A fortified wine with herbal complexity and minimal sweetness. Essential for martinis and other classic cocktails requiring botanical depth without sugar.
18%
ABV
35
Cal/oz
24
Cocktails
liqueur
Category
Dry vermouth was developed in France in the 18th century as a drier alternative to Italian sweet vermouth. It became essential to classic cocktails during the golden age of mixology.
White wine fortified with neutral spirits and flavored with wormwood and other botanicals, with minimal added sugar.
Discover cocktails that showcase this ingredient
Equal parts gin and dry vermouth with a dash of orange bitters—silky, aromatic, and lower proof.
Rye, dry vermouth, maraschino, and bitter orange liqueur—a pre‑Prohibition Manhattan cousin with floral funk and Picon‑style bite.
A sophisticated Italian aperitivo featuring gin, dry vermouth, and Campari – a perfect balance of botanical complexity and bitter elegance.
Pre-Prohibition gin sour colored with raspberry and crowned with a dry-shaken egg white foam.
A savory martini twist—gin and dry vermouth seasoned with cocktail onion brine and garnished with a pearl onion.
The savory martini variation enriched with olive brine—salty, crisp, and bracing.
Vodka, dry vermouth, and a lick of olive brine—icy, saline, and savory with briny olives to finish.
A brinier martini—gin or vodka with dry vermouth and a generous splash of olive brine.
A dry gin martini garnished with cocktail onions—clean, crisp, and subtly savory.
The vodka martini—vodka stirred very cold with dry vermouth.
A pivotal moment in cocktail history, representing the crucial evolutionary link between the sweeter gin cocktails of the 19th century and the iconically dry Martini of the 20th.
The king of cocktails—minimalist, elegant and endlessly riffed—balancing aromatic gin with a restrained measure of vermouth.
A potent and aromatic spin on the classic Gin Martini, distinguished by a haunting whisper of absinthe. Born in New Orleans, this cocktail offers complex, herbaceous, and licorice-tinged flavors.
A bracing Negroni cousin—rye, dry vermouth, and Campari in equal parts for a spicy, bone‑dry aperitivo.
A sophisticated variation of the classic Hanky Panky that splits the vermouth between sweet and dry styles, achieving perfect balance between botanical gin and herbal complexity.
The pinnacle of cocktail balance, splitting vermouth between sweet and dry styles to achieve sophisticated equilibrium between whiskey's spice and vermouth's complexity.
Not just a well-made cocktail, but a specific variation that bridges Sweet and Dry Martinis with equal parts of both vermouths, creating sophisticated balance and complexity.
A modern, potent cocktail defined by the bracing, high-proof peppermint schnapps Rumple Minze, representing the late 20th century '-tini' craze with its intense flavor and simplicity.
Prohibition Paris classic—peppery rye with dry vermouth, lemon, real grenadine, and orange bitters for a crisp, ruby sour.
A sophisticated gin cocktail that bridges the gap between the sweeter Martinez and the drier Martini, featuring complex aromatics from maraschino liqueur and absinthe.
A sophisticated Martini variation featuring subtle complexity from maraschino liqueur and an absinthe rinse, representing the elegant cocktail culture of the Gilded Age.
A sophisticated Martini variation distinguished by the addition of fino sherry, which adds unique nutty and saline complexity to this elegant gin cocktail from the Golden Age.
A late-19th-century martini offshoot with dry vermouth, a touch of maraschino, and aromatic absinthe and bitters.
A study in elegant austerity, this cocktail strips the Martini to its barest essentials and pivots with a single, savory grace note—the distinctive umami of a pickled onion.