The Cuban-born Mojito, a favorite of Ernest Hemingway, saw its popularity soar in the early 2000s. It may not be the trendiest drink anymore, but when prepared well it's delicious and refreshing.
Need the right rum? See our picks for the best rums for Mojitos!
Table Of Contents
Mojito Ingredients
- 2 oz White Rum
- 1 oz Lime
- 3/4 oz Simple Syrup
- 10 Mint leaves, and mint sprig for garnish
Mojito Directions
- Gently muddle mint leaves in Collins or highball glass, taking care not to break the leaves.
- Add remaining ingredients to the glass.
- Mix well.
- Add crushed ice.
- Garnish with mint sprig and enjoy.
Rate This Recipe:
Yield: 1 Cocktail
Calories: 221
Updated: 2022-07-06
Mojito Recipe Video
Mojito FAQ
What alcohol is in a Mojito?
A Mojito is made using white rum.
How is a Mojito traditionally served?
A Mojito is traditionally served well-muddled and mixed in a Collins or highball glass.
Best Practices: Less Is More When You’re Making Mojitos
It’s easy to botch Mojitos. Despite having four ingredients and breezy, tropical-island vibes, Mojitos require precision. In a drink with so few components, you’ll taste every off flavor, from subpar spirits to from-concentrate citrus.
Like their cousins, the Daiquiris, Mojitos are a combination of rum, lime juice, and a sweetener. Mojitos also involve fresh mint, an herb that seems hardy in the garden but goes from pleasantly muddled to limply lifeless in an instant. Making drinks with raw sugar also presents a challenge. If it isn’t properly dissolved, you’ll be crunching on crystals with every sip.
We spoke with five bartenders about their tips for making stellar Mojitos. From at-home hacks, to the one bartending technique you should never ever use, here are five dos and don'ts for mastering Mojitos.
How to Make a Mojito
Juice Fresh Limes
Sure, it might seem fussy to juice a bunch of fruits instead of spiking your drink with a green plastic supermarket squeegee. But fresh lime juice is key.
“A Mojito is made and broken by the citrus that’s used,” Aren Bellando, lead bartender, SideDoor and Lawry’s the Prime Rib, Chicago, says. He swears by “fresh, unpasteurized lime juice.”
Freshly squeezed citrus doesn’t contain any of the additives or stabilizers found in bottled juices. Those extra ingredients will give your finished drink an unnatural, pre-packaged taste.
Cut the Sugar
The classic Mojito recipe calls for muddled sugar, but, if done incorrectly, results can be grainy. Bypass this problem by using simple syrup instead.
“There’s no reason to waste time to dissolve the granular sugar or risk a gritty drink when you can just use simple syrup,” Amanda Swanson, agave sommelier at Anejo in TriBeCa, NYC, says. She suggests making syrup with light sugar because dark brown or Turbinado sugar can “overpower your rum and discolor your drink.”
Use Rum You'd Drink Straight
“Using a flavorless rum only makes the drink taste like a boozy, mint soda,” David Mor, beverage manager, Cindy’s, Chicago, says. You don’t have to blow your budget on a top-shelf bottle, but you should use a rum you like the taste of straight. The sugar, citrus, and mint adorn the spirit in this drink, they don’t mask it.
Mojitos traditionally call for white rum, but you can certainly swap in dark, aged varieties. “I like to use a dark rum to add a little bit more flavor,” Kenneth McCoy, chief creative officer, Public House Collective, NYC, says. Whatever age statement or flavor profile you choose, remember that the spirit will be the most powerful flavor in your drink.
What to Avoid When Making Mojitos
Don’t Over-Muddle Your Mint
We asked five bar professionals for their Mojito-making tips, and all of them warned against over-muddling.
“You don’t want to turn the mint into mulch, you just want to extract the oils enough to get the minty aroma,” McCoy says.
There are several ways to do this. You can simply drop a few small mint leaves in your drink before you mix it, releasing their scent as you stir. Or you can lightly twist the mint leaves in your fingertips over the drink before stirring. “Simply agitate the mint a little to express the oils out of them and open up their aroma,” Mor says.
If you over-muddle, “you will release excess bitter-ing agents that will make your otherwise bright Mojito take a dark turn,” Swanson says. “Less can be more.”
Stirring > Shaking
Is it tempting to shake every drink you make dramatically in a stainless steel cocktail shaker, like you’re auditioning for a samba band or Tom Cruise’s role in "Cocktail"? Of course it is. But that won’t do your Mojito any good. Aggressively shaking your drink “could break up the mint,” Jonathan Borin, head bartender, The Fat Radish, NYC, says. The result is a gritty Mojito with muted flavors.
Instead of using a cocktail shaker, stir yours in its glass with a swizzle. It’s easy and elegant, and protects your delicate herbs.
Mojito Variations To Try:
- The Pink Strawberry Mojito Recipe - In this riff, the classic Mojito is elevated with the addition of strawberries as both an ingredient and garnish. A generous splash of grenadine adds a pleasant pink hue.
- The Jamaican Rum Punch Recipe - This small batch recipe uses a French press to extract flavors of cinnamon, mint, and jalapeño, along with rum and toasted coconut. The longer the mix marinates, the more powerful the flavor.
- The Blackberry Mojito Recipe - This tasty Mojito calls for blackberries, blackberry jam, and a sprinkling of sugar. Muddle the components with lime and mint to fully release all of the drink’s flavors and aromas.