On this Cinco de Mayo, I want to make a public service announcement in the form of a drink recipe.
There is only one recipe for margaritas. Or at least only one worth bothering with.
I know what you’re thinking, and possibly saying to yourselves, but bear with me here. Like the Caesar salad, which which it shares a more or less Mexican identity as expressed through a plethora of origin stories, the margarita has suffered many indignities at the hands of those who claim to love it. And like the Caesar salad, underneath the heaping piles of versions and alternatives and cracked-out variations, there is actually a classic recipe that is very simple and very good.
A margarita consists of three things. Four, if you absolutely must indulge your sweet tooth.
First, it consists of two ounces of good tequila. I enjoy Don Julio Añejo.
Second, it consists of one ounce of Cointreau. (Triple Sec is also an option.)
Third, it consists of an ounce of freshly-squeezed lime juice.
Fourth, and optionally, it consists of a small amount, a teaspoon or so, of sugar. Superfine sugar will dissolve most easily.
A margarita is made thus: place the above ingredients in a cocktail shaker filled with ice, and shake well. Strain into a glass. The glass need not be rimmed with coarse salt although you may if you like.
That is a margarita.
Other things may be mixed drinks containing tequila, but they are not margaritas. Mostly, what is served under the name “margarita” in the USA seems to be a Slurpee with a hard-on.
If that’s what you want to drink, more power to you.
But if you want to drink a margarita, now you know how to make one.
Salud!













{ 3 } Comments
¡¡Salud a ti, tambien!!
I combine 3 and 4 by using an ounce of Rose’s lime juice/syrup instead. I also use three ounces of tequila, because, well, what can I say. Apart from that, preach it!
I confess, I prefer mine frozen. But otherwise this recipe sounds fantastic :)