Ramos Fizz Recipe

Get ready to shake... and shake, and shake.

By
Paul Clarke
Paul Clarke blogs about cocktails at The Cocktail Chronicles and writes regularly on spirits and cocktails for Imbibe magazine. He lives in Seattle, where he works as a writer and magazine editor.
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Updated April 03, 2024
Two Ramos Fizz cocktails, served with brunch food in the background

Serious Eats / Two Bites

To state the patently obvious, the summer weather in New Orleans can be brutal. The positive side of this is that ever since the days when a ceiling fan was considered the apex of cooling technology, bartenders have been devising drinks that are still useful—if not essential—in today's summer-refresher arsenal.

In the ranks of New Orleans-born coolers, the Ramos Fizz (aka Ramos Gin Fizz) is royalty. Created in 1888 by bar owner Henry C. Ramos, the fizz that bears his name takes the already appealing Silver Fizz—a mixture of gin, lemon, sugar and seltzer, with an egg white to add foam and body—and advances it several steps along the decadence line, adding cream, lime juice and a few drops of aromatic orange-flower water (no, not orange juice; the perfume-like stuff usually sold in small blue bottles).

Perfectly suited for a hot afternoon or evening, the Ramos Fizz holds special appeal as a breakfast or brunch drink. I'll be in New Orleans in two weeks for Tales of the Cocktail, and I expect to get on the outside of several of these during the week. But for a drink this good, it's best to start warming up now—who's with me?

Recipe Details

Ramos Fizz Recipe

Prep 5 mins
Total 5 mins
Serves 1 serving

Ingredients

  • 2 ounces gin
  • 1 ounce cream
  • 1 egg white
  • 1/2 ounce lemon juice
  • 1/2 ounce lime juice
  • 2 teaspoons sugar, to taste
  • 2-3 drops orange flower water
  • Seltzer

Directions

  1. Combine everything except seltzer in a cocktail shaker. Tradition dictates that the drink be shaken very hard for at least one and preferably two full minutes with ice. You can cheat by either whisking the mixture with a milk-frother or whisk (or tossing a spring from a Hawthorne strainer into the shaker and using that to whip the ingredients) until foamy, and then shaking with ice for a good 20 seconds, or you can buckle down and take the fully authentic ride, while working off the calories you’ll be taking in from the cream and sugar. Strain into a chilled Collins glass and add an ounce or two of chilled seltzer, to taste.

    Four photos showing how to make a Ramos Fizz cocktail. The first photo shows gin being poured into a cocktail shaker. The second photo shows a hand shaking a cocktail shaker. The third photo shows the cocktail shaker being poured into a Collins glass. The fourth and final photo shows the Collins glass being topped off with seltzer.

    Serious Eats / Two Bites

Special equipment

Cocktail shaker, cocktail strainer

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