Dry Martini
Classicclassicstrong
Ingredients
- Gin60 ml
- Dry Vermouth10 ml
Switch between ml and US units above. Recipes are designed for home mixing.
Glass
Martini
Garnish
Olive or lemon twist
Method
- 01Stir gin and vermouth with ice for 30 seconds.
- 02Strain into a chilled martini glass.
About this drink
More on the Dry Martini
What it tastes like
With a dry, bittered backbone.
Why this recipe works
Stirring keeps the Dry Martini silky and lets the spirit stay centre-stage — there's no citrus to froth, so dilution and chill come from gentle contact with ice rather than aeration. A small dash of bitters sharpens the edges and stops the sweetness reading flat.
Ingredient tips
- Vermouth is fortified wine — store it in the fridge after opening and replace every couple of months.
Common mistakes
- Over-stirring. Stop once the outside of the mixing glass is cold and frosted — usually 20–30 seconds.
- Using an old, room-temperature bottle of vermouth. Once opened it oxidises fast — keep it cold.
- Serving in a warm glass. Chill the coupe or martini glass in the freezer first.
Variations to try
- Try a London Dry gin for a drier finish, or a contemporary gin for softer botanicals.
- No dry vermouth? Try Dry white wine as a substitute (last resort).


