Bee's Knees co*cktail Recipe - The Fuzziest Coupe - Foodiosity (2024)

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The Bee’s Knees sounds just as fun as it actually tastes. The name is an old expression meaning great or excellent, in the same vein as ‘cat’s pajamas’ meant someone who is admirable and great at what they’re doing. So let’s take a look at the old style Bee’s Knees and see if it really is the bee’s knees.

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Bee's Knees co*cktail Recipe - The Fuzziest Coupe - Foodiosity (1)

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What is the Bee’s Knee’s?

Bee’s Knees is a variation on the gin sour, employing gin, lemon juice, and adding a bit of honey syrup to sweeten the whole affair just a smidge. The actual origin of the co*cktail is debatable, but most accounts point to the 1920’s era, and the most prominent story claims a Titanic survivor, Mrs. Margaret Brown invented the Bee’s Knees while vacationing in Paris. Another version claims Frank Meier invented the Bee’s Knees at the Ritz in Paris.

While neither version agrees on who first made it, both agree the drink came about in the 1920s, and in Paris, France. The lemon juice was a common addition to gin sours, and the honey syrup was either an original twist on the classic or a way to mask lower quality gin. In the early 20th century sweet co*cktails weren’t a thing, since the flavor of neat alcohol was showcased instead of mellowed. As the Prohibition era went on, poor quality alcohol had to be masked with various ingredients, often syrups.

Regardless of the actual origin, today Bee’s Knees just sounds awesome and makes you think of a fuzzy bee and its many knees. And it actually tastes like I’d imagine a bee’s pollen-laden legs would taste !

Bee's Knees co*cktail Recipe - The Fuzziest Coupe - Foodiosity (2)

Bee's Knees co*cktail Recipe

Ioana Ciuraru

A wonderfully fresh and delicious gin sour that's going to remind you of a sunny spring morning.

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Prep Time 5 minutes mins

Total Time 5 minutes mins

Servings 1

Ingredients

  • 2 oz gin
  • 0.75 lemon juice
  • 0.5 honey syrup
  • lemon twist to garnish

Instructions

  • In a shaker add gin, lemon juice, honey syrup, ice. Shake very well.

  • Strain into chilled coupe or very small Martini glass.

  • Garnish with lemon twist.

Notes

  • The honey syrup is extremely easy, 2:1 honey to water ratio. Combine in jigger, stir until diluted.
  • You can also express a little lemon peel if you like, but the lemon flavor is noticeable enough with the juice.

When is this drink best ?

The Bee’s Knees is great as a co*cktail hour drink, dinner drink, but maybe not a clubbing drink. I think it’s on the sophisticated side and definitely not something you can easily drink without stopping to appreciate every sip. And due to its lovely shade of light yellow, I think it works absolutely amazing in a daytime setting where you can admire the color in your coupe.

My thoughts on Bee’s Knees

I loved it ! For someone who doesn’t usually like gin, this is a big improvement in a gin sour and I think the honey is 100% responsible for it. It’s not a sweet co*cktail, not like a Pina Colada or Long Island Iced Tea. But it’s just sweet enough to mitigate some of the sourness in the lemon juice and the flavor of honey just pairs so beautifully with the gin ! And the lemon juice, but mostly with the gin. I used London Dry so it has a very juniper-forward flavor, and again I think that works great with honey and lemon.

In my opinion this is a great option if you want something gin-based but don’t want to go the Martini route. Still dainty, can still be served in a small Martini glass, and it even looks better.

Bee's Knees co*cktail Recipe - The Fuzziest Coupe - Foodiosity (3)

If you like Bee’s Knees, you might also like…

Gin sour – sweet and tart mix of gin, lemon juice, simple syrup, and egg white

Cosmopolitan – vodka-based but still sour and just the smallest hint of sweetness

Honeysuckle – a white rum Bee’s Knees

Tequila Honey Bee – a tequila and honey mix

Notes, substitutes, and tips

The honey syrup is extremely easy to make but just as easy to mess up an get it clumpy. To avoid any clumps, mix your honey and water (2:1 ratio) in a jigger or in a small glass. Doesn’t have to be warm water, with enough patience you can dilute the honey with cold water and a teaspoon. Stir it until it gets cloudy.

If you add straight honey to the shaker and then ice the honey will clump and freeze onto the ice. Don’t do that, if you make the syrup in the shaker add your water and lemon juice and stir very, very well before you add the gin and ice.

Shake all ingredients and strain to avoid the foam. This forms quite a bit of foam, and normally you wouldn’t serve that. But you do you, if you want to top with the foam it could look quite nice.

Make sure the gin you use is one you love, since you’ll be tasting a lot of it. If going for flavored gin then citrus, raspberry, and rosemary would work great here.

Bee's Knees co*cktail Recipe - The Fuzziest Coupe - Foodiosity (4)

Ioana Ciuraru

I’m the main writer of foodiosity.com. and I like to write about food curiosities. I have a lot of questions myself and I love finding out the answer. You can find me on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest.


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Bee's Knees co*cktail Recipe - The Fuzziest Coupe - Foodiosity (2024)

FAQs

What is a bees knees drink made of? ›

A Bee's Knees co*cktail is made with just three ingredients – gin, honey, and lemon – but together they create a magical drink.

What is a good gin for bees knees? ›

Sipsmith, a London-based artisanal gin, has a nuanced flavor that pairs well with the honey and lemon in a Bees Knees.

What Flavour is bees knees? ›

Bee's Knees is just, well, the bee's knees. This artful mix of bright ingredients and springtime botanicals is all flavour but none of the buzzzz. Tasting Notes: Lemon, Honey, Red Clover, Juniper and Timut Peppercorn.

What is the history of the bees knees drink? ›

The bee's knees co*cktail has unclear origins. It was possibly invented by Frank Meier, an Austrian-born, part Jewish bartender who was the first head bartender at the Ritz in Paris in 1921, when its Cafe Parisian opened its doors. A 1929 news article attributes the co*cktail to Margaret Brown, an American socialite.

What's so special about bees knees? ›

Some people believe that it is a reference to the fact that bees carry pollen in sacks on their knees, and that the expression therefore alludes to this concentrated goodness. Others maintain that the saying is just a corruption of the word 'business'.

What does the phrase the bee's knees mean? ›

idiom old-fashioned informal. to be excellent or of an extremely high standard: Have you tried this ice cream? It's the bee's knees, it really is.

What co*cktail is similar to the bees knees? ›

The bees' knees is also the name of a classic co*cktail with other names like the Bumble Bee. It's easy to make - and it's my first choice for a co*cktail to welcome spring. Think of a Tom Collins but with organic honey as a natural sweetener instead of sugar. Better yet with local honey!

Is the bees knees good or bad? ›

'That's the bee's knees' which means it is excellent, the highest quality. The phrase 'the bee's knees' came from the 18th century and it was a fanciful phrase that referred to something that didn't exist. A boss would send an apprentice to the store to pick up a left-handed hammer and a bag of bee's knees.

Does gin go better with lime or lemon? ›

Those who argue for lime say the fruit, with its bright, punchy flavor, offers a boldness that lemon can't match. However, many purists argue that the lemon is the only choice: as a more delicate fruit, it is less likely to overwhelm the bounty of a gin's botanicals.

Who invented bees knees co*cktail? ›

The Bee's Knees is generally attributed to Frank Meier, the bartender who ran the Ritz bar in Paris for many years, beginning in the 1920s. The drink appears in Meier's 1936 book The Artistry of Mixing Drinks, with Meier's little signature next to it, indicating it is his invention.

What glass is a bees knees served in? ›

Directions. Add gin, lemon juice, and honey syrup to a co*cktail shaker filled with ice. Shake until chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain into a chilled coupe glass.

What is queen bee jelly? ›

Royal jelly is a milky secretion made by worker honeybees (Apis mellifera). It's rich in carbs, protein, amino acids, fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals. Royal jelly gets its name because it is used as food for the queen bee. Its composition varies depending on geography and climate.

What co*cktail was invented by a woman? ›

Ada Coleman

She created the Hanky Panky inspired by the actor Sir Charles Hawtrey who frequented the Savoy's bar and is one of the first examples of Fernet Branca being used in a co*cktail.

What drink was invented in Chicago? ›

The Mamie Taylor

Consisting of soda water, ice and some type of spirit, fizzes were popular co*cktails in the late 19th to early 20th centuries. Chicago's Mamie Taylor co*cktail was the city's addition to the genre and was named after the famous Vaudeville actress of the same name.

Why do bees drink co*ke? ›

Sodas are full of high fructose corn syrup which is a sugar. When a bee finds a trash can full of half-drunk sodas, it thinks it has hit the sugar water jackpot. The bee loads up, rushes back to its hive, tells all of its sisters, and everyone makes a beeline for the trash can or recycling bin.

What is the sweet liquid made by bees? ›

Honey is a sweet liquid made by bees.

What is royal jelly made of bees? ›

Royal jelly is often referred to as a honey bee's version of “a mother's milk” and is a protein-rich secretion produced by worker bees. This milky substance is fed to all larvae for a short period of time during the honey bee life cycle, and is also fed to the developing queen bee in extra amounts.

What is a bee's honeycomb made out of? ›

A honeycomb is a mass of hexagonal prismatic cells built from beeswax by honey bees in their nests to contain their brood (eggs, larvae, and pupae) and stores of honey and pollen.

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