Daiquiri
ClassicIngredients
- White Rum60 ml
- Lime juice25 ml
- Sugar syrup15 ml
Switch between ml and US units above. Recipes are designed for home mixing.
Glass
Garnish
Method
- 01Add all ingredients to a shaker with ice.
- 02Shake hard for 10 seconds.
- 03Double strain into a chilled coupe.
About this drink
More on the Daiquiri
What it tastes like
Bright citrus balanced by a touch of sweetness. Overall it reads as sour.
Why this recipe works
Shaking is essential here: it chills, dilutes and aerates the citrus so the Daiquiri lands cold, bright and lightly textured. The citrus-to-sweetener ratio is what makes a sour drink balanced — too little of either and it tips into harsh or cloying.
Ingredient tips
- Use fresh lime — bottled juice tastes flat and slightly bitter against the spirit.
- A standard 1:1 simple syrup works here. For more body, try 2:1 sugar to water and use slightly less.
Common mistakes
- Shaking too briefly. Shake hard for around 10–12 seconds so the drink chills and dilutes properly.
- Reaching for bottled juice. Fresh-squeezed citrus is the single biggest quality jump you can make.
- Serving in a warm glass. Chill the coupe or martini glass in the freezer first.
Variations to try
- If it tastes too tart, add sweetener in 2–3 ml increments. Too flat? A few extra drops of citrus usually fixes it.
- Swap simple syrup for honey or demerara syrup to add weight and a darker, richer note.
- No lime? Try Lemon as a substitute (changes the flavour slightly).
Bartender's Notes
- Shake hard for 10 to 15 seconds so the lime and syrup fully combine.
- Always use fresh lime juice — bottled tastes dull.
- Chill the coupe in advance; a Daiquiri loses its edge as it warms.
Origin story
The Daiquiri is named after a beach near Santiago de Cuba and is commonly attributed to American mining engineer Jennings Cox in the late 1890s.


