easy
bourbon
date-night
classic

The Southside

The Whiskey Smash dressed up for a night out. Knob Creek, lemon, and mint, served up.

Difficulty

Prep Time

Glassware

Method

Servings

easy
5 min.
Coupe
Shaken
1
Southside Cocktail
GlassCoupe
MethodShaken
IceNo Ice / Up
Prep5 min
Total5 min
Serves1

Ingredients

2 oz
Knob Creek Small Batch Bourbon
0.75 oz
Fresh lemon juice
freshly squeezed
0.75 oz
Simple syrup
1:1 ratio
6 whole
Fresh mint leaves
shaken, not muddled

About This Cocktail

The Southside is a cocktail with competing origin stories, which usually means it’s old enough that nobody can agree on the truth anymore. Some say it started at the 21 Club in New York. Others give the credit to a Southside gangster in Chicago during Prohibition who needed something to mask the taste of rough bathtub gin. Al Capone’s name gets dropped occasionally, which may or may not be apocryphal. The drink is good enough that everyone wants credit for it.

What it is, stripped down, is a gin sour with mint — bright, herbal, refreshing, and one of the better warm-weather cocktails in the classic canon. The version here uses Knob Creek bourbon in place of gin, which makes it the unofficial bourbon cousin of the Southside. It’s a little warmer and less botanical than the original, but the mint and lemon still do exactly what they’re supposed to do.

If you’ve been making Whiskey Smashes all spring, this is the next logical step — a more refined, up-served version of that same mint-and-lemon flavor profile. Coupe glass, no ice in the drink, a mint sprig tucked alongside. It cleans up well.

Knob Creek and the Southside

Knob Creek Small Batch is a 100 proof Kentucky straight bourbon from Jim Beam’s small batch collection, aged nine years and bottled without chill filtration. The higher proof and longer aging give it a richness and depth — caramel, vanilla, dried fruit, a little leather — that holds up well against the lemon and mint rather than getting lost behind them.

In a drink where you’re asking bourbon to do what gin normally does, you want something with enough presence and complexity to justify its place in the glass. Knob Creek earns it.

Knob Creek Single Barrel at 120 proof is the step up — more intensity, more oak, a more assertive finished drink. Buffalo Trace is the approachable budget alternative that makes a lovely, lighter version of the same cocktail.

Mint in an Up-Served Drink

The Southside shakes the mint rather than muddling it, which is a different approach from the Whiskey Smash or the Mint Julep. A few mint leaves go into the shaker with everything else, get shaken hard, and then get strained out when you double strain into the coupe.

The effect is a clean, mint-infused drink where the flavor is present and aromatic without any leaf fragments or rough texture. More elegant than a muddled mint cocktail, though it sacrifices some of the brightness of fresh-muddled mint in exchange for that cleanliness. Both approaches are correct. This one fits a coupe better.

Instructions

1
Add mint to shaker
Drop the mint leaves into your shaker tin. No muddling — they go in whole and get shaken with the other ingredients.
2
Add remaining ingredients
Add the bourbon, lemon juice, and simple syrup to the tin.
3
Shake hard with ice
Fill with ice and shake for 12 to 15 seconds. The mint will bruise slightly during shaking and infuse the drink.
4
Double strain into a coupe
Strain through both the Hawthorne and fine mesh strainer into a chilled coupe. The double strain removes all mint fragments.
5
Garnish
A fresh mint sprig tucked at the rim. Slap it between your palms first to open up the oils.
Pro tip

The mint goes in whole — no muddling. The shaking does the work of bruising the leaves just enough to release the oils without turning them into paste. Double straining is non-negotiable here because even small mint fragments in a coupe are noticeable and they add bitterness as they sit in the drink. Strain twice, every time.

The whiskey

Knob Creek at 100 proof has the presence and depth to hold its own against lemon and mint. The nine-year aging adds a richness that makes this more interesting than a standard mixing bourbon would in the same recipe.

Budget alternativeBuffalo Trace
Premium upgradeKnob Creek Single Barrel

Bar Tools

Make it like a pro with these great bar accessories.

Cocktail Shaker
Room for mint and ice.
Shop on Amazon
Fine Mesh Strainer
Essential — catches every mint fragment.
Shop on Amazon
Hawthorne Strainer
First pass of the double strain.
Shop on Amazon
Jigger
Balance is the whole game in a sour.
Shop on Amazon
Citrus Juicer
Fresh lemon only.
Shop on Amazon
Filled dot = essential   Open dot = recommended

This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Variations

Classic Gin Southside
The traditional version — swap the bourbon for a London Dry gin for a more botanical, herbaceous drink.
Replace Knob Creek with 2oz London Dry gin.
Southside Fizz
Top with club soda after straining for a longer, more refreshing version suited to hot afternoons.
Strain into a Collins glass over ice instead of a coupe. Top with 2oz cold club soda.
Cucumber Southside
Add two thin cucumber slices to the shaker for a cooling, spa-like variation that works beautifully in summer.
Add 2 thin cucumber slices to the shaker with the mint. Everything else stays the same.

Food Pairing

Light summer appetizers — cucumber sandwiches, mild cheese, chilled shrimp. The Southside is an elegant pre-dinner drink that doesn't sit heavy. It's also excellent alongside anything with fresh herbs.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between the Southside and a Whiskey Smash?+
Both are bourbon, lemon, and mint, but the technique and presentation are different. The Smash muddles the mint and serves it over crushed ice in a rocks glass — casual, textural, meant to be drunk quickly. The Southside shakes the mint and serves it up in a coupe — cleaner, more refined, a slower drink. Same flavor neighborhood, different experience.
Can I use spearmint instead of peppermint?+
Either works. Spearmint is slightly sweeter and more candy-like, peppermint is more assertive and cooling. Use whichever looks freshest at the store. The difference is subtle in a shaken drink.
Why shake instead of muddle the mint?+
Shaking produces a cleaner, more elegant result — the mint flavor infuses the drink without adding texture or bitterness from over-bruised leaves. It's a different approach than muddling, not a better or worse one. For a coupe presentation, the cleaner result from shaking fits the format better.

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