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Japanese Slipper cocktail recipe

total time 3 MINS | serves 1 | standard drinks per serve 1.5 approx.

Read time 3 Mins

Posted 04 Jan 2024

By
Bec Dickinson


Melbourne has created many greats, including this bright green, melon-flavoured icon.

About the cocktail

It’s Melbourne in the ’80s, when the busy neon nightlife met a cocktail of the same bright and unapologetic style. It was the city’s answer to the shiny Cosmopolitan from Manhattan and the spirited Bramble from London. The Japanese Slipper was a zippy new green drink primed to join an era of shamelessly vibrant cocktails.

Invented behind the bar of one of Melbourne’s most iconic restaurants of the era, Mietta’s, it was the young French bartender Jean-Paul Bourguignon who first shook up this fluorescent drink. Made at a time when mixologists were moving away from conventional (and sometimes myopic) combinations and trying more boundary-pushing blends, this was a perfect moment for Jean-Paul to be handed a sample bottle of Midori.

Trained in Paris, it’s understandable that when Jean-Paul experimented with the relatively new melon-flavoured Midori he instinctively reached for something familiar and French – Cointreau. Balancing the overall sweetness (these are two fruity liqueurs, after all) with fresh lemon juice transformed the drink into a spirited figure of the new cocktail age.

Learning English at the time by reading, Jean-Paul discovered the word ‘slippers’ in a book about a Japanese woman (and her slippers). Deciding to make it a permanent part of his vocabulary, he named the cocktail after it, splashing it across menus as he travelled Australia. Smartly so, with Mietta’s now closed and Jean-Paul retired, the Japanese Slipper continues to run around town with a nightlife of its own. Try Nick Tesar’s modern blue twist at Bar Liberty, also in Melbourne.

Watch: How to make a Japanese Slipper

Ingredients

  • 30mL Midori
  • 30mL triple sec
  • 30mL fresh lemon juice
  • Glass: coupe or martini
  • Garnish: maraschino cherry

Method

  1. Add all ingredients to cocktail shaker
  2. Add ice and shake until the outside of tin is frosty
  3. Carefully strain into a chilled glass
  4. Garnish with a single maraschino cherry

Dan’s top tips

The cherry on top here is an actual cherry. Here, we’ve dropped a Luxardo maraschino cherry straight into the drink, which works beautifully, but in season, you might like to use fresh pitted cherries on a cocktail stick. The preserved and slightly tarter morello cherries will also finish this cocktail nicely – the choice is yours.

Just like the original, Cointreau makes a fine triple sec. Equally as important is the freshly squeezed lemon juice – emphasis on the freshly squeezed. Why? As a simple three-ingredient cocktail, poured in equal parts, the quality of each is more pronounced. So, if you’re down for a touch of muscle work (much easier than a dumbbell), freshly squeezing will pay off.

If this leaves you even more eager to turn up the ’80s, you can revive other iconic hits of the era, including Sex on the Beach, Blue Lagoon and even more in our round-up of retro cocktails due for a comeback.

The melon-flavoured Japanese Slipper
Holding a Japanese Slipper
image credits: Shelley Horan (photographer), Long Story Short (videography), Bridget Wald (stylist).