Skip to main content

How to muddle ingredients for a cocktail (even if you don’t have a muddler)

Learn this key skill for cocktail making

wooden muddler sitting on a table surrounded by garnishes and cocktails.
NA

If you love to make cocktails using ingredients like mint, basil, or other herbs, one instruction you’ll often see in recipes is to muddle your drink. It’s not obvious what that means, but don’t worry — it’s a simple process and one which doesn’t necessitate specific equipment.

The reason that some ingredients are muddled is to help them release their oils and flavors. If you just throw a few mint leaves into a cocktail shaker, for example, they will add a subtle hint of minty flavor to your drink but it won’t be very noticeable. To take full advantage of the fresh, bright flavors of mint, you need to tear up the mint leaves so that the oils are released and can blend with the other ingredients in your drink.

Recommended Videos

You’ll find muddling is an important step in making drinks like the Mojito or Gin Basil Smash, where you want to make the most of the flavors of leafy ingredients. There are other ways to extract flavors from these leaves, such as clapping the leaves firmly between your hands before adding them to the shaker (which helps to bruise the leaves and therefore release flavors), or by tearing, cutting, or chopping the leaves into smaller pieces. You can even use a blender as an alternative method to muddling.

But muddling remains the go-to technique for many bartenders because it is effective at extracting flavors but doesn’t require much cleanup and can be done quickly while standing at the bar.

How to muddle (with or without a muddler)

The traditional tool to use for muddling is called a muddler. It is a long handle, often made of metal or wood, with a thick head at the end. On the end of this head is a series of raised teeth, similar to a meat tenderizer but smaller.

To use a muddler, add your herbs to the bottom of a cocktail shaker. Typically your recipe will also tell you to add some fruit juice, spirit, or syrup to the shaker as well so that the oils from the herbs get absorbed into the liquid. Don’t add ice just yet though as that will get in the way of your muddling.

Hold the shaker in one hand and the muddler in the other, and use the end of the muddler to press the ingredients down firmly into the base of the shaker. Twist the muddler as you press to help mangle the leaves and release as much flavor from them as you can. Then you can add any further ingredients that your recipe calls for along with some ice and shake up your cocktail. Don’t forget to double strain your cocktail when you’ve muddle ingredients so that the drink doesn’t get little pieces of herb floating in it.

If you haven’t got a muddler, no problem. You can simply use the back of a spoon instead. Follow the same steps to add your ingredients to a shaker, then press down on them with the back of the spoon and squish them against the side of the shaker to release the oils in the same way.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina Torbet is a cocktail enthusiast based in Berlin, with an ever-growing gin collection and a love for trying out new…
Welcome the spring with these floral gin cocktails
NOLET’S Silver Gin

Spring is the time for flower lovers, as green buds burst into life all around us. And it's also the perfect time to incorporate floral flavors into your cocktails, working with ingredients like rose, creme de violette, and orange blossom.

If you're looking for a spirit to shine in your floral drinks, then Nolet's Silver Gin has a lovely smooth mouthfeel and light botanicals of rose and peach, making it the perfect partner for the botanical vodkas from Ketel One. We've got three recipes for using Nolet's in beautiful drinks to capture the flavors of the season.

Read more
How to order a martini like you know what you’re doing
Do you know the difference between martinis?
Bartender with a martini

The martini is one of the most iconic drinks in all of cocktail history, thanks in no small part to British superspy James Bond. Bond might take his martini shaken, not stirred -- but please, we're begging you, don't order a drink this way if you want to enjoy it. It's a mystery why Bond enjoys his cocktail made in what most bartenders will agree is objectively the wrong manner, but we're sure you'll have a better time drinking a martini if you have it stirred.

However, there are still a bunch of other details you can play around with when it comes to ordering a martini -- from what spirit to use and what garnish you prefer to the glass you'd like it served in. To learn about all the options, we asked New York City bartender Tom Walker about how to order a martini. Walker is a gin enthusiast and has worked at some of the best bars in America and the world, such as Attaboy in NYC, The American Bar at The Savoy in London, Bramble Bar in Edinburgh, and George Washington Bar at the Freehand Hotel. It’s safe to say he knows a thing or two about ordering a martini the right way.
How do you order a martini for the first time?

Read more
An expert explains how to make the perfect Milk Punch
Milk Punch

The Milk Punch is one of those classic drinks which is beloved by its fans, but has a reputation of being a bit of a hassle to make at home. When working with diary you have to be careful not to split it, so some versions of the drink use milk that is clarified using heat and filtration. The classic version of the cocktail combines brandy or bourbon, rum, sugar, and vanilla alongside the milk for a creamy, boozy, comforting drink that's a little like an eggnog without the egg.

A bartending expert from BLVD Steakhouse, Kyle Davidson, has come up with his own take on the Milk Punch, which uses clarified milk for a light, clearer cocktail that incorporates flavors from the classic Arnold Palmer drink as well. Named for the golfing legend, the Arnold Palmer combines iced tea and lemonade, and sometimes has a shot of vodka, cognac, or bourbon added as well.

Read more