Mint Julep cocktail in a frosted silver julep cup with crushed ice and a large fresh mint bouquet

Mint Julep

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Mint Julep

Bourbon, mint, sugar, crushed ice. The official drink of the Kentucky Derby. Served in a frosted silver cup that’ll numb your hand. Aromatic, refreshing, dangerously easy on a hot day.

Mint Julep cocktail in a frosted silver julep cup with crushed ice and a large fresh mint bouquet
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Prep Time: 4 minutes
Total Time: 4 minutes
Bourbon, mint, sugar, crushed ice. The official drink of the Kentucky Derby. Served in a frosted silver cup so cold your hand goes numb. The mint is half the experience.

Ingredients

  • 8-10 leaves fresh mint plus a big sprig for garnish
  • 15 ml simple syrup or 1 tsp sugar
  • 60 ml bourbon good quality
  • 1 cup crushed ice plus more for topping

Instructions

  • Add the mint leaves and simple syrup to a julep cup or rocks glass.
  • Gently muddle the mint, just enough to release the oils. Don't shred the leaves.
  • Pour in the bourbon and stir.
  • Pack the cup with crushed ice (mound it above the rim).
  • Stir gently with a bar spoon until the cup is frosted on the outside.
  • Top with more crushed ice and a generous mint bouquet.
  • Optionally dust the mint with powdered sugar.
  • Serve with a short metal straw so the mint hits your nose with every sip.

Notes

The straw matters. A short straw forces your nose into the mint bouquet on every sip. The mint smell is half the drink. Long bendy straws ruin it.

Where it came from

The Julep predates American whiskey. Originally a medicinal preparation in the Middle East (the word “julep” comes from the Persian “gulab”, rosewater), it travelled to Europe and arrived in the American South in the 1700s. Early versions used brandy, rum or rye, with crushed ice as soon as ice became available.

Bourbon took over as the standard spirit in the 1800s. The Kentucky Derby adopted the Mint Julep as its official cocktail in 1938. Churchill Downs sells around 120,000 Juleps over the two-day Derby weekend, served in commemorative pewter cups.

The crushed ice question

Crushed ice is non-negotiable. It chills the drink fast (the silver cup goes frosty in seconds), dilutes the bourbon to drinking strength, and gives the drink the right texture. Cubed ice doesn’t work, the drink stays too strong and warm.

No crushed ice maker? Wrap regular ice in a clean kitchen towel and whack it with a rolling pin or the back of a heavy spoon. Aim for pebble-sized pieces, not powder.

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Ingredient Spotlight

The bottles that make or break this drink.

The bourbon

Use
Maker’s Mark, Buffalo Trace or Woodford Reserve
Try
Old Forester (Churchill Downs’ Derby pour) or Bulleit Bourbon
Why
Mid-shelf bourbon has the body to stand up to the dilution. Cheap bourbon disappears.

The mint

Use
Spearmint, big bouquet, super fresh
Skip
Peppermint (too aggressive) or dried mint (no aroma)
Why
Spearmint is sweeter and softer. The bouquet is your aromatherapy as you drink.

The cup

Use
Pewter or silver julep cup
Try
A copper Moscow Mule mug works in a pinch
Why
Metal frosts on the outside as you stir, signalling the drink is ready and adding to the ritual.

What if I don't have…

Quick substitutions for when the bottle shop is closed.

No bourbon?

Rye whiskey works (sharper, drier). Brandy or rum is the pre-bourbon original. Avoid Scotch, the smoke clashes.

No fresh mint?

You can’t. Mint is the drink. Don’t bother with dried.

No crushed ice?

Cubed ice in a tea towel, smash with a rolling pin. Or use a blender on pulse with cubes.

No julep cup?

A rocks glass or copper Mule mug is fine. The cup is ritual, not requirement.

Want it less sweet?

Skip the simple syrup; muddle the mint with a tiny pinch of sugar instead.

Frequently Asked Questions

Direct answers to what people search for after Googling this drink.

What is in a Mint Julep?

Bourbon, fresh mint, simple syrup (or sugar) and crushed ice. The standard build is 60ml bourbon, 15ml simple syrup, 8-10 muddled mint leaves, packed with crushed ice in a julep cup. Garnished with a generous mint bouquet.

Why is the Mint Julep associated with the Kentucky Derby?

Churchill Downs adopted it as the Derby’s official cocktail in 1938. The drink had been popular in the American South since the 1800s, and bourbon’s rise to the dominant Julep spirit happened in Kentucky. Around 120,000 Juleps are sold over Derby weekend.

Do I have to use a silver julep cup?

No, but the cup is half the ritual. Silver and pewter frost up on the outside as you stir, signalling the drink is properly chilled. A copper Moscow Mule mug or a rocks glass works fine at home.

Should I muddle the mint?

Lightly. Muddle just enough to release the oils, do not shred the leaves into pulp. Over-muddling releases bitter chlorophyll. Press, don’t pulverise.

Why does the recipe say crushed ice?

Crushed ice chills and dilutes the drink at the right speed, gives the cup time to frost, and creates the proper texture. Cube ice keeps the drink warm and over-strong.

How strong is a Mint Julep?

About 22-25% ABV in the glass. Strong, dropping as the ice melts. Drink slowly.

Can I make a non-alcoholic Mint Julep?

Yes. Use a non-alc bourbon (Lyre’s American Malt, Spiritless Kentucky 74) and follow the same recipe. The mint and crushed ice carry the experience.

What food goes with a Mint Julep?

Southern food: fried chicken, pulled pork, biscuits, peach cobbler. The mint and bourbon cut through richness.

DL
From the Drink Lab catalogue

Drink Lab has been collecting cocktail recipes since 2013. Some we wrote ourselves, plenty came in from readers, and the rest got passed across a bar somewhere along the way.

Last updated April 26, 2026 · 1 min read

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