There’s a short list of modern cocktails that feel like they’ve been around forever. The Gold Rush is on that list, which is impressive considering it was invented in the early 2000s at Milk and Honey in New York City. T.J. Siegal came up with it, and the idea was simple — take the Bee’s Knees, a Prohibition-era gin drink built on lemon and honey, and rebuild it with bourbon. That’s it. That’s the whole innovation. Sometimes the best ideas are the obvious ones nobody got around to first.
What makes it work is that honey and bourbon were basically made for each other. The floral sweetness of honey syrup does something to bourbon that simple syrup can’t — it amplifies the vanilla and caramel from the barrel while adding its own aromatic layer on top. The lemon keeps it honest and bright. The result is a drink that feels simultaneously simple and refined, and it comes together in about five minutes.
Woodford Reserve and Why It Belongs Here
Woodford Reserve is a 90.4 proof small batch Kentucky bourbon with a higher-than-average rye content for the style, which gives it a little more spice than your typical corn-forward bourbon. That spice plays beautifully against the sweetness of the honey — there’s a little tension there that keeps the drink from going soft. The nose on Woodford is all dried fruit and vanilla, and both of those notes carry right through into the finished cocktail.
It’s also a widely available bottle at a reasonable price point, which matters when you’re using two full ounces of it in a drink. Save the allocated stuff for the neat pour. Woodford earns its place here.
If you want to dress it up, Woodford Reserve Double Oaked adds an extra layer of vanilla and toasted oak that’s genuinely excellent in this drink. On the budget end, Buffalo Trace makes a very respectable Gold Rush — slightly less spice, a little more sweetness, still worth making.
The Honey Syrup Is Everything
The Gold Rush lives and dies on the honey syrup, so it’s worth getting it right. Two parts honey to one part warm water, stir until fully dissolved. That’s the recipe. What matters is which honey you use — a generic grocery store clover honey makes a fine Gold Rush, but a good wildflower honey or a local raw honey adds a complexity that elevates the whole drink noticeably. If you’ve got a farmers market nearby and a beekeeper with a table, that’s worth the trip.
The syrup keeps in the fridge for two weeks. Make a decent-sized batch because once you have it you’ll find yourself reaching for it in other drinks too.
Shake It Properly
The Gold Rush gets shaken hard and served up in a coupe, double-strained so the surface is clean. Twelve to fifteen seconds in a shaker with plenty of ice — you want this cold. The honey syrup needs a vigorous shake to fully integrate, so don’t be timid about it.
Chill your coupe in the freezer before you start. A warm glass takes the edge off an up-served cocktail faster than you’d think, and this drink deserves to be cold all the way to the bottom.