MyMixMateYour Cocktail Companion

Gin Fizz

Classic

Easy3 minHighball glassMedium

refreshingfizzy

Ingredients

  • Gin45 ml
  • Lemon juice30 ml
  • Sugar syrup15 ml
  • Soda wateras needed

Switch between ml and US units above. Recipes are designed for home mixing.

Glass

Highball

Garnish

Lemon wheel

Method

  1. 01Shake gin, lemon, and syrup with ice.
  2. 02Strain into a chilled glass.
  3. 03Top with soda water.

About this drink

More on the Gin Fizz

What it tastes like

Bright citrus balanced by a touch of sweetness, a long, fizzy finish. Overall it reads as refreshing.

Why this recipe works

Shaking is essential here: it chills, dilutes and aerates the citrus so the Gin Fizz 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

  • Squeeze lemons the same day you serve. Fresh juice keeps the drink bright; day-old citrus dulls fast.
  • Open mixers as late as possible and pour gently — flat fizz makes a tall drink feel tired.
  • A standard 1:1 simple syrup works here. For more body, try 2:1 sugar to water and use slightly less.

When to serve it

Serve on a warm afternoon, with plenty of ice.

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.
  • Pouring mixers in early or hard. Add them last, down the side of the glass, to keep the fizz.

Variations to try

  • Try a London Dry gin for a drier finish, or a contemporary gin for softer botanicals.
  • 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.

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