Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (2024)

Jump to Recipe Print Recipe

Bitters make bourbon (and whiskey) better. Bitters are more than just flair for mixologists to add to co*cktails. They’re a critical element of flavor, aroma and balance in many bourbon co*cktails.

(Post may contain affiliate links)

Bitters are essentially your spice rack for co*cktails. They’re your salt and pepper. They’re often a binding agent that brings together disparate flavors or pulls out complementary flavors in foods. Not only do they balance out sweetness, but they adjust acidity in co*cktails as well.

This is a three part series of posts:

  • Basics of bitters, what they are and their history (this post) and why to use them with whiskey and bourbon
  • Categories of bitters, tips on how to use them and a basic set to start your home bar
  • How to evaluate bitters for co*cktails, and intermediate and an advanced set of bitters to add to your home bar

So let’s start with the basics:

Bourbon and Bitters: What is Bitterness and Why is it Important?

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (2)

The human response to bitterness developed over the process of evolution to protect humans from the consumption of toxic substances. Oftentimes plants, fruits, bark, or herbs that were bitter were toxic. Over time that meant humans developed a sensitivity to bitterness as a defense mechanism to protect us.

However, many of those same bitter elements were some of the first medicines. Before Big Pharma, humans used plants, botanical extracts, leaves, herbs, flowers, etc. as medicine. As the earliest healers in humanity experimented and discovered natural medicines developed from the world around them some of the fear or aversion to bitters decreased. Those bitter things might soak in water as teas, or alcohol once distillation was created. And we consumed some of them as medicines.

Now, though, bitterness is not so important as a survival technique, and in many ways bitterness increases our intrigue with a taste. If the bitterness is not overwhelming, if it is balanced in a bourbon or whiskey co*cktail, it often generates an internal response like, “That was interesting. A little bitter, but intriguing. I should have another taste.”

Our lizard brain may be screaming danger, but our humanness wants to take the chance and risk it, just for another sip of bourbon and bitters to see if it really is dangerous. I think bitterness can make us feel like we’re taking a walk on the wild side, so to speak.

What are Bitters?

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (3)

Bitters consist of a flavored infusion or tinctures either made in alcohol or in glycerin. The tinctures/infusions use parts of plants – roots, bark, seeds, peels, nuts, fruits – anything with flavor. They can be made from both bittering agents or flavoring agents or both. The infusion process concentrates the flavor of the element in the alcohol or glycerin, with the result that only small amounts are needed to impart a large flavor or aroma to a co*cktail.

Flavoring agent vs bittering agent

Bitter production often includes both flavoring and bittering agents. Bittering agents, like wild cherry bark, orris root, chincona, or wormwood impart the true bitter taste to the bitters. Think of a tea or decoction with wild bark in it. They’re terribly bitter. But each bitterness has notes of other flavors. Some bittering agents taste earthy, others sharp and medicinal, some taste chalky.

So often bitter makers will pair those base notes of bitterness with flavoring agents like

  • Peppers
  • Cocoa nibs
  • Fruit peels
  • Herbs
  • Spices
  • Nuts
  • Coffee

The addition of those flavoring agents adds flavor and aroma to the bitters. Those flavoring agents can signal the brain as we taste, giving us reminders of the flavor or aroma and helping the brain interpret the taste input. They often pull or accentuate latent flavors in the co*cktail elements and move them to the forefront.

Generally, a combination of both will be used in the creation of bitters. For control over the final flavor, some bitters makers create tinctures of each separate ingredient and combine them to create the final product. This gives them final control of the full flavor and aroma of each batch.

On Bourbon and Bitters: History of Bitters

I’ve already described a little of the history of bitters. In their uses as medicinal tinctures, healers prescribed their consumption, often in teas or food. Once alcohol production became common, pharmacists used alcohol to extract and concentrate the medicinal qualities of the plants.

Some saloons and pharmacists touted co*cktails as medicinal because they contained plant extracts, and were part of the reason a co*cktail was a morning drink. You take your medicine first thing, too, don’t you?

Modern bitters started in the late 1700s to early 1800s as health cures. In Colonial times in America, they were your medicine cabinet, or your pharmacy that cured what ailed you. These extracts were invariably bitter and it’s likely some were safer than others. Some snake oil cures likely fell in this category.

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (4)

JGB Siegert created Angostura bitters to cure malaria and stomach ailments for soldiers in 1824. He created them in the city Angostura in Venezuela but his formulation didn’t have angostura bark in them. Siegert was a shrewd businessman. He sued companies using angostura in their name (even though there is a bark angostura that can be used in bitters). From the history it appears he sued many other bitters companies out of business.

Another early and popular bitter originated in the US, created by Antoine Peychaud in 1838 in the French Quarter of New Orleans. He was a Haitian pharmacist who promoted the consumption of his bitters with a bit of Cognac. And that’s where we find the origin of the first Sazerac – as Peychaud created an easy tipple to make the bitters go down smoother. Today, we’ve switched from Cognac to whiskey, but Peychuad’s bitters and a tiny bit of absinthe still complete the bittered whiskey co*cktail.

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (5)

As the co*cktail scene expanded in the late 1800s and early 1900s and alcohol consumption rose in the US, dozens of bitters were created with touted medicinal effects. Bitters were everywhere as cures and co*cktail ingredients.

Sidenote: Angostura survived Prohibition, as most other bitters companies did not, by convincing the US government that the bitters were not potable and that no one in their right mind would sip bitters straight from the bottle as they would a spirit. He got away with it. He was the only U.S. bitters company to survive Prohibition.

Like most of the rest of the spirits industry, bitters companies were decimated by Prohibition. Afterwards, only Angostura and Peychaud’s bitters were commonly found in the U.S. Until the co*cktail renaissance of the early 2000s, there weren’t many bitters available in the U.S. at all.

Now, though, hundreds of bitters and bitters and small batch bitters companies are thriving here and around the world.

Why Do You Use Bitters in a Bourbon or Whiskey co*cktail?

In a co*cktail, especially a bourbon or whiskey co*cktail, bitters can be essential. Bitters create balance. Bitters work well with bourbon, such a sweet spirit, because they can tame that sweetness. When you taste bourbon and find those sweet vanilla, corn, caramel, fruit or nut notes, you can balance that with bitters.

Think of taste as a balancing scale. In a co*cktail, you want a drink that’s not too sweet and not too sour. Bitters balance that in bourbon co*cktails (in any co*cktail, really). Bitterness detracts from the sweetness and the acidity in a co*cktail, balancing and blending the flavors together.

Why Add Bitters to Bourbon?

In a bourbon co*cktail, bitters can either

  • bind the drink together as a whole, often the case with aromatic bitters. Bitters are that person in the room that makes everyone get along and brings them together.
  • add flavors and increase depth without adding either sweetness or acidity. That one taste element needed to complete the flavor profile of a co*cktail.

Other spirits, like vodka, which has far less flavor than bourbon, or gin which has a strong pine/juniper flavor (generally) aren’t as sweet as bourbon or rye whiskies. So for whiskies, the use of bitters to tame the inherent sweetness and aromas of the co*cktail acts as natural balance.

Just remember bitters create balance. That’s the key.

I’ll continue with my list of basic bitters for bourbons tomorrow, but I want to leave you with a co*cktail example for both binding and flavoring actions.

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (7)

First, a traditional Sazerac where the bitters are used to pull the co*cktail together. Pechaud’s bitters are bittersweet and aromatic, with slight licorice and citrus flavors. Those flavors bind the Copper and Kings absinthe rinse used to coat the glass to the bitters themselves and the sweetness in the rye whiskey. They bind the flavors into a cohesive whole because they contain elements of the other ingredients in the co*cktail, and add a layer or aromatics that makes everything play well together.

Second, a variation on a Sazerac with one change – the addition of The Bitter Truth’s dark chocolate bitters and just a touch of chocolate liqueur to bring in a little more earthiness. Try them and see what you think. I love the flavor combination of the chilly, cooling absinthe with the earthiness of the chocolate.

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (8)

Other Sazerac-Inspired co*cktails to Try:

  • Sazerac Slushie
  • Oleo Sazerac (Orange sugar syrup replaces simple)
  • Midnight on the Bayou – Manhattan/Sazerac riff
  • Exit Strategy – Black Licorice Manhattan

Recommended Bar Tools

You don’t need every slick, beautiful bar tool out there, but there are several I’ll recommend. (As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. However, that does not affect the cost of the items below.) My favorite pieces usually come from the co*cktail Kingdom section of Amazon:

You may already have these bar essentials, but just in case:

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (9)

Classic Sazerac

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (10)Heather Wibbels

For this classic Sazerac recipe, we’ll stick to the basics: rye whiskey, Peychaud’s bitters, simple syrup and a touch of absinthe.

No ratings yet

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Prep Time 5 minutes mins

Total Time 5 minutes mins

Course Drinks

Cuisine rye co*cktail

Servings 1

Ingredients

  • 2 oz rye whiskey 100 proof
  • ½ oz simple syrup
  • 3 dashes Peychaud’s bitters
  • Absinthe rinse or mist from an atomizer (I used Copper and Kings Absinthe)
  • Lemon peel for garnish

Instructions

  • Combine whiskey, simple and bitters in a mixing glass and add ice. Stir until well-chilled.

  • Strain into a rocks glass rinsed with absinthe. Express a lemon peel over the co*cktail and discard the peel or dress up the rim of the co*cktail.

Keyword absinthe, bitters, sazerac, whiskey co*cktail

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (11)

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (12)

Chocolate Sazerac

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (13)Heather Wibbels

This chocolate Sazerac riff adds a touch of chocolate bitters and chocolate liqueur but leaves the basic balance of the co*cktail intact, making the combination of earthy cocoa notes and cool absinthe irresistible to licorice lovers.

No ratings yet

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Course Drinks

Cuisine rye co*cktail

Servings 1

Ingredients

  • 2 oz rye whiskey
  • ¼ oz simple syrup
  • ¼ oz crème de cacao
  • 2 dashes Peychaud’s bitters
  • 2 dashes chocolate bitters
  • Absinthe rinse or mist from atomizer (I used Copper and Kings Absinthe)
  • Orange peel

Instructions

  • Combine whiskey, simple, liqueur and bitters in a mixing glass and add ice. Stir until well-chilled. Strain into a rocks glass rinsed with absinthe. Express an orange peel over the co*cktail and discard the peel.

Keyword absinthe, bitters, rye, whiskey co*cktail

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Bitters and Bourbon (Whiskey) - All About Bitters and How to Use them in co*cktails - co*cktail Contessa (2024)

FAQs

What bitters go well with whiskey? ›

While the classic bitters flavors are Angostura, Orange, and Peychaud's, there's a world of whiskey bitters beyond them. If you're first experimenting with the flavors of bitters, Angostura is a great bottle to start with.

Do bitters need to be refrigerated after opening? ›

However, there's no need to refrigerate bitters. Even though there are organic compounds in bitters, the amount of alcohol acts as a natural sterilizer and preservation agent. So, feel free to leave it on your bar cart or in your liquor storage cabinets without having to worry.

When to add bitters to a co*cktail? ›

The answer: Yes, add bitters before you begin the shaking or stirring process. However, there are exceptions. For example, you can add bitters by misting the top of the drink for aromatics or when decorating the foamy egg whites of a co*cktail.

What are the best bitters used by bartenders in co*cktails? ›

Some of the best co*cktail bitters available are Angostura, Regans' Orange, Peychaud's, Bittermens, and The Bitter Truth. A boom of commercially accessible bitters in myriad diverse tastes has accompanied the 21st-century co*cktail revolution. There are hundreds of different variations to pick from.

What do you use bourbon bitters for? ›

It just takes a few drops of bitters to enhance the flavor and add aroma and depth to a co*cktail. I love bourbon and bitters because the addition of a few drops of these extracts can transform a glass of bourbon and magnify flavor profiles that were subtle or they can heighten the aromatics in new and interesting ways.

Can you add just bitters to bourbon? ›

Bitters have a place in the world of bourbon, and it may surprise you that they can really be added to a lot of different bourbon co*cktails and even to bourbon neat. In a recent blog post, I called out five bourbon co*cktails that should be on everyone's list of go-to drinks.

Who should avoid bitters? ›

You can also be allergic to the herbs used in bitters. People who are pregnant and breastfeeding shouldn't take bitters. They also shouldn't be given to children as they often are infused in alcohol.

Is it safe to drink straight bitters? ›

For the most part, while bitters are great as a co*cktail enhancer, they shouldn't be something you consume on their own.

Do bitters cleanse the liver? ›

Bitters give the liver a boost by aiding in the elimination of toxins and detoxification, coordinating the metabolism of sugar and fats, and helping release gallbladder-supporting hormones like cholecystokinin (CCK).

When should bitters be avoided? ›

Plus, if you have any existing conditions like diabetes or illnesses that affect your gallbladder, kidneys or liver, it is not recommended that you take digestive bitters. Bitters contain alcohol, so also avoid it if you are pregnant or nursing.

How many drops of bitters in a co*cktail? ›

▸How many drops/dashes of bitters should I use in a drink? When creating our own co*cktails we always start with 2 dashes, or in our case 20-24 drops, of bitters for a co*cktail 6 oz or larger and then increase or decrease as we see fit.

Do you drink bitters when you're drunk or hung over? ›

Today, bartenders still go for bitters when they want to make a good co*cktail great—you'll find them in an Old Fashioned, or a Manhattan, or a sazerac—but sometimes they also call on bitters for its original medicinal purpose. Or, sort of. It turns out that bitters make for a pretty solid hangover cure.

What is the most famous bitter? ›

Angostura makes perhaps the most ubiquitous bitters bottles out there, one that you'll see in nearly every bar - and one that you should have in your co*cktail arsenal at home.

Which brand of bitters is best? ›

Angostura is the most popular brand of bitters. For years, whenever a co*cktail recipe required "bitters," it was assumed that you would pick up a bottle of Angostura Aromatic Bitters.

Do bitters go with whiskey? ›

A happy by-product of years of medical experimentation is that we now have a dizzying range of tonics and tinctures with which to enhance our drinks. Intense and often high in alcohol, a few drops of bitters can work wonders in whisky co*cktails.

What bitters is best with bourbon? ›

Bitters and bourbon

If you're looking to acquire a few bottles, be sure to consider how they'll work with bourbon's trademark flavors such as vanilla, toffee, oak, caramel, and smoke. They pair nicely with citrus and chocolate bitters, but not as well with herbal-flavors. (Bourbon and cucumber? Not and ideal match.)

Why do you add bitters to whiskey? ›

In a co*cktail, especially a bourbon or whiskey co*cktail, bitters can be essential. Bitters create balance. Bitters work well with bourbon, such a sweet spirit, because they can tame that sweetness. When you taste bourbon and find those sweet vanilla, corn, caramel, fruit or nut notes, you can balance that with bitters.

Can you put bitters in straight whiskey? ›

Bartenders commonly use orange bitters in bourbon and whiskey co*cktails. Bourbon and rye often taste and smell slightly of orange peel, so the bitters bring out those latent flavors in the whiskey.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mr. See Jast

Last Updated:

Views: 6749

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mr. See Jast

Birthday: 1999-07-30

Address: 8409 Megan Mountain, New Mathew, MT 44997-8193

Phone: +5023589614038

Job: Chief Executive

Hobby: Leather crafting, Flag Football, Candle making, Flying, Poi, Gunsmithing, Swimming

Introduction: My name is Mr. See Jast, I am a open, jolly, gorgeous, courageous, inexpensive, friendly, homely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.