intermediate
Rye
date-night
classic

The Preakness Cocktail

A Manhattan variation with Bénédictine that’s more interesting than it sounds and better than most things.

Difficulty

Prep Time

Glassware

Method

Servings

intermediate
5 min.
Nick & Nora
Stirred
1
GlassNick & Nora
MethodStirred
IceNo Ice / Up
Prep5 min
Total5 min
Serves1

Ingredients

2 oz
Rye Whiskey
Rittenhouse 100 recommended
0.75 oz
Sweet vermouth
Carpano Antica or Dolin Rouge
0.25 oz
Benedictine
2 dash
Orange bitters
Angostura Orange or Regan's

About This Cocktail

The Preakness Cocktail shows up in Harry Craddock’s Savoy Cocktail Book in 1930, which means it’s been around long enough that most people have forgotten it exists. That’s a shame, because it’s a quietly excellent stirred drink that deserves more attention than it gets.

It’s essentially a rye Manhattan variation — rye whiskey, sweet vermouth, Bénédictine, and orange bitters. The Bénédictine is the interesting piece. It’s a French herbal liqueur made from a recipe of 27 plants and spices that dates back to the 16th century Normandy monks who supposedly developed it. Whether the monks actually invented it or that’s a good marketing story is debatable, but what’s not debatable is that it adds a honeyed, herbal complexity to a stirred drink that sweet vermouth alone can’t replicate.

The result is a Manhattan that’s a little richer, a little more aromatic, and considerably more interesting at a dinner party than just saying you made a Manhattan.

Rye and Bénédictine — A Natural Pairing

Rye and Bénédictine have a long history together. The B&B — Bénédictine and brandy — is one of the more famous applications of the liqueur, but rye brings something different: the spice of the grain plays against the herbal sweetness of the Bénédictine in a way that creates genuine complexity without effort.

Generic rye is the call here because the Bénédictine and vermouth are doing significant flavor work alongside the whiskey. Rittenhouse 100 is the standard recommendation — high rye content, 100 proof, reliable and well-priced. A lower-proof rye risks getting lost against the Bénédictine. Michter’s US*1 is the premium step-up for a more refined, elegant version of the same drink.

Stir It Properly

The Preakness is a stirred drink — all spirits, no citrus — which means it gets stirred in a mixing glass with ice for a full thirty seconds, not shaken. Stirring chills and dilutes the drink without aerating it or introducing the cloudy appearance that shaking would. The result is a clear, silky drink with a specific weight and texture that shaking destroys.

Thirty seconds of stirring sounds like a long time until you do it and taste the difference between a properly stirred drink and one that got fifteen seconds. Do the full thirty.

Instructions

1
Combine in mixing glass
Add all ingredients to a mixing glass. Fill with large ice cubes.
2
Stir for 30 seconds
Stir with a bar spoon using a steady circular motion for a full 30 seconds. This chills, dilutes, and integrates the drink without aerating it.
3
Strain into a Nick and Nora
Strain through a Hawthorne strainer into a chilled Nick and Nora glass.
4
Express the lemon twist
Express a lemon twist over the surface and place it on the rim or drop it in.
Pro tip

Vermouth quality matters in a stirred drink. Cheap sweet vermouth is one of the fastest ways to make an otherwise good Manhattan or Manhattan variation taste mediocre. Carpano Antica Formula is the gold standard — rich, complex, worth every penny. Dolin Rouge is an excellent mid-range option. Store your vermouth in the fridge after opening; it's wine and it goes bad at room temperature.

The whiskey

Rittenhouse 100's high-rye content and 100 proof give it the presence to hold its own against Benedictine and sweet vermouth. A lower-proof rye gets overwhelmed. The spice of the grain plays against the herbal sweetness of the Benedictine in exactly the right way.

Budget alternativeOld Overholt Rye
Premium upgradeMichter's US*1 Rye

Bar Tools

Make it like a pro with these great bar accessories.

Mixing Glass
A proper mixing glass for a proper stirred drink.
Shop on Amazon
Bar Spoon
Stir for 30 full seconds. Don't shortchange it.
Shop on Amazon
Hawthorne Strainer
Strain cleanly into the Nick and Nora.
Shop on Amazon
Jigger
Especially important for the small Benedictine measure.
Shop on Amazon
Y-Peeler
For a clean lemon twist.
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 Manhattan
Swap the Benedictine for a little extra sweet vermouth and you have a traditional Manhattan, for comparison.
Replace Benedictine with an additional 0.25oz sweet vermouth. Use Angostura instead of orange bitters.
Frisco Sour
A related historical drink — rye and Benedictine with lemon, served up as a sour instead of stirred.
Add 0.5oz fresh lemon juice to the recipe. Shake instead of stir. Serve in a coupe.
B&B Manhattan
Replace the Benedictine with B&B (Benedictine and Brandy) for a slightly different herbal profile.
Replace 0.25oz Benedictine with 0.25oz B&B liqueur.

Food Pairing

The Preakness is a before-dinner drink in the best tradition of that category. Serve it with something simple — olives, a few marcona almonds, maybe a thin slice of dark chocolate — and let it do its job opening up the appetite without filling you up.

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Name

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Benedictine and where do I find it?+
Benedictine is a French herbal liqueur made from a blend of 27 plants and spices. It's honeyed, complex, and aromatic — somewhere between an herbal liqueur and a digestif. Most well-stocked liquor stores carry it. If you can't find it, B&B (Benedictine and Brandy) is a common substitute, though the flavor is slightly different.
Does the vermouth brand really matter?+
Yes, especially in a stirred drink where the vermouth is a significant component. Carpano Antica Formula is rich and complex and makes a noticeably better Preakness than a generic sweet vermouth. Dolin Rouge is a good mid-range alternative. Store it in the fridge after opening — it's wine, it goes bad.
Why stir instead of shake?+
Because this is an all-spirits drink with no citrus or dairy, and shaking it would aerate it and make it cloudy — changing both the texture and the appearance in ways that don't serve the drink. Stirring chills and dilutes without aerating. The result is clearer, silkier, and more elegant.

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