Cocktail Dilution Calculator

🍹 Cocktail Dilution Calculator

Predict how much water ice adds to a stirred, shaken, or batched drink so you can hit the right texture and strength.

Quick Presets
Mixing Inputs
Switch all volumes and outputs.
The alcoholic base before ice.
Used to track proof after dilution.
Juice, syrup, soda, or vermouth.
Approximate weight of the ice used.
Seconds of stirring, shaking, or rolling.
Warmer mixes melt more ice.
Used for per-serving dilution view.
Dilution Estimate
Water added
0
oz
Dilution %
0
%
Final volume
0
oz
Final proof
0
proof
Technique Reference
StirLow dilution
ShakeFast chill
RollGentle mix
BuildMinimal water
Reference Tables
MethodTimeIceRange
Stirred15-25sLarge12-18%
Shaken8-15sCubes18-25%
Rolled6-10sCubes14-20%
Built0sNone0-5%
Blended10-20sCrushed24-32%
Hard shake12-18sCubes20-28%
Wet shake20-30sCubes24-30%
Quick stir8-12sLarge10-14%
Ice typeMelt rateBest useNote
Large cubeSlowStirredLow melt
StandardMedShakeBalanced
CrackedFastSourMore water
CrushedVery fastTikiBright and loose
NuggetFastHighballTexture boost
Clear slabSlowMartiniClean chill
Wet iceFastBatchAdds water
Dry iceNoneNot usedUnsafe here
StyleTarget %ProofTexture
Martini12-16%24-32Sharp
Sour18-24%36-48Bright
Stirred14-18%28-36Silky
Highball20-28%40-56Long
Tiki24-32%48-64Loose
Batch16-22%32-44Even
Gimlet18-22%36-44Clean
Daiquiri18-23%36-46Snappy
Timing tip: Shaking longer does not always help. Once the ice is small, extra agitation often adds dilution faster than it adds chill.
Glass tip: A chilled glass slows warming and helps your measured dilution stay closer to the result you calculated.

 

A cocktail is a mixed drink, usually with alcohol. The base is made of one or more spirits, mixed with various ingredients: fresh juices, flavored syrups, tonic water, shrubs, bitters, whatever you want. The cool part is how different they can be depending on the land.

Many websites always produce old classics and creative new versions of the recipe

Cocktail Basics and Simple Recipes

Among the iconic cocktails are the Manhattan, martini, gimlet, negroni, Tom Collins, Aperol spritz, cosmopolitan, gin and tonic and French 75, they stood the test of time. Also now popular recipes are dirty martini, whisky highball, frozen Margarita and mezcal Old-Fashioned. The list of classics to leran goes from Americano to White Russian, with many in between.

Tom Collins refreshes best. Gin with fresh lemon juice, simple syrup and soda water creates something you genuinely want on a warm day. About spirits: gin now leads, vodka follows it.

Vodka rules because of its flexibility, and bartenders find new ways too use it.

Most bartenders follow the proportion 2:1:1 (two units of base spirit), one unit each of citrus and sugar. After blending, you add one unit of water. Served over ice, it reaches around six units.

Standard pour is 1.5 units, what you call one serving. Martinis have more, around three units of alcohol. Cocktails in coupes or on big ice cubes have 1.5 to 3 units.

Jalisco Painkiller shows that well: two units of reposado tequila with three units of unsweetened pineapple juice. Add one unit of coconut cream and one of fresh lime juice. Mix in shaker with a lot of crushed ice, then put nutmeg and pineapple leaves on top.

Bourbon with lime and ginger works well… One unit of bourbon, half unit of lime juice, ginger beer according to taste and fresh mint for garnish. Fill glass with ice, and you are set.

Sweet and salty bourbon cocktails with summer tomatoes can surprise.

Except the drinks themselves, shrimp cocktail appears on appetizer menus everywhere. Roast it at 450 degrees with minced garlic, olive oil, salt and pepper for a nice version. Cocktail rye bread is another food idea.

Use square pans, cut in neat squares of around 2.5 inches. Today a cocktail menu is not simply a list onpaper. It is an experience, in that mixologists, bartenders and beverage directors put time and creativity.

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