NOW EXPERIENCING:So-Miso cocktail recipe
total time 5 MINS | serves 1 | standard drinks per serve 2 approx.

Read time 2 Mins

Posted 19 Oct 2023

By
Lulu Morris


Savoury, fruity, foamy and delicious, this miso and gin cocktail is a welcome surprise.

About the cocktail

Huh? What? Miso in a cocktail? You must be joking. Miso isn’t just here for your soups, glazes, and dressings, it's part of a long list of umami-heavy ingredients to creep over from kitchen to bar. So, jumping on that bandwagon, our expert Dan’s Daily mixologist has come up with one hell of a miso cocktail, melding it with apple juice, lemon, sugar and gin.

But what is miso? Well, it’s a fermented soybean paste from Japan that is sweet, toasty, salty and absolutely packed with umami. We know it as the core ingredient of miso soup, but did you know it’s also a titular ingredient in soy sauce as well? There are six main types of miso paste that differ in their fermentation, seasoning, textures and regions – but we’re sticking to shiro miso or white miso, the most commonly produced style and easy to pick up in your local supermarket or Asian grocer. It is also the softest and sweetest style of miso (perfect for making syrup!).

In this exceptional cocktail, the miso adds a round, salty mouthfeel to the drink. Paired with the sourness of lemon and the sweetness of the apple, the combo is out of this world. The addition of egg white (or aquafaba, or some other foaming agent) gives the cocktail a great texture, trapping the aroma of the miso in the foamy crown of the drink.

If you’d like to have a crack at this phenom cocktail, have a squiz at our recipe and top tips below.

A glass of So-Miso cocktail
A glass of So-Miso cocktail

Ingredients: For the miso syrup (makes 160mL – enough for around 10 cocktails)

  • 100mL boiling water
  • 100g white sugar
  • 40g white (shiro) miso

Ingredients: For the So-Miso cocktail

  • 45mL gin
  • 45mL cloudy apple juice
  • 20mL lemon juice
  • 15mL miso syrup
  • 3 slices cucumber
  • 1 egg white
  • Garnish: cucumber slice dipped in sesame seeds
  • Glass: coupe or Martini glass

Method: For the miso syrup

  1. Add sugar and miso to a heat-proof jug
  2. Pour in boiling water and stir thoroughly until miso and sugar are fully dissolved
  3. Leave to cool, and it can keep in the fridge for up to two weeks

Method: For the So-Miso cocktail

  1. Prep your garnish by cutting a slice of cucumber and dipping it halfway in sesame seeds – put it aside for later
  2. Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker and shake vigorously without any ice for around 30 seconds (dry shake)
  3. Chuck in plenty of ice and shake vigorously again for around 10 seconds (wet shake)
  4. Strain into a coupe or Martini glass
  5. Balance your sesame-dipped cucumber garnish across the top of the glass

Dan’s top tips

First things first – make your miso syrup. We suggest doing this the day before so it has all night to cool down in the fridge. Much like making any kind of syrup, you start with white sugar and boiling water, and here we’re adding white miso. Chuck everything into a jug and stir to dissolve. If you find that there are little bits of miso floating around in your mixture, fine strain into a container before you leave it to cool. It’ll last around two weeks in the fridge and while the recipe above makes enough for 10 of these cocktails, you can easily scale it up or down as needed.

Next, pop your glassware in the freezer a little while before you start making your cocktails. We want that nice frosty look to the stemware, and we want to keep the liquid as cold as possible. 

Another step to do before getting into the shaking and mixing is to prep your garnish. We want the drink to be served as fresh as possible, so make your fancy sesame seed-dipped cucumber BEFORE the drink, so you’re not faffing around with it while the drink sits on the counter.

Lastly, this drink requires two shakes. So, add all your ingredients to the shaker and dry shake hard (we mean it, shake away) to get that nice foamy texture. Then add ice to the mixture and shake again to make it cold and diluted.

image credits: Charlie Hawks (photography) Bridget Wald (styling)