Cocktails

Old Fashioned: The Quintessential Whiskey Cocktail

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Base Spirit: Bourbon or Rye
Best Season to Drink: All year, but especially fall and winter
Difficulty: Easy to Moderate

The Old Fashioned has a reputation as the drink that defines whiskey cocktails, but not because it’s flashy. It’s because it does so little, so well. Whiskey, sugar, bitters, and a bit of citrus oil are all it takes. There’s no disguise here — your choice of spirit carries the whole drink, so it rewards quality and careful preparation.

A Brief History

The Old Fashioned traces back to the early 1800s when “cocktail” simply meant spirit, sugar, water, and bitters. Over time bartenders layered on liqueurs and absinthe rinses until drinkers pushed back, asking for the simple version made the “old fashioned” way. The name stuck. By the late 19th century, it was already being ordered as we know it today. Louisville’s Pendennis Club often gets the credit for popularizing it, though the drink was already widespread by then.

Ingredients

  • 2 oz bourbon or rye whiskey
  • 1 sugar cube (or ¼ oz simple syrup)
  • 2–3 dashes Angostura bitters
  • Orange peel

Method

  1. Place the sugar cube in a rocks glass, add bitters, and muddle with a splash of water. If using simple syrup, just stir it in.
  2. Add whiskey and stir until the sugar dissolves.
  3. Add a large ice cube or sphere and stir briefly to chill.
  4. Express the oils from an orange peel over the glass and drop it in.

Variations to Try

  • Rye Old Fashioned: A little spicier, drier, and closer to the pre-Prohibition standard.
  • Maple Old Fashioned: Sub maple syrup for the sugar cube for a richer, autumnal version.
  • Smoked Old Fashioned: A bar trick that adds drama, but when done with restraint, it can complement the whiskey’s character.
  • Chocolate Bitters: Just a few drops can add a subtle depth that pairs well with higher-proof bourbons.

Tips for Getting It Right

  • Use a whiskey you’d enjoy neat. The drink is built to showcase it, not hide it.
  • Don’t overcomplicate the garnish. A fresh orange peel is plenty.
  • If you’re hosting, pre-mix the sugar, bitters, and whiskey in a pitcher. Guests can pour over ice and add their own peel.

Why It Belongs in Your Rotation

The Old Fashioned isn’t about novelty. It’s about balance. It’s the rare cocktail that feels appropriate at nearly any occasion, from a casual night in to a formal dinner. Making a good one is less about following the recipe and more about practicing intention: choosing the right whiskey, adjusting the sweetness, and serving it without unnecessary distraction.

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