The Margarita is a sour — a category of cocktail built on the formula spirit + sweet + citrus. In this case that’s tequila, triple sec, and fresh lime juice. Understanding the formula means you can adjust ratios, swap ingredients, and know exactly what went wrong when a Margarita tastes flat. It almost always comes down to the lime.
What You’re Learning
The classic Margarita ratio is 2:1:1 — 2 parts tequila to 1 part triple sec to 1 part lime juice. This is the backbone of every sour. The spirit provides alcohol and base flavor. The sweet component (triple sec) balances the acid. The citrus provides brightness and structure. Too sour? Add a small amount of simple syrup. Too sweet? More lime. Once you understand what each element is doing, you’re adjusting, not guessing.
Margaritas get shaken because lime juice needs to be fully integrated and shaking chills the drink faster than stirring. Shake hard for 10–12 seconds, then strain over fresh ice — don’t pour the shaker ice in, it’s now warm and diluted. For the salt rim, run a lime wedge around only half the rim before dipping in salt. This gives each sip the option of salty or not — the best reason to rim a glass at all.
Ingredients
- 2 oz blanco tequila
- 1 oz triple sec (Cointreau or Grand Marnier)
- 1 oz fresh lime juice (about 1 large lime)
- Kosher salt, for the rim
- 1 lime wedge, to rim the glass and garnish
- Ice
Method
- Run a lime wedge around half the rim of a rocks glass (not the full rim — let people choose). Dip that half in kosher salt.
- Fill the glass with ice and set aside.
- Combine tequila, triple sec, and lime juice in a shaker with ice. Taste the mix before shaking — if your limes are very tart, add ¼ oz simple syrup.
- Shake hard for 10–12 seconds.
- Strain into the prepared glass over the fresh ice. Garnish with the lime wedge.
Notes
- Fresh lime juice is not optional. Bottled lime juice is oxidized and flat — it’s the most common reason a Margarita disappoints. Squeeze it fresh, every time.
- Blanco tequila is unaged and has the most forward agave flavor. Reposado adds oak and complexity — both work. Avoid gold tequila (it’s usually blanco with added coloring).
- Cointreau vs. Grand Marnier: Cointreau is drier and cleaner. Grand Marnier is richer and more orange-forward. Either is correct — they make slightly different drinks.
- Simple syrup is a rescue tool, not a standard ingredient. Make the Margarita without it first. Add it only if the limes are unusually tart.
- Frozen Margarita: blend tequila, triple sec, and lime juice with about 2 cups ice. Add simple syrup to taste. The same 2:1:1 ratios apply.





