Classic Mojito Recipe:
The 7 Ingredients You Need

🕔 4 mins (total)
Fresh mojito cocktail with rum, lime, mint, sugar and ice on La Costa Brava
Fresh cocktail with rum, lime, mint, sugar and ice

Let’s get one thing straight from the start: there is no single mojito recipe that can claim to be the original. We were just trying to catch your attention! Just as there is no definite proof as to where the first mojito came from or who made it. But does it really matter? We think not!

Mojito Origins

A privateer named Silvio Suarez Díaz from Bella Union, a town in what is present-day Uruguay that gets its name (“Beautiful Union”) from its location on the border with both Brazil and Argentina, forming a trifinio (a geographical point where the land borders of three countries converge).**

Others say it was invented later by the English pirate Francis Drake, who was later knighted, not for possibly inventing the mojito, but rather for his “services” to his queen, Elizabeth I. Those services included African slave trading and the massacre on Rathlin Island of over 600 Irish and Scots, about 400 of whom were civilians, including women, children, and the elderly.

We’re sure Silvio Suarez Díaz was no angel either, but we think we’ll give him the credit under the circumstances! In any case, it is possible that both of them “invented” a version of the drink, as, either way, the original recipe was almost certainly obtained from the indigenous inhabitants of the Caribbean who had remedies for various tropical diseases that included ingredients used in making the drink today. It would later have been adapted to be less of a medicinal drink and more like the tropical cocktail beloved worldwide today.

Aguardiente to Rum

The original cocktail is believed to have consisted of a low-quality type of sugarcane brandy known generally as aguardiente (or “burning water”, which was the predecessor to rum) mixed with limes, mint and sugarcane juice, all local ingredients. The lime juice contained Vitamin C, which would help prevent scurvy. Along with the mint, which also helped combat cholera, stomach ailments such as indigestion, as well as the intense heat of the Caribbean, and the sugarcane juice, all would have rendered the foul “brandy” somewhat more palatable!

Over the centuries, tafia, a cheaply produced and unaged type of rum replaced the aguardiente, and later, from the 1860s on, with improvements in distillation techniques and the Cuban rum industry in general, higher-quality rum came to be used instead of the tafia, and the cocktail began to become known as “mojito”.

Havana & Hemingway

Playa de la Concha in Havana, Cuba, is generally credited with being the birthplace, in 1910, of the cocktail as we know it nowadays, and Havana was also where it was made internationally famous by a number of American celebrities in the 1920s and 1930s, most notably Ernest Hemingway, who travelled the short distance across from Florida to Cuba to escape the misery of Prohibition.

Today, the classic recipe has become one of the world’s most popular cocktails, and it can be prepared in dozens of creative ways. The basic recipe is very simple to make.

How to Make a Mojito

Ingredients:

  • Rum – 80ml of good quality white or dark rum, if you prefer!

  • Sugar – 4g / or preferably 30ml of sugar syrup

  • Lime juice – around 25ml

  • Fresh mint or spearmint – a couple of stems

  • Soda water – around 40 – 50ml, or according to taste

  • Ice – preferably crushed

  • Optional: a few drops of Angostura Bitters

Preparation:

  • First, put sugar or syrup in your glass with the lime juice and mix (If you prefer wedges of lime rather than just juice, mash these together with the syrup using a pestle – but don’t forget to leave enough space for your rum!)

  • Add the mint leaves and gently press using the pestle to release their aroma, but without crushing the leaves too much.

  • Add the rum and stir in.

  • Add the mineral water and mix until well combined. We suggest adding the water a little at a time and tasting as you go. You don’t want your mojito to be too watery!

  • Fill the rest of the glass with the crushed ice.

  • If desired, add the drops of Angostura Bitters.

  • Present with a couple of mint leaves and a lime wedge on top for garnish.

Mojito Variations

As mentioned, there are varying ways to make yours. Some people prefer dark rum over white rum, and some recipes suggest using lemon instead of lime. Fresh mint or peppermint can be used, or both. The Angostura Bitters help reduce the sweetness for those who don’t like their mojito too sugary. Syrup, rather than sugar, also makes sweetness easier to control. Using partially refined demerara brown sugar adds a hint of caramel flavour. There are also strawberry mojitos and even a “cojito”, which uses coconut rum.

Other spirits can be substituted for rum, such as tequila or gin. Additionally, there are other cocktails, like the mint julep, which is similar to it but uses bourbon instead of rum and lacks the lime. A caipirinha is a Brazilian version using cachaça (a spirit made from sugarcane) with lime and sugar but no mint or soda water. They’re all good, but sometimes the original is still the best! As the saying goes: “If it ain’t broke, why fix it?” (And as a wise man also once asked: “If it is broke, why fix it?!”)

¡Salut!

Check out our other Mediterranean recipes for dishes to try at home.

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