Skip to main content

Buck Buck Mule

Buck Buck Mule in a highball glass with a cucumber garnish.
Photo by Andy Sewell

Let’s begin by settling a debate. Buck vs. mule? Some maintain that the buck is the one with the base spirit plus ginger ale instead of its spicier cousin, ginger beer. Incorrect. Okay, so either a buck or a mule can be made with ginger beer or ginger ale? Some say it depends on the vessel; the mule is meant to be served in a copper mug, à la the Moscow Mule (an offshoot of the popular late 19th-century Mamie Taylor ginger and Scotch highball), while the buck (think Dark and Stormy or Horse’s Neck) is always served long, in a highball glass. Buck? Mule? Rather than call the whole thing off, or at least picking a side, in 2009, Josh Pape created the Buck Buck Mule for the opening menu at The Diamond in Vancouver. It’s remained on the list ever since.

The name of the cocktail did indeed derive from the great mule vs. buck debate and wordplay. “Originally we couldn’t decide if we wanted to use ginger ale or ginger beer,” Pape told Spirited author Adrienne Stillman in 2019. “In saying it repeatedly ‘buck or mule, buck or mule’ it’s just kind of happened.” (By the way, they went with ginger beer in a highball glass.) What distinguishes this drink is the addition of fino sherry to dry out the other flavors, and cucumber juice for an additional layer of aromatics.

Pape suggests that if cucumber juice is not readily available, it’s okay to muddle a few cucumber slices in the shaker before adding the other ingredients. Just be sure to double strain—using a fine-mesh tea strainer in addition to your cocktail strainer—to avoid pieces of floating cucumber in the final presentation.

This recipe was excerpted from 'Signature Cocktails' by Amanda Schuster. Buy the full book on Amazon.

All products featured on Epicurious are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

What you’ll need

Ingredients

Makes 1 cocktail

1 oz. dry gin
1 oz. fino sherry
¾ oz. cucumber juice (or 4 to 5 cucumber slices, muddled)
⅓ oz. lime juice
⅓ oz. simple syrup (1:1)
4 oz. ginger beer, to top
Cucumber peel, to garnish
  1. Combine all the ingredients except the ginger beer in a shaker with ice and shake vigorously for 10 to 15 seconds. Strain (if using muddled cucumber, double strain) into a highball glass over fresh ice. Top with ginger beer and garnish with a twist of cucumber peel.

Signature Cocktails-COVER.jpeg
Excerpted from Signature Cocktails © 2023 by Amanda Schuster. Photography © 2023 by Andy Sewell. Reproduced by permission of Phaidon. All rights reserved. Buy the full book from Amazon or Phaidon.
Sign In or Subscribe
to leave a Rating or Review

How would you rate Buck Buck Mule?

Leave a Review

Read More
Moscow Mule
This gingery vodka cocktail has a complicated past, but the recipe couldn’t be easier to make.
Cucumber Spritz
A simple homemade lime cordial and a touch of salt make this non-alcoholic cocktail just as special as any boozy option.
Watermelon Cucumber Slushy
Cold, smooth, and tangy-sweet, this invigorating refresher is just what's needed for Juneteenth and all of your hot summer days.
Root Beer Float
As much as we love a trip to the ice cream parlor, the best root beer float is the one you make yourself.
Strawberry-Ginger Limeade
The gentle heat of fresh ginger and bright tang of fresh lime juice highlight strawberries’ natural sweetness in this ultra-refreshing drink.
Cucumber Salad With Garlicky Dill Yogurt
This is what happens when your favorite part of tzatziki is the cucumbers, so you amplify them until they’re dramatic, crunchy, and fork-spearable.
Herb and Ginger Salt
A flavored salt ground with cilantro, mint, and various spices. 
Carrot-Orange-Ginger Soup
This soup is inspired by ginger-turmeric carrot-orange juice at the juice bar. You can swap in cream to make it richer, or coconut milk to make it vegan.