Cocktail: Martini Formula — Gin, Vermouth Ratios, and Temperature Science

Category: classic-formulas Updated: 2026-03-11

Martini: 2.5oz gin (40–47% ABV), 0.5oz dry vermouth (15–18% ABV). 5:1 ratio; final ABV ~35%. Stirred 30 rotations to −4°C. 'Extra dry' = 15mL vermouth; 'wet' = 1:1 gin to vermouth.

Key Data Points
MeasureValueUnitNotes
Gin volume2.5oz (75mL)London Dry standard; 40–47% ABV; higher proof gins (47%) give more texture
Dry vermouth volume0.5oz (15mL)5:1 gin:vermouth ratio; Noilly Prat, Dolin Dry are classic choices (~75g/L sugar)
Final ABV (5:1 ratio)~35% ABV(2.5×40% + 0.5×17%) ÷ 3oz = ~36% pre-dilution; ~35% post-stir
Optimal serve temperature−4°CFully chilled; ice crystal formation begins at −6°C; target is below 0°C without diluting too much
Stirring rotations30–40rotations in mixing glass~0.5oz dilution; longer stir reduces final ABV but over-dilutes in gin-only context
Dilution in extra-dry Martini~1mL (vermouth rinse only)Vermouth rinses the glass and is discarded; essentially neat chilled gin with minimal dilution
Wet Martini vermouth ratio50% vermouth (1:1 ratio)Classic 1920s–1930s proportion; modern palate shifted toward drier ratios post-WWII
Glass pre-chill temperature−18°C (freezer) or ice-water bathPre-chilled glass extends drinking window; un-chilled glass warms Martini within 2–3 minutes

The Martini is the most argued-over cocktail formula in history — the ratio debate (dry vs. wet), the technique debate (shaken vs. stirred), the garnish debate (olive vs. twist) — and yet in its ideal form, it is also the simplest. Cold, clear, spirit-forward, aromatic. The gin Martini showcases the spirit precisely; every botanical in the gin is audible. Nothing hides.

Martini Dryness Spectrum

StyleGinVermouthRatioABVCharacter
Wet (classic 1930s)2oz gin1oz dry vermouth2:1~30%Wine-forward, aromatic, historic
Standard2.5oz gin0.5oz dry vermouth5:1~35%Balanced; most common professional benchmark
Dry3oz gin0.25oz dry vermouth12:1~37%Spirit-dominant; botanical gin showcased
Extra Dry3oz ginRinse (~1mL)~90:1~39%Essentially chilled gin
Bone Dry3oz ginNone~40%Technically just cold gin; purists only
Dirty2.5oz gin or vodka0.5oz dry vermouth5:1~35%+ 0.5oz olive brine; savory, saline
Vesper (Bond)3oz gin + 1oz vodka0.5oz Lillet Blanc8:1~36%Fleming’s specific recipe; gin-vodka blend

Temperature and the Martini

A Martini served warm is not a Martini. The cocktail’s design depends on ice-cold temperature interacting with the gin’s botanical complexity: at 0°C, certain volatile aromatic compounds (terpenes, esters) have reduced vapor pressure, delivering a smoother, less aggressive nose. At room temperature, those same compounds become sharp and alcoholic. The pre-chilled glass (stored at −18°C or ice-water bathed for 5 minutes) maintains temperature for 8–10 minutes. An unchilled glass warms a properly made Martini to >8°C within 3 minutes — past the point of optimal flavor expression.

Vermouth Freshness in the Martini

Because the Martini uses so little vermouth (0.5oz at 5:1), the quality of that vermouth is magnified relative to cocktails where it plays a larger role. Fresh, refrigerated dry vermouth (Dolin Dry, Noilly Prat) contributes clean herbal, citrus, and slightly tannic notes. Degraded, room-temperature-stored vermouth (oxidized) contributes flat, sherry-like off-notes that are obvious in the Martini’s spare landscape. The Martini is the cocktail most unforgiving of poor vermouth handling.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the history of the Martini?

The Martini descended from the Martinez, a sweet cocktail from the 1880s (gin, sweet vermouth, maraschino, bitters). By the 1890s–1900s, bartenders were making the recipe with dry (French) vermouth instead of sweet Italian vermouth, less sugar, and dropping the maraschino. The result was the early Dry Martini. The ratio shifted over the 20th century: early recipes were 2:1 or 3:1 gin:vermouth; mid-century ratios became 5:1 and beyond. Winston Churchill famously described the perfect Martini as 'a glass of gin with a bow in the direction of France' — no vermouth at all.

Shaken vs. stirred — does it actually matter?

Yes, in measurable ways. A shaken Martini receives more dilution (due to vigorous agitation fragmenting ice), contains micro-bubbles that create a cloudy, slightly frothy texture, and arrives colder. A stirred Martini has less dilution, crystal clarity, and a silkier, more viscous texture. James Bond's preference for shaken Martinis (introduced in Ian Fleming's Casino Royale, 1953) has been analyzed by food scientists who note that shaking also slightly oxidizes the gin's volatile aromatics. For gin Martinis, stirred is standard; for vodka, the difference is less pronounced since vodka lacks the aromatic botanicals that dilution and oxidation affect.

What does dry vermouth do in a Martini?

Dry vermouth performs multiple functions: it contributes herbal, floral, and slightly acidic wine character that rounds gin's sharp botanical edges; it adds minimal sweetness (~75g/L) that counterpoints gin's dryness; and its water content contributes controlled pre-dilution. In an 'extra-dry' Martini (vermouth rinse only), nearly all these functions are eliminated — the drink is essentially chilled, slightly diluted gin. Whether this is better depends on gin quality: a superb botanical gin showcases itself without vermouth; a mediocre gin benefits from vermouth's supporting role.

Why does a dirty Martini use olive brine?

Olive brine (10–15% NaCl solution, with fermentation acids and glutamates from the olives) adds three things to a Martini: salt, which suppresses bitterness and heightens other flavors; acidity, which cuts the gin's spirit heat; and umami (glutamates from fermented olives), which adds savory depth unavailable from standard Martini ingredients. A dirty Martini is typically made with vodka (cleaner spirit base for olive flavors) or a citrus-forward gin. The standard ratio is 2.5oz spirit + 0.5oz vermouth + 0.5oz olive brine, though taste varies widely.

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