Some drinks require explanation. This is not one of them.
Bourbon lemonade is exactly what the name says, and the reason it works is exactly what you’d expect — the sweetness and vanilla of the bourbon slide right into freshly made lemonade like they were always meant to be there. Which, when you think about it, they were. Bourbon is sweet. Lemonade is sweet and tart. They have more in common than they have in conflict.
This is the drink for a warm Saturday afternoon in May, for a porch or a backyard or a tailgate, for a group of people who want something cold and easy and good without anybody having to measure much of anything. It also happens to be an excellent Mother’s Day drink, which is probably not a coincidence given the timing.
Keep It Simple With Buffalo Trace
When a drink is this uncomplicated, you don’t want a bourbon that’s trying to be the star of the show. Buffalo Trace is the right call here — approachable, naturally sweet, a little vanilla and caramel, clean finish. It plays nicely with lemonade without fighting it.
This isn’t the place for your allocated single barrel or your barrel proof expression. Those bottles deserve to be in drinks where you can pay attention to them. Buffalo Trace at a price that doesn’t make you wince about pouring it into a pitcher is exactly the right move.
Evan Williams Black Label is the budget substitute — same job, does it well, about half the price. If you want to step it up for a smaller gathering, Four Roses Small Batch adds a little more floral complexity that plays nicely with the lemon.
Make the Lemonade Right
Store-bought lemonade and bourbon is fine. Freshly made lemonade and bourbon is considerably better, and the difference is easy enough that it’s worth making from scratch.
Simple lemonade: one cup of fresh lemon juice, one cup of simple syrup (1:1 sugar and water), four cups of cold water. That makes about six servings. Taste it and adjust — you want it on the tart side since the bourbon is going to add sweetness. If it tastes perfect before the bourbon goes in, it’ll taste too sweet after.
The juice from about eight lemons gives you a cup. A citrus press or a good handheld juicer makes this reasonable. Don’t use bottled lemon juice. This isn’t a Whiskey Sour where technique matters enormously, but the difference between fresh and bottled lemonade is still noticeable in the finished drink.
Batch It for a Crowd
Bourbon lemonade is one of the best batch cocktails there is because it scales perfectly and holds up in a pitcher. Make the lemonade, add the bourbon — roughly one part bourbon to three parts lemonade is the standard ratio, adjust to taste — and refrigerate until you’re ready to serve. Pour over ice. That’s it.
For a party of eight, you’re looking at about a cup and a half of bourbon in a full pitcher of lemonade. It’s not a complicated calculation.