The Best Bloody Mary Recipe

How to make the best Bloody Mary? Skip the mix and doctor up your tomato juice from scratch with horseradish, Worcestershire, and hot sauce.

Two bloody marys one wooden costers

Serious Eats / Two Bites

Why This Recipe Works

  • Considering each element of the cocktail allows you to fashion a Bloody Mary customized to your personal taste.
  • A black pepper-cayenne-hot sauce combo gives the cocktail a well-rounded zing that lingers on your tongue.
  • 摇晃的喝足够的冰块稀释the tomato juice, seasonings, and vodka to the ideal ABV for sipping over ice.

Queen of the brunch table, arch-nemesis of hangovers, and mistress of the morning.Max Davidsonof the Daily Telegraph has called it the "world's most complex cocktail," if only for the sheer number of ingredients that can go into it. Add into that the number of different spirit-based variations (the Bloody Maria with tequila, Bloody bishop with Sherry, Bloody fairy with absinthe, etc), and you end up with more options than you can shake a, well, a shaker at.

The ingredients and flavor profiles of a Bloody Mary are as complex and varied as the hangovers that spawn them. Not only that, but according to theAmerican Chemical Society,独特的成分及其组合华体会应用下载reactions with each other creates literally hundreds of different flavor compounds that cover the entire range of human taste with the exception of bitterness. These flavor compounds are volatile and ever-changing, which means that for best results, you should mix your Bloody Mary fresh and serve it over plenty of ice to keep those chemical reactions at bay and keep the flavor in your glass.

Close up photo of bloody mary in a glass.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Some people prefer the straight-up salty sweetness of tomato juice and celery. Others (like myself), the nose-biting, sinus-clearing pungency of horseradish or the hot bite of black pepper. Still others like to taint their drinks with copious amounts of briny olive juice (the heathens!).

So you can see the problem with trying to come up with "an ultimate" Bloody Mary recipe. One person's cure might be another's sickness. Horses for courses. Different drinks for different needs, and all that.

However, there are a few ground rules that can be generally agreed upon for the ideal Bloody Mary. Let's take a look at them (I'll also point out what I personally like in my cocktails)

Start With Tomato Juice, Clamato, or V8

Pouring tomato juice into a glass.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Tomatoes put the blood in the bloody, and give Bloody Marys their unique savory quality. They contain high levels of glutamic acid, the essential amino acid that gives savory foods like meat, cheese, and mushrooms their mouthwatering umami flavor. This is the single most important ingredient in a Bloody Mary, so make sure you get a high quality, flavorful tomato juice.

Variations:

  • V8 Juicefor those who like a bit more complexity and vegetable matter in their cocktail.
  • Clamatoadds another layer of savoriness, though it can be horribly off-putting to some.

I'm a straight-up tomato juice kind of guy here.

Add Savory Ingredients

Worcestershire sauce against white background.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Tomato juice is savory on its own, but if you really want to up the umami factor and turn this into a cocktail that drinks like a meal, consider adding a few other extra-savory ingredients, such as:

  • Worcestershire sauce.It's a classic Bloody Mary addition flavored with anchovies, tamarind, and dozens of other spices, adding richness and complexity to your dink.
  • Beef Consommé.Bouillon cubes, demi-glace, or liquid consommé when used sparingly can give your cocktail the beefy, savory boost it needs. Just don't tell your vegetarian friends.
  • Soy Sauce.Put a sushi condiment in your drink? Hell yes! just like with gravy and soup, a few drops of soy sauce can add a mysterious depth of flavor without overwhelming.
  • Maggi Seasoning.This liquid amino extract (basically the same stuff as Gravy Master) is the secret weapon of the bestbánh mìshops, adding savoriness in spades.

I very rarely go for all four, usually settling on a mix of Worcestershire and Maggi or soy.

Make It Spicy

Crushed black pepper on white surface.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Not to be confused with nose-tingling pungency of horseradish-type roots, I'm talking bout capsicum heat here—the kind that lingers on your tongue with a gentle burn. Some people like to overwhelm their Bloody Marys with intensely spicy chile peppers, but I personally find that their heat is more distracting than satisfying. Instead, I prefer to get my heat from three sources:

  • Black pepperforms the hot aromatic backbone of my three-pronged approach to heat.
  • A dash of cayenne添加了香馥,舌头上徘徊。
  • Hot sauceadds not only heat, but a touch of acidity as well, brightening up the drink. Tabasco is traditional, but I'm a Frank's guy.

Finish With Horseradish

Unpeeled horseradish root against white background. A bottle of prepared horseradish is visible in the background as well.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Here comes that second kind of heat; the mustard-gas kind that rises up your nose and clear your sinuses. Horseradish is the obvious choice here (though some fresh wasabi might be fun too).

The question is: fresh or prepared? Prepared horseradish, made by grating horseradish and preserving it with salt and vinegar, can be totally fine in a pinch, so long as the bottles are relatively fresh (horseradish loses pungency as it sits).

To take your Bloody Marys to the next level, however, you should opt for fresh horseradish, grating it yourself on a microplane grater just before mixing your drink. It has a much more pronounced heat and aroma, and won't leave unpleasant chunks in your drink like prepared horseradish can.

Which Vodka Should You Use?

Six assorted vodka bottles against a white background.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

With so much going on in that glass, the vodka is the least of your worries. Its only role in this drink is to bring a bit of the hair of the dog back to the party, so any decent cheap brand will do. Save your expensive stuff for spirit-forward drinks!

Acid and Ice!

Overhead photo of ice in a glass next to lemon wedges on a wooden surface.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

All that savoriness and heat can be overwhelming in a cocktail unless you balance it out by diluting it with ice and acid.

A Bloody Mary shouldalwaysbe shaken vigorously with plenty of ice in order to properly chill and dilute it. You want to use lots of ice in the shaker because it's the surface moisture clinging to that ice that's going to be primarily watering down your drink. Make sure your glass is well-chilled before pouring the drink into it.

Acidity is key. I like my Bloody Mary with a squeeze of lemon juice, though lime juice can be a fun alternative. Some people pour pickle juice or olive juice into the shaker as well. I say no thanks (save that olive juice for dirty martinis!)

And as for the glass, a nice celery salt rim gives you something to lick on between sips.

Garnishes

Close up photo of celery stalks on a wooden surface.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Here's where personal preference really comes into play. Some like to go commando, while others go all out with a full four-course skewered feast featuring olives and other pickles as an hors d'oeuvre, cocktail shrimp as an appetizer, deli meats, boiled eggs, and crab claws as a main course, and a nice fat stalk of celery as a post-meal palate cleanser.

At the very least, offer a stalk of celery to give fidgety drinkers something to poke around with while they nurse their hangovers.

June 2011

Recipe Details

The Best Bloody Mary Recipe

Active5 mins
Total5 mins
服务1 serving

How to make the best Bloody Mary? Skip the mix and doctor up your tomato juice from scratch with horseradish, Worcestershire, and hot sauce.

华体会应用下载

  • 1tablespooncelery saltor plain kosher salt, if you prefer

  • 1/4lemon, cut into 2 wedges

  • 1/2teaspoonWorcestershire sauce

  • 1/4teaspoonsoy sauce

  • 1/2teaspoonfreshlyground black pepper(or less to taste)

  • Dashcayenne pepper

  • 1/4teaspoonhot sauce(such as Frank's)

  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly grated horseradish (or1teaspoonprepared horseradish)

  • 2ouncesvodka

  • 4ounceshigh-qualitytomato juice

  • 1stickcelery

Directions

  1. Place celery salt in a shallow saucer. Rub rim of a 12-ounce tumbler with 1 lemon wedge and coat wet edge with celery salt. Place lemon wedge on rim of glass. Fill glass with ice.

    Four image collage of ingredients and prep steps for bloody mary

    Serious Eats / Two Bites

  2. Add Worcestershire, soy, black pepper, cayenne pepper, hot sauce, and horseradish to bottom of cocktail shaker. Fill shaker with ice and add vodka, tomato juice, and juice of remaining lemon wedge. Shake vigorously, taste for seasoning and heat, and adjust as necessary. Strain into ice-filled glass. Garnish with celery stalk and serve immediately.

    Four image collage of adding horseradish and tomato juice to s shaker, pouring shaker into a glass and garnishing with a piece of celery

    Serious Eats / Two Bites

Special Equipment

Cocktail shaker,cocktail strainer

Read More

Nutrition Facts(per serving)
160 Calories
1g Fat
7g Carbs
1g Protein
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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 1
Amount per serving
Calories 160
% Daily Value*
Total Fat1g 1%
Saturated Fat 0g 0%
Cholesterol0mg 0%
Sodium771mg 34%
Total Carbohydrate7g 2%
Dietary Fiber 1g 4%
Total Sugars 4g
Protein1g
Vitamin C 88mg 442%
Calcium 30mg 2%
Iron 1mg 5%
Potassium 340mg 7%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)