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Caipirinha

4.8

(5)

Two caiprinha cocktails in glasses with muddled limes.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Mira Evnine

Unlike many cocktail recipes that serve as rubrics for experimentation, a classic Caipirinha recipe requires precision—especially if it’s your first time making one. It might be tempting to simplify the Brazilian cocktail, which uses just three ingredients, by relying on bottled lime juice and simple syrup. Don’t do it. Muddling fresh lime wedges with crunchy sugar crystals gives this refreshing drink its signature texture and flavor; it’s even better if you do it directly in the glass you plan to serve it in. The pith and peel from those lime pieces provide distinctive character to the finished cocktail.

The backbone of the drink is cachaça (such as Leblon or Avuá). Called the national drink of Brazil, cachaça is a spirit made from fresh-pressed sugarcane juice. (Most rums, on the other hand, are derived from by-products of sugar cane production, such as molasses.) You can do all sorts of things with a bottle of cachaça, including swapping it in for tequila in a margarita or rum in a mojito or daiquiri. However, the Caipirinha drink is where this Brazilian spirit truly shines.

Once your Caipirinha cocktail game is on point, there are a few worthwhile riffs to try. A Caipiroska swaps in vodka for the cachaça, while a Caipirissima uses rum. And if you have fresh passion fruit, try this variation.

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    3 minutes

  • Yield

    Makes 1

Ingredients

1 lime
2 tsp. sugar
2–2½ oz. cachaça

Preparation

  1. Trim both ends off 1 lime and discard the ends; cut lime into wedges and transfer to a small highball or old-fashioned glass. Add 2 tsp. sugar and muddle it into the lime wedges. Pour in 2–2½ oz cachaça and stir. Add crushed ice and stir well. 

    Editor’s note: This recipe was first printed in August 2004. Head this way for more of our favorite summer cocktails →

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