NOW EXPERIENCING:Mai Tai cocktail recipe
Cocktails|Rum|Sweet|Intermediate

Mai Tai cocktail recipe

total time 4 MINS | serves 1 | standard drinks per serve 1.8 approx.

Read time 4 Mins

Posted 14 Sep 2023

By
Dan’s Daily


Synonymous with the tropics, this classic cocktail straddles sweet and sour, fruity and nutty in the best way.   

About the cocktail

When you think of Mai Tai cocktails, it’s easy to get swept away with retro visions of Hawaiian shirts and wooden mugs from the questionable tiki bars of the 1950s and ’60s. In fact, the Mai Tai was so popular during this time that it apparently led to a worldwide rum shortage. 

As the story goes, the Mai Tai cocktail was created in 1944 by Victor Bergeron at his restaurant Trader Vic’s in California, who simply wanted to create a delicious drink using his 17-year-old Jamaican rum. He got to work and ‘added a squeeze of lime, a dash of rock candy syrup, a splash of orange curacao, some French orgeat’ and poured his tropical creation over ice. He then handed this drink to a friend visiting from Tahiti, who enthusiastically exclaimed it was “Mai tai roa ae,” which translates to “out of this world – the best”. The iconic Mai Tai cocktail was born.

Since then, the Mai Tai has gone through many iterations from its original recipe, rising and falling in popularity throughout history. It holds a reputation as a sickly sweet cocktail due to the historical overuse of packaged juices, fruits and syrups, which replaced fresh ingredients when it became more mainstream. This ignored the fact that the Vic Trader’s recipe only required lime juice. But with a Mai Tai revival well and truly here, Victor can rest easy. A new wave of hardcore fans – and this balanced recipe – are ensuring that his tropical concoction will once again be mai tai roa ae.

Watch: How to make a Mai Tai

Ingredients

  • 30mL lime juice
  • 15mL orgeat
  • 15mL orange curaçao
  • 20mL light rum
  • 20mL dark rum
  • Garnish: mint sprigs, maraschino cherries and lime wheel

Method

  1. Add lime juice, orgeat, orange curaçao, light rum and dark rum to a cocktail shaker
  2. Shake, and then strain into a large tumbler
  3. Fill the glass with ice, then garnish with mint and cherries skewered onto a lime wheel 

Dan’s top tips

This original resort drink will take your tastebuds on an island getaway without leaving the house (well, maybe your backyard). If you’re keen to replicate the classic Vic Trader’s recipe, choose a quality aged rum and fresh lime juice. Ice is important, too. Make sure you crush it just before serving – an easy hack is to use a food processor and fill your glass before adding the mixture. And to finish it off, add a cocktail umbrella or two and picture yourself in paradise while you sip on the most iconic tropical-rum cocktail.

Alternatively, if you’re looking for a fresh new take on the classic Mai Tai, stick to a tropical theme and experiment with seasonal exotic fruits. From mango juice to coconut, pineapple, lychee, passionfruit and more, just remember that fresh and in-season is best – no packaged fruits, juices or syrups – as we’re not here to bring the Mai Tai undone once again.