• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Howcast

Howcast

The best source for fun, free, and useful how-to videos and guides.

  • Arts & Crafts
  • Entertainment
  • Food & Drink
  • Health
  • Home & Garden
  • Relationships
  • Explore Guides
  • Contact
  • About
  • FAQs
  • Explore Guides
  • Arts & Crafts
  • Entertainment
  • Food & Drink
  • Health & Wellness
  • Love & Relationships
  • Home & Garden
Food & DrinkComplete Guide to Whiskey

How to Make an Old-Fashioned Cocktail

Transcript

The Old Fashioned is the most classic of classic cocktails and it’s also
the simplest and, in many ways, the most elegant. Sugar, water, spirits, and bitters. That’s it. The earliest Old Fashioneds were actually with Cognac. And it does make a wonderful drink, but I find adding sugar to Cognac can be a little too sweet for my tastes. I like it a little bit more dry, a little bit more bracing, so I drink rye Old Fashioneds. Bourbon Old Fashioneds work wonderful, rum. Stay away from gin. White spirits don’t usually take so well to the old fashion
treatment.

So a rye Old Fashioned, which we’ll be taking today, deadly simple. You have two ounces of your spirit, roughly a bar spoon worth of sugar syrup. This is a demerara sugar syrup. It’s a little more flavorful than a granulated sugar or a white sugar syrup, a simple syrup. Take roughly a bar, it’s about an eighth of an ounce, give or take. Drop that in there. Ice will be your water. It serves to both dilute and cool the drink. As you spin it around. And then stir.

Your stirring technique is really whatever works for you. I’ve seen this. I’ve seen that.
This is the most comfortable for me, but I do a lot of stirring of drinks so anything that works is fine.

Once you have your drink properly chilled and diluted, add your strainer. Take your chilled rocks glass, add ice, and strain. Garnish with a citrus twist, orange, lemon, both whichever you like. Express the twist, and smile.

And that’s how you make an Old Fashioned.


Lessons in this Guide

How to Pick a Whiskey with J Rosser Lomax

How to Make a Gold Rush Cocktail

How to Pair Whiskey with Food

How to Create Your Own Whiskey Cocktail

History of Whiskey

How to Make a Sazerac Cocktail

Whiskey in Popular Culture

How to Cure a Whiskey Hangover

Shaking Cocktails vs Stirring Cocktails

5 Tools You Need to Make Cocktails

What Is Canadian Whiskey?

What Is Corn Whiskey aka Bourbon?

What Is Light Whiskey?

How to Make an Old-Fashioned Cocktail

What Is Scotch Whiskey?

How to Serve Whiskey with Water & Ice

What’s the Best Whiskey to Use in a Mixed Drink?

How to Serve Whiskey

How to Make a Manhattan Cocktail

How to Drink Whiskey

How to Read a Scotch Whiskey Label

What Is Jim Beam Bourbon?

How to Mix Whiskey with Soda

What Is Tennessee Whiskey?

How to Taste Whiskey

How to Make a Hot Toddy Cocktail

What Are Famous Irish Whiskeys?

What Is Wheat Whiskey?

What Is Single-Blended Malt Whiskey?

What Are the Different Brands of Whiskey?

What Is American Whiskey?

What Is Rye Whiskey?

What’s a Good Whiskey for a Beginner?

What’s the Alcohol Content of Whiskey & Bourbon?

What Is Single Cask aka Single Barrel Whiskey?

Malt Whiskey vs. Grain Whiskey

Copyright © 2026 · Howcast · All Rights Reserved · Powered by BizBudding Ventures with Springwire.ai

Privacy Manager