Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Weeknight-Friendly Gimlet

A crisp, authentic gin gimlet with real lime and just enough sweetness. Fast to shake, bright to sip, and easy to scale for two.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A real photograph of a classic gimlet in a chilled coupe glass with a thin lime wheel on the rim, sitting on a home kitchen counter with a cocktail shaker nearby

A gimlet is the kind of cocktail that feels fancy even when you are wearing sweatpants and debating dinner. It is sharp, clean, and lime-forward, with that little botanical hum from gin that makes you take a second sip on purpose.

This is the traditional and authentic version: gin, fresh lime juice, and simple syrup. No neon green “lime cordial” vibe. Just a bright, weeknight-friendly cocktail you can make in about two minutes, with ingredients you can actually find at a normal grocery store.

A real photograph of fresh limes cut in half next to a small glass jar of simple syrup on a cutting board

Why It Works

  • Bright, balanced citrus: Fresh lime brings the snap, simple syrup rounds the edges.
  • Authentic build: This is the classic template used in many modern bars, and it tastes like it.
  • Weeknight-proof: One shaker, one jigger, no drama. You can even make the syrup ahead.
  • Easy to dial in: Like it sharper? Cut the syrup. Prefer it softer? Add a barspoon more.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Storage Tips

Gimlets are best shaken and served immediately, but you can prep the parts so it is basically instant later.

Make-ahead simple syrup

  • Store simple syrup in a clean, sealed jar in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
  • If it turns cloudy, smells off, or grows anything, toss it and make a fresh batch.

Pre-batched gimlet (for tomorrow night)

  • Mix gin + lime juice + simple syrup in a sealed container and refrigerate for up to 24 hours.
  • When ready to serve, shake hard with ice to chill and dilute properly, then strain.

Fresh lime juice

  • Fresh-squeezed is best the same day, but you can refrigerate it up to 24 hours. It loses brightness quickly, like a cut apple situation.

Common Questions

Common Questions

What makes a gimlet “traditional”?

At its core, a gimlet is gin + lime + sweetener. Older versions often used lime cordial. A very common modern “classic” approach is fresh lime juice and simple syrup, which is what you are making here.

Can I use bottled lime juice?

You can, but it will taste flatter and slightly bitter. If you want the gimlet to feel special, use fresh lime. One lime usually gets you close to 1 ounce of juice.

How sweet should a gimlet be?

It should taste bracing but balanced, not like limeade. Start with 3/4 ounce simple syrup, then adjust next round. Different limes have different attitudes.

Do I need a cocktail shaker?

It helps, but a tightly sealed mason jar works in a pinch. Shake hard, then strain through a fine mesh strainer if you have one.

On the rocks or up?

Both are legit. “Up” in a chilled coupe is the classic move. On the rocks is more casual and stays cold longer, which is a weeknight win.

What gin works best?

A London Dry style gin is the most traditional. If your gin is super floral, your gimlet will be too. If your gin is crisp and juniper-forward, the drink stays snappy.

I love a gimlet because it is the rare “two-minute project” that still feels like you did something. On busy nights, I am not trying to build a cocktail that requires a burner, a blender, and a minor in chemistry. I want bright lime, cold gin, and that clean snap that makes takeout pizza feel like a whole plan.

The first time I really nailed it at home, I realized the trick is not fancy technique. It is measuring. When you stop free-pouring and actually hit the ratios, the gimlet goes from “pretty good” to “okay, wow.”