter spirits float. The technique …

Muddling

beginner

Pressing herbs, fruit, or sugar in a glass with a muddler to release essential oils and juices. Gentle pressure for herbs (to avoid bitterness from …

Reverse Dry Shake

advanced

Shaking with ice first (standard shake), then straining out ice and shaking again without ice. Produces a silkier, denser foam than the traditional dry shake. …

Rinse

intermediate

Coating the inside of a glass with a small amount of intensely flavored spirit (typically absinthe, mezcal, or Islay scotch), then discarding the excess. Adds …

Rolling

intermediate

Gently pouring a cocktail back and forth between two vessels (usually two halves of a shaker) for light mixing and aeration. Used for Bloody Marys …

Shaking

beginner

Vigorously mixing ingredients with ice in a sealed shaker to chill, dilute, and aerate. The standard technique for cocktails containing citrus, dairy, or egg. A …

Sous Vide

advanced

Using precise temperature-controlled water baths for rapid, consistent infusions and syrups. A 2-hour sous vide infusion can replace days of traditional maceration with reproducible results.

Stirring

beginner

Gently mixing spirit-forward cocktails with a bar spoon in a mixing glass to chill and dilute without introducing air bubbles. Preserves clarity and silky texture. …

Straining

beginner

Separating liquid from ice and solids using a Hawthorne strainer (for shaker tins) or julep strainer (for mixing glasses). Essential for delivering a clean pour.

Superjuicing

advanced

Using citric acid and citrus peels to extract 6-8x more juice than traditional juicing. The acid breaks down cell walls in the peel, releasing pectin-bound …

Swizzling

intermediate

Spinning a swizzle stick (traditionally a Bois Lélé branch from Martinique) between your palms inside the glass to mix ingredients and frost the exterior. The …

Throwing

advanced

Pouring liquid in a high arc between two vessels — a dramatic Spanish bartending tradition. Creates gentle aeration and a slightly different texture than stirring, …

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Spirits & Base Liquors

Core distilled spirits: vodka, gin, rum, whiskey, tequila, brandy.

Absinthe

intermediate

High-proof (55-75% ABV) anise-flavored spirit containing wormwood. Banned for decades due to thujone fears (now debunked). Used primarily as a rinse or modifier rather than …

Aquavit

intermediate

Scandinavian spirit flavored with caraway and/or dill seeds, often with additional botanicals. Traditionally served ice-cold with fatty foods. Gaining popularity as a cocktail base in …

Baijiu

advanced

Chinese grain spirit (40-65% ABV) and the world's most consumed spirit by volume. Made from sorghum, rice, or wheat using solid-state fermentation in earth pits. …

Bourbon

beginner

American whiskey made from at least 51% corn, aged in new charred oak barrels. Sweet, full-bodied, with notes of vanilla, caramel, and oak. Kentucky produces …

Brandy

beginner

Distilled wine or fruit juice. The broad category includes cognac, armagnac, pisco, grappa, calvados (apple brandy), and eau de vie. One of the oldest spirits, …

Cachaça

intermediate

Brazilian sugarcane spirit distilled from fresh pressed cane juice (not molasses like most rum). The base of Caipirinha, Brazil's national cocktail. Aged versions develop complex …

Cognac

intermediate

French grape brandy exclusively from the Cognac region, double-distilled in copper pot stills and aged in Limousin oak. Age grades: VS (2+ years), VSOP (4+ …

Genever

advanced

Dutch and Belgian malt wine-based juniper spirit — gin's historical ancestor. Richer and maltier than London Dry gin, with a whiskey-like body. Oude (old-style) and …

Gin

beginner

Juniper-flavored spirit with complex botanicals including coriander, angelica root, citrus peels, and more. London Dry is the dominant cocktail style, but Old Tom, Navy Strength, …

Irish Whiskey

beginner

Triple-distilled Irish spirit known for smooth, approachable character. Typically lighter and less smoky than Scotch. Pot still whiskey (using unmalted barley) is uniquely Irish.

Japanese Whisky

intermediate

Precision-crafted whisky inspired by Scotch tradition with Japanese refinement. Known for balance, subtlety, and meticulous blending. Suntory and Nikka are the dominant houses.

Mezcal

intermediate

Smoky agave spirit where the piñas are roasted in earthen pits before distillation. Tequila is technically a subset of mezcal. Over 30 agave species can …

Overproof

intermediate

Any spirit bottled above 50% ABV (100 proof). Used for floats (where a small amount adds punch), flaming (higher proof ignites more easily), and Tiki …

Pisco

intermediate

Peruvian and Chilean grape brandy, unaged and aromatic. The base for Pisco Sour, one of South America's most celebrated cocktails. Peru and Chile both claim …

Rum

beginner

Sugarcane-derived spirit spanning white (unaged), gold (lightly aged), dark (heavily aged), and overproof expressions. Production methods vary wildly by region: column-distilled in Puerto Rico, pot-distilled …

Rye Whiskey

beginner

American whiskey made with at least 51% rye grain. Spicier and drier than bourbon, with peppery, herbal notes. The original whiskey for Manhattans, Old Fashioneds, …

Scotch Whisky

intermediate

Scottish whisky aged minimum 3 years in oak casks. Single malt (one distillery, 100% malted barley) vs blended (multiple distilleries). Peated styles from Islay have …

Soju

beginner

Korean clear spirit (16-25% ABV), traditionally distilled from rice but now often made from sweet potatoes or tapioca. Extremely versatile in cocktails and food pairing. …

Tequila

beginner

Spirit distilled from blue Weber agave grown in designated Mexican regions (primarily Jalisco). Categories by aging: blanco (unaged), reposado (2-12 months), añejo (1-3 years), extra …

Vodka

beginner

Neutral spirit distilled from grains, potatoes, or grapes to achieve a clean, nearly flavorless profile. The most versatile cocktail base, it lets other ingredients shine. …

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Liqueurs & Modifiers

Sweet and bitter liqueurs, amari, vermouths, and bitters.

Amaretto

beginner

Italian almond-flavored liqueur with marzipan character. Despite the name (from 'amaro' meaning bitter), it's sweet and nutty. Disaronno is the leading brand. Used in Amaretto …

Amaro

intermediate

Italian category of bitter herbal liqueurs (plural: amari). Served as digestif or used in cocktails. Ranges from light (Aperol) to intensely bitter (Fernet). Montenegro, Averna, …

Angostura Bitters

beginner

The essential cocktail bitters since 1824, created in Angostura, Venezuela (now made in Trinidad). A few dashes define Old Fashioned, Manhattan, and countless classics. 44.7% …

Aperol

beginner

Lighter Italian bitter aperitif at just 11% ABV, sweeter and less intense than Campari. Flavored with gentian, rhubarb, and cinchona. The star of Aperol Spritz, …

Baileys

beginner

Irish cream liqueur combining Irish whiskey with fresh dairy cream. The original cream liqueur (launched 1974) and still the category leader. Used in Mudslide, Irish …

Benedictine

intermediate

French herbal liqueur with honey, spice, and citrus notes. Originally attributed to Benedictine monks (though this origin is debated). B&B is the pre-mixed Benedictine + …

Campari

beginner

Iconic Italian bitter aperitif with a vivid red color and distinctively bitter orange-herbal flavor. The backbone of the Negroni, Americano, and Boulevardier. 25% ABV, originally …

Chartreuse

intermediate

French herbal liqueur made by Carthusian monks since 1737 from a secret recipe of 130 botanicals. Green Chartreuse (55% ABV) is intensely herbal; Yellow (40%) …

Crème de Cassis

beginner

French blackcurrant liqueur, sweet and deeply fruity. The key ingredient in Kir (with white wine) and Kir Royale (with Champagne). Best from Dijon, Burgundy. Typically …

Crème de Violette

intermediate

Violet-flavored liqueur that gives the Aviation cocktail its signature purple hue. Nearly extinct for decades, its 2007 reintroduction (by Rothman & Winter) revived the classic …

Curaçao

beginner

Orange liqueur originating from the island of Curaçao, made from dried laraha orange peels. The blue-colored variant (Blue Curaçao) is iconic for tropical drinks. Pierre …

Drambuie

intermediate

Scottish liqueur made from aged Scotch whisky, heather honey, herbs, and spices. The base of the Rusty Nail (Drambuie + Scotch). Name derives from the …

Falernum

intermediate

Caribbean spiced syrup or low-proof liqueur (11% ABV for John D. Taylor's Velvet Falernum) with lime, almond, clove, and ginger. Essential Tiki modifier appearing in …

Fernet-Branca

intermediate

Intensely bitter Italian amaro made from 27 herbs and spices. Cult following among bartenders worldwide — the 'bartender's handshake' (ordering Fernet at a bar signals …

Galliano

intermediate

Italian vanilla-anise herbal liqueur in a distinctive tall yellow bottle. The defining ingredient in Harvey Wallbanger and Golden Cadillac. Contains over 30 herbs and botanicals.

Kahlúa

beginner

Mexican coffee liqueur made with Arabica coffee, sugarcane spirit, and vanilla. The key ingredient in Espresso Martini, White Russian, and Black Russian. 20% ABV.

Maraschino

intermediate

Cherry-derived liqueur from Luxardo marasca cherries, but dry and nutty rather than sweet cherry candy. Essential for Aviation, Last Word, Hemingway Daiquiri, and Martinez. Not …

Orange Bitters

beginner

Citrus-forward bitters made from orange peel, cardamom, caraway, and coriander. Once a standard Martini ingredient (pre-Prohibition), now experiencing a revival. Regan's and Fee Brothers are …

Peychaud's Bitters

intermediate

New Orleans anise-forward bitters created by Antoine Peychaud in the 1830s. Essential for the Sazerac and integral to New Orleans cocktail culture. Lighter and more …

St-Germain

beginner

French elderflower liqueur launched in 2007, dubbed 'the bartender's ketchup' because it pairs well with everything. Delicate floral-tropical flavor at 20% ABV. Versatile modifier for …

Triple Sec

beginner

Orange-flavored liqueur made by triple-distilling orange peels. Cointreau is the premium benchmark at 40% ABV. Used in Margarita, Cosmopolitan, Sidecar, and countless other cocktails.

Vermouth

beginner

Aromatized fortified wine infused with botanicals, roots, and spices. Dry vermouth (white, French-style) is essential for Martinis; sweet vermouth (red, Italian-style) for Manhattans and Negronis. …

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Glassware & Serveware

Glass types, serving vessels, their history and proper use.

Absinthe Glass

advanced

Reservoir glass with a dose line (bubble or etched mark) indicating the correct pour of absinthe before the water drip ritual. Part of the absinthe …

Champagne Flute

beginner

Tall, narrow stemmed glass designed to preserve carbonation and direct bubbles upward. The narrow opening concentrates aromas. Used for Champagne cocktails, French 75, Bellini, and …

Collins Glass

beginner

Taller and narrower than a highball (12-14 oz), designed for the Tom Collins and similar long, fizzy drinks. The extra height preserves carbonation by reducing …

Copper Mug

beginner

Traditional hammered copper vessel for Moscow Mule. Copper conducts cold efficiently, creating a frosty exterior that enhances the drinking experience. The original mug was created …

Coupe Glass

beginner

Shallow, broad-bowled stemmed glass (5-7 oz) that has largely replaced the V-shaped martini glass in modern craft bars. Legend attributes its shape to Marie Antoinette's …

Glencairn

intermediate

Tulip-shaped nosing glass specifically designed for whisky tasting by Glencairn Crystal in 2001. The tapered mouth concentrates aromas while the wide bowl allows swirling. Now …

Highball Glass

beginner

Tall, narrow glass (8-12 oz) designed for spirit-and-mixer drinks served over ice. The workhorse glass for Gin & Tonic, Whisky Highball, and any long drink. …

Hurricane Glass

beginner

Tall, curvaceous glass shaped like a hurricane lamp, originally designed for Pat O'Brien's Hurricane cocktail in New Orleans. Used for tropical drinks, frozen cocktails, and …

Irish Coffee Glass

beginner

Heat-resistant stemmed glass mug with a handle, designed for hot cocktails. The stem keeps hands cool while the glass showcases layered cream floating on coffee. …

Julep Cup

intermediate

Metal cup (traditionally sterling silver or pewter) that frosts dramatically on the outside when filled with crushed ice. The signature vessel for Mint Julep, especially …

Martini Glass

beginner

Iconic V-shaped stemmed glass with a wide rim and long stem. While visually striking, the wide opening causes drinks to warm quickly and spill easily. …

Mixing Tin

beginner

The metal vessel (usually 28 oz or 18 oz) used for shaking or stirring cocktails. Part of a Boston shaker set (two tins or one …

Nick & Nora

intermediate

Rounded-bowl stemmed glass (5-6 oz) named after Nick and Nora Charles from 'The Thin Man' films. Elegant for spirit-forward cocktails like Martinis and Manhattans. The …

Punch Bowl

beginner

Large communal serving vessel for batch cocktails and punch, ranging from 1 gallon to 5+ gallons. Punch is the original mixed drink (pre-cocktail), and the …

Rocks Glass

beginner

Short, wide tumbler (6-10 oz) for spirit-forward cocktails served over ice or neat. Also called old fashioned glass or lowball. The thick base provides stability …

Shot Glass

beginner

Small glass (1-2 oz) for serving spirits neat in a single gulp (shots) or for measuring. Standard US shot is 1.5 oz. Collectible souvenir shot …

Snifter

beginner

Wide-bowled glass with a narrow top that concentrates aromas. Traditionally for brandy and cognac (warmed by cupping in the palm), but also used for barrel-aged …

Tiki Mug

beginner

Novelty ceramic vessels in Polynesian-inspired shapes — skulls, moai heads, pineapples, and tropical figures. Collectible art pieces that define Tiki bar culture. Each bar often …

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Ice & Temperature

Ice forms, chilling methods, dilution science.

Chilling

beginner

The process of cooling ingredients and glassware before serving. Methods include filling glasses with ice water, storing glasses in freezer, or pre-chilling spirits. A chilled …

Clear Ice

intermediate

Directionally frozen ice that is free of air bubbles and impurities, resulting in crystal-clear blocks. Made by insulating all sides except the top, forcing air …

Cracked Ice

beginner

Irregularly broken ice falling between cubed and crushed in size. Created by striking ice cubes with a muddler or mallet. Used in Tiki drinks and …

Crushed Ice

beginner

Finely broken ice that chills drinks rapidly due to high surface area. Essential for Juleps, Cobblers, Swizzles, and Tiki drinks. Creates a slushy texture and …

Dilution

intermediate

The water added to a cocktail from melting ice during shaking, stirring, or serving. Typically 20-25% of final volume. Far from being a flaw, proper …

Dry Ice

advanced

Solid carbon dioxide at -78.5°C that sublimates directly into gas, creating dramatic fog effects. Used for theatrical presentations. Never consume directly — it causes severe …

Flash Freezing

advanced

Rapid chilling using liquid nitrogen (-196°C) or an anti-griddle (frozen surface) to create instant frozen elements. Used for frozen garnishes, instant ice cream, and dramatic …

Frosting

beginner

Storing glasses in a freezer or filling with ice water to create a frosted, opaque exterior. The condensation layer insulates the drink. Particularly dramatic on …

Ice Block

intermediate

Large rectangular ice pieces hand-cut or mold-made for slow-melting service. Clear ice blocks are carved to fit specific glassware. A single large block in a …

Ice Sphere

intermediate

Large ball-shaped ice (typically 2-2.5 inches diameter) with the smallest surface-area-to-volume ratio of any ice shape. Melts slower than cubes, maintaining drink strength longer. Popular …

Pebble Ice

beginner

Small, uniform nugget ice (like Sonic or Chick-fil-A ice) that's chewable and porous. Absorbs flavors from the drink. Perfect for Swizzles, Juleps, and any drink …

Tempered Glass

beginner

Heat-treated glassware that resists thermal shock from sudden temperature changes. Essential for hot cocktails (Irish Coffee, Hot Toddy) where pouring boiling liquid into cold glass …

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Garnish & Presentation

Garnish types, plating, visual techniques.

Branded Ice Stamp

advanced

A heated metal stamp that brands logos, patterns, or designs into the surface of clear ice blocks. Used by high-end bars and for private events. …

Cocktail Cherry

beginner

Premium brandied cherries (Luxardo, Amarena, Filthy) used as garnish in Old Fashioneds, Manhattans, and Sours. Far superior to neon-red maraschino cherries, which are bleached, dyed, …

Cocktail Umbrella

beginner

Small paper parasols associated with Tiki bars and tropical drinks since the 1930s. More than kitsch — they signal fun, vacation, and the escapist spirit …

Dehydrated Fruit

intermediate

Oven or dehydrator-dried citrus wheels, pineapple rings, or apple slices used as shelf-stable garnish. Crispy, concentrated in color, and elegant. Dehydrate at 170°F/75°C for 4-6 …

Edible Flower

intermediate

Flowers used as garnish that are safe to consume: orchids, pansies, violets, nasturtium, lavender, hibiscus, chamomile, and rose petals. Adds color, elegance, and sometimes subtle …

Flag Garnish

beginner

A cherry and citrus half-moon (orange or pineapple) skewered together on a cocktail pick. The classic garnish for Whiskey Sour, Amaretto Sour, and Tiki drinks. …

Flamed Peel

intermediate

Igniting citrus oils by holding an orange peel near a lit match over the drink. The oils pass through the flame, caramelizing slightly and creating …

Salt Rim

beginner

Coating the glass rim with salt using a citrus wedge as adhesive, then pressing into a plate of salt. Classic for Margaritas. Only rim half …

Smoke Bubble

advanced

A bubble filled with aromatic smoke (applewood, cherry, hickory) that sits atop the drink and bursts when the guest breaks it. Created using a smoke …

Sprig

beginner

A small branch of fresh herbs (mint, rosemary, thyme, basil) used primarily for aroma. Placed near the straw so the drinker's nose passes through the …

Sugar Rim

beginner

Coating the glass rim with sugar, sometimes colored or flavored (cinnamon sugar, vanilla sugar). Used for Sidecars, Lemon Drops, and dessert cocktails. Apply citrus juice …

Swizzle Stick

intermediate

A stirring device originally carved from the Bois Lélé tree (Quararibea turbinata) in Martinique, with radiating prongs at one end. Spin between palms to mix …

Twist

beginner

A strip of citrus peel (typically 2-3 inches) expressed over a drink to release aromatic oils, then either dropped in, draped on the rim, or …

Wedge

beginner

A citrus quarter or eighth placed on the rim for the drinker to squeeze into their cocktail. The most interactive garnish — the guest controls …

Wheel

beginner

A thin, round cross-section of citrus sliced perpendicular to the fruit's axis. Placed on the rim, floated on the surface, or threaded on a pick. …

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Flavor Science

Taste components, balance, flavor pairing principles.

Acidity

beginner

Sourness from citrus juice, vinegar, or fermentation that provides brightness and backbone to cocktails. Lemon (pH ~2.0) and lime (pH ~2.2) are the workhorses. Acidity …

Balance

beginner

The harmony between sweet, sour, bitter, and spirit strength in a cocktail. A balanced drink has no single element that overwhelms. The golden ratio for …

Bitterness

beginner

The palate-cleansing taste contributed by bitters, amari, gentian, quinine, and certain botanicals. Humans are genetically wired to detect bitterness at low concentrations. In cocktails, bitterness …

Cordial

intermediate

A sweetened, flavored preparation used as a cocktail component. In the US, often synonymous with liqueur. In the UK/Australia, a non-alcoholic flavored syrup. Modern bartenders …

Finish

intermediate

The lingering taste and sensation after swallowing. A 'long finish' (flavors lasting 30+ seconds) is desirable in quality spirits. Cocktail finishes are influenced by bitters, …

Mouthfeel

intermediate

The physical sensation of a drink in the mouth: viscosity (thin vs thick), carbonation (prickle), astringency (drying), temperature, and texture (silky, creamy, velvety). Egg whites, …

Nose

intermediate

The aroma profile perceived before and during drinking. The nose delivers 80% of what we perceive as 'taste.' Garnishes, expressed oils, and aromatic spirits are …

Oleo Saccharum

intermediate

'Oil sugar' in Latin — citrus peels macerated in sugar to extract fragrant essential oils through osmosis. The foundation of classic punch. Takes 2-12 hours. …

Orgeat

intermediate

Almond-based syrup flavored with orange flower water and sugar. Essential for Mai Tai, Japanese Cocktail, and other Tiki/classic drinks. Pronounced 'or-ZHAT' (from French). Homemade versions …

Proof

beginner

Measurement of alcohol content. US proof equals 2× ABV (so 80 proof = 40% ABV). British proof was different (100° proof ≈ 57.15% ABV). Higher …

Shrub

intermediate

A drinking vinegar syrup combining fruit, sugar, and vinegar (usually apple cider vinegar). Colonial-era preservation technique revived by craft bartenders. Adds tangy, fruity complexity to …

Sweetness

beginner

The perceived sugar level in a cocktail, balanced against sour and bitter components. Sources include simple syrup, liqueurs, fresh fruit, and honey. Too sweet masks …

Tincture

intermediate

A high-proof alcohol extract of a single flavor — cinnamon, lavender, vanilla, chili, etc. Made by soaking ingredients in overproof spirit for days/weeks, then straining. …

Umami

advanced

The savory 'fifth taste' increasingly explored in cocktails via MSG, miso, tomato, shiitake, soy sauce, Worcestershire, and dashi. Adds depth and savoriness. The Bloody Mary …

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Cocktail Families & Styles

Sour, Old Fashioned, Highball, Tiki, and other template families.

Cobbler

intermediate

Wine or spirit + sugar + crushed ice, garnished lavishly with seasonal fruit. The Sherry Cobbler was the most popular American drink in the mid-1800s …

Collins

beginner

A fizz served in a tall glass over ice, making it longer and more refreshing. Tom Collins (gin), John Collins (bourbon/genever), and Vodka Collins are …

Daisy

intermediate

Spirit + citrus + orange liqueur (the addition of orange liqueur distinguishes it from a standard sour). Margarita literally means 'daisy' in Spanish. Sidecar and …

Fix

intermediate

A sour served over crushed ice with seasonal fruit garnish. Essentially a cobbler made with spirits rather than wine. The Fix was common in Jerry …

Fizz

beginner

A sour plus soda water, served without ice in a small glass. The soda provides effervescence and lengthens the drink. Ramos Gin Fizz (with cream …

Flip

intermediate

Historical family using spirit + whole egg + sugar, shaken vigorously. Rich, dessert-like texture. Originally made with hot ale and rum (Colonial America), evolved into …

Highball

beginner

Spirit + carbonated mixer served over ice in a tall glass. The simplest long-drink template: Gin & Tonic, Whisky Soda, Rum & Coke, Vodka Soda. …

Julep

beginner

Spirit + sugar + fresh mint over crushed ice in a frosted metal cup. The Mint Julep is the Kentucky Derby's official drink. The frosted …

Martini Family

intermediate

Spirit + vermouth (and/or other modifiers), stirred and served up. Includes the Martini, Manhattan, Negroni, Rob Roy, and Boulevardier. The template for sophisticated, spirit-forward cocktails.

Old Fashioned

beginner

The original cocktail template: spirit + sugar + bitters + water. Predates the word 'cocktail' itself (1806 definition). The simplest mixed drink structure, showcasing the …

Punch

beginner

The original mixed drink predating 'cocktail' by centuries: spirit + citrus + sugar + water + spice. Served communally from a bowl. The name likely …

Rickey

beginner

Spirit + lime juice + soda water with no sweetener. Named after Colonel Joe Rickey who ordered bourbon with lime and soda in 1880s Washington …

Sling

intermediate

Spirit + water + sugar + nutmeg — an early American drink format that predates the cocktail (which added bitters to a sling). Singapore Sling …

Smash

beginner

A julep variation with seasonal fruit muddled in alongside the mint and sugar. The fruit adds sweetness, color, and flavor variety. Whiskey Smash (bourbon + …

Sour

beginner

The largest cocktail family, built on spirit + citrus juice + sweetener. Whiskey Sour, Daiquiri, Margarita, and Gimlet are all sours. The template is infinitely …

Spritz

beginner

Italian aperitivo format: sparkling wine + bitter liqueur + soda water, served in a wine glass over ice. Aperol Spritz dominates globally, but Campari Spritz, …

Swizzle

intermediate

A tall Caribbean drink mixed by spinning a swizzle stick between the palms. Built over crushed ice with spirit, citrus, sweetener, and bitters. The drink …

Tiki

intermediate

Elaborate rum-based cocktails with tropical fruit juices, exotic syrups (orgeat, falernum, passion fruit), and complex multi-spirit blends. Created by Don the Beachcomber and Trader Vic …

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Bar Culture & History

Prohibition, speakeasy, cocktail eras, famous bartenders.

Aperitivo

beginner

Italian pre-dinner drinking tradition featuring light, bitter cocktails (Negroni, Spritz, Americano) accompanied by small snacks (stuzzichini). Occurs between 6-8 PM and is a social ritual, …

Bartender vs Mixologist

beginner

The ongoing industry debate about terminology and craft identity. 'Bartender' emphasizes hospitality and service; 'mixologist' emphasizes technique and innovation. Many top bartenders reject the mixologist …

Craft Cocktail Revival

beginner

The 1990s-2000s movement back to classic recipes, fresh ingredients, artisanal spirits, and ice programs. Led by pioneers like Dale DeGroff, Sasha Petraske (Milk & Honey), …

Digestif

beginner

Post-meal drinks believed to aid digestion: amaro, grappa, cognac, limoncello, port. Typically higher-proof or intensely flavored. The counterpart to aperitivo — together they bookend the …

Golden Age

beginner

The 1860s-1910s era when the modern cocktail was codified. Jerry Thomas published the first cocktail book (1862), vermouth arrived in America, and bartenders became respected …

Happy Hour

beginner

The tradition of discounted drinks in the early evening (typically 4-7 PM). Originated in the US Navy (1920s) as pre-dinner entertainment. Now a global bar …

IBA Official Cocktails

beginner

The International Bartenders Association's curated list of standardized cocktail recipes, divided into 'The Unforgettables,' 'Contemporary Classics,' and 'New Era Drinks.' Updated periodically. The reference for …

Jerry Thomas

beginner

'The father of American mixology' who wrote 'The Bar-Tender's Guide' (1862), the first published cocktail book. Known for the Blue Blazer (flaming whiskey thrown between …

Last Call

beginner

The final opportunity to order drinks before a bar closes for the night. Laws vary by jurisdiction (2 AM in most US states, 4 AM …

Mixology

beginner

The art, study, and craft of mixing cocktails. The term dates to the 1850s but gained renewed currency in the 2000s craft revival. Some bartenders …

Prohibition

beginner

The 1920-1933 US ban on the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages (18th Amendment). Drove cocktail innovation underground, pushed bartenders to Europe and Cuba, …

Regulars

beginner

Frequent bar patrons who build personal relationships with bartenders and staff. Regulars are the backbone of a bar's community and revenue. Good bartenders remember regulars' …

Speakeasy

beginner

Hidden illegal bars during Prohibition, entered through unmarked doors, phone booths, or back alleys. The secrecy added romance to drinking. Today, 'speakeasy' describes cocktail bars …

Tiki Culture

beginner

The Polynesian-themed aesthetic encompassing tropical cocktails, exotic décor (carved totems, thatched roofs, bamboo), and escapist fantasy. Created by Americans, not Polynesians — a romanticized, sometimes …

Tiki Renaissance

intermediate

The revival of exotic rum cocktails starting with Don the Beachcomber (Ernest Gantt) in 1933 Hollywood, followed by Trader Vic (Victor Bergeron). Created an escapist …

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Measurements & Service

Units, pour counts, service etiquette, bar math.

86'd

beginner

Industry slang with two meanings: (1) an item that's run out ('we're 86'd on limes'), or (2) a person who's been refused service or banned. …

Bar Spoon Measure

beginner

Approximately 5 ml (1 teaspoon), the volume held by the bowl of a standard bar spoon. Used for small additions of syrups, liqueurs, and absinthe. …

Call / Well / Top Shelf

beginner

Three tiers of spirit quality in bars. Well (house): cheapest option, stored in the speed rail. Call: mid-range, ordered by brand name ('I'll have a …

Dash

beginner

A small shake from a bitters bottle, approximately 1/8 teaspoon (0.6 ml). The standard bitters measurement. One quick downward flick of the bottle. Recipes typically …

Free Pour

intermediate

Pouring without a jigger using a mental count system with a speed pourer. Standard speed: 4-count equals approximately 1.5 oz (one shot). Fast, theatrical, but …

Jigger Measurement

beginner

Standard double-sided measuring tool: 1 oz on one end, 2 oz on the other (or 1/1.5 oz, or 0.75/1.5 oz). The foundation of precise cocktails. …

Mise en Place

beginner

'Everything in its place' — the French culinary principle applied to bartending. Pre-cutting garnishes, pre-juicing citrus, organizing bottles, filling ice wells, and preparing all tools …

Neat

beginner

Spirit served at room temperature in a glass with no ice, water, or mixers. The purest way to taste a spirit's character. Typically served in …

On the Rocks

beginner

Served over ice cubes in a rocks glass. The ice chills the spirit and gradually dilutes it, opening up flavors over time. A large single …

Parts

beginner

Ratio-based recipe notation that scales to any volume: '2 parts gin, 1 part vermouth' works whether a 'part' is 1 oz, 30 ml, or a …

Speed Rail

beginner

The metal rack mounted below the bar top that holds the most frequently used spirits (typically vodka, gin, rum, tequila, bourbon, triple sec). Arranged for …

Up / Straight Up

beginner

Shaken or stirred with ice, then strained into a stemmed glass and served without ice. 'Up' means chilled but no ice in the glass. A …

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Modern & Advanced

Molecular mixology, fat-washing, clarification, sous vide.

Acid-Adjusted Juice

advanced

Standardizing the acidity of citrus juice by adding citric acid (for lemon character) or malic acid (for apple roundness) to reach a target pH/Brix. Ensures …

Agar Clarification

advanced

Using agar-agar (seaweed-derived gelatin) to clarify cloudy liquids. Set the liquid into a gel with agar, freeze it, then thaw — the gel structure traps …

Barrel Aging

intermediate

Resting batched cocktails in small oak barrels (typically 1-5 liters) for weeks or months. The wood imparts vanilla, caramel, and spice while rounding sharp edges. …

Centrifuge

advanced

High-speed spinning device that separates liquids by density. Used in cocktails for juice clarification (removing pulp and particles), fat separation, and creating layered ingredient preparations. …

Cocktail on Tap

intermediate

Pre-batched cocktails served from a draft system, optionally force-carbonated. Advantages: consistency, speed, reduced waste, and the ability to serve carbonated cocktails. Growing trend in bars …

Enzymes

advanced

Pectinase (breaks down fruit pectin for clear juice), amylase (converts starch to sugar), and other food-grade enzymes used in cocktail preparation. Pectinase creates crystal-clear fruit …

Hydrocolloids

advanced

Substances that form gels or modify texture when dissolved in water: xanthan gum (thickening), gellan gum (firm gels), methylcellulose (heat-set gels), and gum arabic (emulsification). …

Liquid Nitrogen

advanced

Cryogenic liquid at -196°C used for instant freezing, creating frozen glassware, flash-frozen garnishes, and dramatic fog effects. Evaporates completely, leaving no residue. Requires proper safety …

Milk Punch Clarification

advanced

Using milk proteins (casein) to clarify cocktails into crystal-clear, shelf-stable drinks. Hot cocktail is poured into cold milk, curdling it. The curds trap tannins, color, …

Nitro Cocktail

advanced

Cocktails dispensed through a nitrogen tap system, creating a creamy, cascading texture similar to Guinness. Nitrogen dissolves less than CO₂, producing tiny bubbles and a …

Rotary Evaporation

advanced

Laboratory equipment that distills liquids at low temperature and reduced pressure, capturing volatile aroma compounds without heat damage. Used to create delicate distillates of herbs, …

Saline Solution

intermediate

A 20% salt-water solution (by weight) used in drops to enhance flavors and suppress bitterness in cocktails. 2-3 drops is standard. Salt amplifies sweetness and …

Smoke Gun

intermediate

Handheld device that burns wood chips (cherry, applewood, hickory, mesquite) and channels smoke into cocktails, typically trapped under a glass cloche. Adds smoky aroma and …

Spherification

advanced

Using sodium alginate and calcium chloride to create liquid-filled edible spheres that burst in the mouth. Basic spherification (alginate in the cocktail) and reverse spherification …

Vacuum Infusion

advanced

Using an iSi whip or chamber vacuum sealer to rapidly infuse flavors in minutes instead of days. The vacuum forces liquid into the cellular structure …

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Ingredients & Botanicals

Syrups, bitters, shrubs, tinctures, fresh botanicals.

Activated Charcoal

intermediate

Fine black powder made from coconut shells or wood, processed to be highly porous. Creates dramatically black cocktails. Controversial: absorbs toxins (including potentially beneficial nutrients …

Aquafaba

beginner

The liquid from cooking or canning chickpeas — a vegan substitute for egg white in cocktails. Whips into a stable foam when shaken, creating the …

Aromatic Bitters

beginner

Complex, multi-spice bitters with warm notes of cinnamon, clove, gentian, and cardamom. Angostura is the archetype and the world's most widely used cocktail bitters. A …

Bitters

beginner

Concentrated botanical extracts — the 'seasoning' of cocktails. Made by infusing high-proof spirits with bittering agents (gentian, cinchona, wormwood), herbs, and spices. Used by the …

Cinnamon Syrup

beginner

Ceylon or cassia cinnamon sticks steeped in simple syrup (or simmered briefly) to create a warm, spiced sweetener. Used in autumn cocktails, hot toddies, and …

Citric Acid

intermediate

Powdered acid naturally found in citrus fruits. Used to adjust acidity in cocktails, create 'super juice' (combining acid with citrus peels for maximum yield), and …

Demerara Syrup

beginner

Syrup made from raw demerara sugar (large golden crystals from Guyana). Deeper, more complex sweetness with toffee and molasses notes compared to white sugar syrup. …

Egg White

beginner

Adds silky foam, body, and a velvety texture to cocktails when shaken vigorously. Essential for Whiskey Sour, Pisco Sour, Clover Club, and Ramos Gin Fizz. …

Falernum Syrup

intermediate

Caribbean spiced syrup combining lime zest, almond, clove, allspice, and ginger. Essential Tiki ingredient in Zombie, Royal Bermuda Yacht Club, and Corn 'n' Oil. Both …

Ginger Syrup

beginner

Fresh ginger juice (or grated ginger) cooked with sugar to create a spicy-sweet syrup. The base of the Penicillin cocktail and an excellent modifier for …

Grenadine

beginner

Pomegranate syrup that should be made from real pomegranate juice, sugar, and a touch of orange flower water. Commercial versions (like Rose's) are often just …

Honey Syrup

beginner

Honey diluted with warm water (usually 2:1 or 3:1 honey to water) for easier mixing into cold cocktails. Raw honey is too thick and viscous …

Malic Acid

intermediate

Apple-derived acid that provides a rounder, softer sourness than citric acid. Often blended with citric acid for more complex acidity profiles. Used in acid-adjusted juices …

Orange Flower Water

intermediate

Distillate of bitter orange (Citrus aurantium) blossoms, intensely fragrant and floral. Essential for Ramos Gin Fizz and orgeat syrup. Use sparingly — a few drops …

Orgeat Syrup

intermediate

Almond milk syrup flavored with orange flower water and sugar. The soul of Mai Tai — without quality orgeat, the drink falls flat. French in …

Rich Simple Syrup

beginner

A 2:1 sugar-to-water ratio (by weight) producing a thicker, sweeter syrup. Better shelf stability (1-2 months refrigerated) and more viscous mouthfeel. Favored in craft bars …

Rose Water

intermediate

Distillate of rose petals, providing delicate floral notes. Used sparingly (1-2 drops) in cocktails for a subtle perfumed quality. Common in Middle Eastern, South Asian, …

Simple Syrup

beginner

The most basic cocktail sweetener: equal parts white sugar and water (1:1 by weight), dissolved by heating or cold stirring. Integrates into cold drinks better …

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Absinthe

Spirits & Base Liquors

High-proof (55-75% ABV) anise-flavored spirit containing wormwood. Banned for decades due to thujone fears (now debunked). Used primarily as a rinse or modifier rather than …

Absinthe Glass

Glassware & Serveware

Reservoir glass with a dose line (bubble or etched mark) indicating the correct pour of absinthe before the water drip ritual. Part of the absinthe …

Acid-Adjusted Juice

Modern & Advanced

Standardizing the acidity of citrus juice by adding citric acid (for lemon character) or malic acid (for apple roundness) to reach a target pH/Brix. Ensures …

Acidity

Flavor Science

Sourness from citrus juice, vinegar, or fermentation that provides brightness and backbone to cocktails. Lemon (pH ~2.0) and lime (pH ~2.2) are the workhorses. Acidity …

Activated Charcoal

Ingredients & Botanicals

Fine black powder made from coconut shells or wood, processed to be highly porous. Creates dramatically black cocktails. Controversial: absorbs toxins (including potentially beneficial nutrients …

Agar Clarification

Modern & Advanced

Using agar-agar (seaweed-derived gelatin) to clarify cloudy liquids. Set the liquid into a gel with agar, freeze it, then thaw — the gel structure traps …

Amaretto

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Italian almond-flavored liqueur with marzipan character. Despite the name (from 'amaro' meaning bitter), it's sweet and nutty. Disaronno is the leading brand. Used in Amaretto …

Amaro

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Italian category of bitter herbal liqueurs (plural: amari). Served as digestif or used in cocktails. Ranges from light (Aperol) to intensely bitter (Fernet). Montenegro, Averna, …

Angostura Bitters

Liqueurs & Modifiers

The essential cocktail bitters since 1824, created in Angostura, Venezuela (now made in Trinidad). A few dashes define Old Fashioned, Manhattan, and countless classics. 44.7% …

Aperitivo

Bar Culture & History

Italian pre-dinner drinking tradition featuring light, bitter cocktails (Negroni, Spritz, Americano) accompanied by small snacks (stuzzichini). Occurs between 6-8 PM and is a social ritual, …

Aperol

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Lighter Italian bitter aperitif at just 11% ABV, sweeter and less intense than Campari. Flavored with gentian, rhubarb, and cinchona. The star of Aperol Spritz, …

Aquafaba

Ingredients & Botanicals

The liquid from cooking or canning chickpeas — a vegan substitute for egg white in cocktails. Whips into a stable foam when shaken, creating the …

Aquavit

Spirits & Base Liquors

Scandinavian spirit flavored with caraway and/or dill seeds, often with additional botanicals. Traditionally served ice-cold with fatty foods. Gaining popularity as a cocktail base in …

Aromatic Bitters

Ingredients & Botanicals

Complex, multi-spice bitters with warm notes of cinnamon, clove, gentian, and cardamom. Angostura is the archetype and the world's most widely used cocktail bitters. A …

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Baijiu

Spirits & Base Liquors

Chinese grain spirit (40-65% ABV) and the world's most consumed spirit by volume. Made from sorghum, rice, or wheat using solid-state fermentation in earth pits. …

Baileys

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Irish cream liqueur combining Irish whiskey with fresh dairy cream. The original cream liqueur (launched 1974) and still the category leader. Used in Mudslide, Irish …

Balance

Flavor Science

The harmony between sweet, sour, bitter, and spirit strength in a cocktail. A balanced drink has no single element that overwhelms. The golden ratio for …

Bar Spoon Measure

Measurements & Service

Approximately 5 ml (1 teaspoon), the volume held by the bowl of a standard bar spoon. Used for small additions of syrups, liqueurs, and absinthe. …

Barrel Aging

Modern & Advanced

Resting batched cocktails in small oak barrels (typically 1-5 liters) for weeks or months. The wood imparts vanilla, caramel, and spice while rounding sharp edges. …

Bartender vs Mixologist

Bar Culture & History

The ongoing industry debate about terminology and craft identity. 'Bartender' emphasizes hospitality and service; 'mixologist' emphasizes technique and innovation. Many top bartenders reject the mixologist …

Batching

Techniques & Methods

Pre-mixing large quantities of a cocktail recipe for efficient service at events or busy bars. Scale recipes by volume, adjust dilution (add 15-20% water), and …

Benedictine

Liqueurs & Modifiers

French herbal liqueur with honey, spice, and citrus notes. Originally attributed to Benedictine monks (though this origin is debated). B&B is the pre-mixed Benedictine + …

Bitterness

Flavor Science

The palate-cleansing taste contributed by bitters, amari, gentian, quinine, and certain botanicals. Humans are genetically wired to detect bitterness at low concentrations. In cocktails, bitterness …

Bitters

Ingredients & Botanicals

Concentrated botanical extracts — the 'seasoning' of cocktails. Made by infusing high-proof spirits with bittering agents (gentian, cinchona, wormwood), herbs, and spices. Used by the …

Blending

Techniques & Methods

Using a blender to create frozen cocktails with smooth, slushy consistency. Blend with crushed ice for 5-10 seconds. Essential for Piña Colada, Frozen Daiquiri, and …

Bourbon

Spirits & Base Liquors

American whiskey made from at least 51% corn, aged in new charred oak barrels. Sweet, full-bodied, with notes of vanilla, caramel, and oak. Kentucky produces …

Branded Ice Stamp

Garnish & Presentation

A heated metal stamp that brands logos, patterns, or designs into the surface of clear ice blocks. Used by high-end bars and for private events. …

Brandy

Spirits & Base Liquors

Distilled wine or fruit juice. The broad category includes cognac, armagnac, pisco, grappa, calvados (apple brandy), and eau de vie. One of the oldest spirits, …

Building

Techniques & Methods

Assembling a cocktail directly in the serving glass without separate mixing. Pour ingredients over ice, give a brief stir, and serve. Used for Highballs, Gin …

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Cachaça

Spirits & Base Liquors

Brazilian sugarcane spirit distilled from fresh pressed cane juice (not molasses like most rum). The base of Caipirinha, Brazil's national cocktail. Aged versions develop complex …

Call / Well / Top Shelf

Measurements & Service

Three tiers of spirit quality in bars. Well (house): cheapest option, stored in the speed rail. Call: mid-range, ordered by brand name ('I'll have a …

Campari

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Iconic Italian bitter aperitif with a vivid red color and distinctively bitter orange-herbal flavor. The backbone of the Negroni, Americano, and Boulevardier. 25% ABV, originally …

Carbonating

Techniques & Methods

Adding CO₂ to cocktails using a soda siphon, iSi whip, or forced carbonation rig. Creates effervescent drinks. Chill liquids thoroughly before carbonating for better CO₂ …

Centrifuge

Modern & Advanced

High-speed spinning device that separates liquids by density. Used in cocktails for juice clarification (removing pulp and particles), fat separation, and creating layered ingredient preparations. …

Champagne Flute

Glassware & Serveware

Tall, narrow stemmed glass designed to preserve carbonation and direct bubbles upward. The narrow opening concentrates aromas. Used for Champagne cocktails, French 75, Bellini, and …

Chartreuse

Liqueurs & Modifiers

French herbal liqueur made by Carthusian monks since 1737 from a secret recipe of 130 botanicals. Green Chartreuse (55% ABV) is intensely herbal; Yellow (40%) …

Chilling

Ice & Temperature

The process of cooling ingredients and glassware before serving. Methods include filling glasses with ice water, storing glasses in freezer, or pre-chilling spirits. A chilled …

Cinnamon Syrup

Ingredients & Botanicals

Ceylon or cassia cinnamon sticks steeped in simple syrup (or simmered briefly) to create a warm, spiced sweetener. Used in autumn cocktails, hot toddies, and …

Citric Acid

Ingredients & Botanicals

Powdered acid naturally found in citrus fruits. Used to adjust acidity in cocktails, create 'super juice' (combining acid with citrus peels for maximum yield), and …

Clarification

Techniques & Methods

Removing particles from a cocktail using milk proteins (casein), agar-agar, or gelatin to create crystal-clear, shelf-stable drinks. The milk punch technique dates back to the …

Clear Ice

Ice & Temperature

Directionally frozen ice that is free of air bubbles and impurities, resulting in crystal-clear blocks. Made by insulating all sides except the top, forcing air …

Cobbler

Cocktail Families & Styles

Wine or spirit + sugar + crushed ice, garnished lavishly with seasonal fruit. The Sherry Cobbler was the most popular American drink in the mid-1800s …

Cocktail Cherry

Garnish & Presentation

Premium brandied cherries (Luxardo, Amarena, Filthy) used as garnish in Old Fashioneds, Manhattans, and Sours. Far superior to neon-red maraschino cherries, which are bleached, dyed, …

Cocktail Umbrella

Garnish & Presentation

Small paper parasols associated with Tiki bars and tropical drinks since the 1930s. More than kitsch — they signal fun, vacation, and the escapist spirit …

Cocktail on Tap

Modern & Advanced

Pre-batched cocktails served from a draft system, optionally force-carbonated. Advantages: consistency, speed, reduced waste, and the ability to serve carbonated cocktails. Growing trend in bars …

Cognac

Spirits & Base Liquors

French grape brandy exclusively from the Cognac region, double-distilled in copper pot stills and aged in Limousin oak. Age grades: VS (2+ years), VSOP (4+ …

Collins

Cocktail Families & Styles

A fizz served in a tall glass over ice, making it longer and more refreshing. Tom Collins (gin), John Collins (bourbon/genever), and Vodka Collins are …

Collins Glass

Glassware & Serveware

Taller and narrower than a highball (12-14 oz), designed for the Tom Collins and similar long, fizzy drinks. The extra height preserves carbonation by reducing …

Copper Mug

Glassware & Serveware

Traditional hammered copper vessel for Moscow Mule. Copper conducts cold efficiently, creating a frosty exterior that enhances the drinking experience. The original mug was created …

Cordial

Flavor Science

A sweetened, flavored preparation used as a cocktail component. In the US, often synonymous with liqueur. In the UK/Australia, a non-alcoholic flavored syrup. Modern bartenders …

Coupe Glass

Glassware & Serveware

Shallow, broad-bowled stemmed glass (5-7 oz) that has largely replaced the V-shaped martini glass in modern craft bars. Legend attributes its shape to Marie Antoinette's …

Cracked Ice

Ice & Temperature

Irregularly broken ice falling between cubed and crushed in size. Created by striking ice cubes with a muddler or mallet. Used in Tiki drinks and …

Craft Cocktail Revival

Bar Culture & History

The 1990s-2000s movement back to classic recipes, fresh ingredients, artisanal spirits, and ice programs. Led by pioneers like Dale DeGroff, Sasha Petraske (Milk & Honey), …

Crushed Ice

Ice & Temperature

Finely broken ice that chills drinks rapidly due to high surface area. Essential for Juleps, Cobblers, Swizzles, and Tiki drinks. Creates a slushy texture and …

Crème de Cassis

Liqueurs & Modifiers

French blackcurrant liqueur, sweet and deeply fruity. The key ingredient in Kir (with white wine) and Kir Royale (with Champagne). Best from Dijon, Burgundy. Typically …

Crème de Violette

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Violet-flavored liqueur that gives the Aviation cocktail its signature purple hue. Nearly extinct for decades, its 2007 reintroduction (by Rothman & Winter) revived the classic …

Curaçao

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Orange liqueur originating from the island of Curaçao, made from dried laraha orange peels. The blue-colored variant (Blue Curaçao) is iconic for tropical drinks. Pierre …

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Daisy

Cocktail Families & Styles

Spirit + citrus + orange liqueur (the addition of orange liqueur distinguishes it from a standard sour). Margarita literally means 'daisy' in Spanish. Sidecar and …

Dash

Measurements & Service

A small shake from a bitters bottle, approximately 1/8 teaspoon (0.6 ml). The standard bitters measurement. One quick downward flick of the bottle. Recipes typically …

Dehydrated Fruit

Garnish & Presentation

Oven or dehydrator-dried citrus wheels, pineapple rings, or apple slices used as shelf-stable garnish. Crispy, concentrated in color, and elegant. Dehydrate at 170°F/75°C for 4-6 …

Demerara Syrup

Ingredients & Botanicals

Syrup made from raw demerara sugar (large golden crystals from Guyana). Deeper, more complex sweetness with toffee and molasses notes compared to white sugar syrup. …

Digestif

Bar Culture & History

Post-meal drinks believed to aid digestion: amaro, grappa, cognac, limoncello, port. Typically higher-proof or intensely flavored. The counterpart to aperitivo — together they bookend the …

Dilution

Ice & Temperature

The water added to a cocktail from melting ice during shaking, stirring, or serving. Typically 20-25% of final volume. Far from being a flaw, proper …

Double Straining

Techniques & Methods

Using both a Hawthorne strainer and a fine mesh sieve simultaneously for a crystal-clear pour. Catches ice shards, herb fragments, and pulp that a single …

Drambuie

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Scottish liqueur made from aged Scotch whisky, heather honey, herbs, and spices. The base of the Rusty Nail (Drambuie + Scotch). Name derives from the …

Dry Ice

Ice & Temperature

Solid carbon dioxide at -78.5°C that sublimates directly into gas, creating dramatic fog effects. Used for theatrical presentations. Never consume directly — it causes severe …

Dry Shake

Techniques & Methods

Shaking cocktail ingredients without ice first to emulsify egg whites or aquafaba, creating a stable, creamy foam. After the dry shake, add ice and shake …

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Falernum

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Caribbean spiced syrup or low-proof liqueur (11% ABV for John D. Taylor's Velvet Falernum) with lime, almond, clove, and ginger. Essential Tiki modifier appearing in …

Falernum Syrup

Ingredients & Botanicals

Caribbean spiced syrup combining lime zest, almond, clove, allspice, and ginger. Essential Tiki ingredient in Zombie, Royal Bermuda Yacht Club, and Corn 'n' Oil. Both …

Fat-Washing

Techniques & Methods

Infusing spirits with liquid fat (bacon grease, butter, coconut oil), then freezing to solidify and remove the fat while retaining its savory flavor. Creates rich, …

Fernet-Branca

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Intensely bitter Italian amaro made from 27 herbs and spices. Cult following among bartenders worldwide — the 'bartender's handshake' (ordering Fernet at a bar signals …

Finish

Flavor Science

The lingering taste and sensation after swallowing. A 'long finish' (flavors lasting 30+ seconds) is desirable in quality spirits. Cocktail finishes are influenced by bitters, …

Fix

Cocktail Families & Styles

A sour served over crushed ice with seasonal fruit garnish. Essentially a cobbler made with spirits rather than wine. The Fix was common in Jerry …

Fizz

Cocktail Families & Styles

A sour plus soda water, served without ice in a small glass. The soda provides effervescence and lengthens the drink. Ramos Gin Fizz (with cream …

Flag Garnish

Garnish & Presentation

A cherry and citrus half-moon (orange or pineapple) skewered together on a cocktail pick. The classic garnish for Whiskey Sour, Amaretto Sour, and Tiki drinks. …

Flamed Peel

Garnish & Presentation

Igniting citrus oils by holding an orange peel near a lit match over the drink. The oils pass through the flame, caramelizing slightly and creating …

Flaming

Techniques & Methods

Igniting spirits or citrus oils for dramatic visual effect and caramelized flavor. Used for flamed orange peels, flaming absinthe, and theatrical presentations. Requires safety awareness.

Flash Blending

Techniques & Methods

A brief 3-5 second pulse blend with crushed ice, developed for Tiki-style drinks. Achieves a lightly aerated, slushy texture without the full smoothie consistency of …

Flash Freezing

Ice & Temperature

Rapid chilling using liquid nitrogen (-196°C) or an anti-griddle (frozen surface) to create instant frozen elements. Used for frozen garnishes, instant ice cream, and dramatic …

Flip

Cocktail Families & Styles

Historical family using spirit + whole egg + sugar, shaken vigorously. Rich, dessert-like texture. Originally made with hot ale and rum (Colonial America), evolved into …

Float

Techniques & Methods

Gently pouring a spirit or liqueur on top of a finished drink so it sits on the surface. Creates a visual layer and a flavor …

Free Pour

Measurements & Service

Pouring without a jigger using a mental count system with a speed pourer. Standard speed: 4-count equals approximately 1.5 oz (one shot). Fast, theatrical, but …

Frosting

Ice & Temperature

Storing glasses in a freezer or filling with ice water to create a frosted, opaque exterior. The condensation layer insulates the drink. Particularly dramatic on …

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Malic Acid

Ingredients & Botanicals

Apple-derived acid that provides a rounder, softer sourness than citric acid. Often blended with citric acid for more complex acidity profiles. Used in acid-adjusted juices …

Maraschino

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Cherry-derived liqueur from Luxardo marasca cherries, but dry and nutty rather than sweet cherry candy. Essential for Aviation, Last Word, Hemingway Daiquiri, and Martinez. Not …

Martini Family

Cocktail Families & Styles

Spirit + vermouth (and/or other modifiers), stirred and served up. Includes the Martini, Manhattan, Negroni, Rob Roy, and Boulevardier. The template for sophisticated, spirit-forward cocktails.

Martini Glass

Glassware & Serveware

Iconic V-shaped stemmed glass with a wide rim and long stem. While visually striking, the wide opening causes drinks to warm quickly and spill easily. …

Mezcal

Spirits & Base Liquors

Smoky agave spirit where the piñas are roasted in earthen pits before distillation. Tequila is technically a subset of mezcal. Over 30 agave species can …

Milk Punch Clarification

Modern & Advanced

Using milk proteins (casein) to clarify cocktails into crystal-clear, shelf-stable drinks. Hot cocktail is poured into cold milk, curdling it. The curds trap tannins, color, …

Mise en Place

Measurements & Service

'Everything in its place' — the French culinary principle applied to bartending. Pre-cutting garnishes, pre-juicing citrus, organizing bottles, filling ice wells, and preparing all tools …

Mixing Tin

Glassware & Serveware

The metal vessel (usually 28 oz or 18 oz) used for shaking or stirring cocktails. Part of a Boston shaker set (two tins or one …

Mixology

Bar Culture & History

The art, study, and craft of mixing cocktails. The term dates to the 1850s but gained renewed currency in the 2000s craft revival. Some bartenders …

Mouthfeel

Flavor Science

The physical sensation of a drink in the mouth: viscosity (thin vs thick), carbonation (prickle), astringency (drying), temperature, and texture (silky, creamy, velvety). Egg whites, …

Muddling

Techniques & Methods

Pressing herbs, fruit, or sugar in a glass with a muddler to release essential oils and juices. Gentle pressure for herbs (to avoid bitterness from …

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Old Fashioned

Cocktail Families & Styles

The original cocktail template: spirit + sugar + bitters + water. Predates the word 'cocktail' itself (1806 definition). The simplest mixed drink structure, showcasing the …

Oleo Saccharum

Flavor Science

'Oil sugar' in Latin — citrus peels macerated in sugar to extract fragrant essential oils through osmosis. The foundation of classic punch. Takes 2-12 hours. …

On the Rocks

Measurements & Service

Served over ice cubes in a rocks glass. The ice chills the spirit and gradually dilutes it, opening up flavors over time. A large single …

Orange Bitters

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Citrus-forward bitters made from orange peel, cardamom, caraway, and coriander. Once a standard Martini ingredient (pre-Prohibition), now experiencing a revival. Regan's and Fee Brothers are …

Orange Flower Water

Ingredients & Botanicals

Distillate of bitter orange (Citrus aurantium) blossoms, intensely fragrant and floral. Essential for Ramos Gin Fizz and orgeat syrup. Use sparingly — a few drops …

Orgeat

Flavor Science

Almond-based syrup flavored with orange flower water and sugar. Essential for Mai Tai, Japanese Cocktail, and other Tiki/classic drinks. Pronounced 'or-ZHAT' (from French). Homemade versions …

Orgeat Syrup

Ingredients & Botanicals

Almond milk syrup flavored with orange flower water and sugar. The soul of Mai Tai — without quality orgeat, the drink falls flat. French in …

Overproof

Spirits & Base Liquors

Any spirit bottled above 50% ABV (100 proof). Used for floats (where a small amount adds punch), flaming (higher proof ignites more easily), and Tiki …

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Parts

Measurements & Service

Ratio-based recipe notation that scales to any volume: '2 parts gin, 1 part vermouth' works whether a 'part' is 1 oz, 30 ml, or a …

Pebble Ice

Ice & Temperature

Small, uniform nugget ice (like Sonic or Chick-fil-A ice) that's chewable and porous. Absorbs flavors from the drink. Perfect for Swizzles, Juleps, and any drink …

Peychaud's Bitters

Liqueurs & Modifiers

New Orleans anise-forward bitters created by Antoine Peychaud in the 1830s. Essential for the Sazerac and integral to New Orleans cocktail culture. Lighter and more …

Pisco

Spirits & Base Liquors

Peruvian and Chilean grape brandy, unaged and aromatic. The base for Pisco Sour, one of South America's most celebrated cocktails. Peru and Chile both claim …

Prohibition

Bar Culture & History

The 1920-1933 US ban on the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages (18th Amendment). Drove cocktail innovation underground, pushed bartenders to Europe and Cuba, …

Proof

Flavor Science

Measurement of alcohol content. US proof equals 2× ABV (so 80 proof = 40% ABV). British proof was different (100° proof ≈ 57.15% ABV). Higher …

Punch

Cocktail Families & Styles

The original mixed drink predating 'cocktail' by centuries: spirit + citrus + sugar + water + spice. Served communally from a bowl. The name likely …

Punch Bowl

Glassware & Serveware

Large communal serving vessel for batch cocktails and punch, ranging from 1 gallon to 5+ gallons. Punch is the original mixed drink (pre-cocktail), and the …

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Regulars

Bar Culture & History

Frequent bar patrons who build personal relationships with bartenders and staff. Regulars are the backbone of a bar's community and revenue. Good bartenders remember regulars' …

Reverse Dry Shake

Techniques & Methods

Shaking with ice first (standard shake), then straining out ice and shaking again without ice. Produces a silkier, denser foam than the traditional dry shake. …

Rich Simple Syrup

Ingredients & Botanicals

A 2:1 sugar-to-water ratio (by weight) producing a thicker, sweeter syrup. Better shelf stability (1-2 months refrigerated) and more viscous mouthfeel. Favored in craft bars …

Rickey

Cocktail Families & Styles

Spirit + lime juice + soda water with no sweetener. Named after Colonel Joe Rickey who ordered bourbon with lime and soda in 1880s Washington …

Rinse

Techniques & Methods

Coating the inside of a glass with a small amount of intensely flavored spirit (typically absinthe, mezcal, or Islay scotch), then discarding the excess. Adds …

Rocks Glass

Glassware & Serveware

Short, wide tumbler (6-10 oz) for spirit-forward cocktails served over ice or neat. Also called old fashioned glass or lowball. The thick base provides stability …

Rolling

Techniques & Methods

Gently pouring a cocktail back and forth between two vessels (usually two halves of a shaker) for light mixing and aeration. Used for Bloody Marys …

Rose Water

Ingredients & Botanicals

Distillate of rose petals, providing delicate floral notes. Used sparingly (1-2 drops) in cocktails for a subtle perfumed quality. Common in Middle Eastern, South Asian, …

Rotary Evaporation

Modern & Advanced

Laboratory equipment that distills liquids at low temperature and reduced pressure, capturing volatile aroma compounds without heat damage. Used to create delicate distillates of herbs, …

Rum

Spirits & Base Liquors

Sugarcane-derived spirit spanning white (unaged), gold (lightly aged), dark (heavily aged), and overproof expressions. Production methods vary wildly by region: column-distilled in Puerto Rico, pot-distilled …

Rye Whiskey

Spirits & Base Liquors

American whiskey made with at least 51% rye grain. Spicier and drier than bourbon, with peppery, herbal notes. The original whiskey for Manhattans, Old Fashioneds, …

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Saline Solution

Modern & Advanced

A 20% salt-water solution (by weight) used in drops to enhance flavors and suppress bitterness in cocktails. 2-3 drops is standard. Salt amplifies sweetness and …

Salt Rim

Garnish & Presentation

Coating the glass rim with salt using a citrus wedge as adhesive, then pressing into a plate of salt. Classic for Margaritas. Only rim half …

Scotch Whisky

Spirits & Base Liquors

Scottish whisky aged minimum 3 years in oak casks. Single malt (one distillery, 100% malted barley) vs blended (multiple distilleries). Peated styles from Islay have …

Shaking

Techniques & Methods

Vigorously mixing ingredients with ice in a sealed shaker to chill, dilute, and aerate. The standard technique for cocktails containing citrus, dairy, or egg. A …

Shot Glass

Glassware & Serveware

Small glass (1-2 oz) for serving spirits neat in a single gulp (shots) or for measuring. Standard US shot is 1.5 oz. Collectible souvenir shot …

Shrub

Flavor Science

A drinking vinegar syrup combining fruit, sugar, and vinegar (usually apple cider vinegar). Colonial-era preservation technique revived by craft bartenders. Adds tangy, fruity complexity to …

Simple Syrup

Ingredients & Botanicals

The most basic cocktail sweetener: equal parts white sugar and water (1:1 by weight), dissolved by heating or cold stirring. Integrates into cold drinks better …

Sling

Cocktail Families & Styles

Spirit + water + sugar + nutmeg — an early American drink format that predates the cocktail (which added bitters to a sling). Singapore Sling …

Smash

Cocktail Families & Styles

A julep variation with seasonal fruit muddled in alongside the mint and sugar. The fruit adds sweetness, color, and flavor variety. Whiskey Smash (bourbon + …

Smoke Bubble

Garnish & Presentation

A bubble filled with aromatic smoke (applewood, cherry, hickory) that sits atop the drink and bursts when the guest breaks it. Created using a smoke …

Smoke Gun

Modern & Advanced

Handheld device that burns wood chips (cherry, applewood, hickory, mesquite) and channels smoke into cocktails, typically trapped under a glass cloche. Adds smoky aroma and …

Snifter

Glassware & Serveware

Wide-bowled glass with a narrow top that concentrates aromas. Traditionally for brandy and cognac (warmed by cupping in the palm), but also used for barrel-aged …

Soju

Spirits & Base Liquors

Korean clear spirit (16-25% ABV), traditionally distilled from rice but now often made from sweet potatoes or tapioca. Extremely versatile in cocktails and food pairing. …

Sour

Cocktail Families & Styles

The largest cocktail family, built on spirit + citrus juice + sweetener. Whiskey Sour, Daiquiri, Margarita, and Gimlet are all sours. The template is infinitely …

Sous Vide

Techniques & Methods

Using precise temperature-controlled water baths for rapid, consistent infusions and syrups. A 2-hour sous vide infusion can replace days of traditional maceration with reproducible results.

Speakeasy

Bar Culture & History

Hidden illegal bars during Prohibition, entered through unmarked doors, phone booths, or back alleys. The secrecy added romance to drinking. Today, 'speakeasy' describes cocktail bars …

Speed Rail

Measurements & Service

The metal rack mounted below the bar top that holds the most frequently used spirits (typically vodka, gin, rum, tequila, bourbon, triple sec). Arranged for …

Spherification

Modern & Advanced

Using sodium alginate and calcium chloride to create liquid-filled edible spheres that burst in the mouth. Basic spherification (alginate in the cocktail) and reverse spherification …

Sprig

Garnish & Presentation

A small branch of fresh herbs (mint, rosemary, thyme, basil) used primarily for aroma. Placed near the straw so the drinker's nose passes through the …

Spritz

Cocktail Families & Styles

Italian aperitivo format: sparkling wine + bitter liqueur + soda water, served in a wine glass over ice. Aperol Spritz dominates globally, but Campari Spritz, …

St-Germain

Liqueurs & Modifiers

French elderflower liqueur launched in 2007, dubbed 'the bartender's ketchup' because it pairs well with everything. Delicate floral-tropical flavor at 20% ABV. Versatile modifier for …

Stirring

Techniques & Methods

Gently mixing spirit-forward cocktails with a bar spoon in a mixing glass to chill and dilute without introducing air bubbles. Preserves clarity and silky texture. …

Straining

Techniques & Methods

Separating liquid from ice and solids using a Hawthorne strainer (for shaker tins) or julep strainer (for mixing glasses). Essential for delivering a clean pour.

Sugar Rim

Garnish & Presentation

Coating the glass rim with sugar, sometimes colored or flavored (cinnamon sugar, vanilla sugar). Used for Sidecars, Lemon Drops, and dessert cocktails. Apply citrus juice …

Superjuicing

Techniques & Methods

Using citric acid and citrus peels to extract 6-8x more juice than traditional juicing. The acid breaks down cell walls in the peel, releasing pectin-bound …

Sweetness

Flavor Science

The perceived sugar level in a cocktail, balanced against sour and bitter components. Sources include simple syrup, liqueurs, fresh fruit, and honey. Too sweet masks …

Swizzle

Cocktail Families & Styles

A tall Caribbean drink mixed by spinning a swizzle stick between the palms. Built over crushed ice with spirit, citrus, sweetener, and bitters. The drink …

Swizzle Stick

Garnish & Presentation

A stirring device originally carved from the Bois Lélé tree (Quararibea turbinata) in Martinique, with radiating prongs at one end. Spin between palms to mix …

Swizzling

Techniques & Methods

Spinning a swizzle stick (traditionally a Bois Lélé branch from Martinique) between your palms inside the glass to mix ingredients and frost the exterior. The …

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Tempered Glass

Ice & Temperature

Heat-treated glassware that resists thermal shock from sudden temperature changes. Essential for hot cocktails (Irish Coffee, Hot Toddy) where pouring boiling liquid into cold glass …

Tequila

Spirits & Base Liquors

Spirit distilled from blue Weber agave grown in designated Mexican regions (primarily Jalisco). Categories by aging: blanco (unaged), reposado (2-12 months), añejo (1-3 years), extra …

Throwing

Techniques & Methods

Pouring liquid in a high arc between two vessels — a dramatic Spanish bartending tradition. Creates gentle aeration and a slightly different texture than stirring, …

Tiki

Cocktail Families & Styles

Elaborate rum-based cocktails with tropical fruit juices, exotic syrups (orgeat, falernum, passion fruit), and complex multi-spirit blends. Created by Don the Beachcomber and Trader Vic …

Tiki Culture

Bar Culture & History

The Polynesian-themed aesthetic encompassing tropical cocktails, exotic décor (carved totems, thatched roofs, bamboo), and escapist fantasy. Created by Americans, not Polynesians — a romanticized, sometimes …

Tiki Mug

Glassware & Serveware

Novelty ceramic vessels in Polynesian-inspired shapes — skulls, moai heads, pineapples, and tropical figures. Collectible art pieces that define Tiki bar culture. Each bar often …

Tiki Renaissance

Bar Culture & History

The revival of exotic rum cocktails starting with Don the Beachcomber (Ernest Gantt) in 1933 Hollywood, followed by Trader Vic (Victor Bergeron). Created an escapist …

Tincture

Flavor Science

A high-proof alcohol extract of a single flavor — cinnamon, lavender, vanilla, chili, etc. Made by soaking ingredients in overproof spirit for days/weeks, then straining. …

Triple Sec

Liqueurs & Modifiers

Orange-flavored liqueur made by triple-distilling orange peels. Cointreau is the premium benchmark at 40% ABV. Used in Margarita, Cosmopolitan, Sidecar, and countless other cocktails.

Twist

Garnish & Presentation

A strip of citrus peel (typically 2-3 inches) expressed over a drink to release aromatic oils, then either dropped in, draped on the rim, or …

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